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100 Miles from Memphis

Sheryl Crow

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iTunes Review

Sheryl Crow is an industry heavyweight best known for her ability to deliver the radio-ready pop-rocker that sounds as natural as breathing. She is also a musical eclectic who loves both the music’s past and its present. This is hardly a tribute to Dusty Springfield’s Dusty in Memphis, but it resonates with blue-eyed soul. More importantly, it brings together musicians as noteworthy as Keith Richards for the reggae number “Eye to Eye” and then follows that with a cover of Terence Trent D’Arby’s “Sign Your Name” with an assist from Justin Timberlake. Producers Doyle Bramhall II and Justin Stanley add an extra Southern sizzle as Crow assembles everyone into a community circle for “Say What You Want” and the sweet naturalistic grounding of “Long Road Home” where you can hear the ‘70s coming into full stereo. Crow is so confident and diverse throughout that it’s a joy to hear her engaging a full band for the title track and then stripping things to an acoustic hush for the bonus version of “Long Road Home” where the harmonies recall a gospel choir doing its solemn work.

Customer Reviews

Best Release Of Her Career

Sheryl Crow's last album was pretty damn good but she could have written an album that is in the same league as her breakthrough debut. After listening to the new Prince record and all its awesome funkiness comes a very soulful offering from Crow. The opening cut is a complete winner and one of my favorite songs of 2010 sitting pretty high on the list, top 10 right now. The lady doesn't disappoint at all on this album Sheryl has kinda taken a side-step from what her regular music style of singer/songwriter pop usually sounds like. This is a very good thing and a welcomed change as she's always at her best when her sunshine pop side is in full effect.

Now she does a duet with Justin Timber-homo but the song is groovy as hell and not ruined by a craptacular Timbaland production sheen. Another of my favorites on the album is "Long Road Home" that again hits a homerun for Crow in this Soulful new vibe she found. I will just say it this is her best album bar none. Not even Tuesday Night Music Club is this good and that album is a classic album. Her haunting bluesy delivery on the excellent "Sideways" featuring Citizen Cope is near awe inspiring and goose bump delivering. This is what an effective and worthy ballad should sound like when recorded. The tempo picks back up on the title track that seems to have come straight out of 1975. The album closes with a bonus track cover of "I Want You Back" from the Jackson 5. Sheryl Crow completely out did herself on this track she freaking crushed a world series winning grandslam with this album and this is her Sergent Pepper as topping this album will be impossible because perfect albums are very far and few in between. This is a perfect album and will be her crowning jewel for the rest of her career.

5 Stars

Love it! she is not scared to put something different out there! As most put your typical radio music out for the $$$. Way to Go Sheryl, give playing and singing.

Nice!

Sheryl with some more great summer music!

Biography

Born: February 11, 1962 in Kennett, MO

Genre: Pop

Years Active: '80s, '90s, '00s, '10s

Sheryl Crow's fresh, updated spin on classic roots rock made her one of the most popular mainstream rockers of the '90s. Her albums were loose and eclectic on the surface, yet were generally tied together by polished, professional songcraft. Crow's sunny, good-time rockers and world-weary ballads were radio staples for much of the '90s, and she was a perennial favorite at Grammy time. Although her songwriting style was firmly anchored to the rock tradition, she wasn't a slave to it — her free-associative,...
Full bio

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