Current:Home > reviewsSheryl Crow reveals her tour must-haves and essential albums, including this 'game changer' -AssetLink
Sheryl Crow reveals her tour must-haves and essential albums, including this 'game changer'
View
Date:2025-04-18 05:56:13
Sheryl Crow had no intention to write another album following 2019's "Threads."
But the combination of a mind overloaded with concern for the future and a series of songs that seemed to tumble out of her led to "Evolution," her 12th studio album released in March.
On it, the newly minted Rock & Roll Hall of Fame inductee tackles her fears about artificial intelligence on the title track, blends expert snark with humor ("Anger sucks, but at least your brand's trending," she sings on "Broken Record") and covers Peter Gabriel's 1992 classic, "Digging in the Dirt."
It's an organic progression for the woman who has sold more than 50 million albums since 1993's "Tuesday Night Music Club" debut, earned nine Grammy Awards and climbed the Billboard Hot 100 19 times with hits including "If It Makes You Happy," "All I Wanna Do" and "My Favorite Mistake."
In a recent conversation from her home studio in Nashville, Crow, 62, shares her essential albums and tells us why her upcoming tour dates will be more of a family affair than a boisterous party scene.
More:Sheryl Crow talks Stevie Nicks, Olivia Rodrigo and why AI in music 'terrified' her
Why Sheryl Crow prefers to write in a quiet space
In the announcement of her new album, Crow said the songs came from "sitting in the quiet and writing from a deep soul place."
As the mom to sons Levi, 13, and Wyatt, 16, Crow says she often finds herself engaged in their active lifestyles, so her writing sessions primarily take place when the boys are in school.
"I sit on the screened in porch and if it's cold I'll light a fire and if not, I sit out with the sounds of birds and my guitar and a cup of tea. That's where I worked out most of what is on this record," she says. "It's sort of like downloading (your mind) now, and it's liberating. I hate being on the other side of when you age out of being popular, but it's liberating to sit down and write what is on your mind, and know there is probably a huge population of people who understand that."
Sheryl Crow is done partying on tour but anticipates 'adventure'
Crow will head to Europe this summer for a couple of weeks of shows before meeting up with Pink in August to open a slate of concerts on her Summer Carnival stadium tour.
Crow's sons will join her in Europe, even though "they're of the age where maybe going on tour bus isn't where they want to spend their summer," she says with a laugh. But she's hoping for an "adventure" with her family while keeping things low-key backstage and on the bus.
"I'm really easy. We have our general snacks and I like to drink a beer, maybe two if I'm feeling, 'Hey, let's get loose.' But that's the extent of that. If my kids are there, I'm happy."
Sheryl Crow names her 'game changer' album
Crow enjoyed an almost surreal experience at her Rock & Roll Hall of Fame induction in November when she performed with upstarts (Olivia Rodrigo), legends (Willie Nelson, Elton John) and friends (Stevie Nicks, Peter Frampton) on the same night.
Music is a necessity in her life and she taps George Harrison's triple album from 1970, the lauded "All Things Must Pass," as her "game changer."
"I just remember as a kid reading album notes and for him to step out (from the band) … We Beatles fans didn't know what he was fully capable of and that album blew my mind," Crow says. "I think it planted some seeds to seeking some higher vibration. I've come back to it through the years and picked up things like, 'Oh yeah, that's what he meant.'"
As a lifelong Beatles disciple, Crow also still gravitates toward "Let It Be," the band's final studio album released in 1970.
"I was brought into the world with a certain amount of melancholy and there is a lot of that in that record, the essence that it was all coming apart even though you didn’t know it," she says. "But you felt different personalities on the record and the songwriting was so beautiful."
More:Rock Hall induction of George Michael, Sheryl Crow, Missy Elliott airs Jan. 1: Best moments
Sheryl Crow explains the 'divinity' of Stevie Wonder
Crow still drifts toward Stevie Wonder, both musically and personally, and admires his aura as well as his landmark 1972 album, "Talking Book."
"He was such an amazing writer when it came to documenting what was happening in the times and he made it hooky. We all sang every word," she says. "I'll look at him and think, 'There is so much divinity there.' All of the rest of us are trying to learn and he just came in with it. In the history of musicians, there are a handful of people like that. It was part of the essential DNA."
Crow also maintains a soft spot for "Mud Slide Slim and the Blue Horizon," the 1971 James Taylor record that includes his only No. 1 hit, the Carole King-penned "You've Got a Friend."
Crow recalls laying on the floor of her childhood home in front of the record player and absorbing Taylor's understated storytelling.
"It lifts me, it opens me. It's beautiful songwriting and singing," she says. "Music is a salve. I remember meeting Carlos Santana and him saying, 'You really change the molecules.' And that statement is the summation of what I think music is."
veryGood! (73667)
Related
- Romantasy reigns on spicy BookTok: Recommendations from the internet’s favorite genre
- US Energy Secretary calls for more nuclear power while celebrating $35 billion Georgia reactors
- Donald Trump is convicted of a felony. Here’s how that affects the 2024 presidential race
- Biden is said to be finalizing plans for migrant limits as part of a US-Mexico border clampdown
- The FTC says 'gamified' online job scams by WhatsApp and text on the rise. What to know.
- Trump was found guilty in his hush money trial. Here's what to know about the verdict and the case.
- Sixth Outer Banks house collapse since 2020: Photos capture damage as erosion threatens beachfront property
- Former NBA player Drew Gordon, brother of Nuggets star Aaron Gordon, dies in car accident
- Olympic women's basketball bracket: Schedule, results, Team USA's path to gold
- Vermont governor vetoes pilot safe injection site intended to prevent drug overdoses
Ranking
- Sonya Massey's father decries possible release of former deputy charged with her death
- With 'Babes,' Ilana Glazer wants to show the 'hilarious and insane' realities of pregnancy
- Doncic’s 36 points spur Mavericks to NBA Finals with 124-103 toppling of Timberwolves in Game 5
- Dramatic video shows Texas couple breaking windshield to save man whose truck was being swallowed in flooded ditch
- Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow owns a $3 million Batmobile Tumbler
- Minneapolis teen sentenced to more than 30 years in fatal shooting at Mall of America
- Minneapolis teen sentenced to more than 30 years in fatal shooting at Mall of America
- Maui Council budgets $300,000 to study impacts of eliminating 7,000 vacation rentals
Recommendation
'As foretold in the prophecy': Elon Musk and internet react as Tesla stock hits $420 all
Medline recalls 1.5 million bed rails linked to deaths of 2 women
Trump denounces verdict as a disgrace and vows this is long from over after felony conviction
Biden says questioning Trump’s guilty verdicts is ‘dangerous’ and ‘irresponsible’
RFK Jr. grilled again about moving to California while listing New York address on ballot petition
Biden is said to be finalizing plans for migrant limits as part of a US-Mexico border clampdown
Bruhat Soma carries a winning streak into the Scripps National Spelling Bee finals
Brian Belichick explains why he stayed with Patriots after his father's departure