She's back in charge.
Since 1993, nobody has taken care of Sheryl Crow's business better than Sheryl Crow. Before she made her debut album, Tuesday Night Music Club, with Los Angeles studio swells like singer-songwriter David Baerwald and producer Bill Bottrell, Crow had already completed an album an expensive mistake recorded with Sting's producer, Hugh Padgham which she wisely shelved. Later, in the face of doubts about her musical skills and what exactly she had contributed to the making of Tuesday Night, Crow responded by producing on her own brilliantly 1996's Sheryl Crow. Last year, when she and Mitchell Froom collaborated on the theme song for the James Bond film Tomorrow Never Dies, Crow even figured out how to make her way through the showbiz strains of Froom's arrangement, a clever Shirley Bassey update that Mariah Carey could have sung in her sleep.
As someone who grew up studying piano and composition, Crow is a fairly diligent formalist, and her favorite form is Sixties and Seventies English rock, the loose and riffy melodicism of classic Faces, Eric Clapton and Exile-style Stones. She is also an Anglophile with a down-home heart she was born in Kennett, Missouri, just sixty miles from Memphis who belongs to that long line of Southerners, from the Allman Brothers and Lynyrd Skynyrd to Alex Chilton and the Black Crowes, in love with the strength and cohesive flash of great British music. On Tuesday Night, Crow recast the early-Seventies jam aesthetic with a contemporary songwriting strategy and production sheen. On Sheryl Crow, she applied powerhouse riffs to intricate melodies, juicing the combination with vocal harmonies and Nineties alt-rock noise.
The Globe Sessions, on the other hand, is not a record married to a particular sound or concept. Crow deemphasizes stylistic consistency in favor of unrestrained emotion. The songs often concern broken romances and the extremes to which Crow's characters will go to fix them or just let go. "I bring you everything that floats into your mind," Crow claims in "Anything but Down," then explains how little she gets for her efforts: "But you don't bring me anything but down." Sometimes the anger spirals down into deep hurt. In "Crash and Burn," a song about a woman in flight from her feelings, Crow sings, "In case you ever w