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Sheryl Crow Tickets

Sheryl Crow lights the radio waves ablaze with her summer-friendly songs! You love Sheryl Crow hits “All I Wanna Do,” “Everyday is a Winding Road,” “If It Makes You Happy,” and “Soak Up the Sun”! Don't miss your chance to see Sheryl Crow perform LIVE! Buy your Sheryl Crow tickets now!
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[2 of 4 customers found this review helpful]

Outstanding,Very enjoyable
By Tim from Phoenix,Az on 8/23/2008

Was a great show,Can't wait till my next concert!

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[1 of 1 customers found this review helpful]

Love Sheryl Crow
By bossy from escondido, ca on 8/23/2008
Pros:
Engaging Stage Presence, Great Encores, Great Sound
Best For:
Everyone

I do not like political views mixed in my concert.

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[2 of 2 customers found this review helpful]

One of the best concerts I've seen!
By Diane the die-hard Sheryl Crow fan from Oklahoma City, OK on 8/18/2008
Pros:
Crowd Was In To It, Engaging Stage Presence, Great Encores, Great Lighting, Great Sound, Perfect Set List
Best For:
Everyone

I saw Sheryl in Tulsa at the Brady Theater. I thought that was a good show until I saw her in OKC a few months later. AWESOME CONCERT

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[1 of 1 customers found this review helpful]

Sheryl Crow & James Blunt
By RUTHI173 from Wilmette, IL on 8/14/2008
Cons:
Crowd Was Not Into It, Not what expected, Poor Set List, Poor Sound Quality, Too Hot, Too Short
Best For:
Completely Unfamiliar, NEVER AGAIN Ravinia, No One

[$] was WAY out of line when you could not SEE and Barely HEAR the music - AND then the idea of having to sit on a curb cuz there's NOT ENOUGH space REALLY sucks..To glimpse the musicians you have to battle for space & then they were still about 1" tall .... REALLY REALLY DISAPPOINTED with entire evening - would rather buy the DVD and enjoy @ home!

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Sheryl Crow Tickets

“Run Baby Run” to the show after you purchase your Sheryl Crow tickets today! 

Sheryl Crow … singer, songwriter, actress, producer and activist … whatever you want to label her, one thing that is indisputable is that Crow is an international sensation. Her easy going style and adult contemporary sound appeals to a wide audience. The multiplatform artist has received multiple award nominations and is the recipient of more that seven Grammy Awards. Don’t miss your chance to feel the electricity of her live concert performance; get your Sheryl Crow tickets now!

Even before she became a household name Crow was playing with the big boys singing backup vocals for Michael Jackson throughout his “Bad World Tour.” Crammed somewhere in the pop, folk and adult contemporary genres, Crow’s first album effort was tossed after it was abandoned by her label in 1992. While making a second attempt at a debut, Crow’s songs were being sung by superstars Celine Dion and Tina Turner. The 1993 release of “Tuesday Night Music Club” produced unexpected international hits “Leaving Las Vegas,” “Strong Enough” and “All I Wanna Do.” Once fame discovered her it was there to stay, offering up occasions to collaborate and perform with the Rolling Stones, Eric Clapton, Kid Rock, Sting and John Mellencamp to name a few. Crow’s following releases “Sheryl Crow,” “The Globe Sessions,” “C’mon C’mon,” “Wildflower,” “Detours” and “100 Miles from Memphis” saw singles “If It Makes You Happy,” My Favorite Mistake” and “Home” fly onto the charts.

Reviews from concertgoers shout “outstanding,” “best concert ever” and declare that Sheryl Crow is a great live concert experience for the entire family! Take the opportunity to experience an artist that knows how to rock when you buy your Sheryl Crow concert tickets today!


Sheryl Crow Biography

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, reference-laden poetry could hardly have been the product of any era but the '90s. Her production not only kept pace with contemporary trends, but sometimes even pushed the envelope of what sounds could be heard on a classicist rock album, especially on her self-titled sophomore effort. All of this made Crow one of the most dependable stars of the decade, and she showed no signs of relinquishing her hard-won success in the new millennium.

Sheryl Suzanne Crow was born February 11, 1962, in Kennett, MO. Her parents had both performed in swing orchestras, her father on trumpet and her mother as a singer her mother was also a piano teacher, and ensured that all her daughters learned the instrument starting in grade school. Crow wrote her first song at age 13, and majored in music at the University of Missouri, where she also played keyboards in a cover band called Cashmere. After graduating, she spent a couple of years in St. Louis working as a music teacher for autistic children. She sang with another cover band, P.M., by night, and also recorded local advertising jingles on the side. In 1986, Crow packed up and moved to Los Angeles to try her luck in the music business. She was able to land some more jingle-singing assignments, and got her first big break when she successfully auditioned to be a backup singer on Michael Jackson's international Bad tour. In concert, she often sang the female duet part on I Just Can't Stop Loving You, and was inaccurately rumored by the tabloids to have been Jackson's lover. After spending two years on the road with Jackson, Crow resumed her search for a record deal, but found that record companies were only interested in making her a dance-pop singer, which was not at all to her taste.

Frustrated, Crow suffered a bout of severe depression that lasted around six months. She revived her career as a session vocalist, however, and performed with the likes of Sting, Rod Stewart, Stevie Wonder, Foreigner, Joe Cocker, Sinad O'Connor, and Don Henley, the latter of whom she toured with behind The End of the Innocence. She also developed her songwriting skills enough to have her compositions recorded by the likes of Wynonna Judd, Celine Dion, and Eric Clapton. Thanks to her session work, she made a connection with producer Hugh Padgham, who got her signed to A&M. Padgham and Crow went into the studio in 1991 to record her debut album, but Padgham's pop leanings resulted in a slick, ballad-laden record that didn't reflect the sound Crow wanted. The album was shelved, and fearing that she'd let her best opportunity slip through her fingers, Crow sank into another near-crippling depression that lingered for nearly a year and a half. However, thanks to boyfriend Kevin Gilbert, an engineer who'd attempted to remix her ill-fated album, Crow fell in with a loose group of industry pros that included Gilbert, Bill Bottrell, David Baerwald, David Ricketts, Brian MacLeod, and Dan Schwartz. Dubbed the Tuesday Night Music Club, this collective met once a week at Bottrell's Pasadena recording studio to drink, jam, and work out material. In this informal, collaborative setting, Crow was able to get her creative juices flowing again, and the group agreed to make its newest member -- the only one with a recording contract -- the focal point.

Crow and the collective worked out enough material for an album, and with Bottrell serving as producer, she recorded her new official debut, titled Tuesday Night Music Club in tribute. The record was released in August 1993 and proved slow to take off. Lead single Run Baby Run made little impact, and while Leaving Las Vegas attracted some attention, it reached only the lower half of the charts. A&M took one last shot by releasing All I Wanna Do, a song partly written by poet Wyn Cooper, as a single. With its breezy, carefree outlook, All I Wanna Do became one of the biggest summer singles of 1994, falling just one position short of number one. Suddenly, Tuesday Night Music Club started flying out of stores, and spawned a Top Five follow-up hit in Strong Enough (plus another minor single in Can't Cry Anymore). Crow was a big winner at the Grammys in early 1995, taking home honors for Best New Artist, Best Female Rock Vocal, and Record of the Year (the latter two for All I Wanna Do). Her surprising sweep pushed Tuesday Night Music Club into the realm of genuine blockbuster, as its sales swept past the seven million mark. After close to a decade of dues-paying, Crow was a star.

Unfortunately, success came at a price. In 1994, Crow had been invited to perform Leaving Las Vegas on Late Night with David Letterman. In a brief interview segment, Letterman asked if the song was autobiographical, and Crow offhandedly agreed that it was. In actuality, the song was mostly written by David Baerwald, based on the book by his good friend John O'Brien (which had also inspired the film). Having been burned by the industry already, some of the Tuesday Night Music Club took Crow's comment as a refusal to give proper credit for their contributions. Baerwald in particular felt betrayed, and things only got worse when O'Brien committed suicide not long after Crow's Letterman appearance. Although O'Brien's family stepped forward to affirm that Crow had nothing to do with the tragedy, the rift with Baerwald was already irreparable. Some Club members bitterly charged that Crow's role in the collaborative process was rather small, and that the talent on display actually had little to do with her. Tragedy struck again in 1996 when Crow's ex-boyfriend, Kevin Gilbert, was found dead of autoerotic asphyxiation.

Stung by the charges, Crow set out to prove her legitimacy with her second album when the heavy touring for Tuesday Night Music Club finally ended. Bill Bottrell was originally slated to produce the record, but fell out with Crow very early on, and the singer ended up taking over production duties herself. However, she did bring in the noted team of Mitchell Froom and Tchad Blake as assistant producer and engineer, respectively. Froom and Blake were known for the strange sonic experimentation they brought to projects by roots rockers (the Latin Playboys) and singer/songwriters (Richard Thompson, Suzanne Vega), and they helped Crow craft a similarly non-traditional record. Released in the fall of 1996, Sheryl Crow definitely bore the stamp of the singer's personality and songwriting voice, especially in the idiosyncratic lyrics plus, she was now writing mostly with her guitarist, Jeff Trott, proving that she could cut it without her estranged collaborators. The singles If It Makes You Happy, Everyday Is a Winding Road, and A Change Would Do You Good were all radio smashes, and Home also became a minor hit. Sheryl Crow went triple platinum, and Crow brought home Grammys for Best Rock Album and another Best Female Rock Vocal (for If It Makes You Happy).

Crow toured with the Lilith Fair package during the summer of 1997 (the first of several times), and subsequently wrote and performed the title theme to the James Bond film Tomorrow Never Dies. In the fall of 1998, she returned with her third album, The Globe Sessions. A more straightforward, traditionalist rock record than Sheryl Crow, The Globe Sessions didn't dominate the airwaves in quite the same fashion, but it did become her third straight platinum-selling, Top Ten LP, and it won her another Grammy for Best Rock Album. It also spawned two midsized hits in the Top 20: My Favorite Mistake and Anything But Down. In 1999, she contributed a Grammy-winning cover of Guns N' Roses' Sweet Child o' Mine to the soundtrack of the Adam Sandler comedy Big Daddy. She also performed a special free concert in New York's Central Park, with an array of guest stars including Keith Richards, Eric Clapton, Chrissie Hynde, the Dixie Chicks, Stevie Nicks, and Sarah McLachlan. The show was broadcast on Fox and later released as the album Live in Central Park, just in time for the holidays. There Goes the Neighborhood won her another Grammy for Best Female Rock Vocal however, partly because of some shaky performances, the album flopped badly, not even going gold.

Hit with a case of writer's block, Crow took some time to deliver her fourth studio LP. In the meantime, she produced several tracks on Stevie Nicks' 2001 album, Trouble in Shangri-La, and also recorded a duet with Kid Rock, Picture, for his album Cocky. Finally, in the spring of 2002, Crow released C'mon C'mon, which entered the LP charts at number two for her highest positioning yet. It quickly went platinum, and the lead single, Soak Up the Sun, was a Top 20 hit and another ubiquitous radio smash. The follow-up, Steve McQueen, was also a lesser hit. At the beginning of 2005 it was announced that there would be two simultaneously released new albums available by the end of the year. The project was then scaled back to the single-disc Wildflower, which saw release at the end of September. Crow was forced to take time off from her musical career in 2006 after being diagnosed with stage 1 breast cancer. After successful treatment, she returned in 2008 with her sixth studio album, Detours. 100 Miles from Memphis followed in 2010 and featured guest spots from Keith Richards, Justin Timberlake, and Citizen Cope. ~ Steve Huey, Rovi