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Sheryl Crow - C'mon, C'mon (CD)

C'mon, C'mon
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4.6 out of 5.0 stars 19 Ratings (19 Reviews)

Album Details: C'mon, C'mon

Release Date:04/16/2002
Label:Universal Japan
UPC:4988005537515

Other Available Formats: C'mon, C'mon

User Reviews: C'mon, C'mon

  • Overall:

    Ignore the ass below me

    By Yahoo! Shopping User  Sep 2, 2002

    Sheryl Crow is the best female artist out today. All her 4 albums rock, and they all won Grammys(Well, C'mon C'mon just came out, but I know it will). Sheryl rocks, and uses her potential to her fullest!

  • Overall:

    Wasted Potential

    By Yahoo! Shopping User  Aug 26, 2002

    To me, Sheryl Crow will always be a could've been.She clearly has the potetial to be an influential female artist. I wasn't fond of her debut album, Tuesday Night Music Club, but I thought it showed lots of potential and I expected her to grow as a m...usician and a songwriter.Her second, self titled album was better. Although not necesarily a strong album, she was getting better and writting some better songs. I thought "If It Makes You Happy" was a very good song.But then her 3rd album, the Globe Sessions, came out. She was regressing. Lyricaly it was stupid and musically bland.Now she has put out C'mon C'mon and has clearly lost her way. Although it was a big hit, Soak Up the Sun was nothing more than Beach Boys influenced ear candy. Steve McQueen is a dumb song too.Sheryl Crow just frustrates me. I know she has it in her. She shown signs of it in the past. But she sells her self out to be commercial. That's her downfall. Read more Less

Pro Reviews: C'mon, C'mon

  • All Music Guide

    It's hard to call The Globe Sessions a stumble, but its strippeddown, straightforwardness paled in comparison to the dark pop culture kaleidoscope of Sheryl Crow's eponymous second album. That's why C'mon, C'mon, Crow's longdelayed fourth album, is such a delight it's the sunny flip side of that masterpiece, a skillful synthesis of classic rock and modern sensibilities that's pretty irresistible. Crow has turned into the professional she always acted she was she not only crafts songs impeccably, she knows how to record them, filling the record with interesting sonic details, whether it's the Steve Millerstyled "Woo Hoo"s on "Steve McQueen" or subtle Mellotrons on "Over You." That kind of sly sonic adventure was missing from Globe Sessions, as was her predilection for almostabsurd lyrical asides check the digital cable reference on the lead single, "Soak Up the Sun," along with its opening line of "My friend, the communist" and the return of both makes C'mon, C'mon a delightful retu...rn to form. There's so much to enjoy on the surface of the record, particularly in its unashamed glossy sheen and classically structured hooks, that it's easy to enjoy just on that level, yet it also works as a set of songs nearly as consistent and rich as those on her second album. Where Sheryl Crow was a quintessential fall album even at its happiest, there was an undercurrent of melancholy and weariness this is a record designed for the sunkissed open road of spring and summer. Even when she's singing about heartache, there's an assured sense of purpose, even a swagger, to this album that shines through. Yet it doesn't just work a mood, it showcases her skills at a peak. It's Sheryl Crow at her best, delivering music that is firmly rooted in the past, yet recorded and performed with a modern feel and flair, something that was absent from The Globe Sessions. It's pretty much what the followup to Sheryl Crow should have been and what she needed to release for her fourth album, but even better than expected. - Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Sheryl Crow

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, goodtime rockers and worldweary ballads were radio staples for much of the '90s, and she was a perennial favorite at... Read more