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Crow,Sheryl - Wildflower (CD)

Wildflower
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4.3 out of 5.0 stars 4 Ratings (0 Reviews)

Album Details: Wildflower

Release Date:09/27/2005
Label:Universal Japan
UPC:4988005537522

Other Available Formats: Wildflower

Pro Reviews: Wildflower

  • All Music Guide

    Originally, Sheryl Crow planned to have her followup to 2002's Top Ten hit C'mon, C'mon be two simultaneously released albums, announcing their autumn release at the beginning of 2005, but by the time the fall rolled around, the project had been scaled back to a single album: Wildflower. If C'mon, C'mon was a cheerful, bright record ideal for sunny summer days, Wildflower is its opposite, a warm, introspective record that's tailored for the fall. It's not dissimilar to 1998's The Globe Sessions, which felt like a somber hangover to the wonderfully weird party of her eponymous 1996 second album, but where The Globe Sessions had a weary, heartbroken feel, there's a comfortable, livedin atmosphere and sense of genuine affection on Wildflower. Celebrity press and prerelease hype attributed this lovemad vibe to Crow's romance with cyclist Lance Armstrong the couple announced its engagement the same month Wildflower was released and there surely must be some sort of correlation between Cro...w's personal life and work, but anybody looking for an album explicitly about her relationship with Lance (the way that, say, Eric Benet's Hurricane is all about his divorce from Halle Berry) will be disappointed. There are certainly plenty of songs about love here, but Crow's songs are not about specific events (unless they're neoprotest songs like the lively "Live It Up"). They're openended, so it's easy to hear the record and never think about Armstrong. As a matter of fact, the subjects of the songs matter less than the feel of the album. It's easy to spin Wildflower a couple of times before the songs start to sink in unlike her other records, there's nothing here that immediately grabs your attention, they're all growers but the mood of the record is immediately appealing. That sustained warm, burnished, relaxed feel at once rootsy and upscale, modest and classy is reason enough to return to Wildflower to give the songs a chance to take root, and once they do, the album seems to be one of her most consistent records and one of her best. - 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