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Sheryl Crow discography

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Studio albums
  
8

Compilation albums
  
2

Singles
  
30

Live albums
  
2

Music videos
  
31

No. 1 Singles
  
7

Sheryl Crow discography

The discography of Sheryl Crow, an American singer-songwriter, consists of eight studio albums, two live albums, two compilation albums, thirty singles, six promotional singles, seven video albums, and thirty-one music videos. She has sold over 50 million albums worldwide.

Contents

After signing a contract with A&M Records and having her first attempt at a debut record rejected, Crow finally released Tuesday Night Music Club in 1993. It remains her most successful effort to date and one of the best-selling albums of the 1990s, having sold more than ten million copies internationally by the end of the decade. Such hits as "All I Wanna Do", "Strong Enough", and "Can't Cry Anymore" garnered Crow's popularity on radio, while Tuesday Night Music Club became a Billboard 200 mainstay, rising from the debut spot at number 173 to its peak in the top five and spending exactly 100 weeks on the chart. The album also saw success in countries such as Australia and Canada and throughout Europe. In 1995, Crow won three Grammy Awards (out of five nominations), including for Best New Artist.

Her second album, Sheryl Crow, was released in 1996 and debuted at No. 6 on the Billboard 200, becoming Crow's second consecutive top ten album, spending over a year on the chart and ranking as the one of the most sold albums of 1996 and 1997. In less than a year, the album was certified as triple platinum. The album produced five singles: "If It Makes You Happy", "Everyday Is a Winding Road", "Hard to Make a Stand", "A Change Would Do You Good", and "Home", with the first two peaking at Nos. 10 and 11 on the Billboard Hot 100, respectively. The self-titled record remains Crow's most critically acclaimed album to date. Crow won two Grammy Awards for this new effort in 1997 and one additional nomination in 1998. Shortly afterwards, Crow contributed to the Tomorrow Never Dies soundtrack, writing and performing the theme song for the James Bond movie. The song became Crow's fifth top-20 hit in the UK and received nominations for a Golden Globe and a Grammy.

Despite encountering difficulties in recording her third studio album, Crow released The Globe Sessions in 1998. Preceded by the top 20 hit single "My Favorite Mistake", the album debuted at No. 5 on the Billboard 200 and went on to sell more than two million copies in the United States. The Globe Sessions received five Grammy Award nominations, including for Album of the Year, but won only for Best Rock Album. The next year, Crow's rendition of the song "Sweet Child O'Mine" was included in the Big Daddy soundtrack and won a Grammy Award for Best Female Rock Vocal Performance. In addition, Crow released her first live album, recorded at Central Park in the company of guest musicians such as Keith Richards, Stevie Nicks, and Eric Clapton. The album was not as commercially successful as its predecessors, being certified as gold only in Canada but at the same time, garnered Crow three fresh Grammy nominations, winning Best Female Rock Vocal Performance for "There Goes the Neighborhood" in 2000.

C'mon C'mon (2002), her following release, debuted at number two in the US, Canada and United Kingdom. The album became her highest debut in several countries and produced the hit single "Soak Up the Sun". The album helped Crow win an American Music Award and four Grammy Award nominations. Once again, Crow won Best Female Rock Vocal Performance, this time for the second single "Steve McQueen". In 2003, Crow released The Very Best of Sheryl Crow, her first greatest hits compilation. Propelled by the major hit single "The First Cut Is the Deepest", the album went on to sell over four million copies in the United States alone, staying inside the Billboard 200 for 80 weeks and becoming 2004's ninth best-selling album. Crow won two American Music Awards the next year in the categories Favorite Rock/Pop Female Artist and Favorite Adult Contemporary Artist.

Her fifth studio album, Wildflower (2005) debuted at No. 2 on the Billboard 200 and No. 1 on the Canadian Albums chart. The album was certified as platinum in less than a year and spawned the single "Always on Your Side", which became Crow's ninth Billboard Hot 100 top 40 hit. Wildflower received three Grammy nominations. In 2008, Crow released Detours, her first album in three years. Like its last two predecessors, the album debuted at No. 2 on the Billboard 200, remaining on the chart for over 20 weeks and becoming one of the year's best-sold albums. Her seventh studio album, 100 Miles from Memphis, was released in 2010 and became her last album on A&M Records.

After signing with Warner Music Nashville, Crow announced the release of her debut album in the country music format. Her eighth studio album, entitled Feels Like Home, was released September 10, 2013. The lead-off single, "Easy", saw release exclusively to country radio and became Crow's first top 20 country airplay hit.

Other charted songs

  • A "The First Cut Is the Deepest" also reached #35 on the Billboard Hot Country Songs chart.
  • B An alternate version with Alison Moorer instead of Crow was released but is not included on Cocky.
  • Collaborations

  • Michelle Branch "Love Me Like That" (duet)
  • Belinda Carlisle (credited as Cherryl Crowe) "Little Black Book" and "Half the World" [Background vocals]
  • Charlie Worsham "Love Don't Die Easy" [Background vocals]
  • Counting Crows "American Girls" [Background vocals]
  • Stevie Nicks "Sorcerer" [Background vocals & Producer]
  • Dixie Chicks "Travelin' Soldier" and "Landslide" [Producer]
  • Fleetwood Mac "Silver Girl" [Background vocals]
  • Ryan Adams "Two" [Background vocals and harmony]
  • Mick Jagger "Old Habits Die Hard" [duet]
  • "Baby Don't Go" on Dwight Yoakam's Under The Covers
  • "Baby Knows" on Prince's Rave Un2 The Joy Fantastic [Co-lead vocals and harmonica]
  • "Beautiful Pain" on Rosanne Cash's Rules of Travel [Harmony vocal]
  • "Lady, Your Roof Brings Me Down" on Scott Weiland's 12 Bar Blues [Accordion]
  • "Need A Little Love" Miley Cyrus & Sheryl Crow from Hannah Montana Forever
  • "Collide" Kid Rock from Born Free
  • "Run Off To LA" Kid Rock from Kid Rock
  • Johnny Cash on American III: Solitary Man
  • Tony Bennett "The Girl I Love" (duet)
  • Tony Bennett "Good Morning heartache" (duet)
  • Willie Nelson "Faraway places" (duet)
  • References

    Sheryl Crow discography Wikipedia