Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Binding: Audio CD
EAN: 0606949057428
Format: Live
Label: Interscope Records
Manufacturer: Interscope Records
Number Of Discs: 1
Publisher: Interscope Records
Release Date: December 07, 1999
Studio: Interscope Records
Sales Rank: 21924
MPN: 490574
Disc 1:- Everyday Is A Winding Road
- My Favorite Mistake
- Leaving Las Vegas
- Strong Enough
- It Don't Hurt
- A Change Would Do You Good
- Gold Dust Woman
- If It Makes You Happy
- All I Wanna Do
- Happy
- The Difficult Kind
- White Room
- There Goes The Neighborhood
- Tombstone Blues
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Editorial Review:
Amazon.com: This is how a live album should sound--full of irony, crackling energy, and stellar guest pairings. Those who looked askance when Sheryl Crow--never a girl's girl--joined Lilith Fair for 1999 may develop a different perspective after hearing Central Park. After all, Lilith allowed Crow to share mascara wands and bond with Chrissie Hynde, the Dixie Chicks, and Sarah McLachlan, and they all dropped in for her concert at Central Park. Hynde makes "If It Makes You Happy" into the ultimate bad-girl song, and when Stevie Nicks takes over on "Gold Dust Woman," you can almost feel the wind whipping through her witchy hair. But while Dixie Chick Martie Seidel's fiddle gives "Strong Enough" an authentic country feel, Natalie Maines's leaden vocal drags the scathing feminist tract down to a greeting-card level. And a grizzled-sounding Eric Clapton serves up a tired version of the Cream's "White Room." But Crow is in peak form throughout the 14 songs, exposing herself as a rocker in sheep's clothing who's more than up to the task of taking on the Mick Jagger role in an edgy version of the Stones' "Happy," with Keith Richards as her sidekick. --Jaan Uhelszki
Average Rating: 
Rating: -
Crackling live energy and tremendous singing and playing - note to record company: please release the DVD!
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I had some big expectations for this album but after several listenings, my jaw dropped to the ground and not precisely out of astonishment. Read my gripes below:
Sheryl Crow was not naive when she planned this concert so should have put out a live album performed only by her and her band and not this mess overloading with guest stars. One gets the impression that she didn't feel confident enough to play after huge audiences without outside people's help. To me it's pretty dumb.
What's up with her voice? She must be hoarse or who knows what happened, but you can't hear her without feeling like cringing - same as when the Dixie Chicks take over on vocals for Strong Enough. That voice can grate on anyone's nerves.
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Sheryl Crow and friends live from Central Park is an outstanding live album.
Sheryl has surrounded herself with some of the very best musicians in the world.
She is with the Dixie Chicks doing her own version of Strong Enough. This was before the Dixie Chicks shamed themselves with a remark about George Bush.
Sheryl does many of her best known songs including, Everyday is a Winding Road, My Favorite Mistake,A Change Would do You Good, If it Makes you Happy, All I Wanna Do, and The Difficult Kind.
Among the friends are, Stevie Nicks who does Gold Dust Woman.
Eric Clapton adds White Room from his days with Cream.
Keith Richards does Happy. Sheryl also closes the concert with The Bob Dylan tune, Tombstone Blues..........This ... Read More:
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This album is by far on the greatest recent live recordings. Sheryl Crow demonstrates her influence and talent by putting on an all star show with some of the biggest names in music history. Sheryl shines on her own, singing some of her great hits, but it's the duets that really make the album. My least favorite has to be the Dixie Chicks just because I can't appreciate the country flare they bring to "Strong Enough" but it's still a great version. Chrissie Hynde, one of the album's highlights, brings intense attitude to "If It Makes You Happy", still one of my favorite Sheryl songs. Stevie Nicks remains Stevie Nicks, giving more than enough emotion and flare to her own "Gold Dust Woman." Sarah McLachlan's usually soft voice comes out strong on "The Difficult ... Read More:
Rating: -
Clipped, petite and looking more like a leather bar Anne Murray, Crow drags out the hits and the `friends' for this all-star live bash. Half the album is standard issue and straight ahead stage sweat with the morning beer-buzz afficiando going it alone without a little help from her friends (All I Wanna Do, Everyday Is a Winding Road, A Change Would Do You Good, Leaving Las Vegas). With only slight variations on these overplayed originals (a sychopantic crowd and some tinkering with the rhythms) Crow's solo chores rarely rate more than a grudging ho-hum. The rest of the album is a parade of snap-on tools (Dixie Chicks, Stevie Nicks, Eric Clapton, Sarah McLachlan, Chrissie Hynde) who easily steal the spotlight from their downhome hash-slinging waitress/host. Reduced ... Read More:
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