TV-MA | 1h 34m | Documentary | May 6, 2022 Most people became aware of Sheryl Crow via her 1993 debut album, “Tuesday Night Music Club” with the hit song “All I Wanna Do.” I really became aware of her while watching “Woodstock 1994” on VHS about a year after thinking I should have fled Manhattan and attended the concert.
She was wearing bright yellow pants and singing a slow song, and I remember finding the song boring but her stage presence electrifying. Her huge charisma is closely tied to her signature voice quality, which I’ve always defined as a blend of the fascinating nonchalance of that kind of prettiest, coolest, beat-of-her-own-drum artsy girl in high school, who had zero patience for cheerleading, combined with an ability to do a James Brown scream, except with an alluring, muted, girly-girl coyness—with vicious musical chops. And guitar-hero moves. Sheryl Crow onstage at Woodstock ’94 was the personification of a rock star, although she wasn’t one yet….