![]() |
|||
|
September 16, 2000
Meeting Crow
Stacey Earle finds a fan in one of music's top recording starsBy IAN NATHANSON
That fan first relayed praise of Simple Gearle through Stacey's older brother, Steve Earle, though she initially took the praise with a grain of salt. As fate would have it, the fan turned out to be none other than Sheryl Crow. "I had heard through the grapevine that (Sheryl) was a fan of that record," Stacey Earle, 39, says down the line from her Nashville home. "And I'd go, 'Yeah, right!' But Steve did one of the ban-landmines concerts with her. He came home ... and said, 'Hey, did you know Sheryl Crow's a big fan of Simple Gearle? She loves that record.' And I went, 'Well, I'll be damned. It's been confirmed.' " Celebrity endorsement While the celebrity endorsement was a wonderful gesture, Earle says that during the sessions for her sophomore album Dancin' With Them That Brung Me, it completely caught her off guard when Crow inquired about a vocal contribution to one of Earle's songs. "Here I am driving down the interstate, I have a cellphone and the thing rings," explains Earle, who plays Barrymore's tomorrow at 7:30 p.m. "I pick up and the person on the other end of the line says, 'Hi, this is Sheryl Crow.' I almost ran off the road, saying, 'Whoa, hold on, hold on' as I was trying to find a place to stop." Heartfelt After a heartfelt conversation, Earle agreed to have Crow add harmonies, harmonium and piano to Kiss Her Goodnight, as a thank-you gesture. In fact, the whole Dancin' With Them That Brung Me disc -- featuring Earle's husband Mark Stuart on guitar and harmonies, Michael Webb on bass and Earle's son Kyle Mims on drums -- could be best described as a thank-you to those fans who bought her first record. Another thank-you song, Promise You Anything, is actually a Steve Earle original dating back to his 1990 album, The Hard Way. The song marked Stacey's first-ever vocal appearance. She would eventually join Steve's band, The Dukes, and also take care of her brother -- not to mention two boys of her own -- during his drug addiction years in the early 1990s. With those dark days long past, Stacey and Steve remain as close as ever. Yet Stacey's main pride and joy -- her own band, The Jewels -- help keep her spirits alive. "I have fun with them," Earle says. "I always tell audiences, 'Give my Jewels a big hand!' And Mark, Kyle and Michael all fall off the back of the stage embarrassed everytime, whispering, 'Quit saying that!' " |
|||