Can't Cry Anymore

"Can't Cry Anymore"

US 7"/CD single cover art
Single by Sheryl Crow
from the album Tuesday Night Music Club
B-side "We Do What We Can"
Released May 27, 1995 (U.K.)
June 13, 1995 (U.S.)
Format CD single, cassette single
Genre Rock, pop rock
Length 4:31
Label A&M
Songwriter(s) Sheryl Crow, Bill Bottrell
Producer(s) Bill Bottrell
Sheryl Crow singles chronology
"Strong Enough"
(1994)
"Can't Cry Anymore"
(1995)
"If It Makes You Happy"
(1996)

"Strong Enough"
(1994)
"Can't Cry Anymore"
(1995)
"If It Makes You Happy"
(1996)

"Can't Cry Anymore" is a 1995 single by Sheryl Crow from the album Tuesday Night Music Club released on A&M Records. The song reached #36 on Billboard's Hot 100, becoming Crow's third straight Top-40 hit. It also became Crow's highest charting song in Spain.

Track listing

U.K. cassette single and U.K. CD single #1 and (cat. no. 581 055-4/2)

  1. "Can't Cry Anymore"
  2. "All I Wanna Do" - Remix
  3. "Strong Enough" - US Radio Version
  4. "We Do What We Can"

European CD single (cat. no. 581 056-2)

  1. "Can't Cry Anymore"
  2. "I Shall Believe" - Live at the Empire

U.K. CD single #2 and German CD single (cat. no. 581 057-2)

  1. "Can't Cry Anymore"
  2. "What I Can Do for You" - Live at the Borderline
  3. "No One Said It Would Be Easy" - Live in Nashville
  4. "I Shall Believe" - Live at the Empire

U.S. cassette single (cat. no. 31458 0638 4)

  1. "Can't Cry Anymore"
  2. "We Do What We Can"

Australian and U.S. CD singles (cats. no. 581 081-2 and 31458 1081 2)

  1. "Can't Cry Anymore" - LP Version
  2. "No One Said It Would Be Easy" - Live at the Empire
  3. "What I Can Do for You" - Live at the Empire
  4. "I Shall Believe" - Live at the Empire

Charts

Chart (1994) Peak
position
Australia (ARIA) 41
Canada (RPM) 3
Japan (Oricon)[1] 50
Spain (PROMUSICAE)[1] 1
UK Singles Chart 33
US Billboard Hot 100 36
US Top 40 Mainstream (Billboard) 10
US Adult Top 40 (Billboard) 29
US Adult Contemporary (Billboard) 22
US Modern Rock Tracks (Billboard) 38

Critical response

Greg Kot of the Chicago Tribune said the song showed similarities to the Rolling Stones song "Honky Tonk Woman".[2]

References


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