Metascore
69

Generally favorable reviews - based on 10 Critic Reviews

Critic score distribution:
  1. Positive: 6 out of 10
  2. Negative: 0 out of 10
Buy Now
Buy on
  1. Mojo
    Apr 25, 2017
    60
    There are good songs here, but it sometimes sounds like Sheryl is trying too hard to turn back the clock. [Jun 2017, p.87]
  2. Apr 20, 2017
    60
    Love Will Save the Day is touching, not trite, and if there isn’t an obvious smash in the mould of All I Wanna Do or If It Makes You Happy, Be Myself certainly punches its weight in sass.
  3. Apr 20, 2017
    60
    Be Myself is hardly a classic, but it's another solid, light-hearted sounding collection with some clear standouts on it.
  4. Apr 20, 2017
    60
    She aims directly at the torn-and-frayed guitar groove of her Nineties records, but with flourishes of her recent detours into Memphis soul and Nashville country.
User Score
2.5

Generally unfavorable reviews- based on 23 Ratings

User score distribution:
  1. Positive: 4 out of 23
  2. Negative: 16 out of 23
  1. Jun 1, 2022
    0
    she's no brandi carlile for sure, vocally her pipes are not what they used to and she's just boring.
  2. May 14, 2017
    6
    In reverting to a more youthful and retro sound, Sheryl Crow doesn’t find anything magical or exemplary in her run-down song forms andIn reverting to a more youthful and retro sound, Sheryl Crow doesn’t find anything magical or exemplary in her run-down song forms and predictable melodies, and while being cute the album doesn’t necessarily go anywhere of importance. My Score: 106/180 (Okay) = 5.8/10 Full Review »
  3. Apr 24, 2017
    6
    Good but not brilliant.

    The best thing about 'Be Myself' is the fact that it sounds distinctively like Sheryl Crow. An extensive promo tour
    Good but not brilliant.

    The best thing about 'Be Myself' is the fact that it sounds distinctively like Sheryl Crow. An extensive promo tour put great emphasis on how this record would be a return to Crow's rootsy sound from the nineties - I was disappointed as this only seems to be the case with a few tracks.

    The best noise features in the diaphonous outro of 'Long Way Back' while the greatest lyrics smack you in the nose during the first few lines of 'Grow Up'.

    There is however a satisfying theme which webs the songs together. A theme which rejects pretentious modern-day crap like selfies and technology saturation - this will definitely strike as an ear pleaser for nostalgia seekers and hipsters.

    Supreme songs are 'Long Way Back', 'Roller Skate' and 'Grow Up'.
    Full Review »