Shania Twain: Difference between revisions
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===2004—present: ''Greatest Hits''=== |
===2004—present: ''Greatest Hits''=== |
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In [[2004]], she released the ''[[Greatest Hits (Shania Twain album)|Greatest Hits]]'' album, with three new tracks. To date,{{Update after|2008|1|1}} it has sold over 3.5 million copies in the U.S., and over 7.5 million worldwide. The first single, the multi-format duet "[[Party for Two]]", made the country top ten with [[Billy Currington]], while the pop version with [[Sugar Ray]] lead singer [[Mark McGrath]] made top ten in the United Kingdom and Germany. The follow-up singles, "[[Don't!]]" and "[[I Ain't No Quitter]]" didn't fare as well, the former made top twenty AC, while the latter didn't gain enough airplay to even crack the country top 40. |
In [[2004]], she released the ''[[Greatest Hits (Shania Twain album)|Greatest Hits]]'' album, with three new tracks. To date,{{Update after|2008|1|1}} it has sold over 3.5 million copies in the U.S., and over 7.5 million worldwide. The first single, the multi-format duet "[[Party for Two]]", made the country top ten with [[Billy Currington]], while the pop version with [[Sugar Ray]] lead singer [[Mark McGrath]] made top ten in the United Kingdom and Germany. The follow-up singles, "[[Don't!]]" and "[[I Ain't No Quitter]]" didn't fare as well, the former made top twenty AC, while the latter didn't gain enough airplay to even crack the country top 40. |
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Revision as of 06:59, 24 September 2007
Shania Twain |
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Shania Twain, OC (born Eilleen Regina Edwards, August 28, 1965, Windsor, Ontario) is a Canadian singer and songwriter in the country and pop music genres. Her third album Come on Over is the biggest-selling album of all time by a female musician, and the best-selling album in the history of country music.[1] She is the only female musician to have three albums certified Diamond by the Recording Industry Association of America, and is also the best selling artist in Canada, with all three of her studio albums being certified double diamond by the Canadian Recording Industry Association. Twain has achieved both critical and financial success, having received five Grammy awards, nearly forty BMI Songwriter awards, and selling over 73 million albums worldwide to date.
Shania Twain has developed into being one of the most successful female singers. She has become one of the hightest album selling female artists in North America, and has become the third most successful female artist in Europe, after Madonna and Celine Dion.[citation needed]
Early years
Twain is the daughter of Sharon and Clarence Edwards, who divorced when she was two. Her mother then moved Eilleen and her sister Jill to Timmins, Ontario where her mother met and married Jerry Twain, a native Ojibwa Indian. He then adopted Eilleen, and her name was changed to Eilleen Twain.
One of five children, Eilleen Twain had a hard childhood in Timmins, Ontario. Her parents earned little, and there was often a shortage of food and money in the household. In the remote, rugged community she learned to hunt and to chop wood. [citation needed] Twain began to earn money by singing in local clubs and bars from a very young age to support her family. At one point, while Jerry was at work, her mother drove the family 425 miles to a Toronto homeless shelter for assistance (source: Shania's interview in Readers Digest). [citation needed]
Career as "Eilleen"
At the age of 13, Eilleen Twain was invited to perform on CBC television's Tommy Hunter Show. While attending Timmins High and Vocational School in Timmins, Ontario, she was the singer for a local band called "Longshot" which covered Top 40 music.[citation needed]
In 1984, she sang a duet performance on an album by Canadian musician (and present-day CKTB radio personality) Tim Denis.[2]
When her mother and adoptive father died in a car accident on November 1, 1987, the 21-year-old Twain put her musical career on hold and took care of her family.[citation needed] She and her half-brothers Mark and Darryl, and sister Carrie-Ann moved to Huntsville, Ontario, where she supported them by performing at the nearby Deerhurst Resort.[citation needed]
After "Eilleen" becomes "Shania"
1993: Shania Twain
In 1991, she was invited to record a demo tape in Huntsville, Ontario.[citation needed] That led to her first recording contract with entertainment lawyer Richard Frank, whereupon she changed her name to Shania [Shu-nye-uh] an Ojibwa word which means "On my way".
Twain co-wrote only one of the songs ("God Ain't Gonna Getcha for That") on her self-titled debut album. The album's first two singles, "What Made You Say That" and "Dance with the One That Brought You" peaked at #55 on the Billboard Country Charts. By the end of 1993 the album had sold fewer than 250,000 copies.
That same year, Twain sang harmony vocals on Sammy Kershaw's Haunted Heart album.
1995—1996: The Woman in Me
When rock producer Robert John "Mutt" Lange heard Twain's original songs and singing, he offered to produce her and to write songs with her. After many telephone conversations, they met in person at Nashville's Fan Fair in June 1993.[citation needed]
Lange and Twain started working on a second album, and in 1995 The Woman in Me produced her first #1 single, "Any Man of Mine". The album topped the country charts for months and crossed over to mainstream charts, peaking at No. 5. As of 2007 it has sold more than 12 million copies. The Woman in Me won the Grammy Award for Best Country Album as well as the Academy of Country Music award for Album of the Year; the latter group also awarded Twain as Best New Female Vocalist.
1997—2000: Come on Over
In 1997, Twain released her follow-up album, Come on Over. This was the album that established Twain as a successful crossover singer. Slowly, the album started racking up sales. It never hit the top spot, but with the multi-chart hit single "You're Still the One", sales skyrocketed. Songs like "Don't Be Stupid", "Honey, I'm Home", "Man! I Feel like a Woman!", "That Don't Impress Me Much" and "From This Moment On" joined the 12 songs that eventually saw release as singles.
The album stayed on the charts for the next two years. Come on Over had sold 20 million copies in the United States and 34 million worldwide, making it the biggest-selling album of all time by a female musician, and the biggest-selling country album of all time.[1]
Songs from the album won four Grammy Awards over the next two years, including Best Country Song for Twain and Lange for "You're Still the One" and "Come on Over" and Best Female Country Performance for "You're Still the One" and "Man! I Feel Like a Woman!".
Despite the album's sale record it wasn't able to top the Billboard 200, reaching a peak of #2. In 1999, the "Come on over" album was remixed for the European market as a pop version with less country instruments and actually gave her the big breakthrough in whole Europe. "Come on over" went to No.1 on the UK album charts for 11 weeks. It became the biggest selling album of the year in Great Britain and a bestseller in other big European markets as well, selling more than 1 million copies in both, the UK and Germany. The songs that had finally put the huge European attention to the album had been the (both pop remixed)singles "That don't impress me much", a No.3 in the UK and Top 10 hit in Germany in summer of 1999 and "Man! I feel like a woman!", peaking at No.3 in both, the UK and France in autumn. Additionally, the album set the record for the longest ever stay in the Top 20 of The US Billboard 200, remaining in the Top 20 for 99 weeks.
Twain's mainstream pop acceptance was further helped by her appearance in the 1998 first edition of the VH1 Divas concert, where she sang alongside Mariah Carey, Céline Dion, Gloria Estefan and Aretha Franklin and by VH1's 1999 heavily-aired Behind the Music treatment of her, which concentrated on the tragic aspects of her early life as well as her physical attractiveness and Nashville's early resistance to her bared-midriff music videos.
In 1998, Twain launched her first major concert tour, aided by her manager Jon Landau, a veteran of many large-scale tours with Bruce Springsteen. The Come on Over Tour shows were enthusiastically received by audiences around the globe and answered critics[who?] who speculated that she could not perform live.
2002—2004: Up!
After a two year break, Twain went back into the studio, along with a management change (Twain dropped Landau and went with QPrime), and recorded her latest CD. Up! was released on November 19, 2002. About a year later, she staged the Up! Tour to promote it.
Up! was released as a double album, with three different "remix" discs - pop (a red CD), country (a green CD) and Indian/Asian (a blue CD). For North American markets, the pop disc was paired with the country disc and in international markets, the pop disc was paired with the Indian/Latin disc. The Indian/Latin disc was recorded in Mumbai, India. Up! was given 4 out of 5 stars by Rolling Stone magazine, and debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard albums chart, selling 874,000 in the first week alone. It charted at the top for five weeks. The success of the albums pop version outide the US was equally amazing when "Up!" reached No.1 in Germany, No.2 in Australia and the Top Five in the UK and France. Especially in Germany it became a real longseller, certified quadruple platinum and stayed in the Top 100 for 1 and a half year.
The first single from the album "I'm Gonna Getcha Good!", became a modest country hit in the US, but only made the Top 40 on the pop charts. It was a much bigger hit on the other side of the atlantic, released in a pop version, the single hit the Top Five in the UK and Australia as well as the Top 15 in Germany and France. The follow-up single "Up!" reached the top 15 in the US country charts but failed to reach the pop top 40.
The second European single became the mid tempo song "Ka-Ching!"(which was never released as a single in North America) with lyrics where Shania was criticising that money makes the world go around. The song eventually became another smash it in the important European markets, reaching No.3 in Germany, the UK Top 10 and the Top 15 in France.
The third single from the album would be the most successful in the US. The romantic ballad "Forever and for Always" was released as a single in April 2003 and peaked at number four on the country chart and number one on the Adult Contemporary chart, and made as well the Billboard Top 20. Again success was even bigger on the other side of the Atlantic with "Forever and for always" again reaching the Top 10 in both, the UK and Germany. Further singles were "She's Not Just a Pretty Face" a country top-ten hit, while the last US single, "It Only Hurts When I'm Breathing", made the top 20 on both Country and AC.
Due to the enormous European success of UP! and its first 3 singles, 2 more singles were released in the 2nd half of 2003 with up-tempo "Thank you baby" (No.11 in the UK, Top 20 in Germany) and just before Christmas the romantic, acoustic ballad "When you kiss me", at least a minor hit in both territories. The title track "Up!" also saw a single release in a limited edition of European countries, such as Germany, in early 2004.
To date[needs update], Up! has sold 5.5 million copies in the U.S. (Certified by the RIAA as 11 times platinum due to the organization's rules regarding double albums, which are counted as 2 units for certifications) and over 17 million copies worldwide.
In 2003, Twain participated in the Dolly Parton tribute album, Just Because I'm a Woman, covering Parton's classic "Coat of Many Colors", as a duet with Alison Krauss & Union Station. The cover peaked at #57 on the US Country charts as an album cut.
During the Super Bowl XXXVII halftime show Twain performed two songs, "Man! I Feel Like a Woman!" and "Up!".
2004—present: Greatest Hits
In 2004, she released the Greatest Hits album, with three new tracks. To date,[needs update] it has sold over 3.5 million copies in the U.S., and over 7.5 million worldwide. The first single, the multi-format duet "Party for Two", made the country top ten with Billy Currington, while the pop version with Sugar Ray lead singer Mark McGrath made top ten in the United Kingdom and Germany. The follow-up singles, "Don't!" and "I Ain't No Quitter" didn't fare as well, the former made top twenty AC, while the latter didn't gain enough airplay to even crack the country top 40.
In August 2005, when Twain hit 40, she released the single "Shoes" from the Desperate Housewives soundtrack.
At the Academy of Country Music Awards in Las Vegas on May 16, 2007, Twain said that she was currently writing songs for a new album, and that she is doing a "lot of soul searching" and "indulging in the writing". When asked with new music will come out she said "next year".[3]
Shania Twain will be featured on a duet with Canadian country star Anne Murray on her upcoming duets album.[4]
Discography
Personal life
Twain's embrace of her adoptive father's Ojibwa heritage has not been without controversy among members of the Canadian First Nations, with some claiming[who?] that a non-Ojibwa adopted by an Ojibwa parent cannot be considered a true Ojibwa. Shania's response to such criticism is: "I don't know how much Indian blood I actually have in me, but as the adopted daughter of my father Jerry, I became registered as a 50% North American Indian ... That is my heart and my soul, and I'm very proud of it."[5]
Shania married music producer Robert John "Mutt" Lange on December 28, 1993. The couple have a son, Eja D'Angelo (pronounced "Asia"), born on August 12, 2001.[6] Twain and her family currently reside in Switzerland and New Zealand.
Twain's commercial ventures outside of the music industry include a series of cosmetic ads in 1999 based on "Man! I Feel Like a Woman!" for Revlon. In 2005, Twain partnered with COTY for the creation of her fragrance Shania by Stetson. In November 2005, Twain appeared on an episode of the reality show The Apprentice. In September 2007, Twain released a second fragrance from COTY called, "Shania Starlight by Stetson".[7]
She is a vegetarian.[8]
Awards and honors
In addition to her various awards for her singles and albums, Twain has received a number of personal honors:
- She was named the 1999 Entertainer of the Year by both the Academy of Country Music and the Country Music Association; Twain was the first non-US citizen to win the CMA award.
- In 2003, Twain was inducted into Canada's Walk of Fame.[9]
- The city of Timmins renamed a street for her, gave her the key to the city, and built the Shania Twain Centre in her honour.[10]
- On November 18, 2005, Twain was invested as an Officer in the Order of Canada.[11]
References
- ^ a b Twain, Shania. "Biography". Shania: The Official Site. Retrieved 2007-08-22.
- ^ http://www.610cktb.com/shows/510269
- ^ GAC Video
- ^ Anne Murray Releases Special Duets Album Entitled "Anne Murray Duets: Legends & Friends"
- ^ http://shaniatwainnews.20m.com/favorite_links.html
- ^ http://www.canadianliving.com/CanadianLiving/client/en/Family/DetailNews.asp?idNews=238163&pg=5&
- ^ Official Starlight press release
- ^ http://www.goveg.com/feat/sexiestveg2007/
- ^ Shania Twain in Canada's Walk of Fame
- ^ http://www.shaniatwaincenter.com
- ^ http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/20051118/shania_twain_051118/20051118?hub=Canada CTV
External links
- Official website
- Shania Twain QPrime Management
- Shania Twain from Universal Music Group Nashville
- Articles with specifically marked weasel-worded phrases from July 2007
- Wikipedia articles in need of updating from January 2008
- Ontario musicians
- Canadian country singers
- Canadian female singers
- Canadian pop singers
- Canadian singer-songwriters
- 1965 births
- Living people
- People from Windsor, Ontario
- People from Timmins, Ontario
- Grammy Award winners
- Canada's Walk of Fame
- Juno Award winners
- Officers of the Order of Canada