Shania Twain has released Giddy Up
Shawna Twain's "You're Still the One" was ubiquitous during the late Nineties. The singer wrote the song with her producer and then-husband Mutt Lange. Nearly two decades later, the once-happy partners are no longer together. An extramarital affair influenced much of Twain's comeback album Now.
"Man! I Feel Like a Woman!" is one of Shania Twain and Mutt Lange's most popular songs. The duo's video for the song riffs on Robert Palmer's "Addicted to Love". Even funnier is the Chevrolet truck spot that uses "Man!" for its soundtrack.
The song was a watershed moment for singer-songwriter Shania Twain. It was the second of four singles to do so from her new album, The Woman in Me.
Shawna Twain delivers the knockout line about two thirds of the way through the 1998 Come On Over smash. The music video for the give-no-fucks anthem is one of her most beloved, too. It remains one of Twain's best-performing songs.
Shawna Twain's The Woman In Me is one of her most iconic hits. It was her first single to be certified Gold by the RIAA and co-written with Mutt Lange. The song itself is country gold, complete with clever wordplay and big vocal harmonies.
Shawna Twain's "From This Moment On" reached No. 4 on the Billboard Hot 100. The song is her second follow-up to "You're Still the One". The message was clear: It didn't matter what kind of music she was singing, she was the one singing it.
Shawna Twain's "Any Man of Mine" was the bridge between country and pop. The song went all the way to Number One, priming audiences for the genre-jumping hits to follow. It was produced by Mutt Lange and featured a verse that sounded like Def Leppard's "Let's Get Rocked".
Shawna Twain's "Home Ain't Where His Heart Is (Anymore)" was the album's lead track. It was a bit of a ruse, a moody, vulnerable love song that betrayed the tough-talking independence. But it works so well because it shows both sides of her personality.
"No One Needs to Know" is one of the most genuinely countrified songs on Shania Twain's breakout record, The Woman in Me. The Bakersfield-influenced love song was a rare moment in which she looked to the twangy past for inspiration.
Shania Twain's 1998 hit "Honey, I'm Home" was released during the peak of her career. The song topped the Billboard Hot Country chart on Halloween Day, 1998. When it topped the charts that year, she was playing a sold-out show in Houston.
"The Woman in Me (Needs the Man in You)" is from her 1995 album. Like her first Number One "Any Man of Mine," Twain wrote the song with producer Mutt Lange. "I'm not always strong, and sometimes I'm even wrong," she intones.
Shawna Twain's third country chart-topper in a row from The Woman in Me. Unlike the rest of her breakthrough album, this one was all Mutt Lange. "Get Outta My Dreams (Get Into My Car)" kept it just country enough to extend her winning streak.
"Come On Over" is as perfect a metallic-country mashup as Lange and Twain ever conjured. Producer Robert John "Mutt" Lange was the man who put the bomp into AC/DC, Def Leppard and other massive pop-metal hits.
Shania Twain's Come on Over reached Number Six on the country chart. The fiddle-happy track benefits from the participation of fellow countrymen (and women) in the family band, Leahy. Although not one of Twain's biggest chart hits, it's without question one of her catchiest.
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