Given how close the album is to being released, wonder why there has not been anymore dates scheduled for appearances in the U.S. After all, the U.S. is by far her biggest market.
The two country stars are headed to “The Ellen DeGeneres Show.”
By Charles Suchs | Headline Planet | September 15, 2017
Two popular female country stars — one fairly new to the scene, the other a genre icon — are headed to “The Ellen DeGeneres Show.”
Tentative listings issued to TV providers say Ballerini, the former, will appear on the September 27 episode. Shania Twain, the latter, is set for the September 29 broadcast.
The listings do not specify either artist’s role for the shows, but both will presumably be performing. Additional details will be provided upon availability.
It is of course worth noting that “Ellen” lineups tend to be very subject to change. Headline Planet will provide an update in the event either performance is moved.
We'll have to wait and see the next couple days but it doesn't look like Shania will be performing on the live "America's Got Talent" finale show Wednesday night. She isn't listed on my DirecTV on-screen program guide.
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Tommy's #1 SHANIA TWAIN SuperSite shaniasupersite.com Our eyes are closed, but we're not asleep, We're wide awake beneath the sheets
We'll have to wait and see the next couple days but it doesn't look like Shania will be performing on the live "America's Got Talent" finale show Wednesday night. She isn't listed on my DirecTV on-screen program guide.
We'll have to wait and see the next couple days but it doesn't look like Shania will be performing on the live "America's Got Talent" finale show Wednesday night. She isn't listed on my DirecTV on-screen program guide.
And this event isn't also in Derek Frank's list.
That's true. Yesterday it was still listed on his "Calendar" page and now he removed it...
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Tommy's #1 SHANIA TWAIN SuperSite shaniasupersite.com Our eyes are closed, but we're not asleep, We're wide awake beneath the sheets
Shania was just on "America's Got Talent". She sang "You're Still The One" with a female contestant who is deaf then Shania sang "Life's About To Get Good".
Official "AGT" videos
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Tommy's #1 SHANIA TWAIN SuperSite shaniasupersite.com Our eyes are closed, but we're not asleep, We're wide awake beneath the sheets
Based on how well her single is doing on the AC charts in the USA she picked the right song choice which was life's about to get good. She looked beautiful as well
Shania Twain on her songwriting: "I just sort of wrote myself out of my misery"
CBS News | September 22, 2017
Shania Twain with correspondent Lee Cowan, at the singer's studio, at her home in the Bahamas.
Country music superstar Shania Twain opens up to Lee Cowan about her music, her songwriting process after divorce, her childhood and more in an interview for CBS' "Sunday Morning," to be broadcast on the show's 40th season premiere on September 24.
Twain, who with ex-husband producer Mutt Lange was behind some of the biggest songs of the late 1990s and early 2000s (including "Man! I Feel Like a Woman" and "Any Man of Mine"), is back with her first new album in 15 years. It's also the first album without Lange's studio expertise.
"I was now, for the first time in many years, standing on my own as a creative, artistic, recording artist," Twain told Cowan.
She admits she had self-doubt, but she was also determined to overcome those feelings. "As the songwriting evolved, I just sort of wrote myself out of my misery," she said.
Cowan catches up with Twain at her home in the Bahamas, where she spent two years working on her new album. Twain reveals she wrote many of the songs in a bathroom overlooking the ocean, in what she described as her "contemplative space."
Twain also talks with Cowan about her childhood; singing in dive bars when she was eight years-old; the loss of her parents; and finding love after divorce with Fred Thiebaud.
Cowan asked if she ever pinches herself, considering her successful career and lifestyle. "I do, I do," Twain replied. "But there's also another part of me that says, 'You know what? I worked really hard, and there's part of me that feels like I deserve it.'"
The Emmy Award-winning "CBS Sunday Morning," hosted by Jane Pauley, is broadcast on CBS Sundays beginning at 9:00 a.m. ET. Executive producer is Rand Morrison.
CBS Sunday Morning was an 8-minute segment of Shania's life story we've heard 1,000 times. Nothing about new music except saying NOW is her first album in 15 years. They showed some clips of Stagecoach, Shania's house/recording studio in the Bahamas, and Shania and Fred playing tennis and walking on the beach.
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Tommy's #1 SHANIA TWAIN SuperSite shaniasupersite.com Our eyes are closed, but we're not asleep, We're wide awake beneath the sheets
A country mile -- and more -- separates singer Shania Twain from the health crisis that threatened her career a few years ago. She talks about the road back this morning with Lee Cowan:
"I like being close to the fans, physically. I like touching them, I just like that. I'm just one of them, and then I forget about who I am."
Those fans have waited a long time for Shania Twain to put out some new music. But a series of personal setbacks left the country music megastar feeling less like songwriting, and more like hiding away.
"Getting a divorce with the person that you work with for 15 years of your life, is getting a divorce from every element of your life," she said.
Legendary rock producer Mutt Lange, known for his work with Def Leppard and AC/DC, had been her partner both in music and in marriage. Together they created some of the biggest hits of the '90s -- many of them empowering anthems, such as "Man! I Feel Like a Woman."
Shania Twain was the Queen of Country Pop, blending her lyrics with Lange's Southern rock roots to earn her five Grammys and unrivaled popularity. To this day, she remains the best-selling female country music singer ever.
But their hit-making collaboration ended -- and so did their marriage, after Twain says Lange had an affair with one of her best friends.
"I was now, for the first time in many years, standing on my own as a creative, artistic, recording artist," Twain said.
"Was there a part of you that wondered if you could do it?" Cowan asked.
"There was self-doubt, for sure, but I was going to overcome that. That was my determination. I'm like, I am not going to let that stand in my way. I just have to try this."
The result? "Now," Twain's first studio album in 15 years. The first single is aptly called "Life's About to Get Good."
Oh! Life's about joy, life's about pain It's all about forgiving and the will to walk away I'm ready to be loved, and love the way I should Life's about, life's about to get good.
"As the song writing evolved, I just sort of wrote myself out of my misery," she said.
She spent two years working on the album at her island getaway in the Bahamas. She wrote mostly from her second-floor window in her "other studio."
Yes, her bathroom. It's not about the acoustics in here, or the view; it's about the solitude.
Cowan asked, "You need that sort of isolation so that you can sing it out loud and have nobody judge or hear?"
"Exactly. Exactly. I need to just make mistakes."
It's a lifestyle that doesn't just look exotic -- it is, and she makes no apologies.
Cowan asked, "Do you kind of pinch yourself that this is your life, that this is where you live?"
"I do, but there's also another part of me that says, You know what? I worked really hard, and there's a part of me that feels like I deserve it."
Twain grew up Eileen Edwards in Ontario, Canada. Her family had little money -- she went to school hungry most days -- and she says her mother, Sharon, suffered frequent abuse at the hands of her stepfather.
"I remember so often the police coming in and, you know, banging in the door and the radios radios going and the guns, and you're just a child," she said. "It's just like a war zone."
"But as all of that was going on, it didn't sound like you really told anybody about it. You just kept it all inside?"
"You're afraid to tell anybody, because you think you're going to get taken away."
As therapy, she would grab her guitar and head out into the Canadian woods. By the time she was eight, her mother had her singing in dive bars.
"The performance scared the heck out of me," Twain said.
"You didn't like being on stage?"
"I didn't like being the center of attention, period. First of all, I was an ugly kid, okay? So I was very insecure. I really was, oh my gosh!"
"I've seen pictures -- you were not an ugly kid!"
"My teeth were all spaced out, and my hair was frizzy …"
"So, did you feel as if your mom was pushing you on stage?"
"Yes, of course my mother was pushing me! My mother was definitely a stage mom."
But when Twain was just 22, her mother and her stepfather were both killed in a car accident -- a blow that almost stopped her from pursuing music altogether.
"It was very shortly after my parents died, a friend of my parents, she said, 'You can't quit music. You've got to do something about this.'"
Eventually she moved to Nashville, but she wasn't like most country artists at the time. She had a different sound, and a different look.
Cowan asked, "Did you feel like it was a risk? Did you feel like you were out on a limb?"
"I was told I was out on a limb!" Twain laughed. "'Belly button' and all this stuff."
"Your midriff was the topic of a lot of conversation."
"I had no idea it was going to be such a problem!"
Her c0cktail of sex and songwriting worked. Her career skyrocketed, but she wasn't feeling it. "I was confused a lot of the time by, you know, Why am I so unhappy? Why am I so miserable?" she said. "I have everything that anybody could ever want. I should be just jumping for joy at all these things."
Instead of enjoying the success, she worked harder … and then came a wake-up call: She noticed her voice wasn't sounding the same. "I couldn't get any volume, and when I did it was just this really witchy sort of crying sound. It was awful."
It's a condition called dysphonia -- a side-effect, she thinks, of Lyme disease. It almost ended her career.
"I went through a phase of letting go and grieving over that loss, that I would never be a singer again," she said.
"That's huge."
"It is huge. It was terrible. It was really, really, really a terrible thing."
Years of vocal therapy brought her voice back. It's a little lower than it used to be, she says, but good enough that she mounted a successful two-year run in Las Vegas.
And her voice wasn't all she found…
She found love again, too, but with a tantalizingly complicated twist. In 2011 she married Fred Thiebaud, the former husband of the woman she claims had an affair with her first husband.
"I didn't feel like jumping back into marriage myself," Thiebaud told Cowan.
"Either, yeah," Twain added.
"I was a little careful, too," Thiebaud said. "I'm like, Okay, where is this going?"
Cowan asked, "Was there a moment you remember that it switched from being a friend to something more?"
"There was a moment, for sure," Twain replied. "It was the first time that we kissed. I just never felt like that ever before in my life. And I thought to myself, How could I have not seen you this way before? And I said that to him: 'How could I have not seen you all these years?' And he said, 'Because you weren't looking.'"
After a patch of rough sailing, at 52 Shania Twain seems to have finally found some calmer seas -- a chance to find her course again, with music as her compass.
Strange. Shania isn't listed on any shows this week (repeats air on Friday). Macklemore is scheduled on the 27th. The show is taped and airs the same night (like when Shania was on in April for Stagecoach). Unless she tapes the performance on the 27th but it doesn't air until the 28th for some reason. Maybe she'll be added to the list later.
Shania will be on "CMT Hot 20 Countdown" this weekend. The show airs Sep. 30 & Oct. 1 at 9:00am ET/PT.
Shania Twain Says Now Is Her Truth
Exclusive CMT Hot 20 Countdown Interview Airs Sept. 30 and Oct. 1
By Lauren Tingle | CMT | September 26, 2017
When Shania Twain reminisces about her iconic “Man I Feel Like a Woman” music video, she sees herself as an artist delivering a message of empowerment.
The treatment was based on Robert Palmer’s video for his 1986 No. 1 “Addicted to Love” and has Twain working her microphone in a black top hat, corset, men’s shirt and short skirt while being surrounded by a band of stoic and chiseled male models.
That exact costume she wore for the video is currently on display at her Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum exhibit, Shania Twain: Rock This Country, which runs through July 15, 2018.
“It was really fun to create a character that represented the song and my spirit,” Twain tells CMT’s Hot 20 Countdown. “It was a good mix of female empowerment, strength and beauty.”
Twain’s new album Now, her first album in 15 years, offers more of an inside look at that same independent spirit. Available Sept. 29, the album’s 11 songs including her latest hit “Life’s About to Get Good,” are Twain originals without any outside co-writers or contributors. She describes the music as her most soul-baring material to date.
“It’s the most honest album I’ve ever done,” she says. “If you’re collaborating with somebody they’re suggesting, ‘Maybe we go this way, [or] maybe we go that way,’ and they are [contributing] their own feelings, their own thoughts. So, of course it won’t be pure to one person. And plus, I was just at a point in my life where everything had a lot of layers of experiences I had built up, and I was just ready to unload it all, and that’s what this is.”
“Poor Me” offers lyrics that address the downfall of her first marriage with her longtime producer, Robert Mutt Lange. In May 2008, she announced their separation, and a month later, she and Lange were on the cover of a People magazine that said his affair with an assistant destroyed their marriage.
She writes in “Poor Me,” “I wish he never met her and everything would be the way it was.” In her Hot 20 interview, she describes that time in her life as her “lowest low.”
“That’s me and my truth at that moment,” Twain reveals. “Anyone that’s been betrayed and their life is falling apart and … you thought it would last forever and all of a sudden it’s not, that’s how you think. That’s what you think in that moment, so I really did capture a lot of my in-the-moment experiences.”
She describes the opening track “Swingin’ With My Eyes Closed” as the story of her life.
“I was born fighting,” she says. “We all are. Our eyes are closed and our fists are in the air. We’re all born fighters and survivors. I’ve lived my whole life — a lot of it — with my fists forward. And I’m finally at a place where I feel liberation and free to say, ‘I’m just not afraid anymore. I can do this. I got this. I can do this with my eyes closed.’ It’s sort of the new phase of the fighter me.”
She adds her family is always a perpetual source of inspiration for her music. Her son with Lange, Eja, turned 16 in August, and New Year’s Day 2018 marks seven years of marriage with her current husband Frédéric Thiébaud.
“I love my domestic life,” she says. “I love being a normal, everyday person, and I draw my inspiration for everything from there. And then I isolate myself to get creative, and it all comes together in those moments.”
Twain’s NOW Tour will make 32 stops in the U.S. and 14 stops in Canada starting May 3, 2018 in Tacoma, Washington.
She will appear on an all-new CMT Hot 20 Countdown airing Sept. 30 and Oct. 1 at 9 a.m. ET.
Shania is taping her performance on "The Late Late Show with James Corden" tonight...
From Cory Churko on Facebook:
It's about to go down.. Special welcome to our extended bandmates Charlean Carmon, Kenya Hathaway and Sharlotte Gibson!
Austin Clark Derek Frank Joshua Ray Gooch Elijah Wood
#jamescorden #latelateshow #cbsstudios — at CBS Television City.
Someone who went to last night’s James Corden taping said that Shania performed both “Swingin’” and LATGG. She had to do LATGG twice due to technical issues. And they also filmed a segment where she picks out what she is going to wear.
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Tommy's #1 SHANIA TWAIN SuperSite shaniasupersite.com Our eyes are closed, but we're not asleep, We're wide awake beneath the sheets
REMINDER: Shania will be performing on "The Late Late Show with James Corden" tonight at 12:35am ET/PT | 11:35pm CT on CBS. (The show was taped on September 27.)
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Tommy's #1 SHANIA TWAIN SuperSite shaniasupersite.com Our eyes are closed, but we're not asleep, We're wide awake beneath the sheets
Watch Shania Twain on Kix TV. In Part 1 of this visit, Shania talks about her residency at Caesars Palace. Plus, Shania goes in-depth about her songwriting process and why her music has such a broad appeal.
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Tommy's #1 SHANIA TWAIN SuperSite shaniasupersite.com Our eyes are closed, but we're not asleep, We're wide awake beneath the sheets
Watch Shania Twain on Kix TV. In Part 2 of this visit, Shania details her passion for cooking. Plus, Shania and Kix continue their conversation about songwriting.
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Tommy's #1 SHANIA TWAIN SuperSite shaniasupersite.com Our eyes are closed, but we're not asleep, We're wide awake beneath the sheets