According to RoughStock, NOW sold 800 copies (U.S.) in the week ending March 4. This brings the total number copies sold in the U.S. to 219,200. That's not very many considering 137,000 copies were sold the first week.
BILLBOARD UPDATE (week of August 4): Shania's Greatest Hits climbs 2 spots to No. 34 on the Billboard Top Country Albums chart in its 127th overall week on the chart. Meanwhile, Shania's Greatest Hits holds at No. 96 for the second week in a row on the Billboard Canadian Albums chart in its 35th overall week on the chart.
BILLBOARD UPDATE (week of August 11): Shania's Greatest Hits climbs 1 spot to No. 33 on the Billboard Top Country Albums chart in its 128th overall week on the chart. Meanwhile, Shania's Greatest Hits falls back of this week's Billboard Canadian Albums chart.
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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 Twain’s Comeback Makes Her the Ultimate Symbol of Strength
By Jeffrey Davies | The Kelly Alexander Show | August 10, 2018
I fondly recall a time when the world, let alone myself, could not get enough of Shania Twain. Not only was she a gifted vocalist from the very beginning, but almost immediately became a crossover star (conquering the worlds of country, pop, and rock music) and skyrocketed to the top of music charts worldwide. Three of her albums have been certified diamond in the United States (having each sold over 10 million copies), with her third studio album Come On Over becoming the best-selling album by any female artist in any genre in history which, as anyone can figure, is a pretty big deal. Having been born a late ‘90s child, I arrived on the scene right in the middle of Shania Mania and fell deeply in love with her music from a young age. Deeply in love doesn’t even justify it. I was obsessed. I knew all the words to every song and never stopped singing. But as I grew, Shania didn’t follow me: the hits stayed with us, but Twain held back. I never would have guessed that I would have been above legal drinking age before I heard new Shania Twain music again.
Raised in Timmins, Ontario, Shania Twain (born Eilleen) endured a notoriously rough childhood. Her mother and biological father divorced when she was two, and her mother remarried to Jerry Twain, who adopted Shania and her sisters, Jill and Carrie Ann. The household also included their younger half-brother Mark as well as Jerry’s nephew Darryl, whom the family took in. The family’s struggles seemed never-ending: their parents earned very little money, food was very often scarce, and their household was riddled with domestic violence at the hands of their father. Shania was scared to confide to anyone outside of her family about their poverty, fearing the children might be separated. Around 1979, at age 14, Shania insisted that her mother pack up the car with the kids while Jerry was at work, and they drove over 400 miles to a homeless shelter in Toronto for assistance. While her mother would return to Jerry in Timmins two years later, the abuse and poverty never withered. Shania pursued singing and songwriting from an early age, often describing it as her only escape from a world where she experienced too much too young. Her mother would even encourage her daughter’s talents, often spending money the family didn’t have on talent competitions or lessons (which only intensified her father’s abuse), appearing on The Tommy Hunter Show on CBC when she was 13 and performing in bars in Timmins for money as early as 8. She left home after high school and began performing in several bands, but when her parents were both killed in a car accident in 1987, Shania was left as the only person to care for her remaining younger siblings. She returned home and moved her family to Huntsville, Ontario, where she earned a living performing at the Deerhurst Resort. It was there that she found a manager and assembled a demo to send to record labels, gaining the attention of Mercury Nashville Records with whom she would sign in the early ‘90s.
Twain’s self-titled debut studio album, released in 1993, didn’t meet sales expectations and saw little success on the charts, and it didn’t help that several of the album’s tracks had already been released by other artists. Twain later expressed disappointment with her first album, revealing that she had very little creative control and expressed frustration over not being able to showcase her songwriting ability. As she and her management worked tirelessly to promote the underperforming album, Twain met Robert John “Mutt” Lange, a record producer who, at the time, was only known for producing rock songs. They developed a fast connection; not only did they begin working together immediately but they were married in December 1993, six months after first meeting. Record executives were weary of the material they started making, fearing it would deviate too far away from the Nashville sound of their label. Twain’s second studio album The Woman in Me (1995), written entirely by her and Lange, quickly became Shania’s breakthrough: selling over 20 million copies worldwide, the album saw the widespread success of now iconic singles such as “Any Man of Mine,” “Whose Bed Have Your Boots Been Under,” and “(If You’re Not In It For Love) I’m Outta Here.” The Woman in Me also brought Twain countless accolades, most notably the Grammy Award for Best Country Album, and solidified what we now know to be true: Shania was here to stay. While the album explored pop undertones, it would be her follow-up album Come On Over (1997) that would redefine our contemporary definition of pop crossover star, with the album becoming the highest-selling album by any female act in all of history, and the best-selling country album of all-time. Produced and written entirely again by Lange and Twain, Come On Over generated a massive 12 singles released over three years (you surely know them all: “You’re Still the One,” “From This Moment On,” “That Don’t Impress Me Much,” and “Man! I Feel Like a Woman,” among others), and launched Shania to the top of the world (literally). Twain didn’t tour for The Woman in Me, leading to the launch of the Come On Over Tour as her debut concert tour, which sold out worldwide and was one of the highest-grossing concert tours of the decade. By the late ‘90s, you could not discuss country music nor pop music without Shania Twain’s name coming up at least once: she was a country/pop crossover icon and a global superstar. Thus, the phrase: Shania Mania was in full swing.
Twain’s self-titled debut studio album, released in 1993, didn’t meet sales expectations and saw little success on the charts, and it didn’t help that several of the album’s tracks had already been released by other artists. Twain later expressed disappointment with her first album, revealing that she had very little creative control and expressed frustration over not being able to showcase her songwriting ability. As she and her management worked tirelessly to promote the underperforming album, Twain met Robert John “Mutt” Lange, a record producer who, at the time, was only known for producing rock songs. They developed a fast connection; not only did they begin working together immediately but they were married in December 1993, six months after first meeting. Record executives were weary of the material they started making, fearing it would deviate too far away from the Nashville sound of their label. Twain’s second studio album The Woman in Me (1995), written entirely by her and Lange, quickly became Shania’s breakthrough: selling over 20 million copies worldwide, the album saw the widespread success of now iconic singles such as “Any Man of Mine,” “Whose Bed Have Your Boots Been Under,” and “(If You’re Not In It For Love) I’m Outta Here.” The Woman in Me also brought Twain countless accolades, most notably the Grammy Award for Best Country Album, and solidified what we now know to be true: Shania was here to stay. While the album explored pop undertones, it would be her follow-up album Come On Over (1997) that would redefine our contemporary definition of pop crossover star, with the album becoming the highest-selling album by any female act in all of history, and the best-selling country album of all-time. Produced and written entirely again by Lange and Twain, Come On Over generated a massive 12 singles released over three years (you surely know them all: “You’re Still the One,” “From This Moment On,” “That Don’t Impress Me Much,” and “Man! I Feel Like a Woman,” among others), and launched Shania to the top of the world (literally). Twain didn’t tour for The Woman in Me, leading to the launch of the Come On Over Tour as her debut concert tour, which sold out worldwide and was one of the highest-grossing concert tours of the decade. By the late ‘90s, you could not discuss country music nor pop music without Shania Twain’s name coming up at least once: she was a country/pop crossover icon and a global superstar. Thus, the phrase: Shania Mania was in full swing.
Five years would pass before Twain’s next album, Up!, would appear. Released in 2002 and once again produced and written entirely by Twain and her husband, they recorded three versions of the album, color coded: pop (red version), country (green version), and world (blue version). Up! excelled because it combined the successful elements from both The Woman in Me and Come On Over: up-tempo crossover songs with a gentle mix of down to earth and honest country ballads. The album is 19 songs long (an extraordinary length for a country or a pop album, both then and now), and after the conclusion of her Up! Tour in 2004, Twain confirmed that she would take a well-deserved break from making music and, at the time, announced her retirement from performing, citing a weakened singing voice. It marked the beginning of her indefinite hiatus from music: in her autobiography, she wrote that she pushed herself too hard during the Come On Over and Up! eras, being unaccustomed to the rigors and demands of stardom, which caused her singing voice to be severely affected after a certain point. Twain and Lange retired to a quiet life at their home in Switzerland with their son, Eja (pronounced Asia, who was born in 2001), which was a nice existence for Twain, but she felt her husband growing increasingly distant from her (tracing it back to her last tour), and in 2008, she discovered Lange’s affair with his assistant and her best friend, Marie-Anne Thiebaud. Still suffering from the weakened singing voice that caused her to retire from performing years prior, the pain of her husband’s affair led her to fall into a depression that only worsened her vocal condition. “I lost control of my voice and by 2008 I couldn’t project – I couldn’t even call out to the dog,” she said later. “I saw dozens of voice specialists but no one could help me. I initially put it down to exhaustion, thinking, ‘I’m a mother, I’m on the road, I’ve been doing this nonstop for all these years – who wouldn’t be tired?’ But I wasn’t physically tired of the lifestyle, I just couldn’t sing. It was like a part of me had died. I was grieving for the loss of the one thing I really enjoyed. The way I expressed myself was gone. It was devastating.” In 2009, Twain released a letter to her fans, citing personal pains as the reason for her lack of musical output, and a spokesperson from her label later commented that a new album from the singer was “nowhere in sight.” Regardless of the fact that she wasn’t performing or releasing music, Shania had re-entered the pop cultural conversation not only as a victim of heartbreak and betrayal, but as someone whom everyone knew was strong enough to eventually come out clean on the other side.
Twain returned to the limelight in 2011, publishing her autobiography From This Moment On, marrying the ex-husband of her best friend, and revealing that she had a vocal condition called dysphonia (which she also attributes to a previous battle with Lyme disease), and at one point, she believed she would never sing again. In her autobiography, Twain attributes the severe depression she experienced not only to the breakdown of her marriage, but to unresolved issues she had from the domestic violence and extreme poverty she experienced in her childhood (she recently alluded to being a victim of sexual abuse at the hands of her father), the death of her parents, stress from stardom, and then her ultimate divorce. Twain said the divorce caused her to lose her voice, literally and figuratively, and re-open wounds she had never fully healed. “I started peeling back the layers of pain I was in and all the other griefs and disappointments and challenges came to the surface,” she said. “And I thought: ‘I’ve been through worse and it’s time to put it all into perspective.’ When my parents died, I experienced a much deeper grief than even the betrayal. I was just out of myself. When you add shock to grief, it does crazy things to your mind. And that really helped me through – this was not nearly as bad as my parents dying. I survived that and I don’t want to give this so much credit.” She chronicled her vocal rehabilitation on the OWN miniseries Why Not? with Shania Twain, and released her first single in 6 years, “Today Is Your Day,” which she wrote to cheer herself up. By 2012, Shania was ready to return to the concert stage in a Las Vegas residency show, Shania: Still the One, which ran until 2014 for a total of 105 shows. For many, it appeared as though Twain’s time as a recording artist had come to an end, and she was living out her final glory days in Vegas and later on what was billed as her farewell tour in 2015, the North American Rock This Country Tour. But loyal fans (such as myself) held out hope that this wasn’t all Shania had left for us—she teased about writing new material on social media for ages—and in 2017, fifteen years since her last studio release, a new album from Shania Twain finally became a reality: Now.
While the urge to jump for joy was rightly justified, there were important things to acknowledge on Shania’s road to releasing new music. Not only had she finally recovered her voice after years of vocal issues, but several key factors in what catapulted the Shania Twain the world fell in love with to worldwide superstardom were now gone. Not only had she dealt with a multitude of vocal issues, but she had to learn and accept that she was never going to be able to sing like she used to. “I’ve had to accept that my voice will never be the same again. I will never sing my old hits like I used to,” she said. “I’ve had to relearn how to use my voice. When I sing a powerful note, it’s in a different place. It wasn’t until Vegas that I thought about a real comeback. It would have been comfortable to stick with old material, but I had something to say.” As if that wasn’t enough, one key difference in the Shania Twain of today is the absence of her longtime producer—her cheating ex-husband, Mutt Lange. What is important to note is that Lange practically invented the Shania Twain that would go on to sell 75 million albums worldwide and become the highest-selling country music artist of all-time. Before Twain collaborated with Lange, she was just a talented young girl with a label that didn’t know how to use her. Mutt Lange played a large part in Shania’s evolution as an artist, and Now is the first of her albums to not be produced by him since her practically unknown and forgotten 1993 debut album. “Mutt was incredible with the feel and groove of a song,” she wrote in her autobiography, “and my challenge was to write lyrics and melody to his phrasing. As much as I loved Mutt as my husband, it’s possible I admired him even more for the unique way his musical mind worked. It was as though the only person who really had the whole thing in his head all at one time was Mutt.” Still, Twain persevered—she accepted the fact that her voice wasn’t what it once was, found herself some new producers to collaborate with, and wrote her new album entirely by herself. “My new songs are the most personal I have ever shared,” she said. “I’ve written about feeling unappreciated in my marriage and about fighting back against pain. I’ve done my fair share of self-pitying and that’s in there, too. Writing has helped me come to terms with things emotionally. The album is about going from feeling lost to found, from feeling sad to happy. I have learned how vulnerable I can be.” She also acknowledged the anxiety of returning to the music landscape after so long, saying that she had to be emotionally, physically and psychologically prepared: “My biggest fear wasn’t being exposed, it was my voice. I can get away with more when I perform because I can improvise. An album is a bigger commitment because people can analyse it. I had to be sure I was ready.”
Not only was there the pressure of returning to music after fifteen years, but there was the fact that, at one time, Shania Twain was one of the biggest stars in the world, both on the charts and in people’s hearts. No doubt that people would be watching and listening, but she was now having to find her footing in a different aspect of the pop music landscape. Any other pop star who had fifteen years between albums would surely not survive, just based on the politics that demand constant output to keep up with a fickle, youth-obsessed industry. But Shania isn’t just any pop star—she’s Shania freaking Twain, and the popularity of her tours prior to the release of Now let alone her ridiculously endearing greatest hits gave her a different angle to play: nostalgia. But for her loyal fans, the release of a new studio album after so long was nothing short of extraordinary, regardless of the album’s overall quality.
Now was released to mixed reviews, which I can’t say are completely unjustified. As much we can acknowledge that the release of a new album after so long and after enduring more than her fair share of personal and professional pains is transcendent on paper, what our ears hear isn’t always as easy to fall in love with, at least at first. But one thing among critics remained clear: Shania Twain’s artistry did not live and die with Mutt Lange. Not only did she write the album entirely by herself, she co-produced every track on Now, proving that she can still hold her own without her longtime producer and husband who once helped her revolutionize country and pop music. While many applauded her long-awaited return to music, the recurring complaint was Twain’s vocals: the Los Angeles Times said she sounded “flat and robotic” in the up-tempo songs, The Wall Street Journal (who praised the album overall) criticized Twain’s “singing in a somewhat lower register,” and The Guardian wrote that the album is a “strong comeback that plays to Twain’s strengths, but it could have done with some more of her feisty, Brad Pitt-skewering self, and fewer inspirational metaphors.” But that’s just the thing—the feisty, Brad Pitt-skewering Shania is a thing of the past, and despite that being a known fact, listeners (myself included) couldn’t help but go into the new album with those tunes in mind, because it’s really all we’ve ever known of her. Twain told Rolling Stone that she told anyone involved to forget about all her previous material while making Now, saying she didn’t want it to be related to her ex-husband’s productions. “I wanted a more organic approach,” she said. “I was reflecting on the darkness.” The resulting material introduced a new Shania Twain who had been through enough hell that she was ready to sing about it, but also with enough upbeat pop-influenced tracks to balance it all out, because that’s what Shania has always done best. Now also generated its fair share of positive reviews that capitalized on how big a deal her first album in fifteen years was; Pitchfork stated that Twain’s return to public life and performance is “the foundation of one of this decade’s most remarkable comeback stories,” reminding everyone that as much as Shania Twain doesn’t have anything left to prove, Now embodies the power of creative risks when a masterclass songwriter is left to her own devices.
As far as my relationship with Now goes, I was underwhelmed by the album at first, merely because it introduced me to a Shania Twain that I had never experienced, and there were a few lackluster moments. But that didn’t stop me from listening to the album over and over again, even when I wasn’t really in the mood, because the novelty of having a new Shania Twain album after so long just never seemed to wear off. And, in listening a few thousand more times, I began to like more than a few tracks, even if I could still acknowledge that, vocally, Shania isn’t what she used to be. But deep down I knew the quality of the album didn’t matter, because a global icon such as herself truly doesn’t have anything left to prove. The fact that the album even got made and was released at all is the miracle here, and in some backwards way, I think that’s what made me fall in love with it. The following winter after Now came out, I was going through a rough patch with anxiety and depression, and listening to music even when I didn’t feel like it was practically the only thing that got me through it. Since I was young, Shania Twain’s music has always cheered me up in some way, even when I didn’t feel like it. After making my way through all of the old stuff, I listened to Now from start to finish one more time, and it resonated with me in new ways I didn’t understand at the time. I was weary of songs like “Poor Me” and “Who’s Gonna Be Your Girl” when the album came out, but now they were calming me down. Shania singing “life’s about joy, life’s about pain, it’s all about forgiving, and the will to walk away” was suddenly making me feel better when I had pretty much convinced myself that wasn’t possible. Listening to the album didn’t solve my problems, but it sure made them a hell of a lot easier to face. It was only when I saw Twain on her latest arena tour in support of Now, the Shania Now Tour, did I realize that I had listened to songs like “I’m Alright” an embarrassing amount of times. Seeing Shania back in full swing was nothing short of a religious experience for me, given that there was a time where I never thought I would get to see her performing new songs. The Now Tour may have shown a lack of commitment towards her previously announced retirement (listen to more on that here), but it showed Twain is living proof that an artist can fall down and lose everything (what goes Up! must come down, after all) and come back again and again with the vocals, costumes, and performance ability to prove it. I think it took myself going through my own darkness to finally experience the darker, somber, and more emotional material on Now the way Shania intended it, and for that I’m grateful. Going from singing “That Don’t Impress Me Much” at the top of my lungs from the backseat as a child to having her darker, more somber material help me through a tough time as an adult truly feels like a full-circle moment in my evolution as a person. I love and admire Shania Twain very much, and she will always be The One.
BILLBOARD UPDATE (week of August 4): Shania's Greatest Hits climbs 2 spots to No. 34 on the Billboard Top Country Albums chart in its 127th overall week on the chart. Meanwhile, Shania's Greatest Hits holds at No. 96 for the second week in a row on the Billboard Canadian Albums chart in its 35th overall week on the chart.
BILLBOARD UPDATE (week of August 11): Shania's Greatest Hits climbs 1 spot to No. 33 on the Billboard Top Country Albums chart in its 128th overall week on the chart. Meanwhile, Shania's Greatest Hits falls back of this week's Billboard Canadian Albums chart.
BILLBOARD UPDATE (week of August 18): Shania's Greatest Hits falls 8 spots to No. 41 on the Billboard Top Country Albums chart in its 129th overall week on the chart.
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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
Greatest Hits is doing so well. I hope the RIAA will certify her albums again soon.
Meanwhile, do we know anything about Soldier being released to radio?
Shania's album sales still haven't been updated/re-certified.
The 100 Best Selling Albums of All Time (Updated for 2018)
By Paul Resnikoff | Digital Music News | August 20, 2018
What are the best-selling albums of all time? According to the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA), the Eagles’ Their Greatest Hits 1971-1975 is now the top-selling album in history, with 38 million copies sold in the US alone. Here’s the rest.
(Note: these are US-based numbers. The RIAA counts an ‘album sale’ as either a direct album purchase, or the ‘album equivalent’ of 10 downloaded singles from the same album, or 1,500 streams from the same album.)
BILLBOARD UPDATE (week of August 4): Shania's Greatest Hits climbs 2 spots to No. 34 on the Billboard Top Country Albums chart in its 127th overall week on the chart. Meanwhile, Shania's Greatest Hits holds at No. 96 for the second week in a row on the Billboard Canadian Albums chart in its 35th overall week on the chart.
BILLBOARD UPDATE (week of August 11): Shania's Greatest Hits climbs 1 spot to No. 33 on the Billboard Top Country Albums chart in its 128th overall week on the chart. Meanwhile, Shania's Greatest Hits falls back of this week's Billboard Canadian Albums chart.
BILLBOARD UPDATE (week of August 18): Shania's Greatest Hits falls 8 spots to No. 41 on the Billboard Top Country Albums chart in its 129th overall week on the chart.
BILLBOARD UPDATE (week of August 25): Shania's Greatest Hits falls 9 spots to No. 50 on the Billboard Top Country Albums chart in its 130th overall week on the chart.
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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
The nominations for this year's CMA Awards were announced this morning on "Good Morning America". Shania was not nominated in any category. The CMA Awards air November 14 at 8:00pm on ABC.
According to RoughStock, NOW sold 800 copies (U.S.) in the week ending March 4. This brings the total number copies sold in the U.S. to 219,200. That's not very many considering 137,000 copies were sold the first week.
BILLBOARD UPDATE (week of September 15): Shania's Greatest Hits re-enters the Billboard Top Country Albums chart at No. 47 in its 131st overall week on the chart. Meanwhile, Shania's NOW re-enters the Billboard Canadian Albums chart at No. 72 in its ninteenth overall week on the chart.
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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
BILLBOARD UPDATE (week of September 15): Shania's Greatest Hits re-enters the Billboard Top Country Albums chart at No. 47 in its 131st overall week on the chart. Meanwhile, Shania's NOW re-enters the Billboard Canadian Albums chart at No. 72 in its ninteenth overall week on the chart.
BILLBOARD UPDATE (week of September 22): After re-entering the Billboard Top Country Albums chart last week at No. 47 in its 131st overall week, Shania's Greatest Hits album falls back off this week's chart. Meanwhile, after re-entering the Billboard Canadian Albums chart last week at No. 72 in its ninteenth overall week, Shania's NOW falls back off this week's chart.
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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
According to this interview with a Canadian dancer, Shania will be shooting a new music video this year. I wonder what this is all about? For which song?
Lethbridge native Tara-Jean Popowich excited to be working with Shania Twain again in 2018
By Aaron Mahoney | Lethbridge News NOW | September 18, 2018
LETHBRIDGE - There isn't much that impresses Shania Twain, her words of course from one of her most popular songs, but one dancer from Lethbridge caught her eye in the past and it's led to a friendship both personal and professional.
Tara-Jean Popowich, best known for winning Season 2 of So You Think You Can Dance Canada, will be working with Twain again this year for one of the artist's music videos.
Popowich says the industry is so small nowadays that she just gets calls, instead of having to audition against thousands of people.
"The choreographer got my name and they went through my videos and stuff like that, and then just asked me if I'd be interested in working with Shania, and I did not hesitate obviously."
Popowich has worked with Twain in the past, and she believes that familiarity played a role in getting this opportunity.
"I think that's a lot of the industry also if you're a nice person and you stay humble, I feel like the right people reach out to you," she continued. "They're loyal too, so I feel like Shania, now that we've become friends, that she'll just call me if she needs me."
And that's exactly how this story played itself out.
"When I was working in Paris, her manager called me and said that Shania asked for me personally. She said, 'would you be available for the year for the tour?' and I said 100 percent. So, everything was on go for that, but then a few days before Shania said she wanted the dancers to be able to sing, and I don't have the voice of an angel, so I said, 'OK I'll stick with you to do videos and then maybe do the tour next time'," Popowich said with a laugh.
Home base can vary throughout the year for Popowich, who tends to work out of both New York City, Los Angeles and London, with the occasional trip back to Lethbridge to visit with family and friends and decompress.
She says it's a good way for her to keep things in perspective.
"I'm so happy when I'm out and about and people recognize me in town, but I have to remember when I'm going to the store if I'm in a rush and only have 20 minutes not to go. Usually, I bump into someone and I end up chatting with them for about an hour. My days are a bit longer, but I always have good chats with people in the community," Popowich said, adding she loves the interaction and feeling of being home.
It's not just Shania Twain either, as far as working with big names is considered.
"It's kind of funny because I've been in the industry for a while now, since the show I've done Dancing With The Stars in India as a celebrity, then worked with Pharrell Williams in his music video for the song "Happy" and as Carly Rae Jepsen's choreographer while in NYC."
Popowich says she gets calls for things all the time but feels the more you kind of relax and have confidence in yourself the more calls you get.
"I'm constantly auditioning, and I'm constantly flying to New York and Los Angeles. Then I'm in London, U.K. trying to get as many opportunities as I can but it's almost when you sit back and say 'OK, I've done my hard work, so the right jobs will come'. Then your agent, obviously, they're working their butt off to get you the jobs also. So, when you get the call it's so much better than standing at a cattle call audition," Popowich said.
Popowich has taught dance throughout Canada and the US, India, Paris, Ukraine, Africa, Italy, Spain, Bahamas, Germany, London, and China.
She received a key to the City of Lethbridge after winning So You Think You Can Dance Canada.
So, after all of that, is it still surreal for a Canadian kid from a place like Lethbridge to be living this life?
"I don't think it will ever feel real. I'm just really appreciative, even when I was younger I didn't expect to travel even. I thought I was going to be 22 with five kids, so it's kind of crazy now to be seeing the world," Popowich joked.
"Now I'm home for a bit and I get to chat with people and I feel even more appreciative. Coming from Lethbridge where people are so supportive and still want to hear about my career, then I can go be Peter Pan again into the world, and still always come back and feel that support."
Popowich was supposed to leave town last week but decided that she needed at least one more week in Lethbridge.
"I told my manager that I needed one more week because it feels so good to be surrounded by this support. I think it gives me the motivation and extra boost to go back into the world, go travel again for another year then come back home and eat Alberta beef every day," Popowich said.
One year ago today, Shania released her long-awaited fifth studio album NOW. The album debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard 200, Top Country Albums and Billboard Canadian Albums charts. NOW also debuted at No. 1 in the UK and Australia and was certified Platinum last October for selling 80,000 copies in Canada. The album has sold 233,800 copies in the United States. It's been quite a year for Shania and her fans!
Shania also released the music video for "Swingin' With My Eyes Closed".
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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
The reality of Shania..is Shania’s days of charting on country radio over?
Those days are LONG over. Blame Shania for taking so long between albums and in essence killing her career. She should of released at least 4 albums from COO in 1997 to say 2006. Nobody under 30 has any clue to who she is. She is an oldie but goodie touring act now--singing the classics from decades gone by.
S H A N I A. T W A I N. C R E A T I V E P R O C E S S Had the honor of choreographing Shania Twain’s “Swingin’ With My Eyes Closed” Music Video. How appropriate for this moment in my life right now, jumping into the unknown with my music. The wisdom I learned from Shania was you can be Beautiful, Sexy and Strong. Getting to dance (sorry we ripped your dress) with you was Heaven🙏 Shania & Jennifer Maddoux let me be me and the dancers were so open and disciplined 🙏 Shout out to Casey Brooks Video on my websitehttp://www.cjtyson.com
BILLBOARD UPDATE (week of September 15): Shania's Greatest Hits re-enters the Billboard Top Country Albums chart at No. 47 in its 131st overall week on the chart. Meanwhile, Shania's NOW re-enters the Billboard Canadian Albums chart at No. 72 in its ninteenth overall week on the chart.
BILLBOARD UPDATE (week of September 22): After re-entering the Billboard Top Country Albums chart last week at No. 47 in its 131st overall week, Shania's Greatest Hits album falls back off this week's chart. Meanwhile, after re-entering the Billboard Canadian Albums chart last week at No. 72 in its ninteenth overall week, Shania's NOW falls back off this week's chart.
BILLBOARD UPDATE (week of June 8): Shania's Greatest Hits re-enters the Billboard Top Country Albums chart at No. 47 in its 132nd overall week on the chart.
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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
BILLBOARD UPDATE (week of September 15): Shania's Greatest Hits re-enters the Billboard Top Country Albums chart at No. 47 in its 131st overall week on the chart. Meanwhile, Shania's NOW re-enters the Billboard Canadian Albums chart at No. 72 in its ninteenth overall week on the chart.
BILLBOARD UPDATE (week of September 22): After re-entering the Billboard Top Country Albums chart last week at No. 47 in its 131st overall week, Shania's Greatest Hits album falls back off this week's chart. Meanwhile, after re-entering the Billboard Canadian Albums chart last week at No. 72 in its ninteenth overall week, Shania's NOW falls back off this week's chart.
BILLBOARD UPDATE (week of June 8): Shania's Greatest Hits re-enters the Billboard Top Country Albums chart at No. 47 in its 132nd overall week on the chart.
BILLBOARD UPDATE (week of June 15): After re-entering the Billboard Top Country Albums chart last week at No. 47 in its 132nd overall week, Shania's Greatest Hits album falls back off this week's chart.
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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
BILLBOARD UPDATE (week of September 15): Shania's Greatest Hits re-enters the Billboard Top Country Albums chart at No. 47 in its 131st overall week on the chart. Meanwhile, Shania's NOW re-enters the Billboard Canadian Albums chart at No. 72 in its ninteenth overall week on the chart.
BILLBOARD UPDATE (week of September 22): After re-entering the Billboard Top Country Albums chart last week at No. 47 in its 131st overall week, Shania's Greatest Hits album falls back off this week's chart. Meanwhile, after re-entering the Billboard Canadian Albums chart last week at No. 72 in its ninteenth overall week, Shania's NOW falls back off this week's chart.
BILLBOARD UPDATE (week of June 8): Shania's Greatest Hits re-enters the Billboard Top Country Albums chart at No. 47 in its 132nd overall week on the chart.
BILLBOARD UPDATE (week of June 15): After re-entering the Billboard Top Country Albums chart last week at No. 47 in its 132nd overall week, Shania's Greatest Hits album falls back off this week's chart.
Lizzo, Post Malone, Taylor Swift, Shania Twain & More Get AMAs Boost on Album Charts
By Keith Caulfield | Billboard | December 2, 2019
Acts such as Lizzo, Post Malone and Shania Twain surge on Billboard’s album charts in the wake of their respective performances at the 2019 American Music Awards. The Nov. 24 ABC TV broadcast housed performances from a galaxy of stars, with a number of notable titles seeing gains on Billboard charts as a result.
Shania Twain’s best-of collection, Greatest Hits, re-enters the Top Country Albums chart at No. 36 with 4,000 units (up 41%) following her show-closing hits medley.
BILLBOARD UPDATE (week of December 7): Shania's Greatest Hits re-enters the Billboard Top Country Albums chart at No. 36 in its 134th overall week on the chart.
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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
Has Shanias album now sold 1 million copies in the United States? According to Wikipedia it has been certified platinum. It has also sold 80,000 albums in Canada
Has Shanias album now sold 1 million copies in the United States? According to Wikipedia it has been certified platinum. It has also sold 80,000 albums in Canada
Shania's latest published RIAA certifications are for 3 Singles ("Man! I Feel Like A Woman!" 2x Platinum, "Honey, I'm Home" Gold, "That Don't Impress Me Much" Platinum) on August 3, 2020. There isn't anything posted for her NOW album so I don't know where the September 2020 Platinum certification source on Wikipedia came from.
Four years of Life's About To Get Good ❤️ This song is a personal reminder to myself that life is beautiful! It can be full of pain but it can also be full of joy, you just gotta keep going and enjoy every moment while you have the chance.
***"Life's About To Get Good" was released on June 15, 2017 as the lead single from Shania's fifth studio album NOW. The song peaked at No. 33 on Billboard's Hot Country Songs chart and No. 12 on Billboard's Adult Contemporary chart. The music video was shot in the Dominican Republic and released on July 27, 2017.
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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
So I just spent my evening listening to NOW again, and this is probably an unpopular opinion, but I love this album and I feel that it is an album Shania had to make. Not for the fans, but for herself. There are a lot of people who think she should only do work for the fans, but many artists do passion projects. And in many ways, I feel like Now is one of Shania’s passion projects.
I may get negative feedback for this, but I do love the album. And think it was necessary in her journey
By John R. Kennedy | iHeartRadio Canada | June 15, 2022
- In 2017, Canadian singer Shania Twain released “Life’s About To Get Good,” her first single in five years. It was a commercial disappointment, peaking at No. 70 on the Canadian Hot 100 chart and No. 33 on the U.S. Billboard Hot Country Songs chart.
Despite the voice change and the songs not being like her former eras, I still quite enjoyed 'Now' and it saddens me when people criticized her voice on the album because it's not like she could do anything about it. I commend her for returning to music and I think the album was nicely done.
I 100% agree. Yeah her voice is different but it’s still clearly her. People who say it doesn’t sound like her are overly dramatic. I still enjoy the album also, it’s just not my favourite. I prefer her upbeat songs more.
Back on the subject of her voice, I find her Voice on Waking Up Dreaming very close to the sound of her old voice, could be due to the surgery she had back 2019?
It seems that Shania hasn't acknowledge the five-year anniversary of 'Now' at all. I wonder if she'll continue to perform any of the songs on the album that were non-singles.