I had so many wonderful experiences putting The Woman In Me together. I was pushing my limits, liberating myself, digging deeper into my self expression, celebrating my own strength and femininity, constantly pursuing my originality, all whilst getting a huge education on the world and the music industry, very fast! I couldn't have dreamed of what the album would go onto achieve and I've been surprised all over again with the Diamond Edition! I've been overwhelmed by the response to the 25th anniversary reissue and want to thank you from the bottom of my heart for the support and love you have shown me. šā¤ļø This ride is so much more fun with you all by my side š Watch the 25-Year Retrospective Documentary now:ShaniaTwain.lnk.to/25YearsofTWIM
Shania Twain Shares āThe Woman In Meā Retrospective Documentary
The film looks at Twainās 1995 breakthrough album, in the wake of Octoberās 25th anniversary release of āThe Woman in Me: Diamond Edition.ā
By Paul Sexton | uDiscover Music - UKĀ | December 10, 2020
Shania Twain has shared a new, ten-minute retrospective documentary clip marking the 25th anniversary of The Woman In Me, on her YouTube channel.
The film looks at the Canadian superstarās 1995 breakthrough album a quarter-century on, and arrives in the wake of Octoberās 25th anniversary release of The Woman in Me: Diamond Edition. The newly-expanded version is available in both two- and three-CD configurations, and the remastered album in black and limited-edition color vinyl versions.
The retrospective contains archive footage and new reflections by Twain on a record, and an era, that was pivotal in her development into a three-time diamond-certified artist. āIn the beginning when I first went to Nashville,ā she says, āit was sort of a classic story of Iāve had my demo cassettes of my songwriting in my pocket.
āI was playing my own original music to the A&R reps at the label, and to producers. They werenāt accepted in the beginning as being anything that they were willing to record, that they were going to allow me to record. Of course, it was their budget, they were paying.
āI understood that I needed to pay my dues, I accepted that, and I knew I needed to be patientā¦if Iād been too c0cky about it, I just would have been replaced,ā she laughs, ābecause itās very competitive in Nashville. So, patience paid off. I did the best I could with other peopleās music, other peopleās writing, but I finally got my chance to prove myself with my own songs. Thankfully, it worked, and everybody was happy.ā
Twain goes on to reveal that her favorite song from The Woman In Me is āGod Bless The Child,ā which she wrote after a country walk in which she heard a bear crying out, this shortly after the death of her parents. āI just felt like I was that bear somehow, lost, and nobody could really help me through that sorrow.ā
The documentary includes excerpts of seven songs from The Woman In Me and an exclusive live track available only on the Diamond Edition. The original album contained eight songs that made Billboardās country singles chart, four of which, āAny Man of Mine,ā ā(If Youāre Not in It for Love) Iām Outta Here!ā āYou Win My Love,ā and āNo One Needs to Know,ā were No.1 hits.
A 3,000-word essay by pop-culture journalist Eve Barlow is part of a 48-page booklet in the Diamond Edition, which has liner notes by Twain, and photographs by John Derek, Albert Sanchez, Mark Tucker, Bo Derek and Alexander E. Harbaugh.
The Woman in Me: Diamond Edition can be bought HERE.
The Woman In Me was my chance to finally prove myself with my own songs andā¦ thankfully it worked šš Watch the 25-Year Retrospective Documentary now:ShaniaTwain.lnk.to/25YearsofTWIM