Biography
Shania
Twain's Rise to Fame & Fortune

They say the ladies who sing the country songs are a
breed apart. And the ladies who write the country songs,
well, they're just as rare a breed, too. But the ladies
who do both--ah, now there is the heart and soul of it
all, the women who give country music conscience and
sizzle, with a full portion of romance from the feminine
perspective thrown in at no extra cost. "I love to
write stories," says Shania Twain. "Songwriting
is my favorite part of what I do. I like to give ever
song its own personality and attitude and to sing each
one in its own style."
Shania Twain is no stranger to conscience, sizzle and the
woman's prerogative. Come On Over is her third
album (Mercury Records), sixteen songs written by Shania
with her husband and producer, Robert John "Mutt"
Lange. This is Shania's first release in more than two
and a half years, since the 9-times platinum phenomenon
known as The Woman In Me. That album,
which has also sold another 3 million copies outside the
U.S., continues its record-breaking run on the Billboard
Country Albums chart; 140-plus weeks (and counting) as of
the November 1997 release of Come On Over.
For her achievements, Shania earned Billboard honors as
1996's #1 Top Country Album Artist. Her Grammy award for
Best Country Album was echoed by the Academy of Country
Music and her native Canadian Country Music Awards (both
Album of the year); and she was variously named Favorite
New Country Artist or Favorite Female Country Artist by
the American Music Awards, Blockbuster Entertainment
Awards, Canada's JUNO Awards, World Music Awards, and so
on. Her videos earned similar awards from CMT (Country
Music Television, U.S. and European outlets), ABC Radio
Networks and others. One of the most telegenically
accessible figures on the planet, her promo video clips
were compiled on The Complete Woman In Me Video
Collection.
At the same time, Shania has been profiled in numerous
magazines, performed at more awards shows than you can
count, appeared on many television specials, and much
more. On September 24, 1997, viewers of the CMA Awards
were treated to a performance of "Love Gets Me Every
Time," the first single from Come On Over.
Shania's story may well be the
great American dream, that is, the great North American
dream, since she was born in Canada on August 28, 1965,
the second oldest of five siblings. Shania was raised in
Timmins, Ontario (about 500 miles due north of Toronto),
where her stepfather, an Ojibway Indian, and mother had
both been raised. It was a proud but at times,
impoverished existence. There may have been a struggle to
keep enough food in the cupboards, but there was always
an abundance of music in the household.
Shania often grabbed a guitar and retreated to the
solitude of her bedroom, singing and writing until her
fingers ached. "But I loved it! I grew up listening
to Waylon, Willie, Dolly, Tammy, all of them," she
recalls. "But we also listened to the Mamas and the
Papas, the Carpenters, the Supremes and Stevie Wonder.
The many different styles of music I was exposed to as a
child not only influenced by vocal style, but even more
so, my writing style." Mom noticed her daughter's
talents, and Shania was soon being shuttled to radio and
TV studios, community centers, senior citizens' homes,
"everywhere they could get me booked."
Part of the legend has 8-year-old Shania being dragged
out of bed at midnight to sing with the house band at a
local club after the nightly liquor curfew went into
effect. Later, she spent summers working with her father
as the foreman of a dozen-man reforestation crew in the
Canadian bush, where she learned to wield an axe and
handle a chain saw as well as any man. In the winter
season, she would sing in clubs and do television and
radio performances as often as her schooling would allow.
At age 21, Shania lost her parents in an auto wreck. She
then took on the task of handling her parents' affairs as
executrix and the responsibility of bring her three
younger siblings to live with her. She managed to keep
the household going with a job at Ontario's Deerhurst
Resort, which not only provided for her new family
responsibilities, but also gave her an education in every
aspect of theatrical performance, from musical comedy to
Andrew Lloyd Webber to Gershwin, an experience quite
different from the bar gigs she grew up doing. After a
couple of years the kids came into their own, lightening
the load of her responsibilities. It was 1990, and she
was on her own. Shedding her real name, Eilleen, she
adopted the Ojibway name of Shania, pronounced shu-NYE-uh,
meaning "I'm on my way." Shania's way resulted
in a demo tape of original music and a road map to
Nashville.
Although Shania was signed on the
basis of her original material, her self-titled debut
album of 1993 featured only one of her songs, the feisty
"God Ain't Gonna Getcha For That." It took a
phone call from a distant admirer, rock producer Mutt
Lange (AD/DC, Cars, Def Leppard, Foreigner, Bryan Adams
and many more) for Shania to find a true believer, both
in her voice and her original songs.
Shania and Mutt met face to face in 1993 and were wed in
December, by which time they'd written half an album's
worth of tunes together. As the following year unfolded,
they traveled (and wrote) their way across the U.S.,
Canada, England, Spain, Italy and the Caribbean. They
began to lay down basic tracks for the new album in
Nashville, later recording overdubs and mixing in Quebec.
The first results of the labor, "Whose Bed Have Your
Boots Been Under?" entered the Billboard Country
Singles chart in January 1995; The Woman In Me debuted on
the Country Albums chart the following month. The single
rose to No. 11, and The Woman In Me was certified RIAA
gold. Its flip side, "Any Man of Mine," hit the
charts in May and became the first of four consecutive
number ones for Shania, every one of which spent the
requisite 20 weeks on the list, including "(If You're Not In It For Love) I'm Outta
Here!," "You Win My Love," and
"No One Needs To Know."
Two more singles were released in late 1996, "Home
Ain't Where His Heart Is (Anymore)" and the lullaby-hymn
"God Bless The Child," with proceeds donated to
Kids Cafe/Second Harvest Food Bank in the U.S. and the
Canadian Living Foundation which provides meals for
underprivileged children there. Altogether, Shania's run
on the singles chart spanned well over 100 weeks, an
amazing achievement for one album with no touring.
But with the completion of Come On Over, Shania has
turned her attention to her maiden tour, which promises
to be the premiere event of 1998. "When I get out on
tour, I'll be able to do a full show of original songs
that people will be familiar with. It's going to be ideal,
almost like I couldn't have planned it better, even
though I didn't really plan it at all. I'm glad I waited,
and I'm going to give it all I've got to make it
everything the fans have been waiting for."
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