SHANIA TWAIN’S MOTHER NEVER LIVED TO HEAR THIS SONG. THAT’S EXACTLY WHY IT EXISTS. Long before the world knew her name, she was a shy little girl in a cold Ontario town, so small she was barely bigger than her guitar. Her mother, Sharon, would load her into an old Chevy and drive her to sing in smoky bars late at night, telling anyone who’d listen that her daughter was going to be the next Tanya Tucker. Nobody in the music business would have looked at that child and believed it. Her mother believed it with everything she had. Sharon died in a car accident in 1987, before a single one of her daughter’s dreams came true. She never heard “Any Man of Mine.” She never saw the awards, the stadiums, the hundred million records. And now, at 60 years old, Shania has finally written the song she spent decades not ready to write. It’s called “Little Miss Twain,” the title track of her new album — and standing beside her on the record is Tanya Tucker herself. The very name her mother used to speak like a prophecy is now a voice singing in harmony with her. Shania invited Tanya into the studio, and the two legends turned a mother’s stubborn faith into a duet. “I often wonder what she would have thought,” Shania admitted. Somewhere, a woman in an old Chevy already knew.
Shania Twain’s Mother Never Lived to Hear This Song. That’s Exactly Why It Exists Long before Shania Twain became a…