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Mindy McCready - Im Still Here '2010

Im Still Here
ArtistMindy McCready Related artists
Album name Im Still Here
Country
Date 2010
GenreCountry
Play time 47:54
Format / Bitrate Stereo 1420 Kbps / 44.1 kHz
MP3 320 Kbps
Media CD
Size 349 MB
PriceDownload $2.95
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Tracks list

Tracklist:

01. Wrong Again [03:19]
02. By Her Side [03:53]
03. I Want A Man [03:35]
04. Im Still Here [04:10]
05. I Want To Love You [03:38]
06. Songs About You [03:33]
07. The Way You Make Me Melt [04:25]
08. The Dance [04:10]
09. I Hate That I Love You [02:39]
10. Fades [03:26]
11. By Her Side (acoustic version) [03:48]
12. Guys Do It All The Time (updated version) [03:17]
13. Ten Thousand Angels (updated version) [03:54]

There is a sad irony in the title of this album.

Just 3 years after the release of this album, on 17th February 2013, Mindy
apparently took her own life with a gunshot to her head. She was 37 years old.

From an outsider’s perspective Mindy had everything going for her. Her
first 2 albums sold very well and made her famous.

Her life then took on an all too familiar pattern of brushes with the law,
scandals in her love life and drugs and alcohol abuse. After several failed
suicide attempts she seemed to be getting her life back together with the
release of this album in 2010. 

Following the death (by suicide) of her producer boyfriend David Wilson on 13th
January 2013 she subsequently took her own life about 5 weeks later.

Nobody can know what demons live in another person’s head. However
it’s so sad that she leaves 2 very young children who, as for as I know,
are now in foster care.

The following review is by Stephen Thomas Erlewine

Released a matter of weeks after Mindy McCready’s stint on VH1’s
Celebrity Rehab concluded, ‘I’m Still Here’ plays like a
survivor’s handbook, a testament to the singer’s newfound
sobriety. Reflective and gentle even when the tempo starts to skip,
‘I’m Still Here’ is certainly the quietest of
McCready’s records and it’s also the most heartfelt, playing as a
confessional. As it happens, she co-wrote only a handful of these songs, which
hardly invalidates McCready’s meditative comeback as she handles these
songs gracefully and with feeling. Ultimately, what matters on ‘I’m
Still Here’ is that outpouring of emotion: the songs are generally a
mixed bag, veering from sweetly melancholy to syrupy, but McCready has never
been more sensitive as a vocalist, pulling the album through the rough patches
and convincingly selling the notion that she’s a sober survivor.

Mindy McCready


Album