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Shania Twain on Final Tour, New Album and Taylor Swift
"I'll be satisfied after the tour to not perform anymore," says country's bestselling female artist
Rolling 
Stone
By Joseph Hudak
June 4, 2015
Tomorrow night, Shania Twain kicks off 
her Rock This Country Tour in Seattle. Following a wildly popular two-year 
showroom run at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas, the Nineties superstar is hitting 
the road for her first nationwide trek 
in 11 years.
But Twain, who will turn 50 in August, says the tour is also her last. Instead of the concert stage, she's turning her focus to writing and recording a new album. While she released the live record Still the One: Live From Las Vegas in March, her last studio effort was the multi-platinum Up! in 2002.
"I've got just so many things to do musically," Twain tells Rolling Stone Country, "and just not enough time to do it all."
After such a successful residency in Vegas, why go back on tour 
now?
I wanted to get out and feel what it was like to get out on the 
road one more time. I enjoyed Las Vegas very much. It was a successful run and 
it was a lot of fun reconnecting with the people and doing the music again, but 
it felt like a weird way to end my stage performance career. I thought it would 
be more satisfying to end it on tour and not in a static environment.
Why is this your last tour?
I feel like there are so many 
other things to do musically, and there is just not enough time to do 
everything. I want to write more music. I'd like to spend a lot more time doing 
that. I'd like to make more records. I want to write for other people. I'd like 
to write more books. I've got a teenage son. I've just got a whole decade in 
front of me that is full already, before it even gets started!
George Strait retired from touring, but says he'll still do 
occasional shows. Will you?
Right now I feel as if I'll be satisfied 
after the tour to not perform anymore. I'm not so sure I can speak for 
10 years from now. I've learned that about life in general. I never thought 
that I would ever be up on the stage again, but I was up in Vegas and getting 
over that hurdle, so I never know what's around the corner. But I'm not retiring 
in my career by any means.
Will this production be similar to your Vegas show?
The 
production will be entirely different. It's a whole new show all together. It's 
been fun doing that and putting that together creatively. It will be more of a 
rock-themed show. It will be very dynamic and alive in the sense that we will 
have a lot of bells and whistles and the graphics will be great, and the pyro 
will be great and the lighting will be really cutting-edge. [We'll be] playing 
all the hits, and the summer just feels so good being out on the road.
Your music is so guitar-heavy. Did that fuel the decision to amp up 
the rock for this tour?
It is very guitar-driven, and that was a big 
part of it. In Las Vegas we favored more of the visual environment, the 
multi-dimension aspect of it, and an advantage was that the room allowed it. But 
knowing that we wouldn't be able to take those [set pieces] on the road with us. 
. . I want to focus more on the rock vibe and the punch and edge that the music 
naturally has. The arenas are so lively and it's just perfect for the bouncy 
rock. We are going to play a lot on that and then visually just go with that 
whole theme as well.
Can fans expect a greatest-hits set list?
Yeah, I mean, 
I've got so many up-tempo songs, so I'm going to stick to the hits and let the 
energy go and rock. But of course I'm not going to leave out the big ballad 
songs. . . Everybody can count on the classics being there.
You said you want to make more records. Have you been in the 
studio?
Yeah, in fact, I've [recorded] some vocals. I've done the 
writing already. I've got some tweaking to do, but we're already working on the 
songs, we are developing them and I've got a couple producers working away with 
me. We are on our way, so that is very exciting for me and it will be great to 
focus on that. We will be working on it while I'm on tour, and we'll just have 
to sneak in and out of the studio whenever I get the opportunity. Once the tour 
is over we'll just hit it hard again and get the record up. I want to get the 
album out, or at least get the first single out while I'm 50, so I set a time 
goal for myself.
Which producers are you working with?
I'm just looking in 
general for people. I've been listening to a lot of records, and looking at a 
lot of music history and trying to determine, "OK, who is responsible for that 
song that I love, or who is responsible for this record that I love or that 
sound that I love?" I'm narrowing it down that way, as opposed to by genre.
Beginning with 1995's The Woman in Me, all of your albums 
were produced by Robert "Mutt" Lange [to whom Twain was also married until 
2010]. After collaborating with him for so long, is there a learning curve with 
a new producer?
It's kind of like dating for the first time. It's a 
bit awkward, because I didn't really know how to work with anybody else. After 
all those years it's been a real learning curve — that is a good way to put 
it. I was very reluctant to get started, and I put it off for a long time 
because of that. I was concerned about how comfortable I would feel, and 
questioning myself too. A lot of self-doubt. Can I do it? Are they going to like 
what I'm doing? Who is the right person, or who are the right people? A lot of 
thought went into it and probably a lot of over-thinking too. But now that it's 
rolling, it's just very exciting and they are loving the songs. Everybody is 
really motivated.
So much has been made about the dearth of women on country radio. 
What's your take on it?
These things do sort of go in waves. I'm not 
really sure why. But it is always nice to see women out there, new women, fresh 
women, just amazing female voices out there in all the genres and I'm hearing it 
more on the radio. I guess we have been for a little while now fairly 
male-dominant, so I think the women maybe are feeling that they need to make 
some room for themselves. There is always room for change. I love change, and 
change is great for everyone. . . It's what brings fresh innovative thinking and 
creativity.
Anyone in today's country music that has caught your 
ear?
Lady Antebellum stands out for me. They have their own sound 
and they are just really strong, and good and talented all the way around. I 
think Taylor [Swift] is amazing. She seems like she is just getting better all 
the time. She is just maturing so beautifully, so it's nice to watch her.
With her pop crossover success, Taylor mirrors your own career in a 
way.
Yeah, the crossover thing — it can be challenging, but she 
is doing it very beautifully. You know, I enjoyed the audiences more since my 
music started crossing over, because it brings in so many dimensions. There's 
every age and it's both sexes and it makes for a very dynamic night.
So will the famous Shania cat-suit make an appearance 
onstage?
[Laughs] I'm having a lot of fun with the 
wardrobe. Playing dress-up is just fun, so that part of it gets a little bit 
carried away. I think I am going to stay away from the classic cat-suit, but 
there might be a variation on it.
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