How Do I Live (KARAOKE) | Trisha Yearwood

#KaraokeCovers #KaraokeHits #KaraokeVersions “How Do I Live“ is a song written by Diane Warren. It was performed by LeAnn Rimes and the extended version of the song was later featured on her second studio album You Light Up My Life: Inspirational Songs in 1997. It was also performed by Trisha Yearwood, and Yearwood’s version was featured in the film Con Air. In the US, Rimes’s version peaked at No. 2 for five non-consecutive weeks in late 1997 and early 1998, behind “Candle in the Wind 1997“ by Elton John, and “Truly Madly Deeply“ by Savage Garden. It set a record for staying on the Billboard Hot 100 chart for 69 weeks, a record it held until “I’m Yours“ by Jason Mraz set a new record of 76 weeks. The Rimes recording also set the record for the most time in the Billboard Hot 100’s top 5 at 25 consecutive weeks and held the record for 19 years (until it was broken in early 2017 by The Chainsmokers’ song “Closer“), the record for Billboard Hot 100’s top 10 at 32 consecutive weeks (a record surpassed by “Shape of You“ by Ed Sheeran in 2017). It ranks at No. 4 on Billboard’s All Time Top 100, the only single on the top 10 of this list not peaking at No. 1. The only songs that finished ahead of it were Bobby Darin’s cover of “Mack the Knife“, Santana’s song “Smooth“, and Chubby Checker’s version of “The Twist“. It has been certified 3× Platinum by the RIAA for shipments of 3 million copies in the United States, the highest certified country single of that time, to be surpassed 12 years later by “Love Story“ by Taylor Swift, which has been certified 8× Platinum. Despite only peaking as high as No. 7 in the UK Singles Chart, Rimes’ version of “How Do I Live“ spent 34 weeks on the chart, ending up as the 6th best selling single of 1998. As of August 2014, the song has sold 710,000 copies in the UK. “How Do I Live“ was also covered by . (Faye and Real featuring LeAnn Rimes). . invited Rimes to record a portion of the song for their third album Flight Tribe in 2006.[8] At the end of the decade Billboard would rank “How Do I Live“ as the 12th-most-successful song of the 1990s.[9] In 2014, to commemorate the magazine’s 120th anniversary, Billboard reformulated the top Hot 100 songs for each decade, and “How Do I Live“ finished as the number-one song of the 1990s, despite never reaching the position on the weekly tally. In a retrospective compilation in conjunction with SiriusXM from 2019, Billboard ranked “How Do I Live“ second on their list of top performing songs of the decade. Yearwood’s version Larry Flick from Billboard stated that Yearwood “is a vocalist with the depth and intensity to convey the love and longing in the lyric.“ He added that the production by the singer with Tony Brown “is lush and textured, but it is her vocal that is this single’s centerpiece. It’s full of passion and subtle nuances.“ Alanna Nash from Entertainment Weekly described Yearwood’s version as a “countrier rendition“. She noted, “When Yearwood sings, ”If you ever leave/Baby, you would take away everything good in my life,” her voice throbs with adult emotion.“ Source: Thanks for watching! Click the #SUBSCRIBE BUTTON and NOTIFICATION BELL to receive updates on #PinoyKaraokeBattle ‘s latest videos. Learn more: ... Listen ad-free with DISCLAIMER: I do not own the music in this video. Please contact the artist/label if you want to use it. If you want me to remove the song/s on my channel, please contact me on this email address - anythingandeverything1001@ “Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for “fair use“ for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use.“ ALL RIGHTS RESERVED TO THE RESPECTIVE OWNERS. Provided to YouTube by Universal Music Group How Do I Live (Songbook Version) · Trisha Yearwood (Songbook) A Collection Of Hits ℗ An MCA Nashville Release; ℗ 1997 UMG Recordings, Inc. Released on: 1997-01-01 Producer: Trisha Yearwood Producer: Tony Brown Studio Personnel, Mixer: Chuck Ainlay Associated Performer, String Arranger: Ron Huff Studio Personnel, Mastering Engineer: Hank Williams Jr. Composer Lyricist: Diane Warren Auto-generated by YouTube. #ConAir #NicolasCage #TrishaYearwood #HowDoI #LeannRimes #YouLightUpMyLifeInspirationalSongs #YouLightUpMyLife @pinoykaraokebattle379 @xxRafaelProductions
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