Martina McBride

Martina McBride

McBride in Nashville, August 2014
Background information
Birth name Martina Mariea Schiff
Born (1966-07-29) July 29, 1966
Sharon, Kansas, United States
Origin Nashville, Tennessee, United States
Genres
Occupation(s) Singer, songwriter, musician and record producer
Instruments
Years active 1988–present
Labels
Associated acts Faith Hill, Carolyn Dawn Johnson, Megan Moreaux
Website www.martinamcbride.com

Martina Mariea McBride (née Schiff, born July 29, 1966) is an American country music singer, songwriter, and record producer. She is known for her soprano singing range and her country pop material.

McBride was signed to RCA Records in 1991, and made her debut the following year as a neo-traditionalist country singer with the single, "The Time Has Come".[2] Over time, she developed a pop-styled crossover sound, similar to that of Shania Twain and Faith Hill and has had a string of major hit singles on the Billboard country chart and occasionally on the adult contemporary chart. Five of these singles went to No. 1 on the country chart between 1995 and 2001, and one peaked at No. 1 on the adult contemporary chart in 2003. She has been called the "Celine Dion of Country Music" when she was recognized for her soprano singing range.

McBride has recorded a total of 13 studio albums, two greatest hits compilations, one "live" album, as well as two additional compilation albums. Eight of her studio albums and two of her compilations have received an RIAA Gold certification, or higher. In the U.S. she has sold over 14 million albums. In addition, McBride has won the Country Music Association's "Female Vocalist of the Year" award four times (tied with Reba McEntire for the second-most wins) and the Academy of Country Music's "Top Female Vocalist" award three times.[3] She is also a 14-time Grammy Award nominee.[4]

Early life

McBride was born Martina Mariea Schiff in Sharon, Kansas, to Daryl and Jeanne Schiff. She has two brothers, Martin and Steve, who currently play in her concert band, and a sister, Gina.[5][6]

Martina's father, who was a farmer and cabinetry shop owner, exposed Martina to country music at a young age. Listening to country music helped her acquire a love for singing. After school, she would spend hours singing along to the records of such popular artists as Reba McEntire, Linda Ronstadt, Juice Newton, Jeanne Pruett, Connie Smith, and Patsy Cline.[7] Around the age of eight or nine, Martina began singing with a band her father fronted, "The Schiffters." As Schiff grew older her role in the band progressively increased, from simply singing, to also playing keyboard with them. She enjoyed performing in her early years.[7]

Martina began performing with a local rock band, The Penetrators, in Wichita instead.[7] Then, in 1987, Schiff gathered a group of musicians called Lotus and started looking for rehearsal space; she began renting space from a studio engineer named John McBride. In 1988, the two married.[7][8]

After marrying, the couple moved to Nashville, Tennessee in 1989 with the hope of beginning a career in country music. John McBride joined Garth Brooks's sound crew and later became his concert production manager. Martina occasionally joined her husband on the road and helped sell Garth Brooks souvenirs. In 1990, impressed by Martina's enthusiastic spirit, Brooks offered her the position of his opening act provided she could obtain a recording contract.[8] During this time, while her husband was working with country artists Charlie Daniels and Ricky Van Shelton, he also helped produce her demo tape, which helped her gain a recording contract with RCA Nashville Records in 1991.[2]

Music career

1992–95: The Time Has Come and The Way That I Am

McBride released her debut studio album by RCA Records in 1992, titled The Time Has Come. It was produced by Paul Worley and Ed Seay. This album's title track made number 23 on the country music charts, but the next two singles both failed to make top 40.[9] Unlike her later country pop-influenced albums, The Time Has Come featured honky tonk and country folk influences.[2]

The Way That I Am was McBride's second album. Its first two singles both brought her into the country top ten: "My Baby Loves Me" peaked at number two, and "Life No. 9" at number six. The former was previously a Top 10 hit in Canada for Patricia Conroy. The third single, "Independence Day", did not reach the top 10 because many radio programmers objected to the song's subject of a mother fighting back against abuse by burning the family home to the ground.[10] "Independence Day" won Video of the Year and Song of the Year at the Country Music Association Awards.[9][11] It also earned the song's composer, Gretchen Peters, a nomination for the Grammy Award for Best Country Song. McBride performed the song at the 1995 Grammys ceremony. The fourth and fifth singles from The Way That I Am were less successful: "Heart Trouble" peaked at number 21, and "Where I Used to Have a Heart" fell short of top 40.[9] McBride later criticized these single choices, saying that she felt "Strangers" would have been a better followup, as that song was more popular with fans and later appeared on her first greatest-hits album.[12]

1995–99: Wild Angels and Evolution

Released in 1995, Wild Angels accounted for another top five hit in its lead single "Safe in the Arms of Love", which had previously been recorded by both Wild Choir and Baillie & the Boys, and was concurrently released in Canada by Michelle Wright at the time of McBride's version. The album's title track went on to become McBride's first No. 1 single on the country charts in early 1996.[9] However, the three follow-ups,"Phones Are Ringin' All Over Town", "Swingin' Doors" and "Cry on the Shoulder of the Road" were less successful, reaching the lower regions of the top 40.

In early 1997, after "Cry on the Shoulder of the Road" peaked, McBride released two duets. "Still Holding On", a duet with Clint Black which was the lead-off single to his album Nothin' but the Taillights,[9] and "Valentine", a collaboration with pop pianist Jim Brickman which appeared on his album Picture This.[13] She also sang duet vocals on "Chances Are", a single from Jason Sellers' I'm Your Man album.

She had her second number one on the country charts with "A Broken Wing", the lead-off to her album Evolution, in late 1997 This album went on to produce four more top ten hits at country radio: a re-release of "Valentine", "Happy Girl", "Wrong Again" (which also went to number one), and "Whatever You Say".[9] Towards the end of 1998, the album was certified double platinum in sales by the Recording Industry Association of America for selling two million units. In addition, she also won the Country Music Association Awards' "Female Vocalist of the Year" award in 1999 and also performed for President Bill Clinton during the same time.

Also in 1998, McBride released a Christmas album titled White Christmas, which featured a rendition of "O Holy Night" that first charted in 1997 and continued to re-enter the charts until 2001.[9] She also sang a guest vocal on Jason Sellers' mid-1998 single "This Small Divide".

1999–2003: Emotion and Greatest Hits

McBride's sixth studio album, Emotion, was released in 1999. Its lead single, "I Love You," reached number one on the Billboard country charts in 1999, and also crossed over to the Adult Contemporary chart. The song's follow-ups, "Love's the Only House" and "There You Are", both made top ten at country radio, and "It's My Time" peaked at number eleven.[9]

In 2001, she released her first compilation, Greatest Hits. This album has been certified 3× Platinum in sales by the Recording Industry Association of America, and is her highest-selling album.[14] It included most of her major hits to that point, and the album track "Strangers" from the album The Way That I Am, which she put on the album because she felt that it should have been a single.[12] The album also included four new songs, all of which made top ten on the country music charts between 2001 and 2003: "When God-Fearin' Women Get the Blues", "Blessed" (her fifth number one), "Where Would You Be", and "Concrete Angel". Carolyn Dawn Johnson sang backing vocals on "Blessed";[12] conversely, McBride sang backing vocals on Johnson's late-2000 debut single, titled "Georgia".[15] Late in 2002, McBride also sang backing vocals on Andy Griggs's single "Practice Life".[9]

2003–05: Martina

In 2003, McBride released her seventh studio album, Martina, which celebrated womanhood.[2] The first single, "This One's for the Girls," went to number three on the country charts and became her only number-one hit on the Adult Contemporary charts. It also included backing vocals from Faith Hill, Carolyn Dawn Johnson, and McBride's daughters, Delaney and Emma.[9] Follow-up single "In My Daughter's Eyes" was also a top five hit at both country and adult contemporary. "How Far" and "God's Will" from the same album both made top 20 at country radio, as did her guest appearance on Jimmy Buffett's single "Trip Around the Sun", whose chart run overlapped that of "God's Will".[9]

In 2004, McBride won the CMA's Female Vocalist award for the fourth time, following the wins in 2003, 2002 and 1999, which tied her for the most wins in that category with Reba McEntire.

2005–08: Timeless and Waking Up Laughing

After finding success in country pop-styled music, McBride released her next studio album, Timeless, in 2005, which consisted of country covers.[16] The album included cover versions of country music standards, such as Hank Williams' "You Win Again," Loretta Lynn's "You Ain't Woman Enough," and Kris Kristofferson's "Help Me Make It Through the Night." To make the album fit its older style, McBride and her husband hired older Nashville session players and outdated analog equipment. The album sold over 250,000 copies within its first week, the highest sales start for a McBride album.[10] The lead single, a cover of Lynn Anderson's "(I Never Promised You a) Rose Garden", went to number 18 on the country charts, but the other two singles both failed to make top 40.

In 2006, McBride served as a guest coach on Canadian Idol. The remaining five finalists traveled to Nashville, where McBride worked with the competitors on the songs they had chosen by country artists such as Gordon Lightfoot and Patsy Cline. Among the other guest judges that year were Nelly Furtado and Cyndi Lauper.[17] McBride later joined Canadian Idol on a tour in the Spring.[18] In 2007, McBride also served as a guest coach on Fox Networks television series, American Idol.[19]

In 2007, McBride released her ninth studio album, Waking Up Laughing. It was the first album in which McBride co-wrote some of the tracks. She set up her Waking Up Laughing Tour in 2007, which included country artists Rodney Atkins, Little Big Town, and Jason Michael Carroll.[16] The album's lead single, "Anyway", went to No. 5 on the Billboard Country Chart, becoming her first Top 10 hit since 2003. She also lent her voice singing "Anyway" in a Lifetime movie called, "A Life Interrupted" which premiered on April 23, 2007.[20] Its follow-up, "How I Feel", reached the Top 15. In Spring 2008, McBride released Martina McBride: Live In Concert, a CD/DVD set.[16] It was taped in Moline, Illinois in September 2007.

In July 2007, The ABC Television Network announced a special program called Six Degrees of Martina McBride where individuals from around the country were challenged to find their way to McBride on their own connections and research using a maximum of six methods. The "winner" of this challenge eventually located a direct connection to McBride through her husband, John, who knew someone, who knew someone else.[21] McBride recently recorded an electronically produced duet with Elvis Presley, performing his song "Blue Christmas" as a duet with him on his latest compilation, The Elvis Presley Christmas Duets.[22] A compilation collection, titled Playlist: The Very Best of Martina McBride, was released on December 16, 2008, as part of Sony BMG Playlist series. The album features 11 previously released tracks and three unreleased tracks.

2008–10: Shine

McBride wrapped up production of her tenth studio album in late 2008. The first single, "Ride", was released to radio in October 2008 and debuted at No. No. 43 on the Hot Country Songs chart. It barely missed the Top 10 on the chart, peaking at number eleven in March 2009. A music video produced by Kristin Barlowe was also released at the end of the year. The album, Shine, was released by RCA Records on March 24, 2009, and debuted at the top of the U.S. Country album chart and number 10 on the Billboard 200. McBride co-produced the album with Dann Huff, and it featured "Sunny Side Up", a song that she co-wrote. The second single, "I Just Call You Mine", was released in May 2009 and reached the Top 20. The third single from Shine was "Wrong Baby Wrong Baby Wrong", which the Warren Brothers co-wrote with Robert Ellis Orrall and Love and Theft member Stephen Barker Liles.

McBride also initiated the Shine All Night Tour, a co-headlining venture with fellow country star and friend Trace Adkins and opening act Sarah Buxton. The tour began in November 2009 and ended in May 2010.

On June 10, 2010, Billboard announced that McBride had collaborated on a song with Kid Rock.[23] In late June 2010, McBride was nominated for a Teen Choice Award, "Favorite Country Female Artist", alongside country stars Carrie Underwood, Miranda Lambert, Taylor Swift and Gretchen Wilson.

In late 2010, McBride was nominated for two American Country Awards (Best Female Single & Touring Artist of the year w/ Trace Adkins.) Along with the ACA nominations, she received her 14th Female Vocalist nomination for Country Music Association in October.

2010–16: Eleven and Everlasting

McBride exited RCA in November 2010 and signed with Republic Nashville.[24] She began working on a new studio album with producer Byron Gallimore. Her first single for Republic Nashville is "Teenage Daughters", which she also co-wrote with the Warren Brothers. McBride told Country Weekly that she co-wrote eight of the eleven songs on the album; she decided to write more frequently because she felt more confident in her songwriting ability after "Anyway" had become a hit.[25] An album track, "One Night" was released as a promotion for NASCAR with a music video in June 2011.

"I'm Gonna Love You Through It" was released as the album's second single on July 25, 2011. The song became a critical and commercial hit, peaking at number 4 and becoming her first top five hit since 2006's "Anyway." The album, titled Eleven, was released on October 11, 2011. Its third single was a cover of Train's "Marry Me", recorded as a duet with Train lead singer Pat Monahan. In September 2011, McBride was nominated for the CMA's Female Vocalist award for the 15th time, and 14th time consecutively.

RCA Records released two compilation albums in 2012, Hits and More in January and The Essential Martina McBride in October.

McBride released Everlasting, a collection of R&B and Soul covers, on April 8, 2014 via Kobalt Label Services. The album includes duets with Kelly Clarkson and Gavin DeGraw, and was produced by Don Was.[26]

In September 2014, McBride received her 17th Female Vocalist nomination from the Country Music Association. This feat ties her with Reba McEntire for most nominations in any vocalist category.

2016: Reckless

In 2016, McBride released a new single called "Reckless" off a new album. Reckless was released on April 29 through Nash Icon Records. It was recorded at Blackbird Studios and produced by Nathan Chapman and Dann Huff. The album includes 10 songs, one of which is the previously released single "Reckless". According to McBride, making this album felt like "coming home".[27]

Reckless debuted at number 2 in the Billboard Top Country Albums Chart.[28]

On June 8, 2016, McBride debuted the video for her second single, "Just Around The Corner", during the CMT Music Awards. This song is the official Band Against Cancer anthem. Band Against Cancer is a community-based movement led by Sarah Cannon (the cancer institute of HCA) in partnership with Big Machine Label Group and McBride, which aims to raise awareness, support and resources to those battling cancer. The initiative includes a series of concerts across United States, with McBride as a headliner.[29]

On August 2016, the singer announced a new tour called "Love Unleashed". According to McBride, the purpose of the tour was to unite people and spread love through the power of music as a response to the "tragedy and uncertainty in the world".[30] She was also selected as one of 30 artists to perform on "Forever Country", a mash-up track of Take Me Home, Country Roads, On the Road Again and I Will Always Love You which celebrates 50 years of the CMA Awards.[31]

Charity work

McBride works with a variety of charities. She has served as a spokeswoman for the National Domestic Violence Hotline as well as for the National Network to End Domestic Violence and national spokeswoman for the Tulsa Domestic Violence and Intervention Services. Every year since 1995, she has hosted Middle Tennessee's YWCA, "Celebrity Auction", and it has raised nearly $400,000 so far. In 2004, she worked with "Kids Wish Network" to fulfill the wish of a young girl dying from Muscular Dystrophy.[32] McBride was awarded the "Minnie Pearl Humanitarian Award" in 2003.

McBride explained that educating girls and women on domestic violence is something she works on at home with her own daughters, stating that:

A lot of teenage girls will be first dating and they'll think, 'Oh he doesn't want me to see my friends. He just wants me all to himself. Isn't that sweet?' Or 'Oh, he's just being protective. Isn't that sweet?' And then it turns into something else and it's controlling. They don't recognize that until it's too late. So it's an ongoing education that you have to give young girls, I think."[33]

McBride has also teamed up with Loveisrespect, National Teen Dating Abuse Helpline, working with them on a new program called, "My Time to Shine."[34]

McBride appeared on the Stand Up 2 Cancer Telethon in September 2010, where she performed "Unchained Melody" with Leona Lewis, Aaron Neville, and Stevie Wonder. Also in 2010, she hosted the YWCA for the 16th consecutive year, raising over 50,000 dollars. It totals over 500,000 dollars raised so far.

Personal life

In 1988, McBride married sound engineer John McBride and the couple have three daughters: Delaney (b. 1994), Emma (b. 1998),[35] and Ava (b. 2005).[36] After becoming a mother, the singer reduced her touring schedule so that her children could have a normal upbringing. Joe Galante said this was "an enormous choice in terms of money", but McBride had made it very clear that she wanted to be present in her children's lives.[37]

Discography

Tours

Headlining
Co-headlining
As supporting act

Awards and nominations

McBride has received a number of awards, including the Country Music Association Award (CMA) for Female Vocalist of the Year, with her fourth win in 2004.[3] In 2011 she received and honorary CMA award.[38] She has been nominated for 14 Grammy Awards, but has never won.[4]

Grammy Awards

Year Category Work Result
1995 Best Female Country Vocal Performance "Independence Day" Nominated
1996 Best Female Country Vocal Performance "Safe in the Arms of Love" Nominated
Best Country Collaboration with Vocals "On My Own" (with Linda Davis, Reba McEntire and Trisha Yearwood) Nominated
1998 Best Country Collaboration with Vocals "Still Holding On" (with Clint Black) Nominated
2000 Best Female Country Vocal Performance "I Love You" Nominated
2003 Best Female Country Vocal Performance "Blessed" Nominated
2004 Best Female Country Vocal Performance "This One's For The Girls" Nominated
Best Short Form Music Video "Concrete Angel" Nominated
2005 Best Female Country Vocal Performance "In My Daughter's Eyes" Nominated
2006 Best Short Form Music Video "God's Will" Nominated
2007 Best Female Country Vocal Performance "I Still Miss Someone" Nominated
2009 Best Female Country Vocal Performance "For These Times" Nominated
2010 Best Female Country Vocal Performance I Just Call You Mine Nominated
2012 Best Country Solo Performance "I'm Gonna Love You Through It" Nominated

Note: In 1995, McBride was one of the various artists featured on the album Amazing Grace - A Country Salute to Gospel (singing "How Great Thou Art"), which won the Grammy Award for Best Southern, Country or Bluegrass Gospel Album. This award went to the compilation album's producer Bill Hearn, and not to the artists.

Other awards

Year Association Category Work Result
1993 Academy of Country Music New Female Vocalist of the Year Nominated
1994 Country Music Association Horizon Award Nominated
Music Video of the Year "Independence Day" Won

1996

TNN/Music City News Music Video of the Year "Independence Day" Won
Country Music Association Female Vocalist of the Year Nominated
1997 Academy of Country Music Music Video of the Year "A Broken Wing" Nominated
Top Female Vocalist Nominated
1998 Country Music Association Female Vocalist of the Year Nominated
Single of the Year "A Broken Wing" Nominated
Academy of Country Music Top Female Vocalist Nominated
1999 American Music Awards Favorite Female Country Artist Nominated
Country Music Association Founding President's Award Won
Country Music Association Female Vocalist of the Year Won
Academy of Country Music Top Female Vocalist Nominated
2000 American Music Awards Favorite Country Female Artist Nominated
Academy of Country Music Top Female Vocalist Nominated
Country Music Association Female Vocalist of the Year Nominated
2001 Flameworthy Awards Female Video of the Year "Blessed" Won
Academy of Country Music Awards Top Female Vocalist Won
Country Music Association Female Vocalist of the Year Nominated
2002 Academy of Country Music Awards Top Female Vocalist Won
Country Music Association Female Vocalist of the Year Won
Single of the Year "Blessed" Nominated
Billboard Music Awards Country Female Artist of the Year Nominated
2003 Academy of Country Music Album of the Year Martina Nominated
Humanitarian of the Year Won
Flameworthy Awards Female Video of the Year "Concrete Angel" Won
Country Music Association Awards Female Vocalist of the Year Won
American Music Awards Favorite Country Female Artist Won
2004 Country Music Association Female Vocalist of the Year Won
Academy of Country Music Top Female Vocalist Nominated
Billboard Music Awards Female Country Artist of the Year Nominated
American Music Awards Favorite Country Female Artist Nominated
2005 CMT Video Awards Most Inspiring Video "Gods Will Nominated
Female Video "Gods Will" Nominated
Academy of Country Music Top Female Vocalist Nominated
American Music Awards Favorite Country Female Artist Nominated
2006 Academy of Country Music Top Female Vocalist Nominated
2007 American Music Awards Favorite Country Female Artist Nominated
Academy of Country Music Top Female Vocalist Nominated
Country Music Association Female Vocalist of the Year Nominated
Music Video of the Year "Anyway" Nominated
Single of the Year "Anyway" Nominated
Song of the Year "Anyway" Nominated
BMI Song of the Year "Anyway" Nominated
Most Played Song of the Year "Anyway" Won
Billboard Music Awards Top Country Grossing Tour of the Year Won
ASCAP Female Song of the Year "Anyway" Won
Song of the Year "Anyway" Won
2008 CMT Video Awards Female Video "Anyway" Nominated
Academy of Country Music Top Female Vocalist Nominated
Country Music Association Female Vocalist of the Year Nominated
2009 Country Music Association Female Vocalist Nominated
CMT Video Awards Female Video "Ride" Nominated
2010 Teen Choice Awards Choice Female Country Artist Nominated
CMT Video Awards Female Video "I Just Call You Mine" Nominated
American Country Awards Single by A Female Artist "Wrong Baby Wrong" Nominated
Touring Artist of the Year Nominated
Country Music Association Female Vocalist Nominated
2011 Academy of Country Music Honorary Award Won
Country Music Association Female Vocalist Nominated
2012 Country Music Association Female Vocalist of the Year Nominated
American Country Awards Female Artist of the Year Nominated
Single by a Female Artist "I'm Gonna Love You Through It" Nominated
Music Video by a Female Artist "I'm Gonna Love You Through It" Nominated
Academy of Country Music Female Vocalist of the Year Nominated
2013 Academy of Country Music Female Vocalist of the Year Nominated
Country Music Association Female Vocalist of the Year Nominated
2014 Academy of Country Music Female Vocalist of the Year Nominated
Country Music Association Female Vocalist of the Year Nominated
2015 Academy of Country Music Female Vocalist of the Year Nominated

References

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  3. 1 2 "CMT : CMA Awards : Archive : 2004 : Country Music Association". www.cmt.com. Retrieved 2015-07-14.
  4. 1 2 "Martina McBride - 25 Artists Who Have Never Won a Grammy". Retrieved 2015-07-14.
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  10. 1 2 Nash, Alanna. Paul Kingsbury, ed. Will the Circle Be Unbroken: Country Music in America. New York, NY, USA: Jonathan Metcalf. p. 343.
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  13. "Picture This". Allmusic. Retrieved 13 September 2010.
  14. "RIAA Gold & Platinum – Martina McBride". Recording Industry Association of America. Retrieved 2008-11-22.
  15. Room with a View (CD booklet). Carolyn Dawn Johnson. Arista Nashville. 2001. 69336.
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  17. "Canadian Idol Heads to Nashville for Workshops with Martina McBride". Find Articles.com. 2006. Retrieved 2008-11-23.
  18. "Canadian Idol Winner Receives Extra "Prize Pack" from Martina McBride and Cyndi Lauper". Channel Canada.com. Retrieved 2008-11-23.
  19. "Martina McBride is a guest coach on American Idol". American Idol.com. Retrieved 2008-11-23.
  20. "Country Music Sensation Martina McBride Lends Her Voice and New Single 'Anyway' to Lifetime's Movie 'A Life Interrupted' and Emmy-Winning Campaign to End Violence Against Women; Co-Written by McBride, 'Anyway' Debuts on New Album 'Waking Up Laughing'; Special 'Anyway' Music Video Premieres with Film and in Online Viral Effort to Encourage Millions to Take Action to End Violence; 'Sometimes Life Ain't Good. and when I Pray, it Doesn't always Turn Out Like it should. but I do it Anyway, I do it Anyway.' -- Lyrics from 'Anyway,' by Martina McBride." PR Newswire Apr 05 2007 ProQuest. 21 Feb. 2015 .
  21. "Martina McBride news". Martina McBride.com. Archived from the original on August 28, 2007. Retrieved 2008-11-23.
  22. "Martina McBride to Turn On Graceland's Blue Holiday Lights". CMT.com: Martina McBride news. Retrieved 2008-11-23.
  23. Concepcion, Mariel (2010-06-10). "Country's Martina McBride collaborates with Rapper T.I., Kid Rock". Billboard (magazine). Retrieved 2010-06-11.
  24. Shelburne, Craig (8 November 2010). "Martina McBride Signs to Republic Nashville". CMT. Retrieved 8 November 2010.
  25. Phillips, Jessica (9 May 2011). "Change Is Good: Both on the personal and professional fronts, Martina McBride's world has changed greatly over the last year—and she couldn't be happier.". Country Weekly. 18 (19): 41–44. ISSN 1074-3235.
  26. "Martina McBride Sets 'Everlasting' Album". Billboard.com. Retrieved November 2, 2014.
  27. http://tasteofcountry.com/martina-mcbride-new-album-reckless/
  28. http://www.billboard.com/charts/country-albums
  29. http://theboot.com/martina-mcbride-just-around-the-corner-music-video-2016-cmt-music-awards/
  30. http://www.rollingstone.com/country/news/martina-mcbride-love-unleashed-tour-dates-opening-acts-w434689/
  31. http://abcnews.go.com/Entertainment/scenes-cmas-historic-music-video-featuring-30-country/story?id=42129062
  32. "Martina McBride was Ashley's Wish". Kidswishblog.org. Retrieved November 2, 2014.
  33. "Martina McBride Fights Domestic Violence". Great American Country TV.com. Retrieved 2008-11-23.
  34. "Martina McBride Teams Up with loveisrespect National Teen Dating Abuse Helpline For Healthy Teen Dating Relationships". www.loveisrespect.org.
  35. "Martina McBride Moves Family to L.A. to Help Her Daughter Pursue Acting". Taste of Country. Retrieved 2015-07-14.
  36. "Martina McBride's Hubby Gives Thanks for Divine Intervention". The Boot. Retrieved 2015-07-14.
  37. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sJksqudkfd4, retrieved 2015-10-20 Missing or empty |title= (help)
  38. "Off The Dirt Road: Album Review: Martina McBride - Eleven". cmtd.blogspot.co.uk. Retrieved 2015-07-14.
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