tracks.
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1.StopYou're Still the One – Shania Twain 03:32
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2.StopWhen – Shania Twain 03:37
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3.StopFrom This Moment On – Shania Twain 04:51
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4.StopBlack Eyes, Blue Tears – Shania Twain 03:36
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5.StopI Won't Leave You Lonely – Shania Twain 04:06
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6.StopI'm Holdin' on to Love (To Save My Life) – Shania Twain 03:26
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7.StopCome on Over – Shania Twain 02:53
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8.StopYou've Got a Way – Shania Twain 03:19
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9.StopWhatever You Do! Don't! – Shania Twain 03:48
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10.StopMan! I Feel Like a Woman! – Shania Twain 03:53
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11.StopLove Gets Me Every Time – Shania Twain 03:32
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12.StopDon't Be Stupid (You Know I Love You) – Shania Twain 03:33
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13.StopThat Don't Impress Me Much – Shania Twain 03:58
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14.StopHoney, I'm Home – Shania Twain 03:33
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15.StopIf You Wanna Touch Her, Ask! – Shania Twain 04:13
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16.StopRock This Country! – Shania Twain 04:26
The week the Come on Over: The International Version appeared in the States, Come on Over was still in the Top 20 after spending over two years on the charts and selling over 14 million copies. That is massive success and it's all the more remarkable because the hits on pop radio were not on the album. Each single was remixed and refurbished -- most notably the dance reworking of "That Don't Impress Me Much" -- with an eye on Top 40 and adult contemporary radio, plus foreign markets that wanted Shania the pop diva, not Twain the country crooner. Actually, the original versions weren't all that country to begin with; they were adult contemporary pop tunes with the occasional violin or steel guitar -- enough to make Come on Over seem like country on the surface, but at its heart, it was pop music. That's why the single remixes were so successful -- they revealed the true nature of the song. Similarly, The International Version feels more genuine than the original, since it has no qualms embracing the gaudy thrills of pop. Every cut on Come on Over has been remixed for this version and the sequencing has changed. Each track benefits from this tinkering, since these versions are giddily infectious and present Shania as the pop diva she really is. In this incarnation, Come on Over stands as the best pop diva album of the late '90s -- playful, funny, tuneful, catchy, amusing, sexy. No diva has delivered a record this consistently fun in years -- not Mariah, not Whitney, not Madonna (who abandoned the whole idea of fun during the '90s, anyway). Sure, almost all of its best qualities are on the surface but that's precisely why it's irresistible. Stephen Thomas Erlewine, Rovi
- Genre: Rock, Country
- Category Contemporary Country, Country-Pop, Adult Contemporary
- Label: MERCURY NASHVILLE
- Release Date: November 23, 1999
- Artist: Twain Shania
- Additional Artist: Bryan White (Vocals)