Shane McAnally

Shane McAnally
Also known as Shane Mack
Born October 12, 1974 (1974-10-12) (age 37)
Origin Mineral Wells, Texas, USA
Occupations Singer-songwriter
Instruments Vocals
Years active 1999-present
Labels Curb
Associated acts Lee Ann Womack

Shane McAnally (born October 12, 1974 in Mineral Wells, Texas), is an American country music artist. He signed to Curb Records in 1999 and released a self-titled debut album the following year. This album produced three singles for him on the Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks (now Hot Country Songs) charts, including the number 31 "Are Your Eyes Still Blue."

Since 2005, McAnally has been recording/performing under the name Shane Mack. Five of his songs appear in the 2007 LGBT film Shelter.[1] In mid-2008, Lee Ann Womack recorded and released the song "Last Call", which McAnally co-wrote with Erin Enderlin.[2] He also co-wrote Kenny Chesney's 2010 single "Somewhere with You".

Contents

Career

McAnally and music producer Rich Herring recorded a demo of a song that McAnally had written. The song, "Just One Touch", earned McAnally a publishing deal as well as a recording contract with Curb Records.[3]

In 1999, McAnally signed with Curb Records and began recording his first album for the label as well as his first single. "Say Anything" was released in 1999 as the lead-off single to his self-titled debut album. The song failed to reach the Top 40 of the US Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks (now Hot Country Songs) chart. The follow-up single, "Are Your Eyes Still Blue", became his first Top 40 single, peaking at number 31. McAnally released two more singles from the album; "Run Away", which peaked at number 50 on the country chart, and "It Comes and Goes", which failed to chart at all. His album was finally released in October 2000.

In the late 2000s, McAnally found work as a songwriter. He co-wrote Lee Ann Womack's single "Last Call" in 2008, and Kenny Chesney's 2011 single "Somewhere with You".

Discography

Studio albums

Title Details
Shane McAnally

Singles

Year Single Peak chart
positions
Album
US Country
[4]
CAN Country
[5]
1999 "Say Anything" 41 46 Shane McAnally
"Are Your Eyes Still Blue" 31 47
2000 "Run Away" 50 57
"It Comes and Goes"
"—" denotes releases that did not chart

Music videos

Year Video Director
1999 "Say Anything" Chris Rogers

Songs written by McAnally

Year Song Artist Album
2008 "Last Call" Lee Ann Womack Call Me Crazy
2009 "What Country Is" Luke Bryan Doin' My Thing
2010 "Somewhere with You" Kenny Chesney Hemingway's Whiskey
2010 "All the Women I Am" Reba McEntire All the Women I Am
2010 "Cry" Reba McEntire All the Women I Am
2010 "The Day She Got Divorced" Reba McEntire All the Women I Am
2010 "Crazy Women" Leann Rimes Lady and Gentlemen
2011 "Bad Habit" Sarah Darling (featuring Vince Gill) Angels & Devils
2011 "Neon" Chris Young Neon
2011 "Tryin' to Go to Church" Ashton Shepherd Where Country Grows
2011 "Hurt Somebody" The Dirt Drifters This is My Blood
2011 "Kiss Tomorrow Goodbye" Luke Bryan Tailgates & Tanlines
2011 "You Don't Know Jack" Luke Bryan Tailgates & Tanlines
2011 "Alone with You" Jake Owen Barefoot Blue Jean Night
2011 "What Would Dolly Do?" Kristin Chenoweth Some Lessons Learned
2011 "My Hometown" Uncle Kracker My Hometown - Single
2011 "Mama's Broken Heart" Miranda Lambert Four the Record
2011 "That's How I'll Remember You" David Nail The Sound of a Million Dreams

References

External links