Billboard - USA (2019-08-24)

(Antfer) #1

116 BILLBOARD | AUGUST 2 4 , 2 019


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For nearly four decades, songwriter Diane Warren has


perfected the art of the power ballad. Realsongs, which


she founded in 1987, has become the most successful


female-owned music publisher in the world, and the hits


she has written — for Whitney Houston, Céline Dion,


Aretha Franklin, Mariah Carey and others — earned her


a 2001 induction into the Songwriters Hall of Fame.


Today, Warren’s discography boasts a whopping nine


No. 1 hits on the Billboard Hot 100, including Toni


Braxton’s “Un-Break My Heart” (11 weeks) and Dion’s


“Because You Loved Me” (six). But it was her 1997


smash “How Do I Live” — initially intended for the


Con Air soundtrack and recorded separately by both


country singer Trisha Yearwood and a then-14-year-old


LeAnn Rimes — that made the biggest impact on the


charts. Despite peaking at No. 2 on the Hot 100, Rimes’


version is still the longest-running song by a female


artist on the chart, with 69 weeks. Warren looks back on


the making of the historic hit.


After LeAnn won the best new artist Grammy [in


1996], I ran into her at a restaurant. She was the young


hot artist at the time. I told her I wrote this song for


Con Air — though I didn’t mention that there were 200


songs in contention — and literally the next day she


demoed it. After Trisha’s version ended up in the film,


[LeAnn’s label] Curb Records wasn’t going to put it out,


so I called [founder] Mike Curb and said, “You have to


put it out. It’s a hit record for her.”


Even though LeAnn came from the country world,


I figured she had a better shot at crossing over into


pop, and my prediction was right. Trisha had a massive


career and a Grammy-winning country hit because of


it, but LeAnn’s version exploded. It was everywhere.


They split up territories around the world: Trisha’s


was a big hit in Australia and peaked at No. 2 on Hot


Country Songs in the U.S., while LeAnn had the pop


hit here. Elton John’s “Candle in the Wind” kept it from


reaching the top, so the biggest song ever by a female


artist in Billboard never went to No. 1. Numbers aren’t


everything, though. I love writing the emotional ones,


what can I say? I’m a song sadist: I like to rip your heart


out and make you cry. —AS TOLD TO NICK WILLIAMS


DIANE WARREN


SONGWRITER; OWNER, REALSONGS


Warren


photographed by


Kwaku Alston


in 2018.


A SONG FOR


ALL SEASONS


“Diane really hit


the co-dependency


nerve of our society


with ‘How Do I Live’ —


it’s played at weddings,


funerals and just about


every pivotal life-


altering moment.


I loved it from the very


moment Diane


played it for me.”


—LEANN RIMES


THE LEGACY


Y Thirty-two top 10s on the Hot 100,


including DeBarge’s “Rhythm of the


Night” (1985) and Cher’s “If I Could Turn


Back Time” (1989).


Y Named songwriter of the year six


times by ASCAP and four times by


the Billboard Music Awards.


Y Ten Academy Award nominations for


best original song, including Starship’s


Mannequin track “Nothing’s Gonna


Stop Us Now” (1988) and Aerosmith’s


Armageddon anthem, “I Don’t Want to


Miss a Thing” (1998).

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