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Saturday, May 8, 2010

Carrie Underwood Wwants Yyou To "Undo It"

Two-time ACM Entertainer of the Year, Carrie Underwood premiered the music video for her third radio single, "Undo It" from her latest third studio album "Play On" on CMT Friday. It will repeat throughout the weekend. The Chris Hicky directed video features shots of Underwood performing the song in concert along with shots of the background video played during the performance of the song in the Play On Tour, which is coming to Oklahoma City and Tulsa in fall.
"Undo It" is more of a rocker than a country tune, written by Kara DioGuardi, Martin Frederiksen, Luke Laird and co-written and recorded by Underwood. It was made available to digital retailers on last October, and will be released as an official single to country radio as her follow-up to "Temporary Home" on May 24. The single received mainly negative reviews, saying that it had "catchy repeatable lyrics, but she can do so much better."
For Underwood's new music video, "Undo It" the lovely blonde singer portrays a sassy woman who seems more angry about her breakup than hurt. She wants to put it behind her and move forward with positive energy, and the video portrays this message very well. Underwood is always full of positive energy, it seems, so this song and interpretation suit her very well. Her body language in the video is all about being positive and in charge and standing up to what is, and moving forward as a full woman, and not as a victim.
In the video "Undo It," the country star struts around in sexy outfits and leaves her shady
ex-boyfriend licking his wounds. Underwood regrets a love gone awry in her latest single, "Undo It," but it's hard to tell in her music video. Actually it seems like she revels in the role of the woman scorned and consequently can have fun with it. In the live-action video, the powerhouse singer struts to the microphone and takes a authoritative stance, even as she sings about not being able to help herself from the temptations of the bad boy. She rallies the troops with fist-pumps and "Na-Na" sing-alongs, and even though it seems out of the question to think of anyone taking Underwood's heart for a ride, you realize it's something that everyone goes through at some point. Maybe that's why she chooses to to take charge instead of mope. There's no use in crying over spilled milk.

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