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Concrete Angel

"Concrete Angel" is a song written by Stephanie Bentley and Rob Crosby, and recorded by American country music artist Martina McBride. It was released in November 2002 as the fourth and last single from McBride's Greatest Hits compilation album. The song reached number 5 on the country music charts.[2] "Concrete Angel" was ranked No. 1 by Rolling Stone on its list of the 40 Saddest Country Songs of All Time in 2019.[3]

This article is about the Martina McBride song. For the Gareth Emery song, see Christina Novelli § 2012—2013: Breakthrough. For the Hannah Diamond song, see Reflections (Hannah Diamond album).

"Concrete Angel"

"Where Would You Be"

November 18, 2002

2001

4:12

Content[edit]

The song is a power ballad, centering on a main theme of child abuse. The narrator tells a story about a little girl who endures severe abuse. The abuse is silently questioned by her teachers and neighbors, but goes unreported. By the song's end, the girl dies and goes on to an afterlife where "she is loved" more than she was on earth.

– drums

Matt Chamberlain

– programming

David Huff

B. James Lowry – acoustic guitar

Martina McBride – lead vocals

Jerry McPherson – electric guitar

– piano, synthesizer

Steve Nathan

– acoustic guitar

Biff Watson

– bass guitar

Glenn Worf

The following musicians perform on this track:[4]

Music video[edit]

The video was directed and produced by Deaton Flanigen. While McBride sings this song in the cemetery, Angela Carter (played by Noel Wiggins) is the 7-year-old daughter of an abusive mother. The girl's mother is shown disheveled and smoking a cigarette, as Angela is walking to school, another little girl looks at her and then laughs at her, which could imply she was also a victim of bullying. While she is at school, the teacher and her classmates ignore the bruises on her body, either because they think she just had a minor accident or they want to avoid having problems with her family. One day, a young boy (played by Luke Benward) around her age befriends her. One night, Angela and the boy are talking to each other from their bedroom windows, and her mother catches her and beats her to death, which is shown by her mother's shadow. After the beating, police officers and an ambulance are shown at her house, assuming that some neighbors had heard the noise and called the authorities, and the mother is arrested. At the funeral, Angela's grave marked as 1995-2002 is shown, surrounded by a group of people, including her school teacher, some of her classmates, and her only friend. It is implied that the boy is the ghost of a young child who was killed from being abused and then comes to her, before she passes and shows her friendship. The music video ends when the boy passes through the adults, hugs the spirit of Angela and they both run to meet a group of other abused children as they run off into the horizon. When the video was originally released, it featured the phone number for the American Child Abuse Hotline and encouraged viewers to report abuse. The music video received a nomination for a Grammy Award for Best Music Video.

Spanish singer covered the song as "Cómo Un Ángel" in her album Soy Yo, released in 2002.

Marta Sánchez

winner Melissa O'Neil covered the song on the album High Notes.

Canadian Idol

covered this song in her album Prelude to a Dream which was a self-produced CD available briefly as a demo album in 2009 when she was nine years old.

Jackie Evancho

covered this song, having Christina Novelli as the vocalist for the song.

Gareth Emery