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Consider Me Gone

"Consider Me Gone" is a song written by Steve Diamond and Marv Green. It was recorded by American country music artist Reba McEntire as her second release for the Valory label, a sister label of Big Machine Records. It is also the second single from her thirty-third studio album Keep On Loving You, which was released on August 18, 2009. On the Billboard country singles charts dated for the week of January 2, 2010, the song became McEntire's twenty-fourth number-one single. It is also her longest-lasting number one at four weeks.

For other uses, see Consider Me Gone (disambiguation).

"Consider Me Gone"

July 29, 2009 (2009-07-29)

3:38

Starstruck Records/Valory Music Co.

Steve Diamond
Marv Green

Mark Bright
Reba McEntire

An acoustic version of the song was released ahead of McEntire's 2021 album Reba: Revived, Remixed, Revisited.

Content[edit]

"Consider Me Gone" is a moderate up-tempo, featuring electric guitar and steel guitar fills. The narrator describes her lover as not being satisfied with her, but she decides to carry on without him and tells him to "consider [her] gone."

Critical reception[edit]

Jim Malec of "The 9513" gave the song a thumbs-down, saying that it "is a perfectly fine tune, unobjectionable but seemingly a better fit for a new artist who perhaps doesn’t have access to Music City’s best material. Reba, of course, could have the pick of the litter."[1]


Bobby Peacock, in his review of the album for Roughstock, compared the song's sound to McEntire's 1990s material, describing it as "an easy-going mid-tempo which focuses on the tail end of a fading relationship. The melody and production are a bit more stripped-down than most mainstream country radio, so this should do well as the second single."[2]

Music video[edit]

The music video was directed by Trey Fanjoy. It was a 2010 nominee for the CMT Music Awards' Female Video of the Year. It depicts Reba as a fashion designer working in a studio one night, while another woman is seen getting ready to go out. As she sings the song while working and on a spiral staircase, a storyline is interwoven, which depicts the woman and her husband having an argument. The woman seems to have enough of the man's laziness (as he is on his phone watching TV and clearly not paying attention to her) and walks out on him. He seems to not be able to get over her leaving, and everything of the woman's still in his house disappears right before his eyes, her face in pictures of the two of them. As this is going on, the woman is seen driving thru the city in a convertible. She arrives at Reba's studio, and tells her that she has broken up, and is sobbing. As she tries to cry herself out, the man knocks and comes in, embarrassing the woman in disbelief. He apologizes to her, and they make up and leave together. Reba then walks them out, then turns out the lights to her shop and goes to look at a new dress she made.