Marie Osmond will be reunited with the late Dan Seals on a newly released duet, with the single “You Still Move Me” due April 10. The track is being issued ahead of Dan Seals & Friends: The Last Duet, a posthumous collection scheduled for release on August 28 via Melody Place Records.

Originally written and recorded by Seals in 1986, “You Still Move Me” explores the lingering emotions that follow a deep romance — the moments when life moves forward but memories and reflections of what might have been return. The new release pairs Osmond’s voice with Seals’ original performance, marking a musical reunion more than four decades after the pair first charted together.

Osmond and Seals first crossed paths in the mid-1980s, and their 1985 single “Meet Me In Montana” became one of country music’s most enduring duets. The song reached No. 1 on the Billboard Hot Country Singles chart and earned the pair Vocal Duo of the Year at the 1986 CMA Awards, cementing their chemistry with a performance that remains widely remembered. The hit was released on both artists’ solo albums and helped define a key moment in each singer’s career.

“I am extremely grateful that music brought Dan and me together all those years ago, in 1985,” Osmond said, reflecting on the new recording. “It was an honor to sing and perform with him back then, and very special to hear our voices together again over 40 years later. He was a true musical visionary and will always hold a place in my heart.”

Osmond—an RIAA gold-certified recording artist whose career spans six decades—has continued to bridge genres and platforms, from country chart-toppers like “You’re Still New to Me” and “There’s No Stopping Your Heart” to her 11-year Las Vegas residency with brother Donny Osmond. Her most recent studio collection, Unexpected (2021), leaned into classical, operatic and Broadway influences. She has also remained active offstage as a co-founder of the Children’s Miracle Network hospitals.

The forthcoming Dan Seals & Friends: The Last Duet appears to be part of a recent trend of posthumous collaborations that pair living artists with archival recordings. “You Still Move Me” will give listeners a chance to hear Osmond revisit the pairing that brought her and Seals commercial and critical acclaim in the 1980s, ahead of the full album’s late-August release.

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