Amy Winehouse: Her family is considering making a posthumous album


Amy Winehouse's father, Mitch, has revealed that he is considering a new posthumous album of the singer.

Amy Winehouse died on July 23, 2011 at the age of 27 at her home in Camden, London due to alcohol poisoning.

After her death, a collection entitled "Lioness: Hidden Treasures" was released containing unreleased songs, demos and covers by Amy Winehouse.

Now, her father is considering releasing a sequel to the collection.

"We found some songs, but it's difficult because the CDs are a bit damaged, but they've obviously told us we might be able to save something," Mitch Winehouse told BBC News on the tenth anniversary of the singer's death.

"It may not be as good as 'Back To Black,' but from what I've heard from the excerpts we could save, it's good."

The recordings include material from Amy Winehouse both from the first days of her success and before she became famous.

"I want to hear all these things and I want Amy fans to hear all this so they can see that it started there and ended here," Mitch added.

According to Amy Winehouse's mother, J anis Winehouse-Collins, if the recordings could be restored and an album released, it could be titled "The Progression Of Amy".

Earlier this week, Mitch said he wanted his daughter's legacy to be her enduring talent, not her battles with addiction.