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Долго смеялась :))))) |
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At McCaw Hall, Seattle WA on August 29th, 2007 |
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Скоро уже весь мир поверит ,что он большая задница :) |
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Buble's grows in experience, vocal range |
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Friday, August 24, 2007 - 12:00 AM
AMANDA EDWARDS / GETTY IMAGES
At first regarded with suspicion, Michael Bublé has proved he has style. The Canadian singer who has sold 13 million records is scheduled to perform in Portland on Monday.
Jazz Etc.
By Paul de Barros
Seattle Times jazz critic
Michael Bublé, whose album "Call Me Irresponsible" (143/Reprise) has topped the jazz charts 14 weeks, is riding to the Vancouver airport, headed for Los Angeles.
Bublé's voice is deeper and more mature now than it was when he hit the international scene four years ago, able to sustain long, low notes and keep them full and rich. Has he been doing anything special to achieve this?
"I've moved up to four, five packs a day," quips the Canadian. "And then there's the bottle of scotch before breakfast."
At 31, Bublé is still a kid at heart, who loves to joke with the press, particularly about our hapless descriptives for voices — "smoky," "scotch 'n' soda," "honeyed."
Unlike a lot of performers, though, he actually likes interviews. He squeezed this one in at the last minute, despite the fact his Seattle shows at McCaw Hall — Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday — have been sold out for weeks. (There are still tickets for the Monday show in Portland, though they are very expensive — $150-$305: www.ticketsnow.com.)
"I think I'm just older," he offers. "My range has naturally gotten lower and lower. And, like anything, the more you do it, the more you learn."
It's heartening that Bublé has continued to learn and grow. At first regarded with high suspicion by critics as yet another unctuous, Las Vegas-style derivative of Sinatra, Bobby Darin and Harry Connick Jr., Bublé has proved he is not just about style — which he definitely has on stage — but substance.
Many tunes on the new album were recorded live in the studio — with full band and strings — giving it a convincing, immediate feel.
"I afforded myself the opportunity to take a risk and sing live," he says. "Because of that, there's a little more continuity, emotionally. Maybe not as slick, but quite honest. The ballads were my favorite — 40, 50 strings and everyone's playing along. And you can really get into the lyric."
When Bublé launches into the bouncy Sinatra favorite "The Best Is Yet To Come," the track bristles with élan, thanks not only to Bublé but to arranger John Clayton, also the pen behind the last Diana Krall album.
"John is so brilliant," agrees Bublé, who says he personally invited Clayton and the great Bill Holman to write for the project. "John seems to be able to just take a song and make it stronger than you thought it would be. Just when you think it can't get any meatier, it does."
Never entirely a retro artist, Bublé has always done songs from the "second" Great American Songbook of the '60s and '70s. His bossa nova duet with the great Brazilian singer/songwriter Ivan Lins on Eric Clapton's "Wonderful Tonight" is a brilliant stroke. Miraculously, he and David Foster (who produced most of the album) transformed the dark, aching Leonard Cohen ballad "I'm Your Man" into swinging jazz.
Bublé grew up in Burnaby, B.C. (also home to Michael J. Fox), and after paying dues in local lounges and bars caught a break when former Canadian Prime Minister Brian Mulroney invited him to sing at his daughter's wedding. Foster was a guest, and the result was Bublé's first, self-named CD, released in 2003.
Since then, the effervescent showman has sold 13 million albums worldwide.
So why do two of the world's top jazz singers — Krall being the other — hail from British Columbia?
"Canada is a nation of observers," answers Bublé. "This American songbook is one of the greatest gifts ever given to the arts by America. We watch."
Bublé is doing a lot more than watching.
"Well, some people say there's nothing else to do in Canada Saturday night," he says, switching back to type.
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Buble's inexhaustible songbook |
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FROM STANDARDS TO POP, HE REACHES A WIDE AUDIENCE |
By Yoshi Kato Special to the Mercury News San Jose Mercury News |
Article Launched:08/23/2007 01:38:43 AM PDT |
When seated among Michael Bublé's demonstrably enthusiastic fans at one of his concerts, shows by Frank Sinatra, Elvis Presley, the Beatles and more recently 'N Sync, the Spice Girls and Britney Spears come to mind. Screams, mostly high-pitched, greet the vocalist, and various items are lovingly and lustily hurled onto the stage. Bublé, 31, has worked hard for success, starting some 17 years ago with lounge shows in his native British Columbia. Now he tours with a big band, led by San Jose native Alan Chang, and he continues to attract a growing audience with both vintage and contemporary material. "The fun thing for me that I've noticed this tour is there's a lot more men," says Bublé by phone while en route to the Vancouver airport. "I think that that's really healthy. I never wanted to be - I don't know what you call it, but you get my point. I think that those kind of acts (sometimes) fade away quickly and that women get tired of them quickly. It was important for me to show up and perform for those guys that were dragged to my shows, so that they'd want to come back." These days, Bublé suspects, some men willingly come to his concerts with their girlfriends. On Saturday, when the Canadian vocalist plays Oracle Arena in Oakland, the crowd is likely to be diverse. "It's definitely a trip," the singer says, "young, old, gay, straight, white, black, rich, poor - you'll see everybody." According to band leader Chang, sometimes the Bublé magic rubs off on him, too. "If we go out after shows and people are waiting in line to meet Michael," he says, "they'll sometimes say, `Oh, let's get the band to sign (an autograph), too.' It's funny to meet young kids who think that Michael wrote (Cole Porter's) `I've Got You Under My Skin.' But they know all the words; 13-year-old girls know all the words to that song, which is great." Bublé has spoken admiringly of his own idols - Presley, Sinatra, Ray Charles, Bobby Darin - noting their abilities, in some cases, to dance and act, as well as sing. Bublé tried out acting on an episode of NBC's "Las Vegas," but his real versatility is in the sweep of his music. First, there are the standards, including "I've Got the World on a String" and "Call Me Irresponsible" (the title track on his latest CD, from 143 records/Reprise). Beyond the American Songbook, there are selections from Leonard Cohen ("I'm Your Man"), Van Morrison ("Moondance"), Eric Clapton ("Wonderful Tonight," a duet with the great Brazilian singer-songwriter Ivan Lins), etc. And finally, there are the hits Bublé has composed himself, including "Home" (from "It's Time," 2005, co-written with Chang and Amy Foster-Gillies). "I think that, if I had only sung standards, you might see a certain demographic in the audience," Bublé says. "But I've got a No. 1 song that I wrote, that's on pop radio in America ("Everything"), and I sing everything from Queen to Marvin Gaye to Otis Redding." He says it doesn't matter to him "when they were written, or by whom. If I can interpret them and come up with a great concept, then I do my very best." His charisma and showmanship are impressive. Asked about the response of audiences at his shows, he says, "I'm sincere when I sing, and I'm hoping that's a part of why people respond the way they do."Michael Bublé mercurynews |
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Patriot Center at George Mason University 8/11/07 |
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Atlanta's Fox Theater August 14th 2007 |
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Эксклюзивно! |
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Bad boy Michael Buble :) |
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How sweet it is |
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LIVE! |
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И я хочу стоя апплодировать... |
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Buble-ing over with excitement |
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Michael Buble in Boston |
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Mr.Irresponsible |
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Live at Fox theatre |
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Youtube channel |
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Crooner Buble wants every concert to be a 'show' |
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show growth as an artist, even for my own sanity. At the same time, I didn't want to alienate 11 million or so people who bought the record the first time.
"I didn't want to make the easy choices, if that makes any sense. I wanted to do songs because they were right. Not because it was the easiest or the simple thing to do."
That challenge also arose last April when Buble filled in as a last-minute substitute for Tony Bennett on "American Idol" after the legendary singer came down with the flu.
"Now that was terrifying," Buble, 31, said. "It wasn't the most perfect situation for an entertainer to be in. To step in for Tony Bennett is an impossible feat. It's funny - people said, 'Oh, you looked loose.' ... What I do is a loose thing. The style of music I
sing, it's about hearing the lyric and enjoying yourself. It's not a show-stopping, 'American Idol'-esque number.
"You see these kids, and if they do a performance of one of these songs and they do it at a club or a theater, they would probably look over-the-top. On 'American Idol,' it's perfect. It's about vocal gymnastics ... and not much about telling the story."
Telling the story is important to Buble. So the native Canadian admitted it's "with great difficulty" that he chooses the songs for his albums. For "Call Me Irresponsible," it was an "instinctual" thing.
"I think it's a gut feeling, knowing if a song is ready to be done - if it had enough time to live and then to be interpreted. I wanted to take songs and take them into my world. I didn't want to just do an ode to the song. I want to kind of make it my own - without turning it into bad lounge music, because it's pretty easy to do," Buble said.
To avoid that problem and to reinterpret the songs, Buble called in a number of special guests for the album. Boyz II Men lent vocals to Mel Torme's " Comin' Home Baby!" Buble said when he came up with the idea to record the song, he immediately thought of the group, best known for the song "I'll Make Love to You."
"I figured they'd be a perfect match. They're cool and retro in so many ways," Buble said. "They were a big influence on me as a kid. They were a huge group. I liked a lot of their songs. ... The first call I made on the record was to call them and ask them if they would do a duet with me."
Buble's tour in support of "Call Me Irresponsible" hits the Fox Theatre in Detroit on Friday. He said fans should "expect the unexpected."
"First and foremost: This is a show, not a concert. That's the most important thing to me. I'm so bored of these concerts. I keep going to these concerts, and I wonder why I didn't stay home and listen to the CD. It's nothing different," Buble said.
"I love the fact that entertaining people is a lost art. I have a very small responsibility. People pay money to see me, and I'm to take them away for a couple of hours. If I can think about it like that, I can really enjoy myself.
"I love the organic thing that happens in the relationship I get to have with that audience. It's a very personal, kind of intimate thing. Even if I'm playing in an arena. I think every night has to be special. I don't think you can ever just throw a night away. Or sing a song and just throw it away. Every night, these people should know they're seeing something they're not going to see any other time."
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Chris Isaak joins Michael on stage |
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A Crooner Who Woos With Modesty, Humor and More Than a Little Swing |
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At Radio City Music Hall on Tuesday, Michael Bublé performed songs made famous by Otis Redding and Elvis Presley, among others.
Michael Bublé wants the world to know that just because he is a swinging crooner from the old school, he is not a good little mama’s boy looking to please the grown-ups by singing their music. That’s why he called his third studio album “Call Me Irresponsible,” he joked from the stage of Radio City Music Hall on Tuesday evening.
“Call Me Irresponsible” is also the title of the standard by Sammy Cahn and Jimmy Van Heusen that was a hit for Frank Sinatra and Jack Jones in 1963. And on Tuesday Mr. Bublé, accompanied by a 14-piece band, punched it out with a buoyant good cheer that turned it into a personal declaration of independence by a guy’s guy with few axes to grind.
A 31-year-old Canadian who is a protégé of the producer David Foster and of Paul Anka, Mr. Bublé, now a major pop star, is no hothouse flower who as a boy locked himself in a music room with a Victrola and a stack of sheet music. His suit and tie on Tuesday evening didn’t prevent him from playing the cutup. He may be catnip to women, but he also connects to men in a buddy-buddy sort of way.
He did an extended riff on manliness that included an affectionate, dead-on imitation of the early Elvis singing, “That’s All Right.” Horsing around with his musicians, he picked up a trombone and tooted out some phrases of “Try a Little Tenderness.” It all led to a musical joke about masculinity, as Mr. Bublé sang the Village People anthem “Y.M.C.A.” The audience didn’t seem to get it.
It didn’t matter much, because Mr. Bublé, like Harry Connick Jr., is a natural entertainer. Unlike Mr. Connick, who has a less musical vocal timbre and much deeper jazz roots, Mr. Bublé is not inclined to wow an audience; he’d rather befriend it. Near the end of the concert, he talked about his relatively humble background as the son of a salmon fisherman in a close-knit family.
No less a personage than Tony Bennett, the unofficial chairman of the board since Sinatra’s death, has already hailed Mr. Bublé as the best young male singer carrying on the pre-rock tradition. I agree. Mr. Connick may be a phenomenal musical talent, but he spreads himself too thin across the show business spectrum, and on his spotty albums wears too many hats. Mr. Bublé is sensible enough not to squander his gifts by trying to be all things to all people all the time; his ego is in check.
Although the bulk of his repertory consists of standards, his approach to pop is distinctly contemporary in attitude. He slides comfortably from classic swing standards to pop-country to Latin American pop to pop-soul without indulging in stylistic contortions. His current hit, “Everything,” which he wrote with Alan Chang (his musical director) and Amy Foster-Gillies, may not be a pop classic, but it is breezy and tuneful.
The concert’s outstanding number (and also a high point of Mr. Bublé’s album) was his passionate pop-swing version of “Me and Mrs. Jones,” the 1972 Billy Paul megahit celebrating the joys of an adulterous affair. Without bending its phrases badly out of shape, Mr. Bublé built it to a peak of crowing delight, his soulful melismas riding on blasts of punctuation from the band’s powerful horn section. He mischievously dedicated the number to the young women in the audience who cheated on their husbands.
The one questionable number was “Try a Little Tenderness,” the early-’30s standard that Otis Redding gave an undeserved second life in 1966 with a burning soul version so fervent and abject that its sheer passion obscured its sexist lyric. The song has a pretty tune. If its image of a wife “weary” from “wearing the same shabby dress” made sense during the Depression, the blanket assertion about women that “love is their whole happiness” is condescending.
When sung without irony the song reads like cynical advice whispered by one man to another about how to keep a woman in her place. You can be pretty certain that there wasn’t a woman in the well-dressed upscale audience who would be caught dead wearing anything shabby.
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