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A dream come true for Buble

, 15 2008 . 20:03 +
TanyaB (Michael_Buble)

A dream come true for Buble                                                     

VANCOUVER -- Michael Buble

At GM Place

In Vancouver on Saturday

It's barely been a decade since Michael Buble was working as a lounge singer at Babalu - a tiny downtown Vancouver bar that was destroyed by fire in 2001 and is now an Irish pub. And, like so many aspiring crooners, the Burnaby, B.C. native and son of a fisherman played weddings and corporate events to pay the bills, and appeared in musicals such as the campy 1950s revue, Red Rock Diner.

So when he took the stage for his sold-out show at GM Place - Vancouver's largest concert venue - on Saturday night, he seemed like a guy who had left town in a Pinto and returned in a Ferrari.

"So, how much does this remind you of Babalu?" he quipped, kicking off the evening with a fieryrendition of I'm Your Man and It Had Better Be Tonight (Meglio Stasera).

"But I'm so happy to be here. I had to drive, like, two blocks."

Dressed in a black suit, a white shirt, and a black tie that was pulled jauntily loose around his neck, Buble then launched into a cover-heavy set that ranged from a faithful rendition of Sinatra's I've Got The World On A String to a decidedly un-country take on Willie Nelson's You Were Always On My Mind as the audience - mostly middle-aged couples and bevies of young women - cheered and sang along.

Backed by a full horn section, percussion, guitars, piano and bass, the crooner seemed most at home belting out jazz classics such as the horn-heavy Feeling Good, made famous by the inimitable Nina Simone, the Drifters' Save The Last Dance For Me and the sultry Peggy Lee hit, Fever.

But while the estrogen levels in the stadium rose to precipitous highs as Buble performed several of his soft favourites radio hits, including Lost, which he co-penned with Jann Arden, and the toothache-sweet love song Everything, the material was by far the evening's least compelling.

Still, even Buble poked fun at the tunes, saying "I very badly wanted to be a hockey player. And now I'm singing these wimpy love songs."

And although there was no hiding the fact that his music is geared toward love-minded ladies - at one point, he even jumped into the crowd and gave hugs and kisses to several of his admirers - the heartthrob also made peace with the thousands of boyfriends and husbands in the crowd, acknowledging that many of them probably weren't too thrilled about going to the show. "I'm making my music," he reminded them jokingly before a cover of the sexy hit, Me And Mrs. Jones, "and getting you laid when you get home."

Later, he extended another olive branch to the men, comparing the Vancouver Canucks' season record with that of the Toronto Maple Leafs on a giant screen, then dedicating his monster hit Home to Daniel and Henrik Sedin, Markus Naslund and Roberto Luongo of his hometown team.

After saying his thank yous and goodbyes ("This was a dream come true,"), Buble rounded off the evening with a swinging cover of the Queen hit Crazy Little Thing Called Love and the quiet ballad A Song For You.

As he neared the end of the last tune, he put down his mike and, under his own power, filled the stadium with the lines "I love you for my life, because you're all friends of mine/And when my life is over, I'll remember when we were together/Because we were alone and I was singing my song for you." Then he blew kisses to his fans, bowed, mouthed the words "You rock," and walked offstage, ready to take on the world.

: http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/LAC.20080114.BUBLE14/TPStory/TPEntertainment/Music/

Call me irresponsible


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The late late show

, 13 2007 . 20:07 +
TanyaB (Michael_Buble)
Canadian singer/songwriter and all-round heart throb Michael Bublé came into studio to perform two songs, one old, one new, and to talk about just how you follow an album that sold 11 million copies worldwide. In a revealing interview, he spoke of love, family and success - and the audience just loved him!

Watch HERE





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:)))

, 18 2007 . 23:46 +
TanyaB (Michael_Buble)
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Classically cool -- Buble's music is the melody

, 30 2007 . 23:32 +
TanyaB (Michael_Buble)

Classically cool - Buble's music is the melody

Canadian singer Michael Buble brings his love of pop classics and big-band tunes to the Rose Garden

Friday, August 24, 2007
ED CONDRAN
Special to The Oregonian

Michael Buble epitomizes cool.

The Canadian crooner has the looks, the pipes and even a sense of humor. "Am I wasting my votes still voting for Antonella Barba?" Buble, 31, cracked to Ryan Seacrest on last season's "American Idol" after the sultry Barba, a fan favorite, failed to make the cut.

However, the suave entertainer, calling recently from New York, admits he was terrified while making "Call Me Irresponsible," the follow-up to his mega-platinum breakthrough album, 2005's "It's Time." The candid Buble, who performs Monday at the Rose Garden arena, also details his love of pop classics and big band music, why his songs stand out today and what inspired his career.

What was it like following up a career-making disc?

It was very, very scary. I was very nervous. I didn't have a lot of fun making this record.

Why?

I had more to lose this time. So I worked so hard. It's difficult, since the last album sold 5 million copies and I'm in a business that's faltering but I'm expected to sell 10 million copies this time.

You've sold a lot of units but you don't get a lot of airplay . . .

The reason for that is that I'm a live performer. I think if you want longevity in this business, you have to be a live performer. Look at all the acts that are doing well. The Rolling Stones, the Police, these are acts that play well and draw people to shows. They're great at what they do onstage. I think that's very important. It's how it was when the musicians who played my music did it back in the day.

How does a kid growing up in the late '80s develop a fondness for big band music?

My grandfather played the music for me and I just fell for it. I'm a sentimental person, and the lyrics are quite sentimental.

It's one thing to become a fan, but to start a career crooning these classic songs . . .

I was filling a niche, and even more so I thought this could get me (sex). I thought this was a cool thing. I wasn't following in everyone else's footsteps. I was being irresponsible. I wasn't following the rock band of the week just because everyone else was. I had something that was mine. I fell for timeless music.

But you started singing so you could get girls, just like rockers do.

That was my angle. I don't mean to be crass about it but, well, maybe I do. I think if you asked a lot of men after they were injected with truth serum, why they became presidents, entertainers, CEOs or journalists, why they did it, they would say to do well with the opposite sex.

I think you might be right about all of that except the part about journalists.

(Laughs) For me, personally. I can't say (speaking in a fey manner), "It's just lovely music and I think it's just special and it touches my heart." I would cringe myself up.

Your songs get a little more notice today since they're different from much of what is released. Does that give you an advantage?

I think it helps in a way. My single "Everything" went to No. 1, and so did "Home" from my last record. Do I think they would have done as well in 1971? I don't think so. There were so many great songs with great melodies out then. Would those songs have gone to No. 1 and taken out an Abba or a Bee Gees song? I don't know. Those songs Abba wrote are inspiring.

Why has so much nonmelodic music been released?

I think during the '90s a lot of music became groove-driven, and the melody was lost. I'm not saying there isn't room for great groove-driven songs or metal or hip-hop. I'm just saying that there is room for melody. I have 10-year-old kids come up to me and they love music with melody.

Your material isn't all that's a throwback, so is your album, which wasn't overproduced. You cut tracks live, and warts and all are exposed.

That was the way to go. (Producer) David Foster said that it was going to be hard for me to listen to this album because I sang live. He said that I'll be able to hear my breaths. I'll hear the bum notes. He was right. It is hard for me to listen to because it's not slick. But I'll take sounding weird and that emotion you get with it over a slick disc.

Would you ever cross over into rock?

No. I just think about how so (darn) hard it was to get where I am, and there's no way I would do it. I started out as a 16-year-old working nightclubs. I did that for 10 years. I got discovered and worked even harder since then. I was told that I should join a boy band, sing rock or pop. I was told that no one would listen to me sing this style of music. I was told Harry Connick Jr. is in position to sing this music and that I'll never succeed. After proving so many people wrong, I would be crazy to pull a 180 and do something else.

What was it like playing the clubs?

It was weird because Big Bad Voodoo Daddy and Brian Setzer were getting big, and zoot suit people would come into the clubs. It wasn't great for the club owners because these people came to dance and not drink alcohol. They drank water all night. The thing I remember about it was that it was a bit cringy. People wearing '20s getups. I have a great respect for the history of music and for those who wrote it, but I'm glad to have been born in 1975 and wear the clothes we wear today. I love the music, but I'm not so nostalgic that I'm wearing the clothes from the period. For me, it's all about the music.

LINK




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ONE NIGHT WITH LITE

, 27 2007 . 20:18 +
TanyaB (Michael_Buble)

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Call me irresponsible


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Why Michael Buble' won't just shut up and sing

, 27 2007 . 18:19 +
TanyaB (Michael_Buble)  (367x550, 50Kb)

He's got it all: the looks, the starlet girlfriend, a career on the the brink of superstardom. But he keeps talking himself into trouble

JONATHON GATEHOUSE | August 27, 2007 |

''If you write what I actually say, my mother will come after you and cut off your pee-pee." Occasionally, it can be hard to tell when Michael Bublé is joking, but the threat -- as weird and Freudian as it sounds -- seems earnest enough. For the past couple of hours he's been up on stage in the cavernous Events Center in Reno, Nev., rehearsing for the opening show of his U.S. tour, and things haven't been going well. His 13-piece band is finding it hard to get it together, the crew can't seem to hit the light and curtain cues, and the sound mix is muddy. Conditions are ripe for a diva fit, but Bublé has been behaving more like a teenager angling for a detention, and his between-song patter is getting progressively more profane with each new snafu. Everyone is laughing. But it's only after he's questioned the social graces and parentage of his imaginary audience and looks out into the empty seats to see a reporter scribbling away that he starts looking fussed. Now, crouched down on the edge of the stage, he tries his hand at being menacing, fails, then starts pleading not to be quoted. "Every time I say something stupid my mom calls me up and bawls me out."

The Burnaby, B.C., native's constantly running mouth and flip sense of humour have caused him enough trouble lately. There was the crack about marrying his girlfriend, the Hollywood starlet Emily Blunt (who's out in the seats studying for her role as the young Queen Victoria in Martin Scorsese's next film) that got played as a straight-up proposal in the gossip pages. Another off-the-cuff remark -- about how he was going to stay home from the Grammys because his category, best traditional recording, was awarded before the televised ceremony and was a lock for Tony Bennett anyway -- ended up playing as a peevish attack on a singer he adores. Add in earlier missteps like admitting he threw up in the garden at Leo DiCaprio's house. Or a booze-and-strippers boys' night out in the Philippines that was recounted in all its very graphic glory in a British magazine, and you get the sense that Bublé may be letting a lot of mom's calls ring through to voice mail.

The rules of the game are changing for the 32-year-old singer. He's no longer an up-and-coming kid with a nice backstory and a big set of pipes. Now, Michael Bublé is on the cusp of superstardom. His new album, Call Me Irresponsible, debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard Top 200. In just 14 weeks, it has sold close to 820,000 copies in the U.S., and 1.4 million more worldwide. The 19-city American tour is already sold out, and will be followed by a string of even larger European dates -- culminating at London's Wembley Arena in December -- and then a winter Canadian tour. All told, Bublé expects to be on the road for the next two years, hitting more than 40 countries. He's already big in Australia, Italy, Germany, South Africa and the Far East. But if all goes according to plan, by the time he finally makes it back home, he'll be a truly global phenomenon.

The Grammys debacle was a wake-up call for Bublé. After 16 years of struggling to get people to pay attention, suddenly, they are. "I said a lot of s--t before, but no one cared," he says later as we sit in his dressing room. After the story broke, Bublé spent two days at home in his Vancouver condo with the shades drawn. What really stuck with him, he says, was the insight offered by one of his managers. "She said, 'For all the wonderful things that have happened in your life, and all the wonderful things you have, you do know that fame is the worst of all.' "

It's a lot to ask, to feel sorry for a guy who's living the dream. But Bublé's greatest talent is his likeability. Five minutes of conversation and it's as if you've been friends for life. There's no hovering PR flack, or entourage. His newly acquired "bodyguard" -- a job that mostly consists of extracting Michael from the warm embraces of overheated grandmas during shows -- is an extra-large buddy from high school. More than 12 million albums sold and he's still trying to break himself of the habit of looking up the bad reviews on the Internet and brooding about them. "It sucks when someone doesn't like you," he says. "I want everyone to like me."


Jann Arden, the fellow Canadian who's the opening act on this tour, has a friendly warning for the men in the audience in Reno. "Michael's so sexy that he can turn you gay. It's true." When the curtain goes up a half-hour later to reveal Bublé at the microphone, black suit, loosened tie (Hugo Boss is a sponsor), and he launches into his jazzy cover of Leonard Cohen's I'm Your Man, the female screams are deafening. There's so much estrogen in the air that the real danger for the guys might be the spontaneous development of breasts.

Since his eponymous major-label debut in 2003, Warner Music Group has lovingly packaged Bublé as the smoky, heartthrob inheritor of Rat Pack cool. (Michael admits that one of the ways he convinced the company to sign him was his vow to "work his ass off" to fill the crooner slot Harry Connick, Jr. abandoned when he moved on to films and TV.) But a key source of Bublé's considerable charm is that he never seems to take the hype too seriously. On stage, he mugs and jokes his way through the set, relentlessly poking fun at himself. A bit of shtick about what a manly "bad ass" he is introduces a more than passable imitation of Elvis's That's All Right Mama (before he hit it big, Bublé played the King in a touring revue), which quickly morphs into a left field cover of Mika's Grace Kelly -- perhaps the campiest song of the last decade. "If this is your first show, you now realize what a dork I am," he tells the crowd.

Blunt, who has been with Bublé for almost two years now and shares his Vancouver home, says the gulf between the real Michael and the glossy image is laughable. "He's not like the music," says the 24-year-old Brit, who shot to fame last year as the bitchy assistant in The Devil Wears Prada. "He's a fart in a bottle." There's very little dancing, candlelight and flowers, she says, just lots of stay-at-home nights watching the Canucks and playing video games. "It's all right. I like a boy with food down his shirt."

That might be a defensive position. Bublé's fans can be, to put it politely, ardent. "They all hate me," Blunt says with a laugh. She tells of a teddy bear that someone handed him recently. Michael gave it to his road manager, who has a young daughter. When it arrived at the house, the girl gave it a tight squeeze, unleashing a recording of the laundry list of carnal pleasures the fan had in store for the singer. And all indications are that Blunt has it, just as bad as any of the women waiting at the backstage door. When Bublé pulls a stool up beside the piano during the Reno show and delivers a quiet, heartfelt rendition of (You Were) Always on My Mind, out in the audience, her eyes well with tears. "He's bloody good, my boy, isn't he?" she whispers.

Perhaps the most surprising thing about Bublé's live performances is how ill at ease he now seems with some of the standards that launched his career. In Reno, and again two nights later in Las Vegas, Come Fly with Me sounds more bored than Chairman of. And with the exception of Fever, the chestnuts tend to get played for laughs -- improvised lyrics, herky-jerky dance routines -- rather than romance.

In recent years, Bublé has frequently run down his first album (about five million copies sold to date) as "schmaltz" and "crap." He likes to tell the story of an interview he once did with a respected New York City jazz DJ who asked him -- live on the air -- why he didn't just leave blank space on the record instead of his note-for-note recreation of a Sinatra classic. "I knew he was right," says Michael. On the second record, It's Time, Bublé again caved to pressure for a "nostalgic" track, using the familiar Nelson Riddle arrangement of I've Got You Under My Skin. When the subject came up in the studio this time, the singer held firm. "I was like 'Over my dead body. It's not going to happen.' " Call Me Irresponsible has some of Frank's songs, but not in his style. I've Got the World on a String is breezy and Sylvester-the-cat sibilant. That's Life -- transformed into a gospel rocker -- is serving as the tour's showstopper, with a full choir joining Michael onstage every night. "It's okay to borrow things, to be influenced," he says. "But just to rip it off, just to repeat it? I think I have a responsibility to move the music forward."

It's a nice statement of purpose, but the singer and the people around him -- B.C.-born super-producer David Foster and yet another Vancouver native, agent Bruce Allen -- are canny enough to realize that people don't buy his records to feel experimental. (A full 46 per cent of Bublé's sales in the U.S. come from Target department stores.) The mantra for the new disc, says Bublé, was "growth without alienation." So along with the standards, fans get a version of Billy Paul's '70s-soul classic Me and Mrs. Jones (Blunt sings backup vocals), and an upbeat duet with Boyz II Men that stretches Mel Tormé's Coming Home Baby in unexpected directions. Most importantly for Bublé -- and his pocketbook (commercial radio shies away from covers) -- there are two original compositions: the current single, Everything, and Lost, an end-of-the-dance ballad penned with Arden and Alan Chang, his musical director. A similar song on his last album, Home, gave Bublé his first No. 1 hit in the U.S. Lost is perhaps an even more perfect Fosterian confection. By Christmas, it should be unavoidable.

With all this talk of growth and new directions, it's natural enough to wonder if Bublé might be getting ready to make a real leap of faith, and part ways with the man who made him a star. David Foster, after all, is something of a golden curse -- a man with almost unerring easy-listening instincts (Céline Dion, the Corrs, Josh Groban) -- and a cool factor of absolute zero. In the shorthand version of Michael's story, Foster gets almost all of the credit, "discovering" the singer when he performed at the 2000 wedding of Caroline Mulroney, daughter of the former prime minister. The reality, Bublé concedes, was more complex. Foster was kind, letting him hang out in Malibu, steering corporate gigs his way, but was reluctant to take Michael on as a project (Foster is also a Warner vice-president). "I drove him nuts," says Bublé. "I'd constantly drive out to his home and ask, 'When are you gonna sign me?' " A recent article in Britain's Guardian newspaper suggested Foster agreed to produce the demos only after Michael raised US$450,000 to cover the studio costs. Bublé gives that version a lukewarm confirmation, but goes on to say that the "real" story of his big break -- which he can't tell right now -- is even stranger. (A horse head in a bed? Midgets?)

Beverly Delich, Bublé's former manager, says that they did start looking around for a private investor in the summer of 2001. Paul Anka, who went on to executive-produce the first album, even had a mysterious benefactor lined up. But the "real story" Bublé alludes to seems to be a last-minute change of heart by Foster, who ended up paying for the demos himself, leaving it up to other Warner executives whether to sign his protegé.

In other words, the debt is both real and figurative. So for all the talk of "creative differences" and battles in the studio, don't expect a Michael Bublé rock opera any time in the near future. "I like to make fun of him too -- say things like 'How do you hear your music? You don't ride elevators,' " allows the singer. "But there's a reason why millions and millions of people bought all those albums." And as long as the fruits of their partnership have integrity, Bublé says he's content to let the hipsters and the critics sneer. The part of his story that people often overlook is the 10 years Michael spent plying his trade in lounges and clubs to crowds that were more interested in the price of the drinks than the guy up on stage. Street cred is overrated. "I'm not in the record business," Bublé shrugs. "I'm building a career."


It's a half-hour before a sold-out show at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas, and 7,500 bums are settling into the seats, but Bublé seems more hyperactive than nervous. Backstage, he's still dressed in jeans and a T-shirt, and vigorously stroking a room full of corporate sponsors. The crew from Kettle One Vodka appear to have been sampling the wares, so the point-and-shoot digital cameras are proving a bit harder than usual to operate. But through it all, Michael is the very model of broadly grinning patience; his professionalism underlined by the way he rises up on tiptoe just before the shutter is depressed. (Bublé says it's to stop him from leaning into the lens, and the fact that it adds an extra couple of inches in height is purely coincidental.) It's the record company VIPs that get the better lines, however. "Did you get the money I sent to you," Bublé asks conspiratorially when introduced to the program director from "Hot AC" FM in Phoenix. All the colour instantly drains from the face of a nearby Warner rep.

Bublé is becoming big business. Starbucks used Come Fly with Me in a commercial. ESPN promotes its poker coverage with his version of Feeling Good. There's already an endorsement deal with Rolex watches, and talks are under way with American Express. (Bruce Allen, seeking to further broaden his appeal, has him recording a song with rap-rockers Linkin Park.) And there's no end of official Michael products -- $20 teddy bears, $60 hoodies, limited-edition signed lithographs for $200.

The most lucrative deal he's clinched lately, however, was undoubtedly his June gig as the featured entertainment at the $6-million French Riviera nuptials of Australian media tycoon James Packer. Bublé won't say how much he got, but Elton John reportedly received $800,000 for playing at Packer's first wedding. Besides, the cash was not the only consideration. A friend asked him to play as a favour, he says, and with a guest list that included luminaries like Rupert Murdoch and Tom Cruise it seemed like a no-brainer. "It was good for my career."

Bublé's kind of funny about money. He hasn't really bought much with his earnings, choosing to stay in his Vancouver pad, and drive a plum-coloured Vespa around town. He gave Lewis and Amber, his dad and mom, a million dollars this past Christmas, and his two younger sisters $50,000 each. In past years, he's bought them cars, or antique watches. He was kind of hoping that his dad, a commercial salmon fisher, might retire. The suggestion didn't go over well. And that sort of generosity isn't limited to family. At the conclusion of his last tour, Bublé treated 45 members of his band, crew, and even the secretaries from the management office in Vancouver, to a five-day Hawaiian vacation.

But what does seem slightly odd is that Bublé's press clippings contain those types of intimate details, along with the kind of dirty laundry that most people -- famous or unknown -- choose to keep hidden. Like how Michael was unfaithful to his former fiancée, the Vancouver actress Debbie Tismuss, or how she "bawled" when he played her his new track about their failed romance, Lost. (Home was also written for her. Everything is about Emily.) Or the Q&A in the July issue of the music magazine Blender, where he talks about how much pot he smokes, and how he first got drunk -- with his parents -- at age 11.

It's all refreshingly honest. But it does provide ample ammunition for those websites and supermarket rags that trade in rumour. For example, when Michael appeared on American Idol in April as a last-minute fill-in for an ailing Tony Bennett, and delivered an uncharacteristically flat performance, there were suggestions he was drunk or high. (Bublé says he was just nervous. And that his loud sniffling during a post-song interview was the result of his oft-broken nose -- an old hockey injury.) Others read unkind things into his joyful celebration when Blunt won a Golden Globe this past winter, labelling him a "camera hog." Glimpses of the "real" Michael, crow the cynics, firm in their belief that no celebrity can possibly be as nice and forthcoming as this guy appears to be.

Bublé seems genuinely taken aback that some people think it might all be an act. "I'd have to be the most brilliant ..." he trails off. "That I would almost on purpose begin or end a relationship within the cycle of making a record? That would be scary." The real truth, he says, is that he just doesn't have a filter. Something he vows, almost daily, to change, but somehow never succeeds at.

The first night we meet, Bublé sees me talking to Blunt backstage, standing with a dozen or so other people in a chow line. "You're not writing about her?" he asks in a loud voice. "No, no, I'm serious." There's a long pause. "Because it's hard to get laid if people know that I have a girlfriend." Michael being Michael. Blessed with a sense of humour that's way more dangerous than his music. And a guy that -- for better or for worse -- seems destined to stay the same, no matter how famous he gets.

Sorry, Mrs. Bublé. And please, please -- put down that knife.






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A crooner who curses and charms

, 21 2007 . 21:56 +
TanyaB (Michael_Buble)
Michael Buble, A crooner who curses and charms                        

Sunday, August 19, 2007 - 12:00 AM

By Jon Bream
Minneapolis) Star Tribune

Michael Buble was stumped. He could not name the last Canada-based male singer to land at No. 1 on the U.S. album chart before he accomplished it last month.

Bryan Adams with "Reckless" in 1984.

"You're [bleeping] me," blurted Buble. "I'll be bragging to my family in about three hours."

Buble, 32, croons like Sinatra, curses like Eddie Murphy and charms like Bill Clinton. Those traits may help explain why he has joined Nickelback, the Vancouver, B.C., rock band, and Celine Dion, the Montreal pop diva, at the top of the U.S. charts.

Crossing over

But why is it hard out there for a Canadian-based vocalist trying to score in the States?

"There are to things to jump over — become a success here, and then it is a jump to the U.S.," said Larry LeBlanc, Canadian bureau chief of Billboard. "The barrier is there. We can't go back and forth across your border like you can with ours."

Why did Buble's third album, "Call Me Irresponsible," debut at No. 1 in May? Buble (boo-BLAY; it's Italian, not French) will tell you it's because of career momentum. Adams told us in an e-mail it's because Buble is a good singer. Music marketing experts will tell you it's because of a one-two punch: appearing on "American Idol" and "Oprah."

"I was so [bleep-y] on 'Idol' that I think it would be the opposite," Buble said with a hearty laugh. "There were probably 80,000 people about to buy the record who went 'Oh, he's really not that good.' I don't know how much that helped. Maybe it put you in the consciousness of some of the American public."

"Oprah," however, was another story. "They say she's good for 35,000 or 40,000 records for that week and the next couple of weeks," he said this month from his Vancouver home. "That kind of power is pretty amazing. It was quite shocking to me to see that kind of impact."

The "Oprah" appearance effectively captured this modern-day lounge singer, who is one of those artists who must be seen live to be fully appreciated. Plus, he's a charming talker.

Rolling "loose and dirty"

Onstage, he's ham and cheese, slathered with lots of romantic dressing on two slices of dark and handsome. He sings and swings. He does shtick and turns on the charisma. As a London writer put it: He's like Bill Clinton — he'll come on to whomever is in front of him.

"Call Me Irresponsible" presents Buble's personality and stage essence more successfully than his first two discs, which were slickly produced by David Foster, the L.A.-based Canadian who has worked with Barbra Streisand, Josh Groban and Dion.

Buble attributes the improvement to his singing live instead of recording multiple takes and slicing them together for a pristine version. "David and I sometimes go to war over our sense of style," said the singer, who again worked with Foster on this album. "I like things to be a little more loose and dirty, and he likes things to be perfect."

Cue the girlfriend!

Once again, Buble takes on standards, including "The Best Is Yet to Come" and "That's Life." He also reimagines contemporary pop hits, including Eric Clapton's "Wonderful Tonight" (as a bossa nova duet with a man) and Billy Paul's "Me and Mrs. Jones" (as a duet with a woman).

At dinner one night, Foster pitched "Me and Mrs. Jones," a 1972 soul hit, to Buble. He didn't even know the song, but his girlfriend, actress Emily Blunt of "The Devil Wears Prada" fame, proclaimed: "Oh, my God, this is wonderful!"

They went home, put "Me and Mrs. Jones" — about a man's affair with a married woman — on an iPod and Buble concluded: "It sucks." But after six or seven more listenings, he started to appreciate the melody and later the lyrics in a "sexy yet kitschy" way.

While recording it, Foster suggested adding a dark, moody female voice. Buble recommended Blunt, a cellist who can sing. So the producer auditioned her and she got the part.

But now when the recording comes on in front of unfamiliar listeners, right when it gets to Blunt's vocals, she always turns down the volume. "I don't usually say anything," her boyfriend said. "She cringes easily."

He's got pipes

While his salmon-fishing parents were out to sea, young Michael, the oldest of three children, got hooked on the standards in Grandpa's record collection. When the family realized the youngster could sing, Grandpa, a plumber, would go to bars and offer to fix toilets in exchange for letting the kid sing on the bandstand.

After years in Canadian clubs, Buble got his break in 2000 when he sang at the wedding of the Canadian prime minister's daughter. Producer Foster was there, and the assertive Buble asked for a recording opportunity. Foster said the singer would need $500,000 to have a shot at making it in the business.

Buble found investors and eventually released his first U.S. album in 2003 through Reprise, the label that Frank Sinatra founded. With heavy touring and many TV appearances, the Canadian built his career to the point where his second CD, 2005's "It's Time," stayed at No. 1 on Billboard's traditional jazz chart for a record 80 weeks. In addition to receiving two Grammy nominations, he has sung on Tony Bennett's 2006 duets disc and on a new Ella Fitzgerald tribute CD, on which he's the only male vocalist.

Too sexy for his song?

For his own new project, the retro popster co-wrote two songs in a more contemporary vein. "Everything," his current single, is the bubbliest thing Buble has recorded.

"I love pop music, and I was hoping I could do what I do and delve a little closer to acoustic pop without being called schizophrenic," he said. "I wrote a melody with a nice '70s summer feel, and I sat with a lyricist to write about being newly in love."

Then to add a pop-rock edge, he enlisted Canadian producer Bob Rock, who has helmed hits for Metallica, Bon Jovi and Mötley Crüe.

The album also includes a cover of "I'm Your Man" by Leonard Cohen, who rivals Joni Mitchell as the greatest Canadian songwriter to not hit No. 1 in the States. Buble had a conversation about the song with its composer.

"I said: 'OK, Leonard. I'm a bit afraid of how this is going to come off live.' He said: 'Why?' I said: 'Because I'm afraid it's just too sexy. I don't know what's going to happen when men start throwing their underwear at me.'

"He didn't laugh. He just said [imitating Cohen's deep whisper]: 'I don't think that will be a problem.' "

Call me irresponsible

world tour'2007

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, 09 2007 . 21:20 +




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Michael Buble Behind The Scenes

, 09 2007 . 21:17 +
TanyaB (Michael_Buble) A look behind the scenes of Nathan's interview with Michael Buble which Fuzzy was at as well

WATCH IT!
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Michael Buble on Video Hits

, 09 2007 . 21:05 +



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Michael Buble' on Sky News Showbiz

, 09 2007 . 21:02 +


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Michael Buble speaks to 3AW's Ernie Sigley, June 26

, 03 2007 . 21:56 +
Call me irresponsible



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Michael Buble interview on Rove

, 02 2007 . 20:30 +
TanyaB (Michael_Buble)


Michael Buble rapping on Rove



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LiveDaily Interview: Michael Buble

, 24 2007 . 21:02 +
TanyaB (Michael_Buble)  (188x600, 105Kb) June 20, 2007 02:06 PM
"Terrified" is a word that comes up frequently in conversation with Canadian crooner Michael Buble. After selling 11 million albums, what is he so terrified of?

"I put pressure on myself," Buble said about the making of his latest album "Call Me Irresponsible." "I was treading a real fine line. I wanted to 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 when Buble filled in as a last-minute substitute for Tony Bennett on "American Idol" earlier this year, after the legendary singer came down with the flu.

"Now that was terrifying," he 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."

Buble talked to LiveDaily about "Call Me Irresponsible," working with rock producer Bob Rock, and more.

LiveDaily: How do you go about choosing your songs? There's such a wealth of material out there.

Michael Buble: With great difficulty. It's hard to say. More than anything, it's 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.

Do you come up with a list of potential songs, or is that what the producer does?

I think in maybe some cases, that's what a producer does. In my relationship with the producers, I come up with the songs and the concepts. With a lot of the concepts, I come in and say, "I want to do this song, Eric Clapton's ‘Wonderful Tonight,' and I'd love to do it with Ivan Lins because I'm a big fan of [his] records. I think that this song can be taken there, and it can be really tasty and beautiful." Or, with "That's Life," I came to the producer and said, "Here's a song I've always liked. I've been a big fan of Donny Hathaway my whole life and I would love to take this song to church and fuse it with that great gospel R&B feel." I can go on and on and on [about] each song. I spend a lot of time thinking about it. I think what happens is, you think about it so much and you live with these ideas, then, all of a sudden, you start to second guess yourself. So you show up to the recording studio and think, "Is it just me who loves it, or is this going to be loved?"

How did you hook up with Boyz II Men for "Comin' Home Baby"?

The same idea. I was a big fan of this Mel Torme song "Comin' Home Baby," and, every time I heard it, I wanted to do it. The only group I conceived of was Boyz II Men. I figured they'd be a perfect match. They're cool and retro in so many ways. They were a big influence on me as a kid. They were a huge group. I liked a lot of their songs. I knew they were still working and stuff. The first call I made on the record was to call them and ask them if they would do a duet with me.

They must have been thrilled.

They're really nice guys. I had been in touch with Shawn [Stockman of Boyz II Men] before we had even started. We were just kind of fans of each other. We sent e-mails to each other. You know, "Your stuff is great."

How was it to work with producer Bob Rock? He's known for working with the likes of Metallica.

Why, he's one of the greatest jazz players that ever lived! [Laughs] No, I'm kidding. Bob is managed by Bruce Allen, who also manages Michael Buble. (I hate talking about myself in the third person. I just did it to be funny. [Laughs]) It was kind of cool. I've known Bob for a couple years. I just think he's a super guy. Of course, I love a lot of stuff he had done. So I'd written this song "Everything." I figured he'd give it this cool, laid back, not as produced--an edgier thing, very acoustic thing. He's a nice man and we're friends. We had a really great time working together. I can't tell you how thrilled I am that the single has worked. He took a risk working with me and likewise, and it's so cool when it comes out like this and you know your instinct was right.

What did you learn from your primary producer, David Foster?

The enemy of good is great. Truly, I've learned I really want to hold a higher standard for myself and for my music, and for what I do professionally. It's easy to be good and hard to be great. You find with anyone, there's a lot of things you learn positively and a lot of negative things you learn, too. That's what you get by being with people. You can never learn enough.

What can we expect from your concert tour this time around?

Always 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 their CD. It's nothing different. 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 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. I change up my show a lot--not always in the set list, but in the things I do or say or certain songs I just break into. I love what I do. I love to have fun like that.

How do you go about making it more of a performance than a concert?

I think there's a lot of different things that go into that. Firstly, give them some nice production. The only thing that makes anyone's show different than anyone else is the relationship they have with the audience ... their comfort level [and] how much fun the person's actually having. Because, you know, it's catchy, very catchy, when you see someone on stage and they look like they're happy to be there ... and they're comfortable and taking the piss out of themselves and laughing. I think that that takes it to another level, when you can allow yourself to really, really, actually, sincerely enjoy yourself.

Why did you decide to name your album "Call Me Irresponsible"?

Because I am irresponsible, and because I love the song. I think being irresponsible can be kind of a cool thing. Just to fall in love it takes being a little irresponsible, but that's a risk I'm willing to take.

Call me irresponsible



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Who Does Michael Buble' Think He Is?

, 23 2007 . 20:29 +
TanyaB (Michael_Buble)  (180x130, 6Kb)
The dapper Canadian crooner is secretly a badass breaking the law weekly, picking unnecessary fights.

By Victoria De Silverio

Blender, July 2007


*Why have you drawn yourself asa superhero?

-Ive always wanted to be one. I had Spider-Man posters on my wall when I was young. I still have them. In the past two days Ive watched 12 episodes of Heroes. Its great.

*What superpower would you want most?

-To see through womens clothing.

*Like your moms?

-Thats really sick; but with great power comes great responsibility.

*What did you do last night?

-I watched the Vancouver Canucks play in the first game of the playoffs against the Anaheim Ducks. This is really not interesting, is it?

*Not really. How about this: Its a typical Friday at 11 p.m. What are you doing?

-I am on the couch falling asleep, because, well, I cant tell you why, because its illegal.

*How illegal?

-Illegal enough. Im burned out, usually. Im not going to tell you more than that. By 11 oclock, Im pooped from what Ive been doing all day. It makes a lot of things like eating, sex and TV more fun.

*When was the first time you got drunk?

-I was 11, on a fishing boat with my family, eating crabs. I asked my parents if I could have a rum and Coke and they said, Well, why dont you have as many as youd like with us? I puked all night.

*If we drug-tested you, what would we find?

-You know the answer. It would make up 50 percent of my molecules. You could probably just burn me right now and inhale, and wed be hungry and everything would be better.

*Would there be any legal drugs?

-Im on Nexium for heartburn; I use an inhaler for my asthma; and I get cold sores, so I use Denavir. Im also wearing orthotics in my shoes right now. Seriously. I broke my ankle playing hockey. Im like a 31-year-old man in an 80-year-old mans body.

*If you have asthma, why do you smoke?

-Nobody likes a quitter.

*Whats the worst mistake you ever made?

-One time I was singing at a club, and these guys kept booing me, and at the end of the night I asked them to step outside. But they werent yelling Boo! Boo! they were yelling Lou! Lou! because my drummer, Lou Huger, was a buddy of theirs. I felt like a jackass.

*Tell us a trade secret.

-Be nice to everyone. You never know if the intern will be the next president of your record company.

*Stairway to Heaven or Freebird?

-Stairway to Heaven, without a doubt. What other song do you get 12 minutes to make out with a girl on the dance floor?

*Would you ever get plastic surgery?

-Maybe a penis reduction.

*Do you do your own laundry?

-Of course. I dont want people to see my laundry.

*Are you a genius?

-Im more like an idiot savant. Like, Wow, he can count those cards, but totally retarded in other ways. Like Rain Man.

*What happens after you die?

-I hope I go to heaven in a little rowboat.

*Whats your tombstone going to say?

-Fuck, I told you I was ill.

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, 15 2007 . 23:16 +
 (Michael_Buble) Michael Buble' interview

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Linkin Park Loves ... Michael Buble?

, 03 2007 . 21:50 +
TanyaB (Michael_Buble)  (350x233, 27Kb)
We knew that Linkin Park 's Mike Shinoda had eclectic musical tastes, but we didn't know quite how varied they were until we grabbed him for an AIM Interview earlier today:

TyeinMusic: so when your fans go out to buy [your new album, 'Minutes to Midnight'], what else should they pick up?

LPmidnight2007: i always listen to a lot of stuff.

LPmidnight2007: bjork, arctic monkeys, michael buble, arcade fire, amy winehouse, redman, el-p...

TyeinMusic: wait. michael buble?!?

LPmidnight2007: hell yeah. that dude is a pimp. we're trying to put a song with him on the new Styles of Beyond album.

LPmidnight2007: it's going to be amazing.

TyeinMusic: wow. that'll be quite the hookup if that happens

LPmidnight2007: you should hear him sing old michael jackson songs. he sounds better than michael.

TyeinMusic: ha. which one does he do best?

LPmidnight2007: what's the one that goes "i'm gonna make a change, for once in my life..."

TyeinMusic: lol

TyeinMusic: Man in the Mirror?!

LPmidnight2007: HAHAHAHA

LPmidnight2007: i'm totally serious




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Magic

, 03 2007 . 12:58 +

Call me irresponsible



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