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Michael Bublé (born 9 September 1975) is a Canadian crooner jazz singer and
actor. While achieving modest chart success in the United States, his 2003
self-titled album has reached the top ten in Canada, the UK and Australia. A
2004 live album and video Come Fly With Me (2004) was listed on the
Billboard music video charts and reached the top 40 album charts in
Australia. He reached commercial success in the U.S. with It's Time. He can
also be found on Starbucks commercials singing his songs.
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Michael Bublé was born in Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada. He grew up
listening to his grandfather's collection of jazz records. On his website,
Bublé highlights the importance of his grandfather in encouraging his
musical tastes. "My grandfather was really my best friend growing up. He was
the one who opened me up to a whole world of music that seemed to have been
passed over by my generation. Although I like rock & roll and modern music,
the first time my granddad played me the Mills Brothers, something magical
happened. The lyrics were so romantic, so real... the way a song should be
for me. It was like seeing my future flash before me. I wanted to be a
singer and I knew that this was the music that I wanted to sing."
Bublé's grandfather encouraged him to learn the standards that he loved and
to enter a talent contest in Vancouver which he won before a later
disqualification for being underage. Not discouraged, Bublé won first prize
in a Canadian Youth Talent Search at the age of 17.
For the next few years, Michael Bublé pursued a musical career without great
success. He appeared as Elvis in a Red Rock Diner road show and sung as a
star of a musical revue called Forever Swing. He also appeared in an episode
of Death Game in 1996. He recorded a couple of independent albums, one as a
present to his grandfather. Bublé received two Genie Awards in 2000 for
songs he wrote for the film Here's To Life starring Eric McCormack.
Michael Bublé's career breakthrough came when he sang Kurt Weill's "Mack the
Knife" at the wedding of Brian Mulroney's daughter Caroline in 2000.
Mulroney introduced Bublé to David Foster, a multi-Grammy awarding producer
and a Warner Brothers record executive who had worked with Josh Groban
previously. Foster signed Bublé to his '143' record label and he started
recording a self-titled album 2001 with Foster as producer. The album
features a range of standards from various eras including "Fever", "The Way
You Look Tonight", "For Once In My Life", Van Morrison's "Moondance" and Lou
Rawls's "You'll Never Find Another Love Like Mine". Barry Gibb of the Bee
Gees sang back up vocals on Bublé's version of the group's "How Can You Mend
A Broken Heart".
Michael Bublé was released in early 2003 and soon entered the Canadian album
charts. Chart success in the UK, US, Australia and elsewhere soon followed
with the album going platinum and reaching the top ten of the album charts
in the UK and Canada and going all the way to #1 in Australia. The album has
reached the top 50 of the Billboard 200 album charts. His version of
"Kissing a Fool" by George Michael was released as a single from the album
and reached the top 30 of the Billboard adult contemporary chart. "How Can
You Mend A Broken Heart" reached the top 30 of the Billboard adult
contemporary chart as well. His third single "Sway", originally performed by
Dean Martin also reached the top 30 of the adult contemporary chart while a
Junkie XL remix of the song reached the top 20 in Australia in May 2004.
Bublé won the "Best New Talent" award at the Juno Awards of 2004 and his
self-titled album was nominated for "Album of the Year" losing out to Sam
Roberts.
Bublé released a Christmas EP Let It Snow in late 2003. The title track
reached the Australian top 40 in the singles charts, ironically in
mid-summer in that country. He released a live album and video in April 2004
with the video reaching the top 10 of the Billboard video charts. The album
also reached the Australian top 50 of the album charts as at the end of
April and the Billboard 200 album charts.
Bublé has also appeared in a variety of films in the past few years
including his appearance as a karaoke singer in Duets opposite Gwyneth
Paltrow and Huey Lewis. He also has appeared in Totally Blonde in 2001 and
in The Snow Walker in 2003.
Songs from Bublé's debut album ("For Once in My Life," "Kissing a Fool")
were released on the soundtrack for the Ewan McGregor/Renée Zellweger movie
Down With Love, but the soundtrack also included a previously unreleased
duet with Holly Palmer on the movie's title theme. The Junkie XL remix of
"Spider-Man" from Bublé's Babalu album was played during the closing credits
of Spider-Man 2 and this version was also released as a single.
Michael Bublé's second studio album, It's Time, debuted as a hugely
successful sophomore performance. The album reached No. 7 on the Billboard
Album Charts and No. 2 on the ARIA Album Charts in Australia. It's Time also
debuted at No. 4 on the UK Album Charts. The album features covers of
Beatles and Ray Charles songs, as well as a collaboration with Stevie Wonder
and the hit single "Home".
Bublé can be seen in Starbucks commercials singing his cover of the Jimmy
Van Heusen/Sammy Cahn swing standard, "Come Fly With Me," from his debut
album, and more recently, ESPN has used "Feeling Good" in commercials for
poker tournaments. |
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MICHAEL BUBLE PICTURES |
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