Posts Tagged “Hitman”

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Celine Dion

 

From Celinedion.com: 

One of the first producers Celine worked with on her inaugural English album ‘Unison’ was David Foster. That sparked a musical relationship that has spanned decades. David has produced some of Celine’s greatest hits, including “All By Myself” and the timeless classic “Because You Loved Me”. Starting this month, David will hit the road for his 10-city David Foster & Friends Tour and Celine couldn’t be happier for him:

“Hi David! I really want to congratulate you on your first North American tour this fall! I’ve heard so much about it and it’s great that you’re celebrating your 60th birthday this way. It’s so great to see you bringing good music to all of us and discovering new talent. Best wishes and thanks again for everything we’ve done together.

Love - Celine.”

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David Foster

 

This is a short video interview with David Foster on NBC Today’s October 1st, 2009.

 

 
There is embedded video here, if you cannot see it please open the post in a web browser.
 

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This is an excerpt of an interview with David Foster in PBS KVCR entitled “Behind the Keys with David Foster” aired August 29, 2009.

 

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Hit King

 

Hit King
David Foster’s lifelong passion is creating the soundtrack of our lives.

by Marie Speed
Success Magazine
www.successmagazine.com

Good has never been good enough for David Foster. He wants to be great. Which has worked out pretty well for him for the past 40 years, as he’s made his way to the top of the music industry. Today, Foster is regarded as the king of pop, the hit man, the No. 1 music producer in the country, if not the world. In the course of his career, Foster has worked with every imaginable star in the business. He refers to them casually by their first names: Celine, Whitney, Barbra.

He has 15 Grammys to his name (and 45 nominations), an Emmy, seven Canadian Juno awards, three Oscar nominations and a list of mega-hits that goes on for pages. In October, he starts a 12-city tour that includes a Nov. 1 stop in Miami where he will celebrate his 60th birthday onstage. The show is based on the wildly successful PBS special, Hit Man: David Foster and Friends, in which Foster plays master of ceremony and accompanist to a staggering lineup of stars. He’s also working on an upcoming Broadway musical based on cartoon character Betty Boop, as well as other projects, including a future TV series. It’s hard to believe one human being could do so much in one lifetime— but this isn’t just any guy. This guy has been special from the start.

Born in 1949 to a poor working family in Victoria, British Columbia, Canada, Foster was 4 when his parents discovered he had perfect pitch. “I can say unequivocally that I was given a gift,” he tells SUCCESS. “Having perfect pitch is not a key to success, but it is an indicator that you maybe should be doing music. You’ve got to believe that music is passed on in genes, and my father was a musician. My parents encouraged me in a loving way, but not in an overbearing way. Fortunately, I loved it so much it was all I wanted to do.”

When he talks about his parents, the people he’s worked with, even his ex-wives, Foster has the demeanor of a nice guy from a small town who works hard, saves his money, shines his shoes and knows which fork to use. But there is that special thing, that thing that makes him work harder and longer than the next guy, that makes him push artists to deliver their best, that never lets up, not on weekends, not on holidays, not ever. Foster cannot identify exactly what drives him to be the best, but he knows it has something to do with how he was raised—and with not giving up.

A Nurturing Upbringing
“My parents made me feel special,” he says. “I wonder if that’s because I was one boy in a family with six sisters or because I had this God-given talent, or they were just that kind of parents. I think it was a healthy combination of all those things. My childhood, as I recall, was perfect—or near-perfect. Of course we had no money, but somehow they never let us know that. We knew we were poor but we never wanted for food or clothes. So we had the essentials.”

Even as his list of hits continued to grow, Foster never allowed himself to think he could expect the same outcome by exerting any less effort and focus. “I am always worried that I’m not going to measure up to the thing I did last. It’s tenacity, for sure, and upbringing. The reason I never did drugs is that I did not want to disappoint my parents. The reason I have a good work ethic is because my father had a good work ethic. It’s simple; you’re either raised right or you’re not. A lot of people can’t control whether they’re raised right or not—to those people, I would say you just come to the fork in the road and you say, ‘OK, am I going down this road or am I going down that road?’ There is
no
dress rehearsal.
You can either
lay in
bed all day
and feel sorry for
yourself or you can get up every morning at 6 and try to make the best of the day.
There is no dress rehearsal. You can either lay in bed all day and feel sorry for yourself or you can get up every morning at 6 and try to make the best of the day. ”

Foster’s career began in 1972 as a keyboardist for the one-hit wonder group Skylark, whose song Wildflower made the charts before the group slid into obscurity. In 1973, he began working as a session musician, performing with people like John Lennon, Diana Ross, George Harrison, Rod Stewart. “I had to start all over again,” he says. “I had to do rehearsal piano at $5 an hour, but I knew the $5 would turn into $10 and the $10 would turn into $20. I’ve always felt—always in my life—that I was moving forward. Always.”

Big Breaks
Still, Foster wanted something more. He wanted to be a producer. “As a studio musician, I played on everybody’s records and I played on a lot of hit records, and I watched the producers from the other side of the glass and I’d say, ‘Wow, that’s easy; I can do that.’ ”

In his 2008 memoir, Hitman: Forty Years Making Music, Topping Charts & Winning Grammys, Foster writes that he grew certain about his desire to produce while signed on as one of several keyboard players during a big studio session with Barbra Streisand. Streisand wasn’t happy about the arrangement and made that clear to the producer. As she became more frustrated, they broke for lunch. “Ever the opportunist,” Foster writes, “I didn’t go to lunch.”

Instead, Foster stayed behind, trying to work out the song the way Streisand wanted, based on what he heard her telling the producer. At some point, a familiar voice interrupted him: “Hey you! What is that?” It was Streisand. Foster explained he thought the piece could be simpler, his voice quavering. Then he just played. Streisand was thrilled and ordered the song be played his way.

Despite many bright moments, making the transition to producer wasn’t easy. “In my cockiness, I thought I was going to come right out of the gate with a hit record. I produced three or four albums and they all stiffed. As a studio musician, I went from six figures a year to $5,000 total in my first year of producing. That was the only time that I thought maybe I had made the wrong decision.”

But Foster kept at it, focusing on the work, applying what he learned from one project to the next. “In my heart, I knew I could produce successfully, and I couldn’t do that if I kept working as a studio musician,” he writes in Hitman. “So I did what I had to do: I believed in myself almost to a point of madness.”

Hit Man
In the late 1970s, the tide was turning for Foster, who won his first Grammy for Earth, Wind & Fire’s After the Love Has Gone. The song came to him in a moment of panic when Motown founder Berry Gordy asked him if he had something that combined pop and R&B. Foster lied and said he did. “I sat down at the piano, and it was one of those moments where the chorus for the song just poured out of me like a gift from heaven.”

In the 1980s, more No. 1 hits came, including Chicago’s Hard to Say I’m Sorry and Peter Cetera’s The Glory of Love. There were songs on soundtracks to St. Elmo’s Fire, Ghostbusters, Footloose. There was writing and producing with artists like Al Jareau, Boz Scaggs, Olivia Newton-John, Kenny Rogers. The 1990s brought Celine Dion’s The Power of Love and Natalie Cole’s Unforgettable. There was Barbra, too, and Toni Braxton and Whitney Houston and more Celine. By the end of the 1990s, Foster had started his own record label, 143 (I Love You) with Warner Bros.

The next phase of Foster’s career would be the one he is probably best known for: discovering new talent. Foster discovered and signed Josh Groban and Michael Bublé, among others, and continued to work with giants like Andrea Bocelli, Madonna and Michael Jackson.

Through it all, Foster appears to have avoided becoming Hollywood-phony. Although he has a deep respect for the talented people he’s worked with, he is not particularly star-struck, nor overly impressed by the trappings of wealth and fabulosity. Again, he is all about the work.

“I’ve had my moments of being a jerk,” he says, pushing to get the very best performances out of people. “But I have a lot of repeat performance in my work. I’ve had four albums with Michael Bublé, three albums with Bocelli, four albums with Chicago. I’m doing something right. There’s something to be said about the slow, steady climb. At the end of the day, my job is to get a great vocal out of a singer and in my egotistical mind, to be the one who can get a better vocal out of him than any other producer on the planet. That is my mantra. I don’t hit that mark every time, but as my friend Paul Anka says, ‘Good is the enemy of great.’ And I try to be great every day of my life. Every day.”

Incurably Romantic
Of course, not everyone thinks Foster’s music is great. A Time magazine article described “the unmistakable Foster touch” as replete with “soaring vocals, the lush arrangements dripping with strings and keyboards, the crescendos built on crescendos.” He’s been called schmaltzy, a producer of elevator music.

“Twenty years ago, those comments used to sort of hurt me, but the truth of the matter is, when I lay my hands down on the keyboard, what comes out is what comes out,” he says. “I am built to do romantic music. My emotion comes out of my fingers at the piano, and what comes out is what comes out. That is not to say I don’t love every kind of music. I truly love everything. The last type of music I had to learn to love was opera. And now I love it. Country music, rap, Jay-Z, Beyonce, 50 Cent—I truly love it all. I just don’t know how to make that kind of music. There was a joke that I don’t take elevators because I am afraid I will hear my own music in there. There are a lot of composers who would love to hear their music in elevators. Pop stands for popular. Hard-core critics don’t mind giving credit to a pop musician until he becomes popular, then they want to blast them. It’s like they’ve ‘sold out.’ Sold out what? They’ve sold out an arena instead of a club.”

Foster may make romantic music, but it has not translated to a particularly successful love life. With three failed marriages and years of haphazard contact with his children, Foster acknowledges the downside of being driven. He’s tried to make up for lost time. “Fortunately for me, my daughters and my new stepsons are very forgiving, and I’ve done more parenting the last three years than I have in the last 30.”

‘Go with What You Love’
Still, Foster believes he has stayed pretty much on point when it comes to following his heart. “Lesson No. 1” to becoming a success, he says, is to “go with what you love. And you have to be good at it.

“Most people do what they are taught to do—not what they love doing,” he says. “It’s so screwed up. At 17 or 18, you are thrust off to college and at that point in your life you are supposed to make a decision about what you are going to be the rest of your life. Isn’t that weird? I got lucky because, by the age of 10, I knew I wanted to do music—for sure, without a shadow of a doubt. I didn’t know I’d be successful, but I knew I wanted to do it.”

In addition to his career, Foster attends to his David Foster Foundation, which he started 23 years ago, inspired by fellow Canadian Wayne Gretzky’s foundation. The David Foster Foundation raises millions of dollars through events he produces to help the families of children in need of organ transplants. Foster sees philanthropy as the next logical step in his life’s journey.

“Honestly, I believe there is something hugely philanthropic left for me in my life—where that would be my life. I sort of know what it is, but I don’t know how to articulate it. And I know that sounds trite, but it’s been on my mind for two to three years, much the same as when Wayne Gretzky influenced me to start my foundation. But this would be in an all-consuming way. And it’s kind of not a bad way to spend your last round.”

That last round is a long way off. Living alone for the first time in his adult life, he is reconnecting with his children. In addition to the Foster and Friends tour and his Broadway and TV work, he has albums in the works with opera singer Katherine Jenkins, Andrea Bocelli, Michael Bublé and newcomer Charice. He still works seven days a week; he says he’s not interested in just “sipping martinis somewhere.”

And, as far as advice goes, it’s back to that greatness thing.

“Good is just good,” he says. “It’s so easy to be good. I can be good any day of the week. I know how to do this job inside and out—I know how to play the piano very well, I know how to write songs pretty good, but greatness is what everybody should aspire to. I am gifted, but I believe in my heart that if I didn’t have music and I was a shoe salesman, I would be the best shoe salesman in the country.”

 

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David Foster

 

From ETonline.com:

ET was exclusively behind the scenes with producer and songwriter extraordinaire David Foster for his star-studded show in Las Vegas last week, and we’ve got video of Cher and Donny Osmond backstage! Plus, Clay Aiken opens up about the courageous Farrah Fawcett.
Special guests who performed at David’s May 7 extravaganza at the Mandalay Bay Hotel & Casino included Cher, Donny, Clay, Brian McKnight, Katherine Jenkins, Charice and Paul Anka.
‘Hit Man: David Foster and Friends,’ a one-night-only concert featuring David with Josh Groban, Katharine McPhee, Celine Dion and many more singing stars, is available on DVD now.

 

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Charice

 

Seventeen year old Filipino superstar Charice will be making her third appearance on the “The Oprah Winfrey Show” this Monday, May 18th, where she will be debuting “Note to God” - the first single from her upcoming CD, it was confirmed today by 143/Reprise Records.

The haunting and emotionally charged single “Note To God” was produced by the legendary David Foster and written by Grammy winner, Diane Warren. Charice’s performance is part of a special episode marking the finale of “Oprah’s Search for the World’s Smartest and Most Talented Kids”. A bonafide internet sensation, Charice has racked up over 13 million hits on line.

Charice was originally discovered by Oprah’s producers via her YouTube video which was filmed when she was 15 years old. She has toured with the David Foster & Friends show in the US - including an appearance last weekend at the Mandalay Bay in Las Vegas where she received 17 standing ovations and was mobbed by fans. Charice is currently in the recording studio working on her new 143/Reprise Records debut, scheduled for a late fall release.

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David Foster

 

From Las Vegas Review Journal:

No Groban this time. No Bocelli or Buble either.

David Foster is the first to recognize last year’s “David Foster & Friends” will be hard to top. That was a one-of-a-kind event, with nearly a dozen guest singers filmed for a DVD (”Hit Man”) and PBS pledge drives.

It’s impossible to have those big names “go with me every time I want to do this,” the hit-making record producer points out. However, Saturday’s encore at Mandalay Bay finds him trying to build his own name into a brand, one “people would want to come and see no matter who my friends are.”

“In a perfect world, as the record business shrinks and I don’t want to retire, I think this might be a good Round Three for me to perform,” Foster says. “I’m just hoping my music will be the glue, along with my personality and my way of presenting it.”

It’s more than wishful thinking if you saw last year’s concert. And not just because this time, the TV cameras will be gone, and with them the irritating down time and do-overs that stretched the event beyond the three-hour mark.

Of all the star power last year, the big surprise of the night was an unknown 16-year-old Filipina named Charice, belting out “I Will Always Love You.”

On Saturday, Charice returns as a billed performer poised for stardom. Last week, she and Foster visited “The Oprah Winfrey Show” for the anointment of her debut single, “Note to God.” (The show airs May 18, the day the single will be released to digital outlets.)

Foster hopes this year’s audience will take the leap of faith with him and come along for the next new singer he introduces along with the billed stars: Earth, Wind & Fire singer Philip Bailey, Brian McKnight, Peter Cincotti and Heather Headley.

“I do have a little surprise that’s not announced,” he also teases.

Las Vegas audiences have a head start on the trust factor if they attended any installment of the Andre Agassi “Grand Slam for Children” that Foster spearheaded for years. Patrons of those benefits got early looks at Josh Groban, Michael Buble and Charlotte Church, performing alongside the likes of Elton John, Stevie Wonder and Celine Dion.

“I sort
of
discovered late
in my life
that I
do have a
talent for finding talent,”
“I sort of discovered late in my life that I do have a talent for finding talent,” Foster says, before amending that to say, “They usually find me.”

He also has learned, “You can win a crowd over more with an unknown, if it’s presented right and if they kill.”

Agassi supporters also watched Foster issue random challenges to audience members to come up and sing, a stunt he plans to repeat on Saturday.

“There’s always somebody who wants to be a star. That person usually wins bigger than any A-list celebrity you have,” he says. “If they have the balls to get up there, chances are they’re either really good or really bad. And both work.”

Foster’s star began to emerge when he co-wrote and produced the 1982 Chicago hit “Hard To Say I’m Sorry.” For two decades, he dominated the pop charts with hits such as Toni Braxton’s “Unbreak My Heart” and Celine Dion’s “To Love You More.”

Now the Top 40 is dominated by hip-hop, which Foster respects, but knows is not his game. “I just clearly don’t know how to make that kind of music,” he says. “By some stretch, I should just be out to pasture.”

But he also notes, “Pop stands for popular, and I still make popular music. … Everybody’s trying to be hip, and yet you’ve got this show ‘American Idol,’ and what do they do all year to get 37 million people to watch? They do Barry Manilow songs. They do Burt Bacharach. They do David Foster songs.

“People don’t leave the music business. The music business leaves them. And I don’t want to be one of those guys,” he says. “I’m happy for everyone that’s doing it. I just want my little slice to stay where it is, and I’m happy.”

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David Foster and Friends

 

David Foster & Friends Live In Concert
Mandalay Bay Resort
Las Vegas, NV
Sat, May 9, 2009 08:00 PM

Back by popular demand, a concert celebration featuring music’s premier songwriter and producer David Foster will take place Saturday, May 9 at the Mandalay Bay Events Center. The event will pay tribute to the 15-time Grammy winner and will feature Clay Aiken, Philip Bailey from the chart-topping band Earth, Wind & Fire, Brian McKnight, Peter Cincotti and Oprah Winfrey’s protégé, Charice. Foster also will perform some of the hits he has written or produced during his 40-year musical career. The event is scheduled to begin at 8 p.m.

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Hitman

 

This videoclip is taken from “Hitman” DVD/CD:

 

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David Foster and Celine Dion

 

A video with Celine Dion and David Foster performing live “Because You Loved Me” from “Hitman”, David Foster tribute on DVD.

 

 

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