Michael Buble Tickets
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Performances
| SHOW | WHEN & WHERE | |
|---|---|---|
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Michael Buble Dublin, Ireland |
Friday 24 September 2010, Aviva Stadium | |
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Michael Buble Dublin, Ireland |
Saturday 25 September 2010, Aviva Stadium | |
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Michael Buble Sheffield, UK |
Monday 27 September 2010, Sheffield Hallam FM Arena | |
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Michael Buble Newcastle Upon Tyne, UK |
Tuesday 28 September 2010, Metro Radio Arena | |
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Michael Buble Nottingham, UK |
Thursday 30 September 2010, Nottingham Arena | |
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Michael Buble London, UK |
Saturday 02 October 2010, Wembley Arena | |
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Michael Buble London, UK |
Sunday 03 October 2010, Wembley Arena | |
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Michael Buble London, UK |
Monday 04 October 2010, Wembley Arena | |
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Michael Buble Manchester, UK |
Wednesday 06 October 2010, Manchester Evening News Arena | |
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Michael Buble Manchester, UK |
Thursday 07 October 2010, Manchester Evening News Arena | |
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Michael Buble Birmingham, UK |
Saturday 09 October 2010, National Indoor Arena | |
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Michael Buble Birmingham, UK |
Sunday 10 October 2010, National Indoor Arena | |
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Michael Buble Antwerp, Belgium |
Tuesday 12 October 2010, Sportpaleis Antwerpen | |
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Michael Buble Hannover, Germany |
Wednesday 13 October 2010, Tui Arena | |
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Michael Buble Cologne, Germany |
Thursday 14 October 2010, Lanxess Arena | |
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Michael Buble Frankfurt, Germany |
Saturday 16 October 2010, Festhalle Frankfurt | |
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Michael Buble Stuttgart, Germany |
Sunday 17 October 2010, Porsche-Arena | |
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Michael Buble Paris, France |
Wednesday 27 October 2010, Bercy | |
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Michael Buble Arnhem, Netherlands |
Thursday 28 October 2010, Gelredome | |
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Michael Buble Toulouse, France |
Friday 29 October 2010, Zenith de Toulouse | |
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Michael Buble Barcelona, Spain |
Saturday 30 October 2010, Palau Sant Jordi | |
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Michael Buble Madrid, Spain |
Sunday 31 October 2010, Palacio De Deportes |
Michael Steven Bublé (pronounced /ˈbuːbleɪ/; born 9 September 1975) is a Canadian singer and actor. He has won several awards, including two Grammy Awards[3][4] and multiple Juno Awards.[5] His first album reached the top ten in the UK and Canada. He found worldwide commercial success with his 2005 album It's Time, and his 2007 album Call Me Irresponsible was an even bigger success, reaching number one on the Canadian Albums Chart, the U.S. Billboard 200 chart, the Australian ARIA Albums Chart and the European charts. Bublé has sold more than 25 million albums worldwide.[6]
Michael Bublé was born in the city of Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada to Lewis Bublé, a salmon fisherman,[7] and his wife Amber Bublé (née Santagà[8]).[9] He has two younger sisters,[10] Crystal (an actress) and Brandee.[11][12] He attended Seaforth Elementary School and Cariboo Hill Secondary School.[13] According to an Oprah interview on 9 October 2009, Bublé had dreamed of becoming a famous singer since age two. When he was a teenager, he slept with his Bible and prayed to become a singer.[14][15] Bublé's interest in jazz music began around age five[16] when his family played Bing Crosby's White Christmas album at Christmas time.[16][17][18] The first time that his family noticed his singing talent was at Christmas time when Bublé was 13 years old, and they heard him powerfully sing the phrase "May your days be merry and bright" when the family was singing to the song "White Christmas" in a car ride.[14][19] Bublé also had a strong interest in hockey and wanted to become a professional hockey player for the Vancouver Canucks growing up but believed he wasn't good at it,[6][20][21] stating "I wanted so bad to be a hockey player. . .If I was any good at hockey, I probably wouldn't be singing right now."[20] Bublé often played hockey in his youth,[22][23] watched Vancouver Canucks games with his father,[24] and said that he "went to every single home game as a kid. . . I remember I wanted to be Gary Lupul, I wanted to be Patrik Sundstrom and Ivan Hlinka. I used to think that being named Michael Bublé was pretty cool because I was close to being called Jiri Bubla."[22] Bublé also shared his hockey interest with his grandfather.[25]
From age 14, Bublé spent his summers working for six years as a commercial fisherman with his father and crewmates.[7][26] Bublé described his work experience as "The most deadly physical work I’ll ever know in my lifetime. We’d be gone for two, sometimes three months at a time and the experience of living and working among guys over twice my age taught me a lot about responsibility and what it means to be a man."[10]
His first singing engagements were in nightclubs at the age of 16 and were facilitated by his Italian grandfather Demetrio Santagà,[8] a plumber originally from the small town of Preganziol,[27] about 20 kilometres from Venice, Italy, who offered his plumbing services in exchange for stage time for his grandson.[10] Bublé's grandfather also paid for his singing lessons. One of his vocal instructors was Joseph Shore, the opera baritone.[19] Bublé grew up listening to his grandfather's collection of jazz records and credits his grandfather in encouraging his love for jazz music. "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 'n' 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."[28] Bublé never stopped believing that he would become a star but admitted he was probably the only one who believed in his dream, stating that even his maternal grandfather thought Bublé was going to be "an opening act for somebody in Las Vegas".[29] Bublé's maternal grandmother Iolanda Moscone[30][31] was also Italian, from Carrufo,[30] Villa Santa Lucia degli Abruzzi, Italy.[32] Bublé has stated he never learned to read and write music, using only emotion to drive his songwriting ability.[6][33][34]
At the age of 18, Bublé entered a local talent contest and won. But after winning, he was disqualified by organizer Bev Delich because he was underage. After that, Delich entered Bublé in the Canadian Youth Talent Search, which he won. Following that win, Bublé asked Delich to be his manager. Delich signed on and represented Bublé for the next seven not-so-fruitful years. According to Delich, Bublé would do every gig imaginable, including talent shows, conventions, cruise ships, malls, hotel lounges, bars, clubs, corporate gigs, musical revues, singing telegrams, and even the occasional singing Santa Claus gig.[19][26][35][36]
In 1996, Bublé appeared in TV's "Death Game" (aka Mortal Challenge) as a Drome Groupie. Also in 1996, he appeared (uncredited) in 2 episodes of The X-Files as a Submarine Sailor.[37]
Bublé's first national TV performance was on a 1997 award-winning Bravo! documentary titled Big Band Boom!, directed by Mark Glover Masterson.
Beginning in 1997, Bublé also became a frequent guest on Vicki Gabereau's national talk show on the CTV network. During its first season the Vancouver based program aired live, which ultimately worked in Bublé's favor. When a scheduled guest was forced to cancel, the show's music producer (Mark Fuller) often asked Bublé to fill in at the last minute. On one occasion Bublé shared guest duties with fellow British Columbian Diana Krall, who was already a Grammy-nominated jazz musician. According to Fuller, Krall was suitably impressed with Bublé's performance. The Gabereau appearances provided Bublé with great exposure, but they also helped the singer hone his television skills as a performer and as an interview guest. In a mutual show of gratitude, Bublé appeared on the final Gabereau show in 2005, along with Jann Arden and Elvis Costello.
Bublé received two Genie Award-nominations in 2000 for two songs he wrote for the film Here's to Life! ("I've Never Been in Love Before", "Dumb ol' Heart").[38] He recorded three independent albums (First Dance, 1996; Babalu, 2001; Dream, 2002).[39] But by 25 years of age Bublé had moved from British Columbia to Toronto, Ontario and was ready to give up the dream of professional musicianship to move back to Vancouver, British Columbia to pursue a career in journalism when his lucky break came in 2000.[19][40]
In 2000, Bublé's career breakthrough came from a surprising chain of events. Michael McSweeney saw Bublé's performance at a business party[19] and received a copy of Bublé’s self-financed independent album. McSweeney, an aide to former Prime Minister Brian Mulroney, showed the album to Mulroney and his wife. Subsequently, Bublé was invited to sing at the wedding of Mulroney's daughter Caroline, where he sang Kurt Weill's "Mack the Knife".[19] At the wedding, Bublé was introduced to David Foster, a multi-Grammy Award winning producer and record executive who had worked previously with artists such as Whitney Houston, Michael Jackson, Céline Dion, Barbra Streisand, Kenny G., Cher, Josh Groban, and Andrea Bocelli.[19][41]











