His secret passion
Young Chang
The fact that a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame bears the words
“Michael Bolton” as of Tuesday is “dreamlike,” the star’s namesake
said.
“It’s beyond a dream,” Bolton said, during a phone interview last
week. “Much greater than what I could have hoped for.”
But the two-time Grammy-winning vocalist, author and actor -- who
will perform Saturday at the Orange County Performing Arts Center --
is equally grateful for the more mundane perks of his high-profile
life. Perks that, to some, seem more a way of making a living.
Because when Bolton is onstage singing to throngs of fans, singing in
that “zone” he says artists get in, he remembers that this is the
life he’s wanted since he was 11 years old.
“That’s what makes touring the harvest, the payoff, for all the
hard work you put in,” the 49-year-old said. “The thousands of hours
in the studio, if not millions, all of the promotions, the jabbering
sometimes when a new album comes out.... That’s the work. Touring is
not work.”
Bolton’s stop at the Orange County Performing Arts Center in Costa
Mesa is part of his four-month tour promoting “Only a Woman Like
You,” his most recent album. The six-time American Music Awards
winner will sign his new CD on Saturday afternoon at Borders Books,
Music & Cafe at South Coast Plaza. The concert, titled “Lovesongs
Live” and co-presented with radio station KOST-FM (103.5), will
include old hits, new hits and even some opera.
Yes, you read right. Opera.
Bolton was introduced to the classical form through an invitation
to sing with Luciano Pavarotti during a benefit concert for children
in Bosnia. Bolton was honored and excited to respond to the task, but
he said he needed to learn how to sing the classical pieces on the
program.
“While I was studying, I just found an incredible world of
powerful music, especially for a tenor,” the Connecticut resident
said. “In R&B;, rock ‘n’ roll and pop music, we don’t think of
ourselves as tenors and baritones. I never had to hold a note and
make it vibrate and do the certain things you have to do in classical
music.... It was such a powerful experience.”
Bolton put out an album of opera arias in 1998, titled “My Secret
Passion.”
He predicts that his performance of Puccini’s “Nessun Dorma” will
steal the show at the Center.
“Doesn’t matter how many hits I’ve done,” he said. “It steals the
show every night ... because it’s such a powerful piece.”
Center President Jerry Mandel said Bolton’s appearance at
Segerstrom Hall is part of the Center’s goal to feature popular
artists with an impressive list of achievements. Kenny Loggins, who
will perform there in December, is also a part of this roster.
“I’m not interested in [featuring] young artists who are
interested in proving something. I want the kind of people that have
had a career, that have a body of work, that are really tried and
true professionals,” Mandel said. “It’s for that special type of
person whose career has merited that.”
Bolton, best known for his late 1980s hit “How Am I Supposed to
Live Without You” and early 1990s chart-topping rendition of “When A
Man Loves A Woman,” has other artistic surprises up his sleeve. He
wrote his first children’s book, “The Secret Of The Lost Kingdom,” in
the late 1990s -- something he credits to waking up in a castle in
England one morning and being inspired to write -- and he is
currently working on a movie. Bolton also has his own film production
company.
“But my goal basically always comes back to my first passion,
which is music,” said the performer, who says he is most influenced
by Ray Charles. “You can sing forever ... and I believe I’ve had the
good fortune of really building a fan base, which is a couple of
generations. I hope I can keep taking care of my voice and keep
singing as the years pass.”
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