Post by Stiletto on Oct 26, 2006 11:17:25 GMT -5
For those interested........
J.D. Fortune leads veteran rockers INXS through Canadian shows
23/10/2006 8:40:00 PM
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TORONTO (CP) - INXS front man J.D. Fortune has been through a lot since he won the job on "Rock Star" last year.
CASSANDRA SZKLARSKI
Lead singer for INXS, J.D. Fortune performs during an INXS concert, May 5, 2006 at Radio City Music Hall in New York. (AP/Stephen Chernin)
The band split with its U.S. label, and Fortune says the fear of losing it all struck him part way through his first world tour. The lanky singer was back in his hometown of Westville, N.S., on Monday to reconnect with family and friends, but admitted he's come back to Canada a different man.
"It changes you so much," Fortune says by phone of the band's whirlwind tour that's already taken him through Australia, New Zealand, India and the United Kingdom.
"I still have the same values and all that but I've seen so much. ... What keeps you focused is just fans and your family. I know where I come from and more importantly, I know where I'm going and I can't get there if I let it all fall apart around me."
Maintaining a sense of humility has been key to keeping it together, says Fortune, the photogenic performer who won the right to lead the Australian band in the reality TV show "Rock Star."
After winning over the band members - brothers Jon, Andrew and Tim Farriss and Kirk Pengilly and Garry Beers - Fortune says the battle to win fans was nerve-racking.
During its heyday in the late '80s INXS was synonymous with its charismatic front man, Michael Hutchence, who died by suicide in 1997. Many fans expressed anger when the band announced it would turn to a television reality show to replace him.
Hutchence's legacy followed the band wherever they went.
"We spent the first six months trying to prove to everybody that we were a band," Fortune recalls of those early performances.
"Funnily enough, it was all the markets that we were afraid of, being kind of aggressive towards us, that actually just opened up their arms and said, 'Come on in' - that being Australia and the U.K."
Perhaps the toughest challenge came from a run-in with Hutchence's brother, Rhett, who reportedly showed up at a show in Australia wearing a T-shirt that read: "That's not my brother."
"That was just sort of a weird time for everybody," says Fortune, noting he's now on good terms with Rhett.
"The band hadn't seen him in 10 years and it was just a weird thing for everybody, but you know what, he's a perfect gentleman and I would have a beer with him any day."
"You could spend your whole life just sort of spinning wheels round and round and you're not going to get anywhere, so we just sort of buried a non-existent hatchet to begin with," he said.
Hurdles continued earlier this year when the band's label Epic Records, a subsidiary of Sony BMG, dropped the veteran rockers after releasing their first album with Fortune, "Switch," last year.
Fortune describes the parting as a two-way split but refused to elaborate on what led to the falling out.
"We wanted to have us heard more by the people that were sort of ultimately responsible for making decisions," he says.
"We wanted more face time with them and we weren't getting it so we just decided, 'Hey, do what you need to do.' "
Fortune says he takes nothing for granted, noting a brush with ill health had brought to the fore how quickly success can evaporate.
He says he fell ill with bronchial pneumonia in the U.S. Midwest last year, but due to a misdiagnosis he pushed through three shows with a 102 temperature.
"It was pretty full on," he says. "I kinda saw my whole career just falling apart in front of me and I was kinda like, 'Oh no. Please don't let this happen.' "
Luckily, it took him just four days to recover, and Fortune says he's grateful for all he's won.
"You work hard to work hard. If you start taking it for granted it just disappears like you wouldn't believe."
INXS plays a handful of Canadian dates beginning with a two-night stint Nov. 9 in St John's, Nfld.
The show, featuring a mix of old and new hits, later moves to the Ontario communities of Sudbury (Nov. 12), Hamilton (Nov. 13) and Oshawa (Nov. 14) before heading to the United States.
J.D. Fortune leads veteran rockers INXS through Canadian shows
23/10/2006 8:40:00 PM
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TORONTO (CP) - INXS front man J.D. Fortune has been through a lot since he won the job on "Rock Star" last year.
CASSANDRA SZKLARSKI
Lead singer for INXS, J.D. Fortune performs during an INXS concert, May 5, 2006 at Radio City Music Hall in New York. (AP/Stephen Chernin)
The band split with its U.S. label, and Fortune says the fear of losing it all struck him part way through his first world tour. The lanky singer was back in his hometown of Westville, N.S., on Monday to reconnect with family and friends, but admitted he's come back to Canada a different man.
"It changes you so much," Fortune says by phone of the band's whirlwind tour that's already taken him through Australia, New Zealand, India and the United Kingdom.
"I still have the same values and all that but I've seen so much. ... What keeps you focused is just fans and your family. I know where I come from and more importantly, I know where I'm going and I can't get there if I let it all fall apart around me."
Maintaining a sense of humility has been key to keeping it together, says Fortune, the photogenic performer who won the right to lead the Australian band in the reality TV show "Rock Star."
After winning over the band members - brothers Jon, Andrew and Tim Farriss and Kirk Pengilly and Garry Beers - Fortune says the battle to win fans was nerve-racking.
During its heyday in the late '80s INXS was synonymous with its charismatic front man, Michael Hutchence, who died by suicide in 1997. Many fans expressed anger when the band announced it would turn to a television reality show to replace him.
Hutchence's legacy followed the band wherever they went.
"We spent the first six months trying to prove to everybody that we were a band," Fortune recalls of those early performances.
"Funnily enough, it was all the markets that we were afraid of, being kind of aggressive towards us, that actually just opened up their arms and said, 'Come on in' - that being Australia and the U.K."
Perhaps the toughest challenge came from a run-in with Hutchence's brother, Rhett, who reportedly showed up at a show in Australia wearing a T-shirt that read: "That's not my brother."
"That was just sort of a weird time for everybody," says Fortune, noting he's now on good terms with Rhett.
"The band hadn't seen him in 10 years and it was just a weird thing for everybody, but you know what, he's a perfect gentleman and I would have a beer with him any day."
"You could spend your whole life just sort of spinning wheels round and round and you're not going to get anywhere, so we just sort of buried a non-existent hatchet to begin with," he said.
Hurdles continued earlier this year when the band's label Epic Records, a subsidiary of Sony BMG, dropped the veteran rockers after releasing their first album with Fortune, "Switch," last year.
Fortune describes the parting as a two-way split but refused to elaborate on what led to the falling out.
"We wanted to have us heard more by the people that were sort of ultimately responsible for making decisions," he says.
"We wanted more face time with them and we weren't getting it so we just decided, 'Hey, do what you need to do.' "
Fortune says he takes nothing for granted, noting a brush with ill health had brought to the fore how quickly success can evaporate.
He says he fell ill with bronchial pneumonia in the U.S. Midwest last year, but due to a misdiagnosis he pushed through three shows with a 102 temperature.
"It was pretty full on," he says. "I kinda saw my whole career just falling apart in front of me and I was kinda like, 'Oh no. Please don't let this happen.' "
Luckily, it took him just four days to recover, and Fortune says he's grateful for all he's won.
"You work hard to work hard. If you start taking it for granted it just disappears like you wouldn't believe."
INXS plays a handful of Canadian dates beginning with a two-night stint Nov. 9 in St John's, Nfld.
The show, featuring a mix of old and new hits, later moves to the Ontario communities of Sudbury (Nov. 12), Hamilton (Nov. 13) and Oshawa (Nov. 14) before heading to the United States.