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- Name:
Shayne Ward
- Date of Birth: October 15, 1984
- Place of Birth: Manchester, England
- You’ve seen it all before and you know what to
expect: out of nowhere, some kid scores a Number One
single and album, travels the world selling million of
records, then disappears off the face of the earth and
returns having decided that for album number two it’s
time to mature, to ‘grow up’, to leave behind those
youthful follies and explore a Serious New Musical
Direction. You could see it coming a million miles off
with the new Shayne Ward album, right? Well, wrong.
After the mature, adult balladeering of his debut this
Manchester-born lad has decided that it’s actually time
to act his age. “I’m 22,” he says, slumped comfortably
in jeans, trainers and a hoodie. “Not 42.”
- What do 22-year-old lads act like? Well, for one
thing they listen to – and make - the sort of music on
Shayne’s second album. It’s music for clubbing, dancing
and drinking. “I’d rather give people a taste of my
personality,” Shayne says, “instead of banging on about
‘my art’ or ‘my creation’. I listen to music for fun, so
why wouldn’t I make it for the same reason?”
- Recorded over the last twelve months in Sweden with
legendary pop overlord Max Martin, the Brit-nominated
singer’s new album – bursting with an energy few would
have expected from his debut – is an unselfconscious and
fruity collection of pop, R&B and electronica with world
class production values taking influences from Shayne’s
own iPod playlists - Prince, Ne-Yo, Justin. These are
musical preferences already familiar to those who saw
Shayne on his 2007 arena tour with its handful of
well-chosen cover versions (‘Don’t Stop Til You Get
Enough’, ‘When Doves Cry’) nestling among Shayne’s own
songs.
- Comeback single ‘If That’s Okay With You’ is a
funky, dancefloor-bound track about the end of one
relationship and the first, tentative steps into
another. “It’s a ‘would you like to move in with me, can
I leave my toothbrush at your house’ kind of song,”
Shayne laughs. “It’s a situation most of us have been in
at some point – scary and exciting at the same time.”
‘If That’s Okay With You’ is the first glimpse of a
second album destined to build on the phenomenal success
of Shayne’s first. Debut single ‘That’s My Goal’ smashed
the UK record for first day sales, debuting at Number
One and selling more than 1.3 million copies, followed
by the ‘Shayne Ward’ album which also shot straight to
Number One and went platinum in a fortnight. Within six
months Shayne was a waxwork in Madame Tussaud’s and
bringing city centres to a standstill (his open air
Manchester gig pulled in tens of thousands of fans)
while the singles – ‘No Promises’, ‘Stand By Me’ - kept
coming and tickets for his 18-date UK arena tour flew
out of box offices across the country.
- Though Shayne’s been absent from the UK charts for
over a year – quite unusual in these days of whacking
out an album every twelve months in the misguided belief
that a high volume of shonky material will somehow
maintain a fanbase – he has hardly been sitting around
at home twiddling on his PlayStation. Travelling the
globe he’s taken his music to Number One in Hong Kong,
Sweden, Indonesia, Korea, South Africa, Singapore,
Taiwan and Thailand. In some countries his album went
triple platinum, in others it charted higher than Justin
Timberlake and Christina Aguilera. He has, it is fair to
say, done fairly well around the world. “It’s flattering
to hit Number One in the UK,” Shayne says, but he adds
that to hit it big in countries where he wasn’t ‘that
bloke off the telly’, and where he stood or fell on the
quality of his music, presents a very different sense of
achievement. “Asia is one of those places where you have
to put in the hard work to get something out,” he adds,
“and I definitely did. I love the hard work and the
support I got from all that was incredible. I started
from scratch in different countries, and it was an
amazing, very vindicating feeling when it worked out.”
- As well as trotting those areas of the globe, Shayne
spent a lot of time a little closer to home, in Sweden
with Max Martin and his team of songwriters and
producers. Max is the living pop legend whose talents
propelled Britney, *NSYNC and the Backstreet Boys to
fame at the start of the decade then, with a reinvented
guitar pop sound, worked magic on recent releases
including Kelly Clarkson’s ‘Since U Been Gone’. Shayne
says. “There's a special feeling when he is in the room
because you know something is going to be big. He’ll pop
into the studio, make some suggestion which seems weird,
then by the time he’s left the room the song has gone
off in some amazing new direction.” Shayne adds that
songs which make up this new album are not of the
‘pulled out of the tracks Britney rejected’ drawer
variety favoured by so many of today’s tunesmiths;
written either for or with Shayne the songs – like ‘You
Hang Up’ and ‘You Make Me Wish’ - have an organic,
bespoke feel which suits Shayne’s personality down to
the ground. “These are all my songs,” Shayne beams, “and
I needed to be proud of them because I’m going to be the
one out there singing them! I can’t wait to show my fans
what I’ve got up my sleeve.”
- A stamp has been put on the imagery and the video
for the first release from the album ‘If That’s Okay
With You’. The line up of this superstar team only
begins with Max Martin, As for the video, Syco recruited
legendary director Wayne Isham who has brought songs by
the likes of Michael Jackson, Ricky Martin and Bon Jovi
to life with his innovative videography. For the
creative Shayne has been photographed by Max Vadukul who
has shot countless stars for the cover of Rolling Stone
and Vogue as well as timeless campaigns for Armani and
Express.
- Back on an album otherwise surprisingly bereft of
balladry there’s one song, 'Breathless', which
completely hits the spot. “It really stands out as the
best ballad I've ever done,” Shayne smiles, “but even
then it doesn’t sound like you might expect. Just
because a song’s down-tempo it doesn’t mean you can’t
surprise people.” Think along the lines of ‘Umbrella’ or
‘Cry Me A River’ and you’ll pinpoint the kind of
state-of-the-art ballads Shayne’s going for – ballads
which don’t need gargantuan key changes or ‘standing up
off the stool’ moments to get the job done. “As with a
lot of the album I think you hear ‘Breathless’ and you
hear something with a lot more depth – a lot more
adventurousness – than I’ve had before,” Shayne says.
“It’s been really important to get the sound of the
songs, not just the tunes of those songs, just right.”
- The album’s so well-realised that it’s easy to
forget that just two years ago nobody knew Shayne Ward
even existed. Having grown up with six brothers and
sisters Shayne spent his teenage years performing at
pubs, clubs, bars and weddings with two other singers.
The money’s alright in that game, but it doesn’t do much
for your self-esteem. Shayne was thinking bigger and,
when his break on TV finally came, he was ready to go
the whole way. Since winning X-Factor he’s grown up in
the right ways but stayed exactly the same in all the
right ways too – not an easy feat to pull off, but you’d
be hard-pushed to find a guy with his feet so firmly on
the ground as Shayne. One change you will notice this
time around, however, is that he’s hung up his suit and
the old image.
- Behind the determination to succeed and a thirst for
making great pop music, Shayne has a refreshingly laid
back approach to his career. Eye-wateringly
autobiographical lyrics about ‘my struggle’? “These
things can come, I’m just enjoying myself for now.”
Popstar strops re being ‘an artist’? “Fourth album,
hopefully never.” Away from sloppy romance, Shayne’s
stepping everything up a gear. “This is not a love album
at all,” he states. “It’s about me being the lad that I
am. I’m having fun, I’m showing my emotional side, I’m
showing my sexy side and I’m unleashing the beast. With
each album I'm going to make it the best that I can -
every album is going to be different and better than the
last. I want to see myself in the premiere league of
British pop acts, and I’m enjoying working my arse off
to get there.”
I'm now back home for Christmas and I cant wait to spend lots of time with my family and catching up with all of my friends! It's been such a great year with the tour, international promotion then into the recording and creative process of the new album.
- Shayne Ward
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