
Andrea Bocelli reunites with Vegas, brings passione to
the Strip
‘Las Vegas audiences …
know how to have fun, how to express joy and share emotions.’
– Andrea Bocelli
Andrea Bocelli’s holiday-season Las Vegas visits have
become something of a tradition for both the city and the performer. So the
legendary Italian tenor’s Dec. 6 concert at MGM Grand Garden Arena — his sixth
performance at the nearly 17,000-person venue — will offer both a stunning show
and a warm sense of reunion.
“It is a venue I am particularly fond of,” said
Bocelli, in an interview translated from his native Italian. “I am an emotional
[person] and despite a 20 year career, I always feel a bit tense before getting
on stage. But here this feeling always starts melting away from the very first
notes. For me it is a family place where I can ideally hug a lot of friends.”
Although he made his U.S. debut in 1998, it was a
televised Las Vegas concert in 2005 that made Bocelli a household name.
In December of that year, Bocelli’s first-ever
contemporary music concert took place on an elaborate floating stage at Lake
Las Vegas Resort. The show was broadcast nationwide on PBS and then released as
his “Under the Desert Sky” DVD, which debuted at No. 11 on the U.S. Billboard
200.
“The DVD was really well received and jumped to the
top of the charts, thus arousing an even greater interest in the [2006] album
‘Amore,’” Bocelli recalled. “The contributing factor in the excellent result of
this album has surely been Las Vegas audiences — so warm, sympathetic,
passionate and generous. It is an audience that knows how to have fun, how to
express joy and share emotions.”
Raised on a farm in the Tuscany region of Italy,
Bocelli did not seem predestined for a music career. Born with congenital
glaucoma, he lost his vision altogether following a childhood soccer accident.
Though he displayed great passion for music and started piano lessons at an
early age, Bocelli instead earned a law degree and worked as an attorney.
Bocelli found his way back to music as a performer on
Italian rock star Zucchero’s 1993 European tour. After winning the newcomers
section of the 1994 Sanremo Music Festival competition, he released his well-received
debut album, “Il Mare Calmo Della Sera.”
International fame came with the 1995 single “Con Te
Partirò,” a record breaking hit, with an English-language duet version with
soprano Sarah Bright man (“Time to Say Goodbye”). The song’s success propelled
Bocelli’s self-titled sophomore album to multiplatinum sales. He has since sold
80 million albums worldwide and performed duets with A-list artists including
Celine Dion, Christina Aguilera and Jennifer Lopez.
Although he has toured extensively, Bocelli’s
performances are never the same. He is promising something special for his
upcoming MGM Grand Garden Arena concert, where he will be joined by conductor
Eugene Kohn, soprano Maria Aleida, featured violinist Caroline Campbell, and
Tony and Grammy award winner Heather Headley.
“The variables depend on many reasons, starting from
the fact that the partner voices change from one show to another, and every
guest adds his/her own cultural and stylistic background,” Bocelli said. “The
first part [of the MGM Grand concert] will be devoted to an exclusively
operatic repertoire. Then there will be popular romanzas and songs that
my public expects to hear from my voice, and for sure I will not disappoint
them.”
Bocelli’s most recent release, a live CD/DVD
compilation titled “Love in Portofino,” came out in October, featuring some of
his best-known songs and selections from his latest studio album, “Passione.”