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Michael Ball

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Michael Ball Life story


Michael John Ball is an English former professional footballer who played as a left back. Ball started his professional career at Everton, making his debut as a 17-year-old in 1997. He was capped by the England national team in 2001. Ball joined Rangers in the 2001 close season in a £6.5 million transfer.

Early Life & Education

Michael ball is an english singer. Actor. Radio and television presenter. And musical theatre actor. He was born on ujne 27. 1962 in bromsgrove. Worcestershire. England. He earned a degree in drama from the central school of speech and drama in london.

Stage Career

Michael ball is an establihsed musical thearte actor. He made his west end debut in 1985 in les miserables. And has since starred in a number of musicals. Including aspects of love. Hairspray. Chitty chitty bang bang. And sweeney todd. In 1992. He originated the role of marius in the west end production of les miserables.

Television & Radio Career

Michael ball has appeared on a number of television shows. Including the one show. This morning. And the graham norton show. He has been a frequent guest on the bbc radio 2 show friday night is music night sicne 1997.

Albums & Singles

Michael ball has released a number of albums and singles throughout his career. His debut album. Michael ball. Wsa released in 1988 and includes his hit signle love changes everything. His most successful album to date is at this moment. Which was released in 2006 and includes the single everybody s talkin.

Awards & Accolades

Michael ball has been honoured with a number of awards throughout his career. He won a laurence olivier award for best actor in a musical for his performance in aspects of love in 1990. He also won a tony award for ebst performance by an actor in a leading role in a musical for his performance in the phantom of the opera in 1991.

Notable Events

In ball was awarded an honorary doctorate from the uinversity of worcester for his services to musical theatre.

Interesting Facts

Michael ball is the only actro to have won both a laurence olivier award and a tony aawrd for his performance in musical theatre.

Now That's What I Call Music turns 40: Forty facts about the compilation giant

Now That's What I Call Music turns 40: Forty facts about the compilation giant
Nov 28,2023 11:21 am

... 24) Captain Sir Tom Moore is the oldest singer to feature on the compilation, having reached his 100th birthday when he sang alongside Michael Ball on the charity cover version of You ll Never Walk Alone (Now 106)...

The Beatles top singles chart 60 years after their first hit

The Beatles top singles chart 60 years after their first hit
Nov 10,2023 1:39 pm

... They are also the second and third-oldest chart-topping artists, after Sir Captain Tom Moore, aged 99, whose was number one in 202 with Michael Ball...

Strictly Come Dancing 2023: Snake hips, meditation and fabulous outfits

Strictly Come Dancing 2023: Snake hips, meditation and fabulous outfits
Sep 11,2023 2:31 am

... " When I was in Hairspray with Michael Ball, I was playing Wilbur Turnblad who owns a joke shop, and you don t get louder than that...

Captain Sir Tom Moore: What has happened to his legacy?

Captain Sir Tom Moore: What has happened to his legacy?
Jul 8,2023 11:40 am

... A week before his 100th birthday, Capt Sir Tom became the oldest person ever to get to number one in the UK singles charts, when his duet of You ll Never Walk Alone - with singer Michael Ball - took the top spot...

Cumbrian radio volunteer to meet hero Michael Ball

Cumbrian radio volunteer to meet hero Michael Ball
May 23,2023 8:00 am

...By Steve SaulReporter, BBC North West TonightA volunteer hospital radio presenter is to meet his hero Michael Ball who has invited him to visit the studios at BBC Radio 2...

Eurovision: Which parts of the UK have performed best?

Eurovision: Which parts of the UK have performed best?
May 10,2023 4:11 am

... The West Midlands has only had one solo act make it to the contest - Michael Ball in 1992...

Jack Lis: Pair jailed for Caerphilly dog attack death

Jack Lis: Pair jailed for Caerphilly dog attack death
Jun 10,2022 5:45 pm

... These offences happened between 4 and 7 November, before the attack on Jack, and two of those incidents resulted in injuries to two members of the public, Michael Ball and Sian Sullivan...

Eurovision: Where has the UK gone wrong in the past?

Eurovision: Where has the UK gone wrong in the past?
May 14,2022 4:25 am

... " Actually back in the day with Katrina and the Waves, Michael Ball, etc all did very well because we understood we should throw our best at it...

Now That's What I Call Music turns 40: Forty facts about the compilation giant

Feb 3,2022 8:43 pm

By Mark SavageBBC Music Correspondent

The world's best-selling compilation album is celebrating its 40th birthday.

Now That's What I Call Music was launched in the UK on 29 November 1983, with a mission to anthologise the biggest chart hits of the day.

The first album contained hits like Karma Chameleon, Red Red Wine and Total Eclipse Of The Heart. Since it has catalogued every musical trend from hip-hop to K-pop, featuring everyone from Queen to Billie Eilish and even Bob The Builder.

And it's still going strong. The 116th edition has just been released, opening with Sam Smith and Calvin Harris's dance smash Desire, before rattling through Olivia Rodrigo's Vampire and Doja Cat's Paint The Town Red.

In the pre-playlist era, the Now albums were an essential way of staying up-to-date, and even discovering new music. Even now they sell by the bucket load - with lifetime sales in excess of 120 million.

As the series enters its fourth decade, here are 40 facts about its hits, misses and howlers.

Now that's what I call the early days

1) Compilation albums existed before Now That's What I Call Music came along but they were often full of knock-off cover versions, or missing major hits due to licensing issues. By contrast, Now was a joint venture between two of the UK's biggest record labels, EMI and Virgin, giving compilers immediate access to the day's biggest songs.

2) The series took its name from a 1920s advertising poster for Danish bacon, featuring a pig saying. " Now, That's What I Call Music" as it listened to a chicken singing. Virgin Records' owner Richard Branson had given it to his cousin and the company's co-founder Simon Draper several years earlier, and it hung behind his desk at the label's offices. " The joke was I couldn't really start the day without eggs and bacon, "

3) The first track on the first album was You Can't Hurry Love by Phil Collins. He went on to appear on a further 12 Now albums.

4) Of the 28 artists who featured on that first edition, 11 have yet to make a second appearance, including hip-hop group The Rock Steady Crew and Aussie rock band Men At Work.

5) The record entered the charts at number seven before climbing to number one, where it remained for five weeks. A new era was born.

6) The success made other record labels sit up and take notice. In 1984, CBS and WEA launched a rival series, titled The Hits, which focused on big American acts like Madonna, Prince and Bruce Springsteen. The first edition topped the charts for seven weeks and denied Now That's What I Call Music 4 the coveted Christmas number one slot.

7) The rivalry continued for years, leaving some strange gaps in the Now series. Michael Jackson has only appeared twice: On Now 4, with the drippy 1970s ballad One Day In Your Life, and again on Now 88 with the posthumous single Love Never Felt So Good.

8) Another big hold-out is Madonna, who has never featured on any of the main, numbered Now albums. However, she did sneak onto the tracklist of the most recent release, Now 116, as a featured artist on Sam Smith's single Vulgar.

9) Now That's What I Call Music 4 was the first edition to be released on CD. With record labels reluctant to give approval to the new format, it ended up as a single disc containing only 15 songs. About 2,000 were sold - and pristine copies of the CD now change hands for up to £600.

10) The MiniDisc format was introduced with Now 43 (July 1999) and ended with Now 48 (April 2001). Now 62 was the first compilation to be available as a download, in 2005. The last edition to be available on cassette was Now 64 in 2006.

Now that's what I call big numbers

11) The numbered volumes have spent a combined total of 771 weeks at number one. Only Now 4 and Now 115 have missed the top spot.

12) More than 120 million Now albums have been sold. Apparently over half the population have either bought one (or been given) one; and the average household owns four Now albums.

13) Including the latest edition, Now 116, the compilations have featured 2,409 different artists, and 675 UK number one singles.

14) Robbie Williams has appeared more times than anyone else - a grand total of 38. That includes 32 hits as a solo artist, six with Take That, and one each as a member of the charity projects Helping Haiti (Now 75), Justice Collective (Now 84), Artists for Grenfell (Now 97), and World Music project 1 Giant Leap (Now 52).

15) Kylie Minogue is tied with Robbie for the most appearances as a solo act. She made her debut with I Should Be So Lucky on Now 11, and is still going on the most recent release, Now 116, with Tension.

16) Girls Aloud have clocked up the highest number of consecutive appearances - 13 in total - with a track on every album from Now 54 to Now 66.

17) Little Mix are the most featured group, with 28 appearances, ahead of Coldplay (24), Girls Aloud (21) and U2 (20).

18) The most successful volume to date is 1999's Now That's What I Call Music 44, which sold 2. 3 million copies and is the biggest selling compilation album ever. It opened with Britney Spears'. . Baby One More Time and also featured Shania Twain's That Don't Impress Me Much, Moloko's Sing It Back and Steps' Tragedy.

19) 2008's Now That's What I Call Music! 70 sold 383,002 copies in seven days - the biggest first-week sales of any Now album. It featured hits like Estelle's American Boy, The Ting Tings' That's Not My Name and Flo Rida's Low.

20) Don McLean's American Pie is the longest song to feature on a Now album, clocking in at 8 minutes and 34 seconds. Wings by the Jonas Brothers is the shortest, at 1 minute and 58 seconds.

Now that's what I call trivia

21) As well as the main Now series, the brand has released more than 260 themed compilations, including Now That's What I Call Eurovision, Now Karaoke and Now That's What I Call Classic Soul.

22) The most popular Now album is Now That's What I Call Christmas, which has shifted 4. 3m copies. If compilation albums were included in list of the UK's best-selling records, it would take ninth place, nestling between Michael Jackson's Bad and Dire Straits' Brothers In Arms.

23) Willow Smith is the youngest artist on any Now compilation. She was just nine years old when Whip My Hair featured on Now 78 (2011); and had to wait more than a decade for her second appearance, with Meet Me At Our Spot on Now 111 (2022).

24) Captain Sir Tom Moore is the oldest singer to feature on the compilation, having reached his 100th birthday when he sang alongside Michael Ball on the charity cover version of You'll Never Walk Alone (Now 106).

25) Duran Duran have the longest career span on the series. They debuted on the very first Now album with their number one hit Is There Something I Should Know, and are back on the latest volume with Black Moonlight - a single which failed to make the top 75.

26) It would take 300 hours to listen to all 116 volumes of the Now That's What I Call Music series back to back.

27) The first few albums featured artist montages on the cover, but that practice was abandoned after Now 5, because the track list is often finalised so late that any problems in securing images could potentially delay the release.

28) While recent album covers have been computer-generated, early instalments were created for real. Now 10 featured a custom-made neon sign, while Now 12 was shot at a leisure centre. " We actually stuck the number 12 to the bottom of a swimming pool, painted some polystyrene balls with the Now logo and had a photographer take a photo that would become the cover, " said artwork designer Neal Martinez.

29) The Now team pay a lot of attention to how the albums are sequenced. " The perceived wisdom about compilations is that, when somebody picks one up, they look at the first half-dozen tracks and the last two or three tracks and make a decision accordingly, " says Steve Pritchard, who was custodian of the series for more than 20 years. " So the sound quality and the running order is important, but the opening half-dozen tracks are what really sells the album. "

30) The series was so successful that compilation albums were quarantined into a separate chart in 1999. Ashley Abram, who compiled volumes 2 to 81, says the decision was forced by US record labels, who couldn't understand why superstar artists were being kept off the top of the charts by Now.

Now that's what I call middle age

31) The success of the UK albums has inspired localised variants around the world - beginning with the Netherlands and Spain in 1984, Japan in 1988, and the US in 1998.

32) Over the years, a tradition has arisen of the second disc housing more experimental and edgy songs. " Does disc two have the cooler stuff? Very loosely, " says Abram. " When we started all we were trying to do was sequence the songs in an interesting way. . but if you keep swapping the genres too much, it's perceived as too hard to listen to. So we tended to have all the pop stuff together. "

33) As it ages, the Now series has become a totem of popular culture. The 48th volume even became a pivotal plot point in an episode of Peter Kay's Car Share, when supermarket employee Kayleigh Kitson (Sian Gibson) declared it was her favourite album. As a result, the record re-entered Amazon's compilation chart on the strength of second-hand sales (the album was out of print) with prices rising from 11p to more than £20.

34) The series has been running so long that several songs have appeared more than once. The first was Alive and Kicking by Simple Minds, which cropped up on both Now 6 and Now 23. More recently, two cover versions of Tracy Chapman's Fast Car have appeared on different albums, the first by Jonas Blue on Now 93; and the second by Luke Combs on Now 116.

35) The generation-spanning series has also become a family affair. Neneh Cherry and her daughter Mabel have both appeared on the series; as have Bob Marley, his son Damian and grandson Skip.

36) Although downloads and streaming appear to pose an existential threat to the Now series, the numbered volumes still sell in big quantities. In 2021, Now 108 shifted 25,876 copies in its first week - that's 10,000 more than the week's official number one album, Ben Howard's Collections from the Whiteout.

37) DJ Mark Goodier, who has voiced adverts for the Now series since 1992, says it still has a place in the market. " One of the reasons music stands the test of time is that we have personal experiences associated with songs - so people who are deeply knowledgeable about music can curate playlists better than Artificial Intelligence. AI hasn't had a record played at a funeral, AI doesn't know what song was playing when you walked down the aisle. The people who are really good at selecting records on radio, on a streaming service or on a compilation album, are very few and far between. "

38) In 2021, the company launched its " Yearbook" series, a new series of albums collecting the hits from a specific year. Covering the years 1973 to 1992 (so far), these albums have marked the first appearance of 700 songs on any Now compilation.

39) Those compilations sometimes throw up odd anomalies. Terence Trent D'Arby's hits are now credited to Sananda Maitreya, the name he chose in 2001; while Eurythmics now insist on the awkward billing of " Eurythmics, Annie Lennox, Dave Stewart".

40) If everything goes to schedule, Now 120 will arrive in March 2025, with Now 200 due in time for Christmas 2051. But in 1995, the numbers were almost dropped altogether. According to EMI executive Barry McCann, the label was concerned that people would think that double digits would make the series seem outdated, as no compilation series had run that long. In fact, the numbers became an asset. Everybody has a favourite Now album. What's yours?

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Source of news: bbc.com

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