Kalan Porter

Kalan Porter
Background information
Birth name Richard Kalan Porter
Born (1985-11-11) November 11, 1985
Origin Irvine, Alberta, Canada
Genres Pop
Occupation(s) Singer-songwriter
Years active 2004–2008
Labels Sony Music Canada
Website kalanporter.com

Richard Kalan Porter (born November 11, 1985) is a Canadian singer-songwriter from Medicine Hat, Alberta, and the winner of the reality television series Canadian Idol in season 2.[1] He started to sing at an early age and is classically trained, playing several instruments, most notably, the violin and viola. He writes and arranges violin solos for many of his songs. Porter's first single "Awake in a Dream" is the best selling debut single for a Canadian artist to date and has been certified 8x Platinum by the Canadian Recording Industry Association. He is also the highest selling solo Canadian Idol singer. He currently is a student of the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania.[2]

Early years

Porter grew up on a buffalo ranch outside of Medicine Hat, Alberta. He is a classically trained musician. His mother used to take him to music lessons saying that one day he'll thank her, and he has said that he now thanks her. He played in a family band, that played a variety of music, including covers of popular rock and pop songs, as well as their own compositions. In 2004, he was preparing to leave home for Montreal to study viola performance at the Schulich School of Music in McGill University, when he decided to audition for Canadian Idol.

Canadian Idol

Beating out 8,977 other contestants, Porter was crowned "Idol" on September 16, 2004 in front of a live TV audience. For three seasons he was the only contestant in Canadian Idol who had never been in the bottom three or two until Season 5 when Jaydee Bixby made it to the finale without ever being placed in the bottom group.

Post-Idol career

2004–2005: 219 Days

Porter's first single "Awake in a Dream" was released on October 5, 2004 and debuted at number 1. It spent a total of 8 weeks at the top of the charts and has become the best-selling debut single for a Canadian artist to date as it was certified 8x Platinum by the Canadian Recording Industry Association in November 2004.

His debut album 219 Days, released November 23, 2004, debuted at number four on the Canadian albums chart. The album title, 219 Days, refers to the number of days from his first audition to the release of his debut CD. Since its release it reached double platinum status in Canada. It was recorded at Metalworks Studios in Mississauga, Ontario.

Porter completed a cross-Canada, 65-date tour in 2005. Most of these shows were sold out.

In 2006, Kalan Porter received three Juno Award nominations: Artist of the Year, Album of the Year for 219 Days, and Pop Album of the Year. He was a presenter at the 2006 Juno Awards in Halifax. He won MuchMusic's People's Choice Award for the Favourite Canadian Artist in 2005.

Later in 2006, BMG gave Porter time off before recording his second album. He returned home to his family's buffalo and cattle ranch to be with his mother, who was undergoing chemotherapy for breast cancer,[3] and his grandmother, who was awaiting surgery.

2007–2008: Wake Up Living

Porter's second album, Wake Up Living, was released on August 28, 2007 and debuted at number 7 on the Canadian albums chart. The first single, "Down in Heaven" (which Porter wrote as a tribute to his mother) was available to radio stations from June 4, and reached number 25 on the Canadian Hot 100.

The music video for the second single from the album, "Destination (Where I Belong)" premiered in November 2007. The track "Walk On Home" was used as the contestant elimination song for Canadian Idol's fifth season.

SOCAN honoured Porter and his co-writer Gregory Johnston with a No. 1 Award for their song “Hurray” which reached the top spot on the MuchMusic Countdown chart on May 29,

Discography

Main article: Kalan Porter discography

See also

References

  1. Rob Faulkner (17 September 2004). "'Medicine Hatter' Kalan wins Canadian Idol title". The Hamilton Spectator. Retrieved 16 April 2011.
  2. Ben Rayner (29 November 2013). "Canadian Idols: Where are they now?". The Toronto Star. Retrieved 7 July 2015.
  3. (July 21, 2007). "Post-Idol Kalan puts mom first", The Vancouver Sun. Retrieved March 12, 2011.

External links

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