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Barnev Valsaint Becomes Top Back-up Singer with Celine Dion, Develops New Production Co.
By Jayne Moore
Canadian vocalist and writer/producer Barnev Valsaint has
enjoyed stellar success during the past decade, with a #1 song in Canada, then
touring and eventually settling in Las Vegas to work as Celine Dion’s top backup
vocalist in her band. Valsaint is currently performing in Dion’s spectacular
show, A New Day, to sold-out audiences at the 4,000 seat Colosseum at
Caesars Palace. The show has entertained over one million fans so far.
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| Barnev Valsaint |
Valsaint recently took a break from his busy schedule to
talk about his background and success in Canada, as well as working with Dion,
who is now the biggest-selling female artist of all time. He also discusses his
love for producing, which he continues, in addition to performing 200 shows a
year with Dion.
Growing up in Montreal, where the population is divided
between French and English as the predominant language, Valsaint started his
education on the north side of Montreal, where he spoke French as his first
language. “I went to school, which was taught in French and spoke French at
home,” he recalled, then moved to west Montreal. “Once we moved to the west
island, all my friends spoke English.”
Music, the universal language, was a large part of
Valsaint’s entire family. “We got into music because of church. My parents, my
uncles, my whole family were very gospel oriented. There’s not one person in my
family who doesn’t sing.” However, Valsaint was the first in his family to
pursue music professionally.
While in college, where he studied to become a teacher, he
began to work with a group called Dubmatique. “They asked me to [write and
sing] a chorus for one of their songs and that song became the #1 song in
Canada.” The song, “Soul Pleurer,” said Valsaint, was a metaphor. “If you take the
two words, they say ‘your soul is crying.’ It was dedicated to some friends of
ours who had died in Montreal. It was a very touching, emotional song that a
lot of people could relate to.” The song, which was a hip-hop/ R&B
rendering, was not initially well received. “Hip-hop was very new to the Quebec
culture. They were not ready for stuff like that. I was singing the R&B
hook on the song. The radio stations didn’t want to play it, nobody wanted to
play it, but we [didn’t give up]. The song finally played once on the radio and
people just kept calling and it became the #1 hit in Canada. We toured Europe
and Canada for so long, I dropped out of school and that’s when I knew what I
wanted to do for a living.”
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| Barnev Valsaint singing a duet with Celine Dion for a TV appearance. |
Once the tour with Dubmatique was finished, Valsaint
released a record and toured with his R&B group, Nodeja. Shortly
thereafter, in late 1998, Dion was looking for a male vocalist.
“Celine wanted me to come on tour because her former backup
vocalist, Terry Bradford, decided he’d been touring long enough and wanted to
do other things. They called me in for an audition and it was between me and
another guy. They sent the videotape to Celine and she said, ‘I want Barnev.’ I
was only supposed to be on tour with her during her Let’s Talk About Love world tour. Basically, I was just filling in
for Terry and was only supposed to go for that one tour. Then once that tour
ended, they asked me to stay. They were such good people, and [at the same
time] my group basically deteriorated because everyone wanted to do their own
thing. I decided I might as well stay with Celine, and have been with her ever
since.”
Valsaint has nothing but the highest regard for Dion. “I’ve
met and worked with a lot of artists, and I don’t think I’ve ever met an artist
at the level that she is to be as grounded as she is. She just loves everyone
who surrounds her. She’s thankful and she recognizes that she needs everybody
around her. We make her look good and she knows that. She’s such a sweet
person.”
Now that Dion has settled to raise her son and taken a
respite from touring, Valsaint has accordingly made his home in Las Vegas. “At
the beginning I loved touring because I was in a different city every week,”
explained Valsaint. “But once it gets to the Celine level, you don’t see your
family, you don’t see your friends or your girlfriend. Basically you have to
fly people in to come and stay with you for a week or two, because there’s no
way you can leave and go see them. That was the only negative aspect of the
tour. Everything else is great. But being in Vegas, you do a show and you come
home; that’s the best. You’re doing what you love, you’re performing and the
show is sold out every night. You’re not in a hotel; it feels good. I like
touring, but it started getting a little hard because I’m very close to my
family.”
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| Barnev Valsaint (pictured at bottom) with his group Nodeja, in the late '90s. |
Valsaint is the only male backup singer in Dion’s show. He
was featured with Dion on The Oprah Winfrey Show and is currently among
59 musicians, vocalists and performers in her New Day presentation
currently at Caesar’s Colusseum. He performs all the duets with Dion. “I do all
the duets she has. We have sung the R.Kelly song, ‘I’m Your Angel’ and the
Peabo Bryson song, ‘Beauty and the Beast.’”
Because of the vast sets and choreography, the duets are not currently
in the show, but Valsaint believes they may come back as the Colosseum show
evolves.
Now that he has a “day job,” Valsaint is following his other
passion- producing. “I’ve been doing it since the beginning,” said Valsaint.
“Every record I’ve collaborated or participated with, I’ve produced one or two
songs on the album. It’s something I’ve always loved to do. I decided to start
my own production company (Polar Bear Entertainment) and started writing &
producing songs.” Over the past couple of years he has been working with his
partner Yacoub Moilim to prepare a catalog of songs. “We’ve been collaborating
since the beginning on different projects.”
Moilim now resides in Las Vegas, so he and Valsaint can
continue their project. “We have a studio in the house where we can continue
with production. We did one song that a friend of mine really liked. So I gave
him a copy and he sent it to a publisher in Los Angeles. The publisher liked it
and arranged a meeting with actress Nadia Bjorlin, (who has starred in the soap
opera, Days of Our Lives). We
met with Nadia and agreed to produce her. She’s an amazing singer and she has a
lot of potential.” Valsaint and Moilim
have composed a number of songs, and have begun the process of attracting
attention to their work.
Valsaint offers his advice for vocalists looking to achieve
his degree of success. “Never give up. Never let anybody tell you that you
can’t sing or you can’t make it. Because seriously, if Celine did it, if I did
it, anyone can do it- if you have the talent. It’s a matter of persistence and
believing in yourself. There’s not a method, there’s not a guideline, not a
book to tell you how to make it. Just believe in yourself and keep on going
until you can’t go anymore, because you never know. You could be in the right
place at the right time. You could be anywhere and somebody might recognize the
talent that you have. Keep your head up and keep trying and never burn your
bridges. You never know who’s in front of you or behind you.”
Valsaint feels very fortunate to have achieved such a high
degree of success in his career. “I’ve been blessed to have worked with all the
people I’ve worked with. They’ve all been very professional and such good
people. “Just two weeks ago, my parents met Celine. We spent time hanging out
in her dressing room, having a ball. It’s very rare you see people like Celine
in the music industry. For Celine, it’s all about who she surrounds herself
with. She surrounds herself with family. The people who work with her become an
extension of her family. She has her family close to her at all times. She
makes sure that she’s around good people, and I get that same feeling from
Nadia (Bjorlin).”
Jayne Moore is a freelance music/entertainment journalist. She has launched a new service, writing bios, articles and press releases. Moore can be contacted at musicgerm@hotmail.com. You can also visit her website: www.musicgerm.com.
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