No Idol Time for Ballad Singer
Mar 23, 2004
Martin Derbyshire
Markham Economist and Sun
Caleigh Burke doesn't want to be a manufactured pop star who sells her
soul and a million records.

That's why the singer songwriter of mainly soft and seductive
piano-driven ballads, a lifelong Unionville resident, took a pass on
the recent Canadian Idol auditions, even through friends told her she
had the talent to make an impression.
"At the end of the day, I came to the conclusion
that it's a wonderful opportunity for somebody, just not for me,"
she said.
"Being who I am, there are a lot of things I value
that I won't compromise. If this is something that's really going to
happen for me I won't have to sacrifice and I won't have to compromise.
It will happen mostly on my terms.
"I'm not Britney Spears. Thank God. And that's important
to me. Who I am and what I sing about and what I play is important to
me. Otherwise, what else do you have?"
It's not that Ms Burke, 20, doesn't see a place for pop
music. She just doesn't necessarily see a place for her own brand of
cerebral songwriting inside the massive, money-driven machine pop has
become.
She counts Dave Matthews, Sting, Tori Amos (as a fellow
redheaded piano player, she apparently does quite an impression), Elton
John and Sarah McLachlan among her favourites.
However, the mp3 list on her computer includes everything
from country to hip hop and hard rock.
"I really like any kind of music that has some kind
of substance to it and is not just manufactured. Something that's artistic
and meaningful rather than just a product meant to sell a million copies,"
she explained.
Ms Burke's mother, Maureen, says her daughter showed signs
of a musical future at an early age.
"It's always been there. She was always very verbal
and as a very young infant I sang to her all the time," she said.
"When Caleigh was two years old, her grandfather
died and she was watching me rehearse songs for his funeral. Well, at
the funeral she sang every single one of the words of those songs. People
were amazed. She was definitely a natural."
Ms Burke remembers the funeral and she also remembers
singing and dancing all around the house as a young child.
At age nine she pushed her parents to get her into piano
lessons and started writing songs as young as 13.
"I just loved it right away. It came very naturally
to me," she said.
As a student in Unionville High School, she joined the
Arts York Program, allowing her to concentrate on singing and playing
piano.
But it was a concert she attended five years ago, featuring
Winnipeg piano pop performer Chantal Krev-iazuk, that truly drove home
her interest in music as a career.
"It really struck a chord with me. There was no band.
There was nobody else. Just her and her piano. She just kind of walked
out there and did her thing for a couple of hours and I literally cried
through the entire thing," she said.
"Afterwards, I couldn't sleep. I remember vividly
not being able to sleep and not being able to breathe and knowing I
had to do this. It was so clear and it was so scary at the same time."
Since then she has pursued a her dream with great vigor,
starting with Arts York shows in school, then writing and recording
her first CD and playing nights at the Al Dente restaurant in Markham
last summer.
Just this month, she played her biggest show yet, in front
of more than 120 people as part of Canadian Music Week in Toronto.
"I was very pleased the Canadian Music Week showcase
went over so well because it was my first really big test," she
said. "The question is, do I really want to do this and this answer
for me was definitely a resounding yes."
However, Ms Burke's drive and passion for her chosen vocation
hasn't prevented her from pursuing other interests.
In fact, she is attending the University of Toronto studying
criminology, ethics and law.
"I look at university, more than anything else, as
life experience. It's about being independent and forging your own pathways
in life," she said.
"Ethics, law, criminology, I'm really interested
in them. I love learning about them and I really wanted to leave music
as something for me to determine, not something I go to school for and
have to do. Because then you run the risk of not liking it anymore."
She lives downtown during the week while attending classes,
but returns to Unionville every weekend, to the same house she's always
called home.
"Unionville is a great place. I love coming home
on weekends to a small town and a real sense of community," she
said.
"It's nice to still have a small town to call home,
but be a part of something a little bigger."
Despite growing older and certainly busier, Ms Burke's
family, including her parents and older brother and sister, remain a
tightknit group providing that ever-important support system.
"We are a very close family and we get along surprisingly
well. The main thing is that we really enjoy spending time together.
"We're all together as a unit so infrequently these
days I think everybody treats it as a sacred, special and fabulous thing,"
she said.
"I think it's so important that the most important
people in your life be supportive of your dreams and what you want to
do because without that, it would be next to impossible to accomplish
anything."
With two more years of university to go, Ms Burke plans
to study hard and continue performing.
"I hope I can build a career in the music business
organically. I recognize it's not an easy thing to do, but I think it's
important it happens in its own time, organically and naturally.
"Right now, I just want to be playing as many shows
as I can and writing," she said.
Copies of Caleigh Burke's CD are available through her
website, www.caleighburke.com. Upcoming live performances will also
be listed there.
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