Drew Wright

Drew Wright
Birth name Drew Edward Wright
Born (1979-10-05) October 5, 1979
Toronto, Ontario
Origin Collingwood, Ontario, Canada
Genres Alternative
Occupation(s) Singer-songwriter
Instruments electric guitar, acoustic guitar, drums
Years active 2006–present
Associated acts Mitch McDonald, Theo Tams
Website fallanddivide.com

Drew Edward Wright (born on October 5, 1979) is a Canadian who is best known for being a top three finalist on the sixth season of Canadian Idol.

Early life

When Drew was young, he was mostly into rock and country. When he was two, he was given a ukulele which he grew attached to.

Even at a young age, Drew's interest in music was apparent. When he was five, he was sent home from school for singing Under My Thumb by The Rolling Stones. Later, he quickly picked up drumming when he was twelve and he was often sent home for singing or drumming in class.

He played in the band at Admiral Collingwood Public School and various sports such as hockey or wrestling, as well as taking tap dancing lessons for a year. When he was fifteen, he was taught a few chords on the guitar and took it up as his main instrument. Despite being left-handed, Wright plays right-handed.

After leaving school, Drew attended CCI and enrolled in the drama program. He would often bring his guitar to class and play for his peers. For his year-end monologue, he played a character who wanted to write music for a living.[1]

Around this time, he played in a band called Clean Dirt, though they broke up shortly thereafter. He then formed a band called Malleus, who won the Rock 95 Loud and Local Contest in 2006.

After graduating high school, Drew got a degree in music engineering and continued to play on the local scene.

Canadian Idol

Drew was pressured to try out for Canadian Idol by family and friends. As twenty-eight is the cut off age for auditioners, he decided to give it a shot (he was twenty-seven at the time of his audition) and made it to the Top 200.

The day of his final performance in Toronto Week, his grandmother died and he contemplated leaving, though decided, with his family's blessing, to stay in the competition. He wowed the judges with his acoustic performance of Maroon 5's She Will Be Loved and made it into the Top 24 (though at the time, it was still a Top 22).

After performing Queen's "Under Pressure", Neverending White Lights's "The Grace" and Hoobastank's "The Reason" (the latter which of two, he accompanied himself on guitar), Drew advanced into the Top 10 of Canadian Idol. Though he said the leaving of many of friends was sad, he was ecstatic to make the top ten and what was ahead for him.[2]

Drew accompanied himself on drums during Top 10 week, playing David Bowie's Five Years. The judges response to his performances were mostly lukewarm, though he managed to advance.

For Top 9 week, he sang Blind Melon's No Rain without accompanying himself on an instrument. The Idols were mentored by Gavin Rossdale for Top 8 week, when he again sang a Maroon 5 song (this time, Sunday Morning). Speaking of the experience, he called it "a great experience".[3]

Drew accompanied himself on an electric guitar for Top 7 week, in which he sang Radiohead's 1992 hit, Creep. The judges were largely happy with the performance, though judge Zack Werner noted that he could have "sang the lyrics a bit more angst-ridden."

The following week, Simple Plan mentored the Idols for Canadian Artists week, in which Drew chose Big Wreck's That Song. With a mixed response from the judging panel, Drew found himself in the bottom three the next night with Earl Stevenson and Amberly Thiessen - the last competitor of the Top 10 to find himself in that position. Amberly was eliminated.

The top five went to Camp Oochigeas, which Drew said was "unreal" and mentioned how his worries seemed "extremely trivial with what these kids are going through".[4]

For that week, the judges of the show chose the contestants songs to sing from The Beatles. Singing While My Guitar Gently Weeps, Drew received praise from all four judges but found himself in the bottom two with Mookie Morris. Morris was then eliminated.

On August 22, Drew returned home to Collingwood for a welcome home party. He sang full-length versions of That Song, Creep and Under Pressure, as well as Tonic's Open Up Your Eyes, Jeff Buckley's Hallelujah and U2's Where The Streets Have No Name.

That week on the show, Anne Murray mentored and Drew sang her song Hey Daddy as well as John Mayer's Gravity. Drew was safe as there was no bottom two announced.

For his final week on the show (where the theme was Bryan Adams songs), Drew sang his own arrangement of Cuts Like a Knife and I'm Ready.[5] The next night, Drew was eliminated despite universal praise from the judges (with judge Jake Gold proclaiming he had "finally discovered what kind of artist you are").

Drew said he was not surprised it was his name that was called, considering he'd been in the Bottom 2 a couple of times and despite tremendous support from his hometown, Ontario does not vote like some other parts of the country do. He then later said he was happy to leave on a high note and had nothing but good words for the Top 2 finalists Mitch MacDonald and Theo Tams.[6]

Post-Idol

Following the show, the top three were sent on a three-month, cross-Canada tour.[7] During this time, Drew joined up with some friends and created a band. Their MySpace went up on November 3, 2008.

Career

Fall and Divide

Immediately following Canadian Idol, Drew pieced together a band under the name Fall and Divide, which "comes from the state the planet is in right now and also from the separation from the demographic of Canadian Idol."[8]

After several line-up changes, the band released their debut album digitally through iTunes and Amazon MP3 on October 3, 2011. On March 26, 2013, Fall and Divide announced on their Facebook page that they had disbanded.

Discography

References

  1. http://community.livejournal.com/thedrewcrew/21020.html
  2. Block, Sheri. "Meet Your New Canadian Idol Top 10!", CTV.ca. Retrieved on 2009-03-09.
  3. Block, Sheri. "Idols say working with Gavin Rossdale was invaluable ", CTV.ca, 2008-07-29. Retrieved on 2009-03-09.
  4. Block, Sheri. "Idol's Top 5 visit Camp Oochigeas", CTV.ca, 2008-08-19. Retrieved on 2009-03-09.
  5. Worboy, Martha (September 2, 2008). "No Idol crown for rocker Wright", Canwest News Service.
  6. Block, Sheri. "Drew Wright feels privileged just to have made it to Top 3", CTV.ca, 2008-09-03. Retrieved on 2009-03-09.
  7. (October 24, 2008). "Top 3 Tour books Winnipeg", Winnipeg Free Press, p. W1.
  8. Thompson, Catherine. "Drew Wright Working On New Album", "News Centre", 2009-01-30. Retrieved on 2009-03-09.

External links

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