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Seal

 
Artist: Seal
 
  • Born: February 19, 1963, Paddington, London, England
  • Active: '90s, 2000s
  • Genres: Rock
  • Instrument: Vocals
  • Representative Albums: "Seal," "Seal," "Soul"
  • Representative Songs: "Crazy," "Kiss from a Rose," "Human Beings"

Biography

Seal emerged from England's house music scene in the early '90s to become the most popular British soul vocalist of the decade. Although his earliest material still showed signs of acid house, by the mid-'90s he had created a distinctive fusion of soul, folk, pop, dance, and rock that brought him success on both sides of the Atlantic.

The son of Nigerian and Brazilian parents, Seal was raised in England. After graduating with an architectural degree, he took various jobs around London, including electrical engineering and designing leather clothing. After a while, he began singing in local clubs and bars. He joined an English funk band called Push, touring Japan with the band in the mid-'80s. When he was in Asia, he joined a Thailand-based blues band. After a short time with that group, he traveled throughout India on his own.

Upon returning to England, Seal met Adamski, a house and techno producer who had yet to make much of an impression within the U.K. Seal provided the lyrics and vocals for Adamski's "Killer," which became a number one hit in 1990. After "Killer" became a hit, Seal signed a solo record contract. He recorded his eponymous debut album with Trevor Horn, who had previously worked with ABC, Frankie Goes to Hollywood, and the Buggles. The first single pulled from the album, "Crazy," became a number 15 hit in the U.K. and reached number seven in America upon its release in 1991. Seal was also a success, reaching number 24 in America and selling over three million copies around the world.

After the success of his debut, Seal took three years to complete his second album. In between the two records, he appeared on the Jimi Hendrix tribute album Stone Free, singing on Jeff Beck's version of "Manic Depression." In the summer of 1994, he released his second album, which was also titled Seal. Preceded by the American Top 40 hit "Prayer for the Dying," the album did well upon its release, peaking at number 20 and selling a million copies by the spring of 1995, but it didn't really take off until a year after its release, when "Kiss from a Rose" was featured on the soundtrack to Batman Forever. "Kiss from a Rose" became a number one pop single in America and spent a total of 12 weeks at the top of the adult contemporary charts; the single spent a total of 45 weeks on the adult contemporary charts.

The success of "Kiss from a Rose" sent its parent album, Seal, into multi-platinum status; two years after its original release, the album had sold over four million copies in the U.S. alone. Human Being hit the shelves in 1998, with Seal IV following five years later. The career-spanning Best: 1991-2004 appeared in October 2004 with the live CD/DVD combo Live in Paris following a year later. In 2007, Seal returned with the studio full-length System, which featured a duet with his wife, Heidi Klum, whom he married in 2005. His next record, 2008's Soul, was a switch, featuring covers of classic soul standards. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide
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Discography: Seal
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System

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System

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Seal IV

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Waiting for You/Loneliest Star

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Walk on by, Pt. 1

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Beginning

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Waiting for You

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Seal IV [Import Bonus Track]

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Seal IV [Import Bonus Track]

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Human Being

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Black Biography: Seal
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pop singer; songwriter

Personal Information

Born Sealhenry Olumide Samuel, February 19, 1963, In London, England; son of Francis (a plumber and interior decorator) and Bisi (a homemaker) Samuel; raised by father and stepmother Joyce; married Heidi Klum (a model/television host), May 2005; child: Henry Gunther Ademola Dashtu Samuel, September 2005.
Education: Received degree in architecture.

Career

Recording and performing artist, c. late 1980s--. Joined first band, Stay Brave, at age 15; worked as designer of leather clothing and as an electrical engineer; toured Japan with member of funk group Push; sand with blues band in Thailand; released Killer, a collaboration with Adam "Adamski" Tinley, 1990; signed with ZTT records and released debut album Seal, 1991; collaborated with Jeff Beck on contribution to Jimi Hendrix tribute album Stone Free, 1993; released Seal 1994; released single, "Kiss From A Rose," which was featured in the movie Batman Forever, 1995; released Human Being, 1998; released Seal IV, 2003; released Seal Best: 1991-2004, 2004.

Life's Work

Eclectic British pop artist Seal told Rolling Stone's David Thigpen, "All my songs are therapy. I~m giving therapy to myself." After a splashy 1991 debut--including a Number One U.K. single and a top-selling album--he experienced several tumultuous and difficult years that caused him to confront the meaning of his sudden fame and, more importantly, his life.

Seal returned wiser and more assured with his 1994 sophomore effort, though in certain fundamental respects he was back where he began: with the same influential and supportive producer and the same title. Yet the variety of styles he enlisted--building on the already rich mixture of rock, soul, folk, and dance music that fills his first album--was, if anything, even greater. The journey to this achievement, as he told Q, necessitated a self-acceptance with which he struggled all his life. "You have to work out why you feel so undeserving," he insisted, adding "you have to start healing and you have to start saying to yourself, OK, I am worth it, I do deserve this."

Seal was born Sealhenry Olumide Samuel in London, England; his parents had moved there from Nigeria and divorced when he was still an infant. Raised first by foster parents and then by his own father, he had what he described to Rob Tannenbaum of Rolling Stone as "a rough childhood." In an interview with Mark Cooper of Q he called his father "a bitter person who~d missed a lot of opportunities in life. I think he loved me but was just incapable of showing it." Seal earned a degree in architecture and worked a variety of jobs, from electrical engineering to posting ads for London prostitutes; the latter occupation resulted in an arrest.

After trying to build a music career in London, Seal hooked up with a band called Push, playing funk music on tour in Japan. It was important more for geographical than for musical reaons: "I~d never been to that part of the equator before," he noted to Tannenbaum. "It was right up my alley. Every day was a new experience." After a jaunt with a Thailand blues group, he made his way to India and there had what he called "a few spiritual experiences." The happiness he felt there, he insisted, bestowed a calm and contentment about his future and allowed him to stop wanting a record deal so fervently. He believes this is why he soon got one.

Seal also became convinced that the half-moon scars under his eyes left by a skin ailment were a kind of omen of stardom. "I got really depressed about [the scars] at first, as you can understand," he recalled. "Now I really like them." The scars, he ultimately reasoned, would serve as a kind of insignia. "If I could design something, I don~t think I could do it better." He did design the rest of his distinctive look: head-to-toe leather clothes and long dreadlocks, adding even more flash to his 6~4" frame.

Seal met producer Trevor Horn--who had made a fortune making records for the Art of Noise and Yes, among others, and had his own label, ZTT. "I thought he looked a bit frightening," Horn remembered to Tannenbaum. "I thought he was gonna like all kinds of music I wasn~t gonna like. Then he told me he liked [folk-rockers] Crosby, Stills and Nash and Joni Mitchell. It was quite refreshing." Even so, he was disinclined to sign the fledgling artist.

In 1990, however, Seal took his fate into his hands, achieving immediate success that would grab the attention of Horn and much of the pop world. He wrote a song called "Killer" with British keyboardist Adamski, and its mix of dance and rock--helped by heartfelt singing and lyrics--took it to the top of the U.K. charts. "I remember the first time we got to No. 1," he recollected in an interview with Giles Smith of The Independent, "Adamski and myself were in one of those family inn restaurants on a Sunday near Cambridge, [and] the week before we were No. 4 and [pop diva] Madonna was No. 1." When they realized that "Killer" had gained the top position, "I let out this huge roar. Honestly, families around us were going for their children--there was this six-foot-four black man gone wild in Cambridgeshire."

Seal was unprepared for what would follow. "I guess I was the epitome of the phrase "meteoric success,~' he told Cooper of Q." "My kind of success was different because I had a hit record with something which wasn~t immediately commercial in the pop sense. I took [my song] Crazy round to lots of record companies before Killer and although everybody really liked it, they wouldn~t touch it. But if you manage to get a hit with a record like that, it~s like you~ve broken through with something which allows you so much room." Soon ZTT found itself in competition with other labels that wanted to sign Seal; Horn~s company recruited the young artist by offering him artistic freedom and, as Seal himself told Tannenbaum of Rolling Stone, "quite a bit of money, too."

Though Seal initially brought in various friends from the dance music world to help him produce the album, he eventually surrendered the reins to Horn. The producer told Tannenbaum that the singer~s crowd"were very interested in Chicago house music. I thought that was absurd, when you have that much talent. It~s limited--you don~t sit and listen to it. You can~t go to concerts and things like that." The resulting album, Seal, appeared on ZTT/Sire in 1991 and complemented the dance-floor grooves with acoustic guitars and an overall emphasis on melody and song structure.

Rolling Stone writer Thigpen called the Seal~s debut album "a startlingly original synthesis that seemed to come from some undiscovered place along the axis of rock and soul." Seal~s lyrics on this first album reflected what he later referred to in the Independent interview as a "very young, very idealistic" point of view: "if we only stick together we can save the world." His travels in the east had made him "unstoppable in that respect."

Seal was an international smash, thanks to "Killer" and "Crazy," an idealistic slice of pop-funk that was soon co-opted for a television commercial. And Seal himself was overwhelmed by fame. "You live one way for 26 years, and then suddenly there~s a dramatic change," he reflected to Thigpen. "Five years ago I would get annoyed when my dole [unemployment] check arrived a day late. The next thing I know, I~m getting pissed off if my limo didn~t turn up."

Indeed, as Seal told Cooper, the experience "was completely the opposite of what I~d imagined. If you~re a sensitive person, like myself, you quickly realize that not everybody~s intentions are genuine. And, yes, you have more people around you, lots more people around you, but your space becomes much smaller. People come up to you constantly in the street and they treat you like you~re an alien." Most tragically, "I thought that the adoration would replace the attention that I sought from my father. I thought success or fame would bring me all these things." All of this led to "a very bad period when I had a lot of panic attacks." As he complained to Rolling Stone, "I wanted the money. I wanted to be a millionaire. But fame can be a pain in the ass."

Along with the anxiety, however, came laurels: the Q award for Best New Act of 1991, and three 1992 Brit Awards. Seal even performed at the Grammy Awards ceremony, though he took home no trophies. "The best thing that came out of the Grammys," he reflected to Smith of the Independent, "was that I did an interview for the L.A. Times and for the umpteenth time I was asked about my musical influences and for the umpteenth time I said I really like Joni Mitchell and reeled off this whole piece on why." On tour in France two months afterward, Seal received flowers and a note that said "Thanks for appreciating the work, love Joni." Seal had another brush with greatness when he joined British guitar legend Jeff Beck on a cover version of rock trailblazer Jimi Hendrix~s "Manic Depression" for the Hendrix tribute album Stone Free.

After relocating to Los Angeles, Seal gradually began work on a follow-up album. Intent on a stylistic departure rather than a recreation of his debut, he selected a new producer. Steve Lillywhite, who~d worked with Irish rock superstars U2, among others, was his choice. But he soon asked Horn to take over. "Steve was wrong for all the reasons Trevor was the right producer," he commented to Thigpen. "Trevor~s a musician first and foremost."

The resulting album--again called Seal--replaced the debut~s pounding rhythms with slyer grooves, while Seal~s singing moved away from the anthemic shouts of his earlier hits and became more nuanced and intimate. The first single, "Prayer for the Dying," a sober, reflective tune with an insistent funk beat, became a Top Ten hit. Jeff Beck played guitar on another track, "Bring It On," and Joni Mitchell joined Seal for a duet in the song "If I Could." It was difficult for Seal to stop working on the project. "One time, I was going to the airport and I just turned round and came back to do more vocals," he confessed to Cooper. "I was dragged screaming from this record and so was Trevor. It was probably the most important thing about the whole record."

"You have to start healing and you have to start saying to yourself, OK, I am worth it, I do deserve this." Seal~s new look--a shaved head--at once represented a concession to California temperatures and a clean break from the past. He~d lived through a number of losses and near catastrophes between the two albums. "I had a really heavy duty car crash in California," he told Cooper. "I nearly flew off a canyon on to a freeway a hundred feet below at peak hour. The car was completely written off and, miraculously, I walked away virtually unscathed. Then I got double pneumonia. The doctors said it was touch and go at one stage but I came out of that unscathed too, with no scarring on my lungs or anything. Then there was a shooting right in front of me on [Hollywood~s] Sunset Boulevard."

Seal claimed that a London healer helped him recover from his illness and clarify his life; he appears on the cover of his second album in the nude, his newly shorn pate adding to the overall image of strength through vulnerability. "My whole approach to this record was one of openness," he told Cooper. He also emphasized in various interviews that the "idealistic" world-saving stance of his first album had neglected the necessity of healing oneself-- spiritually and otherwise--before one could truly help others. Part of this healing meant putting fame in perspective, and allowing his "celebrity" self to surface when he needed to protect his private self. "The days I wanted to be noticed, wanted some feedback," he informed Smith in the Independent,"I could go out there and kind of exude and I~d get recognized," becoming "Seal, pop star, impervious to everything."

Seal the second was generally greeted with critical raves. "This British neo-soul singer~s gift flows from his ability to transform dance floor tracks into spine-tingling, magical experiences," enthused James Bernard of Entertainment Weekly, who gave the album an "A" grade. Reviewer Hobey Echlin of the Detroit Metro Times labeled the effort "Brilliant, subtle, indulgent and sentimental." Thigpen noted that "Seal~s husky, expressive voice sounds even richer and more aged; the new record has an almost folky feel, with an undercurrent of melancholy and introspection that wasn~t there before."

But it wasn~t so much good reviews as good old fashioned radio airplay that helped the achievement sink in. "Somebody played the single on the radio the other day," Seal related to Smith. "I was speaking to my friend Oswald on the car phone. He said: "They seem to be playing your record a lot.' I said, rather grumpily: `Really? Cos I haven~t heard it once.~ Ironically enough as I said that, it came on the radio. I said: `Oswald: I~m going to have to call you back.~"

Pulling over to the side of the road, Seal finally appreciated the finished product. "I~d been listening to it as a song and now I wanted to hear this thing that Trevor had always talked about: I wanted to hear the record. It sounded better on the radio than it did on the stereo at home. And the DJ said, "That was the new one from Seal--well worth waiting for.~" The feeling, he noted, was one he~d felt only occasionally: "almost unquantifiable... just this rush."

Seal continued to make music with such recordings as Human Being (1998), Seal IV (2003), and Seal Best: 1991-2004 (2004). He then added another layer to his life with his 2005 marriage to model and TV host Heidi Klum. The newlyweds welcomed their first child, Henry Gunther Ademola Dashtu Samuel, in September of that year.

Awards

Q award for Best New Act, 1991; Brit Awards for Best Album, Best Male Artist and Best Video, 1992; Grammy Award nomination for album of the year, 1995 for Seal.

Works

Selective Discography

  • "Killer" (single), 1990.
  • Seal (includes "Killer" and "Crazy"), ZTT, 1991.
  • (With Jeff Beck) "Crosstown Traffic," Stone Free: A Tribute to Jimi Hendrix, Reprise, 1993.
  • Seal (includes "Prayer for the Dying" and "If I Could"), ZTT, 1994.
  • (Contributor) Batman Forever (soundtrack), Atlantic, 1995.
  • Human Being, Warner Brothers, 1998.
  • Seal IV, 2003.
  • Seal Best: 1991-2004, Warner Brothers, 2004.

Further Reading

Sources

  • Entertainment Weekly, June 3, 1994.
  • Guitar Player, October 1994.
  • The Independent, May 12, 1994.
  • Metro Times (Detroit), June 22, 1994.
  • Q, July 1994.
  • Rolling Stone, November 28, 1991; August 25, 1994.
Online
  • Amazon, www.amazon.com (November 17, 2005) .
  • E! Online, www.eonline.com, May 10, 2005; September 12, 2005 (May 12, 2005; September 14, 2005).
  • Yahoo! Shopping, shopping.yahoo.com/shop?d=product&id=1921992087 (September 9, 2003).

— Simon Glickman

 
Wikipedia: Seal (musician)
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Seal
Seal in Frankfurt, Germany (2006)
Seal in Frankfurt, Germany (2006)
Background information
Birth name Seal Henry Olusegun Olumide Adeola Samuel
Born 19 February 1963 (1963-02-19) (age 46)
Origin London, England
Genre(s) Soul, R&B, Pop
Occupation(s) Singer-songwriter, musician
Instrument(s) Vocals, guitar, bass guitar
Years active 1989–present
Label(s) ZTT Records
Sire Records
Warner Bros. Records
Website http://www.seal.com

Seal Henry Olusegun Olumide Adeola Samuel (born 19 February 1963 in Paddington, London, United Kingdom[1][2]) is an English soul singer and songwriter.[3] His name Olusegun means "God is victorious".[4] Known professionally by his first name, Seal is known for his numerous international hits and his marriage to supermodel Heidi Klum.

Contents

Childhood and early life

Seal was born Seal Henry Olusegun Olumide Adeola Samuel to Nigerian parents. He was adopted because his parents were unable to support him financially. He was raised in Paddington, a district of the City of Westminster in inner London. He received a two-year diploma, or associates degree, in architecture and worked in various jobs in the London area.

Seal’s facial scars are the result of the condition discoid lupus erythematosus (DLE). Seal has revealed in interviews that he was afflicted with this syndrome as a teen, a condition where the immune cells attack various body tissues; DLE usually affects young people. Intense inflammation develops in the skin, particularly in sun-exposed areas, and if not treated aggressively with sun protection and anti-inflammatory medicines, scarring can result. Not only did it cause the cheek scars, but he had significant scalp involvement, causing hair loss. The singer's condition has been in remission for years.

Music career

Early career

After a short time singing in local clubs and bars, in the 1980s he joined Push, a British funk band, and toured with them in Japan. In Asia, he joined a blues band in Thailand for a while before separating from the group and journeying throughout India on his own. Seal returned to England, sleeping on the couch of friend Julian Bunster, then a model. He sometimes asked him "Do I sing well?" To which he often met the response that he sang better than most current artists. After a short while of living on the edge,[vague] he met Adamski, a producer who was impressed by him. He was given the lyrics of the song "Killer", which was a huge hit in 1990.[citation needed]

Seal (1991)

Seal first came to public attention as vocalist on the Adamski single "Killer" in 1990. The single eventually reached number one in 1990 in the UK. Seal subsequently signed to ZTT Records and released his début album (produced by Trevor Horn), self-titled Seal, in 1991. Two versions of the album are known to be in circulation: the original "premix" version and a second, more common version with an updated mix. This is attributed to the demand for a produced single rushing the final album edit, and as Seal puts it, his and producer Horn's "inability to let go."[5]

Seal was positively received by critics. The singles "Crazy", "Future Love Paradise", and his own rendition of "Killer" performed well on the charts. In particular, "Crazy" became a hit in the United States in 1991, reaching number seven on the Billboard Music Charts and number two in the U.K.[6]

In April 1992 Seal performed with the surviving members of the rock band Queen at the Freddie Mercury Tribute Concert. Seal performed on his own singing the 1986 hit Who Wants To Live Forever and joined the rest of the acts for the all star finale singing We Are The Champions.

Seal II (1994)

His second album, also self-titled Seal, was released in 1994. A success, the album featured the singles "Prayer for the Dying" and "Newborn Friend", later receiving a Grammy nomination for Album of the Year. "Prayer for the Dying" became a minor pop hit in the U.S., peaking at #21 on the Billboard charts. A third single, "Kiss from a Rose", performed modestly when released but was later featured in the film Batman Forever. "Kiss from a Rose" won a Grammy Award for Record of the Year and Song of the Year in 1996, becoming Seal's best performing single on the US market (it topped the Billboard Hot 100 in late August 1995).

Human Being

After the release of his previous album, in 1998, Seal released Human Being. The album was the product of a turbulent time in his life, including a split and later reconciliation with producer Horn as well as Seal's parting with ZTT Records and his signing with Warner Bros. Records in 1997. The record was panned upon its release. However, it received Gold record certification by the RIAA just two months after its release date.[7] The album provided three singles, "Human Beings", "Latest Craze", and "Lost My Faith".

Togetherland

In 2001, fans awaited the arrival of a new album, announced as Togetherland. However, after a protracted post-production period the album was cancelled. The official word was that Seal simply didn't think it made the grade, although this conflicts with other reports that said the album was turned down by the label because producers felt the album wouldn't be commercially successful. Even so, one single was released from the album. "This Could Be Heaven" was released in the US and featured on The Family Man soundtrack. Since December 2006, Seal has indicated that he has plans to excerpt cuts from Togetherland and make them available for streaming download. The complete or edited versions of the songs "All I Wanted To Say," "Elise" (also known as "Eliz"), "Love Is Better," and "This Could Be Heaven", are available as streaming audio only on Togetherland co-producer Henry Jackman's website.

Meanwhile, Seal co-wrote and provided vocals for the hit single "My Vision" from Jakatta in 2002. He also recorded a successful duet with French icon Mylène Farmer called "Les Mots" during that same period.

Seal IV

In 2003, Seal released his fourth album, which was again self-titled, except for Australia, where it was released under Seal IV. Although it didn't sell as well as either of his first two albums, this release brought him back into the public eye in the United States and continental Europe. Singles from the album included "Waiting For You", "Get It Together", and "Love's Divine" (released in 2004, and a big hit in several European countries).

Greatest Hits Album: Best 1991-2004

In 2004, a greatest hits album entitled Seal: Best 1991-2004 was released, including a cover of the Bacharach / David classic "Walk on By" and a cover of Echo and the Bunnymen's song "Lips Like Sugar". Also for a small additional fee the album could be bought with a limited edition acoustic CD with acoustic covers of songs such as "Killer" And "Kiss from a Rose".

Live in Paris

Also in 2004, Seal performed shows at the Olympia Theatre in Paris, France. The 6 July 2004 show was recorded and released about one year after as CD/DVD package, simply titled Live in Paris.

One Night to Remember

In June 2005, Seal recorded a special concert which was subsequently released in 2006, entitled One Night to Remember, as CD/DVD combination. The DVD includes a special "the making of" documentary in addition to the live performance. Recorded in a historic steel mill, the Altes Kesselhaus ("old boiler house"), in Düsseldorf, Germany, this performance includes a special version of Brahms' Lullaby which Seal sings in German and then in English for the exclusive audience. Unlike earlier recordings in which Seal is accompanied by his band, a full orchestra and choir of 52 musicians accompanies the singer.

System

Seal in March 2008

System was released in the UK on 12 November 2007 and in the U.S. on 13 November 2007.[8] Seal describes the album as more dance-oriented, apparently a return to the roots of his first album. On the track titled "Wedding Day", Seal sings a duet with his wife, model Heidi Klum. The album's first single, "Amazing", was released on 25 September 2007, and was nominated for the "Best Male Pop Vocal Performance" Grammy at the 2007 50th Annual Grammy Awards.[9]

Seal performed "Amazing" and the Beatles' "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds" at the 2007 Royal Variety Performance.

Seal also performed "Amazing" at the 2007 Victoria's Secret Fashion Show in December, as well as the duet "Wedding Day" with his wife. Other performers at the 2007 Victoria's Secret Fashion Show include the Spice Girls and will.i.am of Black Eyed Peas. He appeared on the American Idol Season 7 Finale, singing with third-place contestant Syesha Mercado.

Soul

Seal's sixth studio album Soul was released on 11 November 2008 in the United States and 3 November 2008 internationally, and contains eleven soul classics produced by David Foster.[10][11] The video for the first single, a cover of Sam Cooke's "A Change Is Gonna Come" is up on his official YouTube Page. As well, he will be mentoring the top 9 on Deutschland sucht den Superstar and performing one of his songs from the album.[2]

Personal life

Seal with wife Heidi Klum

Seal proposed to German supermodel Heidi Klum on 24 December 2004 at 7,000 ft, in an igloo on a glacier in Whistler, British Columbia.[12]

On 10 May 2005, the couple married on a beach in Mexico near Seal's home on Mexico's luxurious Costa Careyes.[13]

The couple have two sons together, Henry Günther Ademola Dashtu Samuel (b. 12 September 2005)[14] and Johan Riley Fyodor Taiwo Samuel (b. 22 November 2006). Seal is also the adoptive father of Heidi's daughter, Helene "Leni" Klum (b. 4 May 2004), whom Heidi had with Renault Formula One team director and Italian businessman Flavio Briatore.[15] Seal is her only father figure, and he has praised Briatore for keeping his distance and not disrupting Leni's life.[16] Seal coached the participants of Germany's TV show "Deutschland sucht den Superstar" (Popidol) in February/March 2009.[17]

On Thursday April 16, 2009, Seal confirmed to the press and his audience at Radio City Music Hall that Klum is pregnant with their fourth child, a girl.[18]

On June 11, 2009, Seal, on tour with his new album Soul, revealed, "It is nice to be in newspapers and magazines for something other than my marriage." He said his marriage may take away the attention, but doesn't detract from what he loves doing: making music.[19]

Discography

Studio albums

Other albums

DVDs

See also

References

  1. ^ http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0780499/bio Internet Movie Database
  2. ^ http://www.wikitree.org/index.php?title=Seal_Henry_Olusegun_Olumide_Adeola_Samuel Wikitree Page
  3. ^ AskMen.com Bio
  4. ^ Olusegun meaning
  5. ^ Future Love Paradise - 10 Years on and Still the Web's Best Source of Seal Info
  6. ^ Billboard.com - Biography - Seal
  7. ^ RIAA.com Human Being Gold certification date 01/22/1999, Retrieved 12 July 2007
  8. ^ Joseph, Mike (2007-11-13), "Seal — System", Pop Matters Music Review (PopMatters.com), http://www.popmatters.com/pm/music/reviews/51003/seal-system/ 
  9. ^ GRAMMY.com
  10. ^ Soul. Seal official website. Retrieved on 4 October 2008.
  11. ^ SEAL'S SOUL. auspOp (4 October 2008). Retrieved on 4 October 2008.
  12. ^ Silverman, Stephen M.; KC Baker (January 4, 2005). "Heidi Klum and Seal Engaged to Wed". http://www.people.com/people/article/0,26334,1013954,00.html. 
  13. ^ "Heidi Klum and Seal Marry in Mexico". May 11, 2005. http://www.people.com/people/article/0,,1059829,00.html. 
  14. ^ "Klum Names Son After Her Dad and Seal". September 14, 2005. http://www.people.com/people/article/0,,1103758,00.html?cid=redirect-articles/. 
  15. ^ DPA (September 14, 2005). "Heidi Klum gives birth". smh.com.au. http://www.smh.com.au/news/people/heidi-klum-gives-birth/2005/09/13/1126377313883.html. 
  16. ^ "Seal on being a father and Heidi not being pregnant, for once!". Celebrity Baby Blog. 2007-11-04. http://www.celebrity-babies.com/2007/11/seal-on-being-a.html. 
  17. ^ "Seal will be coaching the participants of Germany's TV show "Deutschland sucht den Superstar" (Popidol)". http://www.rumsabbeln.de/archives/2255. 
  18. ^ [1]
  19. ^ news.com.au (June 11, 2009). "Seal on his comeback". news.com.au. http://player.video.news.com.au/news/#pa6p_MA97H8G2v_Fqn9VRCG6Itc95SEa. 
  • Entertainment Weekly, June 3, 1994.
  • Guitar Player, October 1994.
  • The Independent, May 12, 1994.
  • Metro Times (Detroit), June 22, 1994.
  • Q, July 1994.
  • Rolling Stone, November 28, 1991; August 25, 1994.

External links


 
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