Arab Times

Cowell recalls Cabello’s first steps to ‘stardom’

Swift to perform

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LOS ANGELES, Aug 8, (RTRS): Camila Cabello came very close to not getting a chance to audition for “The X-Factor”, the reality competitio­n series that catapulted the Cuba-born singer into worldwide stardom. That is, until Simon Cowell stepped in.

While it may seem that the then-15 year old first met Cowell onstage during her audition, the two had actually been acquainted backstage just moments before. The singer, who traveled to North Carolina from her hometown of Miami, Florida with her entire family, had been placed as a “reserve”, meaning that if time ran short, her audition would be cut. And on this specific day, the producers told Cabello that they were running short on time. Cabello was certain that her chances of getting on the show had been definitive­ly shot down.

But Cowell, the show’s salty judge and co-creator, took her destiny into his own hands. As he recalls to Variety: “I went to have a cigarette in this arena and I passed this girl who was lying on the floor crying. And I thought maybe one of her brothers or sisters or whoever had auditioned, because she was so upset.”

Cabello

After Cabello explained her situation, however, Cowell used his magic to squeeze in time for the aspiring performer. “’What are you talking about?’ I’ve never heard of before but just go on now. I’m probably back in my seat in five minutes,’” Cowell recounted telling her. “And she comes down, auditions, and she blows the roof off. Literally, I mean that was it.”

Clips of that first audition, which have since been posted on YouTube countless times by nostalgic fans, now boast upwards of 20 million views. But Cowell said he never could have anticipate­d the success Cabello has seen, who, at 21 years old, became one of the top five selling artists at Sony Music.

“You don’t know at that point. When you do a first audition, you can’t make that prediction,” Cowell says. “I just thought she was super talented, ambitious, very passionate. Hence, why she was upset. But when she was 15, she walked into an arena in front of 7,000 people and it was amazing.”

Shortly after that first audition, Cabello joined solo contestant­s Ally Brooke, Normani Kordei, Dinah Jane and Lauren Jauregui to form Fifth Harmony. Cowell and fellow judges Demi Lovato, L.A. Reid, and Britney Spears helped bring the girls together, and after finishing third in the competitio­n, the group signed a joint record deal with Cowell’s Syco Records and Reid’s Epic Records. The women went on to release two successful albums before Cabello departed in 2016 to pursue a solo career. (Of her former groupmates, Cabello told Variety: “The courses of our lives have drifted. But if I saw any of them at an awards show, I would say hi and it would be totally cool. It feels like there’s been a reset just because of the amount of time that’s passed.”)

While Cowell says he didn’t immediatel­y predict Cabello would mature into a solo star, he does remember one stand-out moment during Fifth Harmony’s semifinals performanc­e when the group sang a rendition of Ellie Goulding’s “Anything Could Happen”.

“I remember that performanc­e and she really popped that night,” Cowell says. “From that point on it was like, whatever happens, the group’s going to be successful, but she’s gonna blow up at the end of it.”

Indeed, that’s exactly what happened. After Cabello’s 2015 hit with Shawn Mendes “I Know What You Did Last Summer”, other high-charting collaborat­ions followed, including “Bad Things” with Machine Gun Kelly. By the time her debut album, “Camila”, came out, she was a household name thanks to smash single “Havana”.

Cowell notes that Cabello’s authentici­ty has played an important part in her rapid-fire success. “It’s real, it comes from her,” he says. “She always relies on her instinct and doesn’t overthink it.”

Her confidence is also why Cowell is careful to not take credit for her career, which undoubtedl­y has much more in store. Says Cowell: “I’ve always said this to her: ‘You don’t need me to tell you what to do. You know exactly what you what you want to do and how you’re going to do it. Any advice you want, I’m here. Any support you want, I’m here. But you’ll make it happen.’ She just does it her way, and that is the perfect artist.”

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Success

Taylor Swift will perform at the MTV Video Music Awards (VMAs) just three days after the release of her new album “Lover”.

The show will broadcast live from Prudential Center in Newark, New Jersey on Aug 26 and will be her first televised performanc­e following the album’s release.

Swift, who earned 10 VMA nomination­s for her songs “Me!” and “You Need to Calm Down”, is tied with Ariana Grande atop the leader-board. Among the categories both Swift and Grande are up for is the coveted Video of the Year award – for “You Need to Calm Down” and “Thank U, Next”, respective­ly.

The singer last performed at the award ceremony in 2015, also going in with 10 nods. With seven nomination­s, “You Need to Calm Down” is Swift’s secondmost nominated video next to “Bad Blood”, which had eight nomination­s. The singer is a seven-time VMA winner, taking home Video of the Year award for “Bad Blood” in 2015.

Swift has been a VMAs headline-grabber in the past, though not usually of her own doing. In 2009, Kanye West interrupte­d Swift’s acceptance speech for best female video (she won for the song “You Belong With Me”). In 2015, Swift ignited a Twitter feud after responding to Nicki Minaj’s criticism of the awards for not nominating the rapper’s video for “Anaconda”. Leading into this year, there hasn’t been a shortage of drama behind-the-scenes – specifical­ly, Swift’s public criticism of Scooter Braun, who recently purchased Big Machine Label Group, home to the master recordings for her first six albums, from Scott Borchetta, the label’s founder and chief executive.

In a June 30 Tumblr post, Swift wrote: “For years I asked, pleaded for a chance to own my work. Instead I was given an opportunit­y to sign back up to Big Machine Records and ‘earn’ one album back at a time, one for every new one I turned in. I walked away because I knew once I signed that contract, Scott Borchetta would sell the label, thereby selling me and my future. I had to make the excruciati­ng choice to leave behind my past.”

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