One of David Foster鈥檚 favourite phrases, he explains, is: 鈥淚f you want something done, give it to a busy person.鈥 It helps explain why, at 68, the producer has a packed slate of projects rivalling the busiest times of his near five-decade career in music.
鈥淭wo years ago, I thought that I would maybe just chill, and it just didn鈥檛 happen, and it just hasn鈥檛,鈥 said.
A brief roundup of Foster鈥檚 many projects (the ones he鈥檚 confirmed, at least) includes: a new Joe Jonas song, Party Time, which he wrote for the Hotel Transylvania 3 soundtrack; a forthcoming album for Michael Bubl茅 (title TBA) he co-wrote with the singer; 鈥渢wo or three鈥 new musicals to which he鈥檚 contributing songs; a seasonal hosting stint on Asia鈥檚 Got Talent; and, if you count wedding-planning as a project, his recent . Up next, he embarks on a run of newly added North American dates to his Hitman Tour, kicking off at the Colosseum at Caesars Casino in Windsor in August.
He鈥檚 particularly excited about his Broadway projects, which include a Betty Boop production and an adaptation of the Amy Bloom novel Lucky Us with Jewel.
鈥淚 want to try and conquer Broadway, it鈥檚 not an easy thing to do, but it鈥檚 a transition I鈥檓 trying to make,鈥 he said. 鈥淚鈥檓 spending a lot of time in New York so that I can ensconce myself in the world of Broadway. You don鈥檛 want to be that guy that comes up from L.A. and goes: 鈥楢y, look at me, I want to write a show.鈥 鈥
And his Hitman Tour, in which he tells the stories behind his most enduring hits as guest vocalists perform them 鈥 C茅line Dion鈥檚 Because You Loved Me, Whitney Houston鈥檚 I Will Always Love You, Earth Wind and Fire鈥檚 After The Love Is Gone, Josh Groban鈥檚 You Raised Me Up and more 鈥 has a structure reminiscent of another music legend鈥檚 current Broadway act, Bruce Springsteen鈥檚 Springsteen on Broadway.
鈥淢y tour is a version of that, except with a few less zeroes,鈥 Foster jokes about Springsteen鈥檚 Broadway profits. 鈥淵ou basically get two hours of the hits that I鈥檝e had, so the songs are all pretty much hits with three incredible singers (American Idol alum Pia Toscano, Stevie Wonder mentee Shelea Frazier and rising opera star Fernando Varela), and with me telling stories about them. And I work as hard as I can to be great every night, but honestly, the show kind of rolls on its own.鈥
Mounting a hits-retrospective such as Hitman has the Victoria-raised Foster thinking about his legacy, an essential chapter of which involves Whitney Houston, whose life story is back under a media magnifying glass after the release of the controversial new documentary Whitney this month.
鈥淚 didn鈥檛 see what everybody saw,鈥 Foster said, recalling their time together recording their iconic music for The Bodyguard, when he was 鈥渜uite a bit younger and just so excited鈥 to be working with her.
鈥淚 just saw a girl who went to work all day on the movie set and came in at 10 p.m. to sing with me, and her attitude was great 鈥 she was tired, but she just wanted to sing and get it right. She gave it her all every night, and we made a great record. Past that, I only know what I saw.鈥
What he did witness while spending time with Houston was a version of her relationship with Bobby Brown that, at least at the time, was more nuanced than pop-culture history remembers.
鈥淗er and Bobby had a real love there,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 mean, they really loved each other. And I think that鈥檚 one thing that many people don鈥檛 understand. They throw a lot of shade on Bobby for [their troubles], but that鈥檚 just not true. They really loved each other and it was a great thing to watch and just be around. He was so supportive of her.鈥
Foster worked with Houston on her final album and laments that 鈥渂ad luck鈥 tarnished her voice in her later years.
鈥淪ome people tortured their voice in every way possible, smoking and drinking and whatever, and they鈥檙e 80 years old and still killing it,鈥 he said.
鈥淲hitney just had that kind of voice that just wasn鈥檛 able to take any abuse. And so it was so early on in her career where she really lost her pipes, she lost that third dimension, and some of that I really believe was just the bad luck of DNA.鈥
Staring down his 70th birthday next year, Foster may not be the kind of musician with a pristine voice to protect, but as an artist on the road whose production and writing work show no sign of slowing down, he credits his health to another favourite axiom: moderation is key.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 judge,鈥 he said, 鈥渂ut I actually stopped drinking altogether a year ago, not that I was ever a big drinker at all. I鈥檇 drink a glass of wine two nights in a row and then go weeks without. I just stopped it completely because I thought: 鈥業t might be time to give that a rest for awhile.鈥 鈥
And considering he鈥檚 a newly engaged man, Foster has one more thing in his life that鈥檚 keeping him happy and healthy.
As for how he鈥檚 feeling about the couple鈥檚 forthcoming wedding planning, Foster demures, paraphrasing a Chance the Rapper lyric 鈥 鈥淚鈥檓 just living my best life right now.鈥