Shane ;)
bon je m'ennuyais un peu de Shane et j'ai donc fait des recherches sur lui mais c'est très difficile car il n'y a pas beaucoup de site sur lui. Il y a un site fait par ses amis: http://www.shanewiebe.info/
Allez faire un tour, il y a de l'audio de toutes ces performances et quelques chansons avec sa femme! Je m'ennuie de Shane!
Allez faire un tour, il y a de l'audio de toutes ces performances et quelques chansons avec sa femme! Je m'ennuie de Shane!
voici des photos de Shane et sa femme, une des fille les plus chanceuse du monde
voici le texte qui venait avec lol...
TO MOST TELEVISION VIEWERS, HE WAS JUST SHANE, a guy with a terrific voice who sang his heart out on national TV as he competed for the coveted title of Canadian Idol. But to one woman, he was very much more. As Angela Wiebe, his adoring wife of just four months watched Shane perform, she swelled with pride, living for the few private moments of the week that the producers of the competition allowed them to spend together.
Fittingly it was music that brought Shane Wiebe, 21 and Angela Bensler, 25, together. They first met while performing at a wedding in 1998, and later traveled to Europe together as part of a choir tour. But it wasn't until 2001 that they felt the chemistry. The musical chemistry, that is.
"When I was 18, she called me because she needed a pianist for a gig," Shane recalls. "We got together, rehearsed, and had such a blast, because musically, we were on the exact same wavelength. We had a musical chemistry like I've never seen before." Angela agrees. "The first rehearsal, when we sat down together, he was playing piano and I was playing violin, and the musical chemistry was very evident."
That night, she recorded an entry in her journal. "Today, I met the man I'm going to marry," she wrote. "I remember that exact moment," Angela confesses. "It was an unreal feeling to look at him and know for sure that this would be my husband."
After that first gig, Shane and Angela began spending more and more time together, discovering they shared a common religious faith that played equal importance in each of their lives. "Angela seemed like the perfect wife to me, and she had all the qualities I could ever dream of," says Shane, who started planning an elaborate engagement in January 2003. The man who had come of age surrounded by music and entertainment wanted to lavish his girlfriend with attention as he asked for her hand in marriage on the anniversary of their first date.
Ingeniously, he secured the use of the Chan Centre at the University of British Columbia, blindfolded Angela and drove her there. Meanwhile, Shane had recruited his friends and family to perform a 45-minute concert of songs, skits and poems in her honour.
His grandmother almost gave the secret away. "In a poem she recited to us, she used the words on your formal engagement day," Shane recalls. Angela's eyes momentarily widened in surprise. But the show went on. And at its finale, in front of all the people the couple love and cherish, Shane proposed.
"It was a huge surprise!" exclaims Angela. "Of course, we had talked about getting married, but Shane was great at convincing me that it wouldn't be possible at the time. The night of our engagement, I became increasingly suspicious as the evening continued. I've watched the video tape of the engagement many times, and when my Grandma included that line in her poem, my face was in complete shock. I actually shook my head in disbelief!"
They were married at an Abbotsford church in December 2003, as snow dusted the ground outside and candles added an intimate, romantic touch to the ceremony. The sound of music filled the church, as the choir sang and Angela's brother, a professional violinist, played Bach. In a medieval-style gown with a cathedral-length veil she had purchased in Ontario, Angela walked down the aisle.
"When I first saw her, it honestly pained me, because she was so beautiful, so radiant and gorgeous as she came down the aisle, I felt like I was unworthy to behold her," says Shane. "I was so overwhelmed with love and joy. We wrote our own vows and poems to each other, and the things she said to me that day are among the most special, sacred and most powerful moments of my entire life."
The exchange of vows was the highlight of the wedding for Angela, too. "Shane is quite the poet," she confides. "What he said was every woman's dream-the promises that he made about how we would grow old together, and how our friendship would deepen even more, and about his desire to be the best husband possible, and a man of God. It was just fantastic."
The couple sang a duet at their wedding, performing the song When I Fall In Love. "It was music that had brought Angela and me together, and we thought it completely necessary to sing together at the wedding," says Shane. "We find it enchanting singing together under normal circumstances...but singing together on our wedding day? You can't get more magical than that."
In the aftermath of the competition, Shane and Angela's bond as husband and wife has deepened all the more. All Canadian Idol competitors are sequestered, unable to be with friends or family during the competition period, which in Shane's case was almost two months. And, although the producers of the show provide all of the comforts and amenities in the big mansion competitors are housed in, it was especially difficult for the newlyweds to be apart. Interviewed on set at the time of the competition by Real Weddings, Shane was missing his wife terribly. "There's not five minutes that go by that I don't think about her," he confessed. "There are times that I cry myself to sleep at night in that big old mansion, I miss her so much."
Now that the competition is over, the couple is keeping busy catching up with much-missed family and friends. And despite the fact that Shane did not emerge as the winner in the show, he and Angela agree that the experience was invaluable. "The whole Canadian Idol experience was quite emotional," Angela reflects. "We looked to each other for comfort, support, and encouragement to pull us through."
voici le texte qui venait avec lol...
TO MOST TELEVISION VIEWERS, HE WAS JUST SHANE, a guy with a terrific voice who sang his heart out on national TV as he competed for the coveted title of Canadian Idol. But to one woman, he was very much more. As Angela Wiebe, his adoring wife of just four months watched Shane perform, she swelled with pride, living for the few private moments of the week that the producers of the competition allowed them to spend together.
Fittingly it was music that brought Shane Wiebe, 21 and Angela Bensler, 25, together. They first met while performing at a wedding in 1998, and later traveled to Europe together as part of a choir tour. But it wasn't until 2001 that they felt the chemistry. The musical chemistry, that is.
"When I was 18, she called me because she needed a pianist for a gig," Shane recalls. "We got together, rehearsed, and had such a blast, because musically, we were on the exact same wavelength. We had a musical chemistry like I've never seen before." Angela agrees. "The first rehearsal, when we sat down together, he was playing piano and I was playing violin, and the musical chemistry was very evident."
That night, she recorded an entry in her journal. "Today, I met the man I'm going to marry," she wrote. "I remember that exact moment," Angela confesses. "It was an unreal feeling to look at him and know for sure that this would be my husband."
After that first gig, Shane and Angela began spending more and more time together, discovering they shared a common religious faith that played equal importance in each of their lives. "Angela seemed like the perfect wife to me, and she had all the qualities I could ever dream of," says Shane, who started planning an elaborate engagement in January 2003. The man who had come of age surrounded by music and entertainment wanted to lavish his girlfriend with attention as he asked for her hand in marriage on the anniversary of their first date.
Ingeniously, he secured the use of the Chan Centre at the University of British Columbia, blindfolded Angela and drove her there. Meanwhile, Shane had recruited his friends and family to perform a 45-minute concert of songs, skits and poems in her honour.
His grandmother almost gave the secret away. "In a poem she recited to us, she used the words on your formal engagement day," Shane recalls. Angela's eyes momentarily widened in surprise. But the show went on. And at its finale, in front of all the people the couple love and cherish, Shane proposed.
"It was a huge surprise!" exclaims Angela. "Of course, we had talked about getting married, but Shane was great at convincing me that it wouldn't be possible at the time. The night of our engagement, I became increasingly suspicious as the evening continued. I've watched the video tape of the engagement many times, and when my Grandma included that line in her poem, my face was in complete shock. I actually shook my head in disbelief!"
They were married at an Abbotsford church in December 2003, as snow dusted the ground outside and candles added an intimate, romantic touch to the ceremony. The sound of music filled the church, as the choir sang and Angela's brother, a professional violinist, played Bach. In a medieval-style gown with a cathedral-length veil she had purchased in Ontario, Angela walked down the aisle.
"When I first saw her, it honestly pained me, because she was so beautiful, so radiant and gorgeous as she came down the aisle, I felt like I was unworthy to behold her," says Shane. "I was so overwhelmed with love and joy. We wrote our own vows and poems to each other, and the things she said to me that day are among the most special, sacred and most powerful moments of my entire life."
The exchange of vows was the highlight of the wedding for Angela, too. "Shane is quite the poet," she confides. "What he said was every woman's dream-the promises that he made about how we would grow old together, and how our friendship would deepen even more, and about his desire to be the best husband possible, and a man of God. It was just fantastic."
The couple sang a duet at their wedding, performing the song When I Fall In Love. "It was music that had brought Angela and me together, and we thought it completely necessary to sing together at the wedding," says Shane. "We find it enchanting singing together under normal circumstances...but singing together on our wedding day? You can't get more magical than that."
In the aftermath of the competition, Shane and Angela's bond as husband and wife has deepened all the more. All Canadian Idol competitors are sequestered, unable to be with friends or family during the competition period, which in Shane's case was almost two months. And, although the producers of the show provide all of the comforts and amenities in the big mansion competitors are housed in, it was especially difficult for the newlyweds to be apart. Interviewed on set at the time of the competition by Real Weddings, Shane was missing his wife terribly. "There's not five minutes that go by that I don't think about her," he confessed. "There are times that I cry myself to sleep at night in that big old mansion, I miss her so much."
Now that the competition is over, the couple is keeping busy catching up with much-missed family and friends. And despite the fact that Shane did not emerge as the winner in the show, he and Angela agree that the experience was invaluable. "The whole Canadian Idol experience was quite emotional," Angela reflects. "We looked to each other for comfort, support, and encouragement to pull us through."
- *Raphaëlle*
- Immortel du Domaine
- Messages : 22597
- Inscription : jeu. janv. 27, 2005 4:00 am
Le CD de Shane va être en magasin au mois de Juillet
oopps j'allais oublié le lien (ça doit etre l'excitement!)
http://www.shanewiebe.info/ShaneMessages.htm --Message edité par Whenever le 2005-05-31 22:39:41--
oopps j'allais oublié le lien (ça doit etre l'excitement!)
http://www.shanewiebe.info/ShaneMessages.htm --Message edité par Whenever le 2005-05-31 22:39:41--