Warren Wiebe


Warren Wiebe was an American vocalist and session artist from San Diego.

Career 1987–1998

After playing bass with several bands, Warren Wiebe was discovered by David Foster and Burt Bacharach in Los Angeles in 1987. He sang the duet "Listen to Me" with Celine Dion for the Listen to Me soundtrack.
He was one of several lead vocalists who contributed to the 1991 charity record "Voices That Care".
He was famous for performing the song "Human Touch", a ballad which was used as one of the ending theme songs for the 1996 anime After War Gundam X. The song was one of a very small number of anime theme songs that not only was performed with English lyrics but was composed by non-Japanese songwriters. An avid ice hockey fan, he was also known for his stirring performances of the national anthems prior to Los Angeles Kings games.
He sang many demos for David Foster including "When I Fall in Love" for the film Sleepless in Seattle and when Celine Dion heard his singing she wanted him instead of Clive Griffin to sing on the track. In addition, he sang on the All-4-One hit "I Swear" and did backing vocals for many artists. He was also featured on Foster's 1990 release River of Love; his vocals were on title track "River of Love", "Walk Away", "Is There a Chance", "Living for the Moment", "This Must Be Love" and his 1994 subsequent release Love Lights the World performing vocals on the track "Is There a Chance".
In 1991, "If Not for Love" was part of the One Good Cop soundtrack that featured Michael Keaton and Rene Russo.
On Jay Graydon's Airplay for the Planet, originally released in 1993 by Inside Out Records in Japan, Wiebe would perform two songs: "Roxann" and "You're Not Alone".
Warren performed "Goodbye" as part of the television soundtrack One Life to Live: The Best of Love in 1994.
He was referred to by Quincy Jones as the "Soulful Rain Man" and was part of Jones' release Q's Jook Joint in 1995 performing a duet with Gloria Estefan on "Is It Love That We're Missing".
The Burt Bacharach collection release, Applause...The Look of Love included Wiebe's duet with Lalah Hathaway called "On My Own".
After battling mental health issues and depression, Wiebe took his own life on October 25, 1998.

Posthumous discography

Compilation and soundtrack album appearances

Music videos