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Fortune has stopped smiling on J.D. – Metro US

Fortune has stopped smiling on J.D.

At this time just three years ago, J.D. Fortune was a month into the wildest ride of his life: A world­wide concert tour serving as frontman for Australian rock ’n’ roll legends INXS.

The 18-month tour, which included two sold-out gigs at Massey Hall in February 2006, was a smash, in some locales drawing crowds as large as 80,000 people.

The band’s first release with Mississauga-born Fortune replacing the late Michael Hutchence on the mike, 2005’s Switch, had given the aging band its most vital commercial presence since the multi-platinum heyday of such monster records as 1987’s Kick and 1990’s X, in no small part due to a radio-storming first single, Pretty Vegas, written by Fortune. It appeared as though the Idol-esque reality TV series Rock Star: INXS had delivered the dream it had promised: Instant rock stardom, on a global level.

A few days ago, though, Fortune, 35, was ringing up old friends at Sony Music Canada on a borrowed cellphone, despairing that he had nowhere to stay that night and venting at the label because he’d been dumped from its roster and had bankrupted himself making a solo album that no one wanted to release. So much for harmony.

Why? Because despite its members’ claims at the time of Fortune’s Rock Star win in late 2005 that he was a permanent hire, INXS dumped its new singer off at the Hong Kong airport when the clock ran out on its 18-month Switch tour.

Handshakes all around and a “thank you” and that was it, according to Fortune. The band didn’t even bother to announce the firing.

Neither did Fortune, until last week when he brought his story to Entertainment Tonight Canada in an interview that was quickly picked up around the globe. Suddenly, the headline “INXS singer homeless and living in his car” was everywhere.

News of his exit from INXS caught even the band’s long-time spokesperson Chrissy Camp by surprise. It might also soon force INXS to announce that INXS itself — which had already burned through two other singers, Terence Trent D’Arby and Jon Stevens, before Fortune came along — is completely over.

“The members are scattered all around the globe at the moment,” she told Australian newspaper The Daily Telegraph, saying the band would put out a statement about its future in the next couple of weeks.

INXS otherwise kept silent all week long with its side of the story, as have the band’s various record labels around the planet, leading to much online speculation that Fortune, who has conceded a major cocaine problem played a part in his ouster from the band, might be exaggerating the cruelness of his fate. Fortune has also largely held his tongue since ET Canada.

Interview requests were relayed directly to Fortune by a friend, but he has thus far kept mum.

Fellow Torontonian Luk­as Rossi suffered a similar fate when his inaugural tour with Rock Star: Supernova, the second “real band” created by the TV show of the same name, wrapped up. The only difference in his story, he says, was that his all-star bandmates Tommy Lee, Jason Newsted and Gilby Clarke “didn’t drop me off in Asia somewhere.” And, having been there, he believes Fortune is in dire straits.

“The deals on those shows aren’t great. He’s definitely not set for life,” says Rossi from the California home he extended to Fortune as a crash pad on his blog this week. “I wouldn’t be surprised if the security guards on his tour got paid more than him. But you take what you can get, you know?”