(S07E12) I have to say tonight's show was a mixed bag for me. There were a lot of surprises for me with the girls' performances, some good and some bad. I went into the show with a few clear favorites and a few that I didn't have high hopes for and it all got turned around on me. There wasn't as much of a "Wow!" factor with any of the girls and actually none of them earned the patented DOUBLEPLAY, but that's not to say there weren't some great performances.I give Idol a lot of crap, and most of it is pretty well deserved, but one thing they've been hyping is absolutely true. This Top 24 has the deepest pool of talent, and if we (that means you and me) can truly get rid of the twelve weakest singers we're going to have the most amazing Top 12 we've ever seen. If that happens, I guarantee you the ratings questions about Idol being down this year will disappear as those ratings shoot right through the roof.
Apparently the flu bug made it's way to the girls' rooms or something as there was no mention of it last night but tonight we were told that several of the girls had been struck. If that is what's to blame for some of the lackluster performances then I feel bad for these girls. Two of them may pay the ultimate price for not being able to fight through it.
Kristy Lee Cook (24, Selma, OR) - "Rescue Me," Fontella Bass
Kristy's makeover really worked for her. I like her with straightened hair, though it takes away a bit from her country style. She looked authentic down-home in a sparkly tank top and strategically torn jeans, though. Her performance showed confidence, charisma and stage presence, which was even more impressive when we found out she was double-shot with the flu and bronchitis.
Randy: "It wasn't your best performance ... you had some pitch problems all the way through ... [It was] a little rough around the edges."
Paula: "Being sick and being the first one [is] a double whammy ... You don't want to ever let anyone see that you're having a ... tough time. You did a good job."
Simon: "What did we get from that? Not a lot. The song didn't suit you ... [It's] designed for someone who's going to belt out a song. The performance was robotic ... It just wasn't really anything to grab hold of ... You really didn't make an impression."
Jason: "You turned an R&B/Soul song into a country ballad and you know what? For me, it worked. And you looked really comfortable up there. Did anything about that dazzle me? No, not really. It was fun and energetic but you never really pushed it up to that next level and I was kind of waiting for it."
Joanne Borgella (25, Hoboken, NJ) - "I Say a Little Prayer," Dionne Warwick
She's a plus-size model who said everyone expects soul or neo-soul when they see a plus-sized woman. Going into that performance, Joanne looked and sounded like she may have the flu worse than Kristy because her lower register was very scratchy and her eyes looked a little glazed over. The energy level was way too low for the song. It was almost painful to watch because you know she's much better than that performance. She barely moved on the stage. If it wasn't the flu then it was classic "deer in headlights."
Randy: "That was pretty good. The first part was a little weird for me but you got it together towards the end ... Your voice ... felt a little unsure for me."
Paula: "We've seen you .. where you have this unbelievable ... sense of yourself ... [a] real confidence. It's very nerve wracking what you're doing right now. You've got to pull it together and shine through ... I liked it, I didn't love it."
Simon: "I didn't like it at all ... You've gotta come out and nail it ... You did ... a very average cabaret song ... I thought the second half of the song was worse than the first half. There was no confidence ... It was very sub-standard ... I don't accept this thing about nerves at this point."
Jason: "If you're not struggling with the flu then you should be very disappointed in yourself. In hearing you speak, you sound okay so I'm not sure what happened out there. If it was nerves then you've got to pull it together or you're never going to make it through the rest of the season. That wasn't nearly good enough."
Alaina Whitaker (16, Tulsa, OK) - "More Today Than Yesterday," Spiral Starecase
The youngest contestant on Idol. Her birthday is tomorrow which means she'll be eliminated, right? Isn't that the pattern? I call Alaina "generic blonde girl" because she hasn't stood out at all and in her talking with Ryan she continued her string of not standing out in any way. In watching her perform she does kind of look like she thinks she's not only great but way better than you. It was a bit off-putting. It was confidence pushed over into arrogance for me. She did manage to stand out by putting on a good performance, though.
Randy: "Season 7 is turning out to be the year of the young ones ... The beginning was a little rough but you sang it with so much conviction and confidence ... I was like 'What?!'"
Paula: "It's such a feel good song ... You nailed it. You had the best ending that I've heard on that song."
Simon: "I think you're very good. I do. [That was] the first time tonight we haven't seen any nerves. I hate the song ... It's just so corny. If you can make a song as awful as that sound okay, when you've got a decent song you're gonna be great ... You are sailing through to the next round after that."
Jason: "I agree that vocally you were great. You were strong and confident, if a little pretentious. Just don't let the praise you get from the judges go to your head or it'll show through on stage and be off-putting for the audience."
Amanda Overmyer (23, Mulberry, IN) - "Baby, Please Don't Go," Big Joe Williams
Amanda has sworn off Janis Joplin after Simon told her it had already been done in Hollywood. I think her vocals were a little overwhelmed by the band throughout her performance. She's got the big rock hair and the black tank top with patchwork pants and a choker so she's got the look down. Vocally, though, I worry that the Idol audience won't like her. She's raw and authentic but very atypical for Idol; even more than Chris Daughtry because he could be tamed vocally but I don't think Amanda can be. And Chris didn't even make Top 3. I could definitely see her headling a rock act. And tonight, we learned that Amanda made her own jeans and Simon had never heard this song before tonight.
Randy: "I love that, man ... I like the trousers too, man."
Paula: "I just love everything that you do ... You're authentic ... A one trick pony, you're not."
Simon: "I really like you because I genuinely think you're authentic. It wasn't the best performance ... I hope you stay around for awhile. I think at some stage you've got to come out and prove what a great singer you are ... [but] I like you."
Jason: "I'm worried for you, Amanda. Not because you're not good at what you do, because you're great at it. I'm worried because there are a lot of stupid theme weeks coming up and I don't know how well you'll adapt to them. There's a very distinct rock edge to your voice that might hurt you in mainstream America. But we've seen it before and I believe in you, so prove me wrong, girl! Tonight, your voice got lost in the music a bit, but you brought it together in the end."
Amy Davis (25, Lowell, IN) - "Where the Boys Are," Connie Francis
She's a trade show model and grad student. Tonight, she got a glamorous and classy hairstyle. Vocally, though, she was pitchy and weak. I hate to say it, but this was the worst performance of the night. I found her incredibly boring. She showed some vocal chops at the end but it may have been too little too late. She better hope the fact that she's pretty can net her some votes.
Randy: "I didn't think it was great ... A lot of country singers scoop up to the note ... but when you [do that] you've got to hit that note dead on and there were just a lot of pitch problems ... It wasn't great for me."
Paula: "The camera loves you." This means Paula did not. "The nerves got a little bit of you. I don't know if it was the most engaging song for you to sing ... It was a little lackless(?)."
Simon: "It was what it was ... You look great, but you didn't sound great ... It was a very boring song ... incredibly cabaret. The arrangement was very boring ... It sounded like you went on for about ten minutes ... I think you're gonna struggle after that."
Jason: "It didn't work at all. You were all over the place through the first two-thirds of that and it got painful to listen to. You're definitely better than that, I don't know if the nerves are killing the girls tonight but there's definitely a problem. And I hate to say it, but you just got the worst of it so far. It wasn't good at all."
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Need more American Idol? Get an inside look at Season 7's contestants and think back to these scathing (and hilarious) Simon Cowell quotes.
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The singing nanny was a "good girl," having never seen Rated-R movies. Simon said he could bring her over to the dark side, but Brooke says it's not going to happen. I think her hair looked even poofier than usual but she looked great on stage nonetheless. She was graceful and confident. Her performance was a little over the top in places but I think she sang the song well. Oh, and can someone get her a cookie. Or a dozen?
Randy: "It started a little rough for me, but by the middle of the song you kind of got your confidence back and you kind of worked it out at the end ... If you come out here and slay it, that's what's supposed to happen ... The back part you started getting your slaying on .. The front part of the song was not good, the back part of the song was good."
Paula: "This competition is about originality. That's what I love about you ... That's what this whole business is about ... You picked the right song and I think you did a great job."
Simon: "You chose the right song." He then started going on about "washing up liquid" and blonde hair and the '60s. It just wasn't his cup of tea. He can't handle that she's sunny and happy, I guess. Honestly, he sounded like Paula during this tirade.
Jason: "You've got a really nice quality to your voice. You're confident on the stage and there's no question you know who you are as an artist. I think you and Jason Castro should probably do a duet. You'll be fine, though. Probably straight on through to the Top 12. Wow factor to make it to the end, though? It wasn't there tonight."
Alexandrea Lushington (17, Douglasville, GA) - "Spinning Wheel," David Clayton-Thomas Combine / Blood, Sweat & Tears
She pronounces her first name like two separate words, Alex and Andrea. She was the girl with the delightful great-grandmother at the first-round audition. She started her performance at the top of the steps and commanded both the stage and the audience masterfully from there. What an incredibly confident performer for 17. I hate to say it but I'm surprised at how good she is.
Randy: "You blew the doors off that ... You stayed on the note. You got it. It was hot, baby. it worked."
Paula: "What I loved so much about this performance is you took control of how your entrance was going to be. You thought about ... your performance from top to bottom ... I saw more confidence in your performance than any performance tonight so far and what I loved is your interpretation of a song that could be on the radio today the way you did it."
Simon: "I didn't get it ... I didn't think the vocals were great ... It reminded me of ... some terrible '60s musical ... I didn't think the vocals were great."
Jason: "I'm going to have to disagree. This was an outstandingly good vocal. The best performance of the night so far. You owned that song, that stage and that audience from the first note like no one before you. What a revelation you just turned out to be. We've got a dark horse contender."
Kady Malloy (18, Houston, TX) - "A Groovy Kind of Love," Diane & Annita
She looks almost exactly like Kristy Lee Cook, which could be a detriment to them both. She still does an amazing Britney Spears impression and was our first girl to sing on a stool with dimmed lights. It was clever of her to select a song that she might have some familiarity with, considering the Phil Collins version from 1988. I always like it when the contestants can pull off little tricks like that to find songs more in their comfort zone despite the forced theme of the week. Too bad her pitch was all over the place and the performance pretty bad overall. I know she's better than that.
Randy: "This song was okay for me. It was so restrained and controlled ... [It] never really quite got there for me. I thought that you got lost a little bit in the song."
Paula: "You look really pretty ... We fell in love with ... your personality ... [so] I want to see the life in you more; the fun .. We want to see the fun Kady." This means she didn't like the performance.
Simon: "I agree with Paula. That was like Night of the Living Dead. When you do the Britney you're brilliant and then when you do you, the lights go off. Literally. It's like watching two different people ... You came across as 80 in that ... Kady, you've got to lighten up. I don't know who could impersonate you. A pencil?"
Jason: "I hate to agree with Simon, but in a way he's right. There was no personality in that performance, it was very by-the-book. You were overthinking it all, trying to figure out what you thought you should be doing and how you should sing each line. You need to cut loose, have fun and feel the songs."
Asia'h Epperson (19, Joplin, MO) - "Piece of My Heart," Erma Franklin
She had an emotional audition in the first round, two days after her dad died, but now she's living his dream in the Top 24. She blasted onto that stage with sass and attitude and I liked seeing that. She not only showed confidence but she showed that she put herself inside the lyric of the song. The song was made famous by Janis Joplin, but Asia'h doesn't try to Joplin-ize the song, despite where she's from (*Boo! Boo! Hiss!*)
Randy: "I love that ... You did your thing with that. I was impressed ... Nice."
Paula: "You had some really good moments in that song."
Simon: "It was my favorite of the night. You let go. You're fun, you're likable, you've got a good voice, you're not taking yourself too seriously. It was what it's all about."
Jason: "You just had an amazing night and made your dad proud. You made that song your own. I could totally hear the Asia'h Epperson version on the radio. Your vocal was nearly flawless with just the right attitude for the song. You actually sold the emotions and story of the lyrics rather than just sing them. Great job!"
Ramiele Malubay (20, Miramar, FL) - "You Don't Have to Say You Love Me," Dusty Springfield
She's the tiny little Fillipino with the big voice. There must have been some change in the water they got in the red room because Ramiele came out and owned this just as Asia'h did before her. She had the saucy passion the song demands and just a beautiful pure tone to her voice. A very impressive start for her.
Randy: "You know what I loved about that? ... You saved [your big voice] to the end ... [and] made it your own. Very classy, almost like a pro ... That was hot!"
Paula: "You're a force to be reckoned with. I hope you sail all the way in there ... There's such a beautiful range in your voice, the tenderness how you started ... You had a really great performance."
Simon: "I'll be the first to admit it. I didn't like you when I first saw you. During Hollywood you were the most consistently good singer ... tonight, you outsang every single person."
Jason: "Well, I'm the first to admit that I called this from the beginning. I thought you were one of the clear favorites to make it all the way toward the end and you proved me right with an amazing performance tonight. You sang that like it was written for you. Keep on keepin' on, girl!"
Syesha Mercado (21, Sarasota, FL) - "Tobacco Road," John D. Loudermilk
She's a working actress in Miami. She lost her voice in Hollywood but still managed to pull off an amazing vocal performance when needed. She sang from her soul and even though she couldn't talk, her singing voice was amazing. The same voice came out of her tonight. Her voice was powerful and spot on. And she hit the mother of all Idol power notes there at the end.
Randy: "You definitely can sing ... there were a couple of pitchy things in there ... [but] all in all I liked it. [It was] not my favorite performance."
Paula: "[You are] consistent ... joyful, fun, big! ... Way to go!"
Simon: "I agree ... it wasn't your best performance. Having said that ... I don't think it really matters because you are probably one of the most talented girls in the competition ... I thought it was terrific."
Jason: "You've got a big old voice to go with that big beautiful smile. Definitely the strongest, in regards to power, performance we saw tonight. Did that last note really last forever? Seriously, you just wrote yourself a ticket to the Top 12 with one performance."
Carly Smithson (24, San Diego, CA) - "The Shadow of Your Smile," Tony Bennett (The Sandpiper)
She owns a tattoo shop with her husband. She admitted to being signed to a major label., though the company folded (MCA Records) and she was left in the cold. Simon told her she was one of the top three vocalists in the competition in an earlier audition. She has had a consistently beautiful quality and purity to her voice and that came through again tonight. It was a sultry performance that was better if you didn't watch it. I can see where the mic pulling in and out can be a little annoying. Question: do newer microphones have the feedback issues of older mics where they had to do that or has it been fixed, or is it just done to control volume now?
Randy: "The best vocal of the Top 24."
Paula: "You're reliable ... You do not even have to power your voice. The tenderness of your voice. Everything, every choice you make, beautiful inflections."
Simon: "I didn't get it ... There's so much hype about you, so much expectation ... The song was way too old-fashioned ... Your mic technique was very cabaret. Everything about it to me was a let down ... I was genuinely expecting something fantastic. I didn't think it was fantastic."
Jason: "I'm actually going to agree with everyone. That was spot-on a professional performance. Your voice sounded great and your control was amazing. That said, the 'Wow' factor that I fully expected to get from your performance tonight wasn't there. Maybe the hype is hurting you at this point as our expectations have been raised too high. I don't know. Take all that away and it was one of the better performances of the night but I definitely don't give it best of the entire Top 24. Sorry."
THE BEST OF THE NIGHT
Alexandrea Lushington, Ramiele Malubay, Syesha Mercado
SHOULD BE WORRIED
Joanne Borgella, Amy Davis, Kady Malloy
WHO'S GOING HOME, or the section where I go out on a limb and predict who I think will be leaving the competition tomorrow night. I'll keep track of my accuracy throughout the season, just for fun.
Boys: Chikezie, Luke Menard
Girls: Amy Davis & Kady Malloy
















Reader Comments (Page 1 of 2)
2-20-2008 @ 11:56PM
jake said...
I really liked Kady Malloy, she was the only one that I got truly excited about -- her voice is amazing. I'm sick of the judges saying about the songs are old fashioned, etc -- the theme is the 60's.
My other favorites were Alaina, Amy Davis and Ramielle.
Who is everyone voting for?
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2-21-2008 @ 6:38AM
sjohnmassoud said...
Amen Jake
I liked Amy and Alaina too!
^5
2-21-2008 @ 12:28AM
vacelts said...
I really liked Asia'h and Syesha. My picks for going home are Carly and Kady.
http://redlightnaps.wordpress.com/2008/02/21/american-idol-7-top-24-women/
Jason, I like the way you added you comments after the judges.
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2-21-2008 @ 12:30AM
Caroline said...
I agree, I actually thought Kady Malloys performance was great and her vocals were good, I was pretty shocked with what the judges had to say. (Maybe that's just because the Britney Spears imitation was so hilarious to me and now I'm biased.)
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2-21-2008 @ 12:44AM
bethany said...
i don't like the fact that some of these contestants have had record deals or professional music careers. I was rooting for Carly during the auditions, and I'm sure being left in the cold by your record label sucks, but I don't think she should have qualified as a contestant - I feel like she is kind of a phony, because I felt for her story of not having her visa to audition before. Same thing with Michael Lee Johns, the lead singer of The Rising (his myspace has some of his music). Kristy Lee Cook also signed with a record label in 2001.
I thought the whole idea of the show was raw talent, people who love to sing trying to make it big, not people who have already been around and want more notoriety.
I'm rooting for Jason Castro and Ramiele Malubay.
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2-21-2008 @ 12:51AM
Sally said...
Uh, Chris Daughtry WAS a fourth-place finalist when he was eliminated. It was Elliott Yamin who took third, and then Katharine McPhee who ended up second to Taylor Hicks.
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2-21-2008 @ 1:18AM
Jason Hughes said...
Corrected and mea culpa. I was in a pool that year and it was the fifth place finish that messed me up and I got it all mixed up in my head... Idol Overload... Thanks for the catch!
2-21-2008 @ 12:48AM
Ryan said...
I think Kady Malloy got a raw deal. She sounded great tonight. I didn't get the judges criticisms.
Having said that, here's my rankings:
1. Syesha Mercado
2. Asia'h Epperson
3. Ramiele Malubay
4. Kady Malloy
5. Carly Smithson
6. Alexandrea Lushington
7. Joanne Borgella
8. Brooke White
9. Alaina Whitaker
10. Amy Davis
11. Amanda Overmyer
12. Kristy Lee Cook
For the whole competition I'll root for David Archuleta and Syesha Mercado.
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2-21-2008 @ 12:48AM
Stigmata said...
its gonna be a good season, thank god we got rid of the fat, ugly, geeky, talentless freaks that were representing last year.
there is 1 fat chick in there, but she'll be gone soon enough.
now they can produce an idol they can actually sell to the public, unlike last years winner which looked like shrek!
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2-21-2008 @ 1:09AM
Tommy Marx said...
Chris Daughtry made the Top 4.
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2-21-2008 @ 1:18AM
Idol Fan said...
I totally agree that Amy Davis and Kady Malloy as the bottom two. Great Recap.
http://idol-mania.com/american-idol-fan/
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2-21-2008 @ 2:18AM
Oreo said...
The guys were better, but not by much.
And several of the contestants have had record deals, at least 5 (which is low considering the uproar). The rules are you can't have a current deal. And frankly if we don't know who these people are and they can sing I rather have then on the shows than the "no bodies" you can't sing at all.
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2-21-2008 @ 2:42AM
Neal said...
I too was not blown away with any of the guys or gals performances, but it's just the first week. I think for many of them, it's nerves, others chose the wrong song, etc. HOWEVER the BIGGEST thing that got my blood boiling was that British tart Simon NOT KNOWING several of the songs that were sung. He's a AR rep in the UK?!?!?!?!?!? Heck, I'm 47 and I believe I'm a bit older than Simon, but dear lord, I've PLAYED in various bands on stage ALL of the songs Simon had never heard of!! How can a judge of someone's singing judge a performance based on a song he doesn't know anything about??? He's made mention numerous times since the first season he never heard a song someone sang. Somtimes he liked it, most times he did not. But if he is allowed to be ignorant about the songs the contestants are going to sing, then a very simple thing should be done since it's too bad he can't be fired from the show. When the singers choose the song and the band gets notice, Simon gets a copy of the original verions of the song so he can hear what it originally sounded like so he would at least have some background of how the song goes. This way his remarks just might make some sense when a contestant sings a song. After six seasons and now this new one, I'm so sick and tired of Simon's useless dialogue about things he knows nothing about on a personal level like performers Randy and Paula. He's just there to be annoying and get paid far too much money for it. Finally, does the USA really need a Brit to judge American talent? I know we have plenty of singers, songwriters, performers who might just be interested in his salary to do a much better job than Simon. Or how about one panel person be like me... "a nobody musician/performer of thiry+ years" as the voice of the general public??? I'd do it for a 1/3 of Simon's salary and at least I'd know all the songs like "Spinning Wheel" by Blood, Sweat, and Tears from 1969. Rant over - maybe it might even be some food for thought?
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2-21-2008 @ 4:53PM
Jeliwobble said...
Just going to back up my countryman here! Firstly, some of the arrangements of the songs can make something perfectly recognisable into something completely unrecognisable. Many of the 60s hits have been reinterpreted in the intervening years and, as other posters have pointed out, the various singers have picked which version they are putting out there (best example I can think of was Chris Daughtry's 'Walk the Line' which no one had heard before and all assumed it was his own arrangement and consequently he had to admit that it wasn't). Often these arrangements haven't left the shores of the US...and equally, some of the best music ever recorded has never reached these shores either (LMAO! *ducks*).
Being in A&R means that you have to pitch and promote the artist, you have to know what is selling currently and where your artist will fit into the music scene but you don't necessarily need to know every song that's ever been written or even be that interested in the music itself. In fact, many A&R people aren't into the music they promote. I liken it to being a great salesman of beer when you're a tee-totaller. You taste the beer, can tell where it was made and what from by sniffing and swirling but you never actually swallow and getting drunk on it just doesn't happen. You can appreciate what it is without liking it...
Anyway, you are actually forgetting two vital things. One, this show isn't just syndicated in the US, it's watched worldwide and Simon is a very watchable part of it for most of the rest of the English speaking countries. Two, originally the show was called 'Pop Stars' and it began in the UK with Nigel Lythgoe (exec producer) as Mr Nasty. Simon was brought on when it became 'Pop Idol' as Nigel wanted to take a back seat (though he now reprises the role on 'So You Think You Can Dance') and was invited by Fox when they bought the rights to the show to repeat his Mr Nasty role over here. The foil he provides works, in the most part, because he has been an A&R man for 20 odd years, he actually does know what he's talking about when it comes to what sells and what doesn't, even in the fickle and often stodgy US market, and the show would be a poorer thing without him.
2-21-2008 @ 6:35AM
sjohnmassoud said...
Actually I rather liked Amy's performance. She's got a good voice. I will agree though that the song choice was not the best for her.
Alaina Whitaker really hit it out of the park. She was probably the best performer last night.
For me, the absolute worst was (and I really don't like to call it the worst because there were no Sanjaya's in the top 24) was Asia'h Epperson.
That really didn't do it for me. I don't get why everyone thought she hit that out of the park. That's a very difficult song to sing and really no one can take it and make it theirs. And no one can sing it quite like Janis Joplin did.
Either or, all the girls did well. I do hope Amy stays another round or 2.
And while I feel weird as a 40+ year old guy voting for a gal who's bday is today, Alaina was easily the best.
My guess is that Kady is in some trouble.
But hey, if Sanjaya could make it to the top 10, then anything is possible right?
I am glad to see they did it based on talent this time and not based so much on "story lines" or who's cute. All the final 24, guys and gals, are talented and we should be proud of them and the producers and judges of AI, who got it right this time!
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2-21-2008 @ 10:34PM
Steve in Concord said...
I'm not sure the American public always appreciates new talent. In the early 80's I was working at an outdoor concert venue (Concord Pavilion) and as the opening act performed before the headliners (soul performers Ashford and Simpson) came on, the audience talked amongst themselves, went to the concession stands, and generally payed little attention to the performance going on. I was paying attention and was amazed at how good the performer (whom I had never heard of) sang. The set ended to scattered light applause as the audience now settled in to anticipate the main attraction they had come to see. Who had been the opening act that evening? None other than Whitney Houston!
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2-21-2008 @ 7:53AM
Vickie said...
'Can't believe Simon's never heard "Baby Please Don't Go". Amanda nailed it; she was better than I expected. Syesha is the whole package: great voice, gorgeous face, perfect figure,and delightful personality.
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2-21-2008 @ 8:57AM
BC said...
I think Amanda Overmyer should have sang Proud Mary by CCR (1869) but sang the Tina Turner version of it. I know she has song Janis Joplin in previous auditions but I think she also has a 'Tina Turner' type voice and that Proud Mary would have been a better choice than the "Baby, Please Don't Go" song that she sung Wednesday night. If given the opportunity I would like to hear her sang some of Turner's hits from the 80's.
I get some of them mixed up but I am pretty sure that is was Kady Malloy that sounds just like Celine Dion to me regardless of what song she sings! While its seems no one liked her tonight, I did.
I thought Asia'h Epperson did the best one!
And maybe is it just me but almost all of them are awesome looking....
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2-21-2008 @ 9:07AM
I miss my stars! said...
Did anyone else have trouble with the audio and video syncing up?
We just got Verizon Fios last week and I wonder if they were the culprit or if anyone else had the problem of the audio being a .25 second behind the video. After half an hour I had to turn it off - it was driving me crazy.
I didn't have this happen on any other channel - but Idol was the only thing running "live" last night.
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2-21-2008 @ 9:39AM
Carrie said...
Goodness. I'm not gonna say the girls were better than the boys this week, but I am gonna say I was disappointed in both nights. I don't get it about Carly Smithson. What I mean is, I don't know what the judges see in her. Maybe I'm affected by the fact that she's already had her shot, but I hope she gets voted off, and quickly. Best of the night, for me, was Alaina. I do think it was a mistake on AI's part to start with the theme weeks so early. I feel if the top 24 had been able to choose what they wanted to sing, perhaps we would have had at least one blow-me-away performance this week. As it was, we did not.
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