Posts Tagged ‘Scott Macintyre’

Top 8 Performance Night: Things Could Only Get Better, Right?

Wednesday, April 8th, 2009

After last week’s disaster/fiasco/catastrophe, things could only go up. Way up. Year You Were Born, however, wasn’t quite a masterpiece of a night. It had its high – and low – points, but a smooth ride? Nope. Not even close. Still, in Idol-land, all we fans can ask for is a semi-decent night. Last night was that, but not much more.

Best of the night, by a pretty far margin, was Adam Lambert. The ridiculous lighting for Mad World aside, everything came together for Adam tonight: his vocals were up to the job, he was able to connect with the song’s emotions, and he didn’t let the theatrics get in the way of the music. Easily Adam’s best performance of the season, and possibly the most well-rounded one of the season to date.

Second-best, by a pretty decent margin herself, was Allison Iraheta. Her vocals are always going to be on; she made a pretty good song choice as well. It was an emotionally loaded song that she pulled off with the requisite amounts of believability; this was perfectly, and completely, believable. Well done.

Anoop Desai is reminding us a lot of Phil Stacey from Season Six: when he’s good, he’s very good – but he is just as capable of dropping a clunker. Fortunately for us, he was in the former mode this week. It was a solid, well-sung performance. It didn’t quite have the special “X-factor” that elevated both Allison and Adam, but it was well-executed and pretty good to listen to.

Matt Giraud and Danny Gokey faced a similar problem: they were both saddled with difficult, complex, bordering on the nonsensical arrangements that did them no favors. This was the Idol equivalent of walking into a gunfight with a spork. On pure vocals, Matt was probably a little better, but he also had, by far, the worse arrangement. More often than not, despite his okay signing, he had me scratching my head thinking, “what was that?”. There’s a lot of your-mileage-may-vary for these two – as it is, both can only be put in the “okay” category, and some might say I’m being a bit generous.

From there, though, it gets a little ugly. Kris Allen had the momentum coming into this week… but lost an awful lot of it this week. Memo to all future Idol contestants – this idea of starting in a mini-stage in the mosh pit is dumb beyond words. It didn’t work for Matt last week, and it didn’t work this week for Kris either. It was competently executed, but there was a vague paint-by-numbers feeling to it. There was no excitement, no passion, no emotion. Musical wallpaper is how I’d describe it.

Lil Rounds… oh boy. What in the world was that? Has Lil made one good song choice since the finals? Again: she couldn’t sing as well, or as artfully, as the original (Tina Turner). It was just an utterly dull, meandering performance that was, well, nothing. Easily her worst performance to date.

And then we get to Scott Macintyre. It’s never a good idea to sing a song that has any connotations of ending, finishing, etcetera, on Idol. It’s tempting the Idol gods, to be honest. And boy, did they come down hard on Scott. The electric guitar was just… out of place. And then we get to the vocals… no. Just no. He did his best, I’m sure, but this was a clear disaster.

Tempting the Idol gods: The “obvious” pick to get eliminated is Scott. He’s been steadily slipping throughout the finals, showed up in the bottom three two weeks ago, and turned in a complete and utter trainwreck Tuesday night to boot.

However… there’s a distinct possibility that the Mighty Mouse effect could be in play here. The only real solid fanbases right now that are strong enough that I won’t call vulnerable is Adam’s and maybe Danny’s. They’re not going to end up in the bottom three. The rest of the field is weak enough that they can be beaten by Idol voting patterns, regardless of how good or bad they are.

While it may be possible, I don’t think it’s probable here. If Scott had showed any signs of becoming more competitive, I’d be more open to the possibility of one – but right now, I think Scott’s fanbase is so weak that frantic power-voting or not, he’s going home.

Just like last week, the more interesting story is in who ends up beside Scott. The obvious suspect here might well be Lil, who has been just that bit better than Scott so far – but not by much. However, if DialIdol is to be believed, Anoop and Kris might find themselves in danger there – both, in fact, are lower than Scott in their ratings. DI isn’t the be-all-and-end-all of Idol predictions.

Kris might not be strong enough to escape the bottom three, but one so-so performance is probably not going to send him home. Meanwhile, Anoop was actually pretty good last night, so him going out right now seems unlikely too. Given the wide margin-of-error this week, I’m not as convinced of DI’s utility this week.

So, ultimately, the pick is:

Scott Macintyre to go home.

Top 9 Performance Night: April Snooze Day

Wednesday, April 1st, 2009

Due to the wonders of timezones and the International Date Line, this week’s episode of American Idol came to us on April Fool’s Day. Unfortunately, this week’s singing felt like a prank that had gone awry.

The only one who really shined was Kris Allen. He may not have had a lot of hype coming into this week, but Ain’t No Sunshine fixed that perfectly. His singing was spot-on; he connected with the audience and the song’s emotions. Kris isn’t a vocal powerhouse, but he definitely made the best of what he does have. This week and last were both very, very good for Kris – he is rapidly becoming the person to watch out for in this field.

Adam was, well, Adam. He does what he does very, very well. (And kudos to him for singling out Rickey Minor for praise.) Over the top, as usual, but subtlety is not usually part of the Adam Lambert performance. Overall, it was pretty entertaining, and better than most this week, but – Mick Jagger? Steven Tyler? Really? That’s a stretch, to put it mildly. Somewhere between okay and good, but not worthy of the comparisons and praise it’s getting from Paula and Kara.

Danny Gokey’s version of What Hurts the Most. It’s a pretty emotional song, and Danny was able to express that pretty well. That said, the vocals were not that good. The power was not there; he was straining in far too many parts. It was a great effort, but the singing was just not good enough for this to get ranked any higher.

Scott Macintyre made a good song choice in Billy Joel’s Just The Way You Are. Of course, it would have sounded better if Scott hadn’t given the AC treatment to just about all of his performances to date. He was able to connect with the song and gave a decent version of it – however, there’s a catch. It didn’t do much to hide his basic flaws of limited range and power – he did what he could, but he’s just not as good.

Allison Iraheta made the classic mistake of picking a song she liked as opposed to something that suited her. Don’t Speak isn’t a song which, in our opinion, doesn’t translate well live. Note to future Idol contestants: avoid this song. Please. Allison’s vocals were okay, not great, but there was only so much she could do with this song. While the judges spent too much time talking about her wardrobe, I have to agree it was a bit much. Decent vocals with, well, clashing visuals all put her right in the Mediocre Middle.

Doing Celine Dion on the Idol stage is… ambitious, to say the least. Unfortunately, it was yet another case of being too ambitious for Lil Rounds. The glory notes did show off Lil’s power, but the rest of it was bordering on the terrible. Lil is definitely not playing to her strengths. It doesn’t help that she loves to pick songs by very good singers, but she’s not quite in the same league vocally. She’s not in danger right now, but if she keeps up at this level she’ll be gone sooner rather than later.

I know the song is called You Found Me, but I didn’t realize that much of the song had just as lyrics. I’m not familiar enough with the original to compare, but what I do know is that there was nothing compelling about Matt Giraud’s performance. Wooden, middling vocals, no connection to the audience… he’s taken whatever gains he had from So Small and utterly thrown it away. And starting in the mosh pit, but with a keyboard? What was that?

Anoop Desai has a good enough voice to avoid major trainwrecks – in won’t have people at home cringing in horror at how bad the singing is. However, that’s no assurance of the overall performance making sense. Anoop just hasn’t figured out how to do a “fast” song yet – when he does, he crashes and burns. Badly. This was at about the same level as Beat It a few weeks ago – if anything, it was even worse. Ouch.

Worst of the night was Megan Joy. She pulled the “song I really love” line again… with predictably bad results. At this stage, I don’t know if there’s really anything she can do decently – she’s not that good a singer, and even if she was she’s too quirky to pick songs for easily. Whatever the case, she was definitely the worst of the night.

Overall, it was easily the worst night of the finals. Only one really good, high-quality performance from Kris; a couple of okay-to-good ones from Adam and Danny; a lot of so-so songs, and Anoop and Megan occupying the cellar with strange song choices. Setting aside Kris’s great performance, I couldn’t help but thinking something along the lines of, “that was it?” There was an awful lot of musical wallpaper that could put listeners to sleep if they were tired after a long day.

They never make it easy, do they: With relatively few good performances this week, the number of people I’d call truly safe would fall essentially into two categories: those with large, pre-existing fanbases and those who were at the very top of their game. This week, the total membership of the truly safe group is three: Adam Lambert, Danny Gokey, and Kris Allen. Anyone else could visit the bottom 3 and I’d find it completely plauisble.

That said, our pick to go home is Megan. Her uniqueness and quirks may have won her fans right at the start, but the four performances since the finals have been the Idol version of Chinese water torture for a fanbase. You can’t perform that poorly for a month and not lose fans – or, at least, lose ground to other fanbases.

The real shocker could be who’s standing beside her. Matt Giraud already made his bottom three appearance last week, so he could be the beneficiary of a bounce this week – his bad performance notwithstanding. Don’t be surprised to see Anoop or Scott take their spot beside Megan – they’re both a little vulnerable right now, and Anoop has not been in the bottom group before. A shock boot is probably not in the cards, but a warning shot probably is.

The Idol Guy pick: Megan Joy to go home.

Top 10 Performance Night: These Songs Seem Strangely Familiar

Thursday, March 26th, 2009

When I sat down to watch today’s show, there was a strange feeling of familiarity that came over me. I couldn’t quite put my finger on it, but something was definitely off with the show. Then, as I tend to do, I checked my friends over at What Not to Sing and an interesting fact came up: nine out of the ten songs of the night had been sung on Idol before.

That explains a great deal, because as it turns out in a very real way Motown Night turned out to be Rerun Night. No good. The not-so genre savvy would blame the contestants: surely there must have been nine other good Motown songs to pick, right? As for us… maybe, maybe not. Some of the blame must go there, sure, but given all the reports of pre-cleared song lists and all the other backstage rumors, well, I can’t lay all the blame on them. There’s a lot of blame to go around, and everyone deserves a decent share.

It was one of those episodes that, on paper, looks good – but wasn’t nearly as impressive to watch or listen.  There were no surprises, no songs we haven’t heard before (except for Adam)… it was the closest thing Idol has done to a rerun, to be honest.

Normally, I’d rate and review them from best to worst. However, it’s hard to do that this week because by far, the most common grade was just “okay”, with very little to separate them.

Matt Giraud opened the night with an okay version of Let’s Get It On. He didn’t push the limits of his vocals, which is good – but the originality and the emotion that were there last week were just not there. It was competent and technically okay, but not much else.

Kris Allen was one of the better ones of the night. It was a very pleasant, well-sung How Sweet It Is. He did very well in adapting the material to suit his style – something always essential to Idol success – but it was a good performance without a signature moment. His lack of impact had little to do with “conceitedness”; more an arrangement without high points to speak of.

The next two performances left us with ample time to wonder what Scott Macintyre and Megan Joy were thinking. It’s hard to imagine worse song choices for Scott; and Megan’s version of For Once in My Life had me thankful I’ll only have to listen to her in full once in our lives. The sad part is, of course, for both of them something like this is nothing more than business as usual. Ouch.

Anoop Desai is possibly the most technically sound singer left in the competition – certainly, his control is second to none – but he had a similar problem to Matt Giraud. Vocally, great – as good as anyone else last night. In “selling” the song, connecting with the audience… it wasn’t all that. Whatever the technical difficulty of the song – and even to our untrained ears, it was – this isn’t figure skating where the scores have a degree of difficulty adjustment.

Michael Sarver’s Ain’t Too Proud to Beg proved one thing – I, too was begging him to stop. Another crowd-pleaser of a song sung somewhat poorly. This is becoming too familiar of a story for Michael.

Someone who definitely practiced the “rerun” theme was Lil Rounds. Last week’s song choice was bad, and Heatwave was just as bad. Lil has a great voice – but it didn’t sound like it last night. It was less of a singing performance than a shouting one. This should have been a good night for her, but it wasn’t. Mediocrity seems to be the word with her – she should be doing better, but just isn’t.

And then we got to Adam Lambert. First off: I give Adam some credit for being the only one to do a song that hadn’t been done on Idol before. The end result wasn’t bad. I’ll go further: it was actually pretty good. It was a good falsetto, but it’s not something I’d listen to for long – though I’d say that for most falsettos, not just Adam’s.

That said… the trouble with this performance as its believability. The very best Idol performances are not just good, they are authentic. Adam isn’t that at all. The vocals – good as they are – are telling us one thing, but the imagery – he’s acting too hard. In the theater, that’s a good thing, but it does not translate well to the TV screen. You know it’s acting, you can’t suspend your disbelief and let the singer tell the story of the song. In a perverse way, in fact, while it was decidedly not

The real trouble with singing “over the top” is that it distracts from the singing, from the music. Even if Adam wasn’t the same manic, flamboyant, Adam we’ve seen before, the fundamental problem is still the same. The visuals, the acting, distracted from the singing – when it didn’t need to. This is a performance that is much better listened to blind than watched and heard at the same time.

In some ways, this performance was a reaction to last week’s fiasco. He subdued himself, yes, but in a real way he didn’t fix the fundamental issue of the performances overshadowing the music, not complementing it.

One more thing: the tongue bath he gets from the judges is bordering on the ridiculous. It was good, yes, but not that good. Word of warning: the judges were pretty easy on David Archuleta last year, too. Anyone remember one of the judges – Simon, I think – said Archie won the finale? That went real well – for the other David.

After a performance that was not a rerun, we got… Danny Gokey. This was also, in effect, a rerun. Competent, but not outstanding singing, mixed with some of the worst dance moves since, well, maybe Taylor Hicks. At least it worked for Taylor – here, not so much. Danny’s a solid singer, but he really needs to take it up to the next level.

The best of the night was Allison Iraheta. Great vocals, very believable, just a top-notch performance all around. Not quit “excellent”, but still better than anyone else. The judges spent too much time acting like children instead of commenting on her, but that didn’t take anything from her performance. I’m not into the whole gimmick of Idol judges and pundits constantly handing out “best ever” awards, but I will give Allison one: she may well be the best female rocker this show has ever had. If gambling on reality TV were legal, I’d take the over on the over/under betting of how far Allison will go.

The pecking order returns: With no great surprises in the performances, this week’s boot will be largely determined by long-term performance – in short, this week will serve largely to weed out the obviously bad.

Realistically, then, those in danger are the three people who haven’t really had a single unquestionably good performance since the start: that would be Michael Sarver, Scott Macintyre, and Megan Joy.

None of them will exactly be missed, to be honest. They all seem to be decent people, but Idol is fundamentally still a singing competition. None of them have really distinguished themselves in that category.

It basically comes down to a fanbase battle – and with weak fanbases, those are some of the hardest calls to make. They all have relatively few fans, but beyond that, to be honest, it’ll largely be Wild-Ass Guesses.

Our pick to go would have to be Michael. He’s a likable fellow, but that’s it. Scott is actually decent in spots, and Megan is… unique. Which will attract some voters. When you’re scraping the bottom of the barrel for fans – as all three are – everything counts.

I realize this is not our most decisive moment, but this is a situation where any of the three could go legimitmately – and there’s an element of won’t-miss-any-of-them to boot. Barring any major shocks, it’ll be a dull and predictable boot. Which is sort of appropriate for how the week was, really.

The Idol Guy pick: Michael Sarver to go home.

Top 11 Results: “I Told You So”… literally!

Thursday, March 19th, 2009

Somehow, Carrie Underwood and Randy Travis singing I Told You So was strangely appropriate. Far and away the consensus pick to go home was Michael Sarver; instead based largely on DialIdol and song age I made the call that Alexis Grace would end up in the bottom. My only mistake was to believe that Alexis’s exit would be vetoed. I was wrong on that part. Still, I was a lot closer than Conventional Wisdom was.

I already explained yesterday why Alexis was in very real danger. Her low Dialidol score tipped us off to look at the numbers more closely. Her average and median song age was disproportionately high – over 30 when everyone else except Adam Lambert was in the low 20s or below. With everyone else singing very young, singing old songs becomes much more noticable. If you’re Adam Lambert, you have a gimmick that surpasses that. She didn’t; and just one so-so performance when others elevated their game was enough to get her out of there.

Alexis can also be considered a casualty of the new semifinals format as well. One of the challenges coming out of the group rounds is that it became that much harder to build up any significant fanbase out of them: one song, with a multi-week gap, does not a solid fanbase make.

It’s something that can hurt people all season long – particularly for singers out of Group 1. In the three seasons that had the group format, only one contestant ever made it to the finale after singing in the first group. That was Season 3′s Diana DeGarmo; and her ride to the finale was far from smooth. It’s hard to build momentum if you’re not singing for several weeks in a row.

Her exit can be summed up quickly, and fairly. Despite all the pimpage and promotion she got, there were problems. She had a fanbase that didn’t have a chance to solidify, and couldn’t grow because of limited appeal – winning over the young power-voting Idol blocs with Aretha Franklin and Dolly Parton was a hard task, at best. Yes, she was a good, maybe even great singer – but to succeed on Idol you need to know your audience. Alexis Grace and Idol voters proved to be a bad fit.

There’s a rich element of irony when it comes to this week’s results, though. The producers’s own rule change worked against them. Alexis would have almost certainly survived if she had gone through a three-song semifinal. It would have given her fanbase a chance to solidify, and for her to define her musical identity (which she didn’t do too well, Kara DioGuardi’s exceptionally useless advice of dirtying it up notwithstanding). As it is, though, someone that TPTB wanted to advance far is ending up going home as a direct result of executive meddling. Alexis just got caught in about as unlucky a spot as you can imagine.

Now, as to why they didn’t save her? The answer to that is tied into someone else… Adam Lambert. I’ll get back to him in a little while.

Hold the champagne: Strategically, there was one overwhelming theme for the night: favorites faltered while the midcard upped their game. Who knows, maybe everyone outside the Favored Four Three are surprisingly Genre Savvy – they can’t be all too happy at the idea of meekly standing by while the Coronation of the Producers’ Idol proceeds as planned. Kris Allen, Matt Giraud, and Anoop Desai were all midcard singers at best previous to this show – now you have to at least consider them in the mix.

Danny Gokey and Lil Rounds can recover without too much trouble. They didn’t really stink too much, they were just… mediocre. It’s the type of performance that voters won’t hold against you too much. Last week will almost certainly be better for both of them – if only because it’s hard to make worse song choices than either of them did. As I said yesterday – Carrie Underwood and Martina McBride? Seriously? That’s like carrying a wooden stick to a gunfight. While neither of them is in danger – yet – they both need a good, undisputed showstopper in the next two to four weeks if they want to get in the final four.

Kris, Matt, and Anoop all need to be able to prove that this week wasn’t a fluke. Even normally bad contestants can put it all together if they can find a theme, song, and arrangement that fits them like a glove. If they can pull it off, the upside could be significant. The dark horse in here is Kris – his vocals are not as good as Anoop’s, but better at conveying emotions. Giraud doesn’t really have the vocals to compete with either one.

There’s one puzzle in the Touring Ten that I haven’t quite figured out: Allison Iraheta. She’s sung well, her songs are young, and so is she. I don’t have any Idolmetric measurement that says she’s in danger. She should not be in the bottom three (now two). On the flip side, she’s likely to pick up at least some votes from Alexis’s old fanbase. Beyond that… well, even I don’t have the answer for that.

There’s a pretty clear division, too, about who’s clearly lagging behind: Michael Sarver, Scott Macintyre, and Megan Joy. Right now, they’re all getting by on something other than singing. Michael’s probably safe for two weeks – see the latest WNTS editorial for the reasoning behind that, but the order is immaterial. None of them are going to win, and the only question is how many others will go before they do.

And then we have Adam Lambert. He really deserves a section of his own.

Damaged Goods? Maybe.: The debate over Adam’s version of Ring of Fire will probably last until the season ends, if not even longer. Still, it’s undeniable that it did change things around.

I was never a big believer in Adam Lambert, largely because I thought the theatrics covered up a voice that didn’t know the meaning of subtlety. Adam’s style was just not sustainable in the long term. The novelty would eventually wear thin, and my money was on him finishing in the high midcard – fourth to sixth.

I know I’m going to be challenged on that statement, so let me explain it a bit more. Adam has zero crossover ability. He can’t appeal to a wide cross-section of Idol voters; people that liked that over-the-top theatric style would love it from the start, but it would have been an uphill climb to win those who don’t. That crossover ability is vital to lasting long on the show.

With that in mind, Adam’s challenge was essentially how long he could keep going along this path before leaving, or proving that he’s more than a stage actor that happens to sing decently, too. The trouble is, though, his version of Ring of Fire was so… unusual, it sped up that process. From Idol voters, a pretty common reaction was:  ”what the heck was that?”

I’m sure this will prompt Adam’s fans to write in anger. I’m not going to deny that he has fans – but I think that for everyone one he won over, there was at least one who now wants to burn him at the stake and another two scratching their heads.

That’s not to deny that he has talent. He is very, very good at what he does. What I’m questioning is whether this is something that the collective Idol fan base can really stomach for long. Everything I’ve known about it tells me: no.

The upside is that right now, Adam is looking iffy for the finale. The producers are perfectly happy to keep him around as long as they want. Remember, the underlying goal – seemingly – of the whole season – was Drama and Buzz. I can’t deny Adam delivers on that.

The effect of that was to make the veto an exceptionally valuable tool for the producers – one that just wouldn’t do to be used right now. Phil Stacey had it right: the “veto” is essentially an insurance policy for Danny and Adam.

Once the novelty and appeal of Adam’s theatrics go away, he’s surprisingly vulnerable. By far, he is singing the oldest songs in the competition on average. There’s a decent chance he could crash out, say, seventh. We’ve had three weeks of Adam singing in competition – is his current pace and style something that can work for two months or so? I doubt it.

Taken all in context, what’s clear to me is that the Judges’ Veto just became Adam’s Veto. It’s not going to be used on anyone else, except maybe Danny – but he doesn’t really need it. Adam does.

If Adam had not sung Ring of Fire – if the producers had believed that he could survive for a long period independently, as they probably don’t right now – they would have had freedom to use the veto now and save Alexis. However, the producers have their own priorities – and one of them seems to be Save Adam. The judges and producers want Adam to go deep so badly they’re willing to keep the veto in check even in a perfect spot to use it, all because it wasn’t Adam up there.

Credibility? What credibility?: Having laid out the case for not using the Veto so early, one can ask why I thought Alexis would be saved anyway.

It essentially came down to two things: I knew Alexis was still a judge’s favorite and might be treated more kindly. The other reason was more pipe dreams than anything else: they needed credibility. So far, off the Idol stage, the season has been dominated by ham-handed manipulation. What we got on Wednesday was… more of the same.  Does anyone think that on pure merit alone Alexis should be gone before Michael Sarver? Really?

No. Of course not. It would have been the perfect time to use the veto and live up to what they claimed it was for. Instead, it became another self-sustained injury for the Idol franchise. This week confirmed what we all had just suspected before, and will make people even more tired of the Official Manipulation.

The bye-ku returns!I didn’t have time to do this last week, but… the bye-ku returns. Here’s our official farewell to Alexis Grace in verse:

Mother with pink streaks
Stop! Song older than thirty!
Shocker to many