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Subject: Tiger Beat/All Music Guide Reviews
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Username: groucho
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02/07/2007 8:42 AM Alert 

More stuff that showed up courtesy of google alerts. I don't remember seeing these here, but if so, I'm sure someone will tell me. I don't agree with everything they say, but they are generally positive, and nobody likes everything. I'm kinda puzzled by the phrase "lack of sensuality" though...  Oh well, see for yourselves.

I believe this is from Tiger Beat

If fans can look beyond her uncharacteristically risqué album cover, they will find that Season 5 American Idol runner-up Katharine McPhee is still sugar and spice underneath her vamp makeover. The unexpected new look, however, does compliment her unexpected new sound. Initially, it’s surprising to hear the Broadway baby — who during her Idol stint wowed the judges with her soaring rendition of “Somewhere Over the Rainbow” and got footloose performing an acoustic guitar-anchored rendition of KT Tunstall’s “Black Horse and the Cherry Tree” barefoot — belting “Open Toes,” a pop-and-R&B-kissed ode to sexy footwear. In fact, on her self-titled debut, McPhee sounds more like Christina Aguilera than fans will remember. Luckily, she has the pipes to support the junior diva comparison. For instance, the power ballad “Home” recalls X-tina’s “Beautiful,” and on the simmering, mid-tempo “Neglected,” Kat even cribs the Grammy-winning singer’s signature “Oh yeah” vocal trill. McPhee’s individuality, however, does shine through, particularly when she sings in her upper register, as on “Not Your Girl,” a tasty slice of ska-tinged pop, and the tender ballad “Ordinary World.” Like Clarkson and Underwood before her, McPhee is one of Idol’s most promising graduates. Tracy E. Hopkins

All Music Guide
From the beginning of the series’ fifth season, Katharine McPhee seemed like the ideal American Idol: a drop-dead gorgeous brunette, she was certainly telegenic and she also had a powerhouse voice, equally impressive on a slow-burning, show-stopping “Somewhere Over the Rainbow” as on a lively cover of KT Tunstall’s “Black Horse and a Cherry Tree.” Most importantly, Katharine was the first American Idol finalist since the premiere season to seem to appeal directly to the show’s core audience of predominantly female pre-teens and adolescents, the first since Kelly Clarkson to possess a crucial blend of young, fresh looks, pop sensibility, and wholesome sexiness. All the pieces seemed to be in place for McPhee to take home the crown, but she got steamrolled by the Soul Patrol, as the world’s youngest Baby Boomer, the prematurely gray Taylor Hicks, won the competition by appealing to the other AmIdol core audience — the adults who grew up on the pop of the ’60s, ’70s, and ’80s and were wondering where all that good music went. Taylor’s debut record appealed precisely to that audience, which freed runner-up Katharine to deliver an album that appeals to younger listeners, at least in theory. In practice, it took a bit of effort to get all involved with McPhee’s debut album to agree to this principle. According to several pre-release interviews, the singer approached her producers and label midway through production, requesting that the album sound younger; specifically, she wanted the music to have a stronger R&B and modern pop influence, so it would sound contemporary, which, in turn, would give her a greater chance of establishing herself as an artist outside the confines of American Idol — and as Kelly Clarkson proved with her two albums, this could result in greater success both in the short term and in the long run.

RCA acquiesced to Katharine, delaying the holiday 2006 release of the album and pushing it into the first month of 2007, but that didn’t mean that all of the original recordings were scrapped: some new sounds were added to the pre-existing sessions, resulting in a curiously lopsided final album, one that has two opposing sounds fighting against each other. There is, as Katharine requested, a heavy dose of modern pop here — mainly, a lot of songs that bear a heavy Beyoncé influence, along with traces of Christina, and the results can be quite stylish and alluring, as on the glistening, exuberant opener, “Love Story,” which strikes precisely the right blend of retro-’70s soul vibes and sparkling, stylish contemporary rhythms. But for every time the modern makeover works, it almost as often goes awry, as on the jarringly awkward, rapid-fire “Open Toes,” a self-conscious celebration of sexy shoes on which Katharine never once sounds believable; she sings as if she’s only seen pictures of this footwear in US Weekly and never once wore them herself. This disconnect is a common problem throughout this eponymous debut album: try as she may, Kat never sounds sexy when she struts on numbers like “Do What You Do,” which doesn’t come as a great surprise since she was always more spunky than sultry on the show, but it’s a problem that plagues even the old-fashioned tunes, which should have been McPhee’s forte. True, most of the slow ones here are little more than boilerplate ballads, but McPhee can’t breathe life into these songs, so they just sit there inert, sounding impeccable but unmemorable. And that gets to the core problem with Katharine McPhee: as pretty as she is, as talented as she is, she has yet to develop a performing personality that is distinctively hers. That was also true of Carrie Underwood, but she benefited by willfully submitting herself to the machinations of Nashville, where she was skillfully molded into a country-pop star blessed with strong material and strong productions. Here McPhee submits to two different formulas, neither of which are entirely successful because they rely on her to carry the music with her personality, which she can’t quite do yet. That these two formulas don’t quite complement each other also hurts the record, since it never gels, but on the positive side, the album does suggest McPhee’s instincts about going younger were correct. Missteps like “Open Toes” aside, the tracks that truly work are the ones that sound modern, whether it’s “Love Story,” the Christina-aping “Home,” “Not Ur Girl,” or even “Do What You Do,” which works in spite of Kat’s lack of sensuality. These are slices of sleek, bright modern pop that sound like what a young American Idol should sound like in 2006. That McPhee can’t quite deliver on their promise for the entirety of her debut is disappointing, but it’s not a disaster — after all, this is just a debut, and first albums are often where an artist shows promise instead of fulfills it. Here Katharine — just like she did on the show — suggests that she has the potential to be the freshest mainstream pop singer American Idol has produced since Kelly Clarkson. Even if the album ultimately plays like a handful of good singles and filler, that’s not too different than Kelly’s debut, and even if McPhee isn’t yet as charismatic as Clarkson, this record shows she has the raw ingredients to become a true pop star instead of merely playing one on TV.


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02/07/2007 9:29 AM Alert 
Hats off to All Music Guide for their comprehensive review. That's a professional job.
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02/07/2007 10:46 AM Alert 
The criticisms in the "All Music Guide" review are typical of alot of the recent reviews. People don't seem to support albums containing more than one genre per CD. They don't se it as we do, as a versatile artist appealing to a broad audience. However, 116,000 CDs for the first week is good and debuting at #2 is GREAT. Katharine and RCA knew Norah would be dropping an album wHen they chose that date. They were hoping Katharine would be #2, so nobody should Be complaining.
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02/07/2007 10:55 AM Alert 
Well Groucho, I've read them before. But maybe not here, I can't remember. It was a few weeks ago though.

The AMG review is quite comprehensive, and while not as positive as I would like, it is quite optimistic about Kat. And I understand what they mean by Kat not sounding "sexy". She's just a lovable, goofy kid at heart, not a vamp, no matter how she looks. So she sounds more convincing singing about rainbows than seduction.

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02/07/2007 11:25 AM Alert 
Agree bcollan!
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02/07/2007 11:51 AM Alert 
I guess I don't get it. I have been a musician for thirty years, listened to lots of music (like we all have), played in numerous groups, bands, solo gigs, etc, have produced myriad television programs, DVDs, special interest home videos, all incorporating music/sound - Not to say that my opinion is better or more valuable than anyone else's because it is not. But I think I have a pretty good ear and I just can't relate to the statements that Kat doesn't sound sexy when she needs to or doesn't sound like she believes what she is singing (In Open Toes many reviewers think she just doesn't sound like she believes what she is singing), and of course she is bland on the ballads. I just don't hear that. Yes she has room to grow as an artist and needs to continue to find who she is. But I will again offer the theory that when a lot of critics are listening to this album, they can't separate the Kat they knew on Idol, the goofy Kat we see currently on her blogs, talk shows, etc, with the Kat who is singing on the record. If one never heard of Kat and were to just listen to the songs, I think they would have a very different opinion. In sum, I think she delivers on Open Toes, I think she sounds sexy and sultry when she needs to, and I think her ballads have lots of emotion and feeling. But do I want Kat to succeed so badly that I hear what I want to hear? Maybe I am (maybe we all are) listening to the tracks with rose-colored headphones on. Maybe we can't separate our wishes for Kat from listening to the record anymore than critics with pre-conceived ideas about Kat can separate those ideas from critically listening. I don't know, juts a thought.
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02/07/2007 11:56 AM Alert 
. eh yeah.
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02/07/2007 12:30 PM Alert 
Posted By dbroom on 02/07/2007 11:51 AM
I guess I don't get it. I have been a musician for thirty years, listened to lots of music (like we all have), played in numerous groups, bands, solo gigs, etc, have produced myriad television programs, DVDs, special interest home videos, all incorporating music/sound - Not to say that my opinion is better or more valuable than anyone else's because it is not. But I think I have a pretty good ear and I just can't relate to the statements that Kat doesn't sound sexy when she needs to or doesn't sound like she believes what she is singing (In Open Toes many reviewers think she just doesn't sound like she believes what she is singing), and of course she is bland on the ballads. I just don't hear that. Yes she has room to grow as an artist and needs to continue to find who she is. But I will again offer the theory that when a lot of critics are listening to this album, they can't separate the Kat they knew on Idol, the goofy Kat we see currently on her blogs, talk shows, etc, with the Kat who is singing on the record. If one never heard of Kat and were to just listen to the songs, I think they would have a very different opinion. In sum, I think she delivers on Open Toes, I think she sounds sexy and sultry when she needs to, and I think her ballads have lots of emotion and feeling. But do I want Kat to succeed so badly that I hear what I want to hear? Maybe I am (maybe we all are) listening to the tracks with rose-colored headphones on. Maybe we can't separate our wishes for Kat from listening to the record anymore than critics with pre-conceived ideas about Kat can separate those ideas from critically listening. I don't know, juts a thought.

Well, I'm a 49YO dad with 2 daughters, and I think of Kat as an adopted third daughter, so maybe that colors my perception of whether or not she sounds sexy.

Like you say, our opinions are colored by our pre-concieved ideas. Kind of makes the term "fair reviewer" an oxymoron!

"She sings so magnificantly, it's just amazing" David Foster
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02/07/2007 5:05 PM Alert 
That's why in the final analysis you read it all, then listen and make up your own mind. Nobody should take any reviewer's take on things as the end-all-be-all. It's just their opinion. They can't tell you what to like. And yes indeedy, I think people get an image in their heads and measure everything against it. It's taken me months to get over it. That's the good thing and the bad thing about being on Idol. You get to be a new artist but with the advantage of having months to build up a pre-existing fan base, but on the other hand, people have months to build up an image of what they think you are. Yesterday was the first time I've listened to Love Story and actually liked it. It may have taken that long to get certain parts of my brain down from over the rainbow and into current reality.

katpedia.com - watch and listen to Idol, pre-Idol, and post-Idol McPhee performances all in one convenient location

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02/07/2007 7:45 PM Alert 
With the All Music Guide, I see what they're saying, and it truly seems like they believe in her ability and they think she'll go far. It good constructive criticism, and while at some points I think they overstate the problem, they do tend to mirror what soem critics said during Idol. Either way, I think Kat can definitely connect and tell stories in her music, but she may need a little more time to develop that even further.

It seems that she'll definitely get that chance now.
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02/10/2007 2:28 AM Alert 

That All Music Guide one basically says her album is a lot like Kelly Clarkson's debut album.  That's OK.  It's a fair review.  I don't agree with all of it but I can't say they didn't do a good job writing the review.

Is Katharine sensual when she sings?  That might a fair critique.  When you have her in front of you...you miss that translation because she's so amazing to look at.  All in all I can't complain about the review.  They seem to "get it" so...I'm not going to knock anything there.  And they do think she's as the potential to be a pop star so...


"I saw Katharine McPhee when there were about 12 contestants left on American Idol. She blew me away. I loved her grace, her style, her poise, her voice and her hair! I wanted her to be the face of Sexy Hair because she represented everything that I had in my head for the brand: youth, beauty, talent, class, a young sophistication, and sexiness." -- Jim Morrison, CEO of Sexy Hair Products.
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02/10/2007 8:49 AM Alert 
Kat will always be graded a little "harder" simply because there's so much potential there and people seem to sense that, even regardless of their own personal preferences. If you take an honest moment (not a FAN moment), it's a pretty good review (the AMG).
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