Tag Archives: Voice

Gerard Butler Losing His Scottish Accent

Gerard Butler says he’s slowly losing his Scottish accent by doing Hollywood roles. The actor appeared on David Letterman’s show to promote his new movie The Bounty Hunter , where he plays an American who chases down his ex-wife, played by Jennifer Aniston . Butler, 40, told Letterman that it was a struggle at first to speak like someone born in the States and he had to stay in character even off set. Now the actor says he has become so used to the American tongue that his voice has changed. “It’s kind of rubbed off unfortunately, I used to speak a lot deeper but my accent has softened.” Wonder if the ladies will still swoon?

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Gerard Butler Losing His Scottish Accent

Alex Chilton, Big Star’s Biggest Star, Dead at 59

You may not be able to place the name, but you’ll definitely recognize the voice. Mega influential singer and guitarist Alex Chilton has died at the age of 59, after a music career…

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Alex Chilton, Big Star’s Biggest Star, Dead at 59

‘American Idol’ Top 12: Crystal Bowersox, Siobhan Magnus Come Out On Top

Didi Benami and Casey James also get praise from the judges during big-stage debut. By Gil Kaufman Crystal Bowersox on “American Idol” on Tuesday Photo: Fox The “American Idol” season-nine top 12 made it to the big stage Tuesday night (March 16) to take on the songs of the Rolling Stones. And, in a wakeup call on the first night of mixed-gender competition, the women served notice that they really are the ones to beat this year as Siobhan Magnus drew more raves and Crystal Bowersox had yet another solid performance. Brawny football-player-turned-singer Michael Lynche was up first, singing the appropriately sexy “Miss You,” playing it like a Sam Cooke-style soul burner, complete with plenty of falsetto whoops and hollers and vigorous hand gestures. Randy Jackson and Ellen DeGeneres thought it continued Lynche’s winning ways and provided a nice kickoff to the night. Kara DioGuardi thought Michael delivered on the swagger inherent in the Stones’ live show, and Simon Cowell praised him for his confidence but thought the dancing was a bit “corny” at times. Knoxville, Tennessee, native Didi Benami went torchy with “Play With Fire,” singing the song as a dark jazz ballad while slinking across the big stage and emoting into the camera. Kara thought the eeriness of the song combined with the sweetness of Benami’s voice was a nice mixture. “For the first time for me in weeks, Didi, you’re on fire,” Randy said. Cowell thought the tune began to show what kind of artist Benami could be. Casey James rocked out “It’s All Over Now,” playing a Dixie-fried boogie take on the tune while occasionally strumming an electric guitar and tossing his golden locks at all the right moments. After telling him several weeks ago to stop trying to be a rock star, Kara said James finally was a rock star in his best performance yet. But Simon said, despite looking great and singing well, it felt more like an audition that didn’t really make use of the big stage. “You’ve got to push yourself,” he said. “Not just be a guy standing in the middle of the stage playing the guitar. It has to be more than that. … Just be a star.” Another Texas kid, Lacey Brown, went with an orchestral version of 1967’s “Ruby Tuesday” complete with a string quartet. She sang in her coquettish 1960s pixie pop voice, seated on the edge of the stage while tweaking the melody just enough to make it her own. Cowell said Brown’s vocals are strong but that she performs like an actress and overthinks it too much. Ellen didn’t like how she sat down during the most uptempo bits and felt it was a bit sleepy. Needing to get back into his early groove, Andrew Garcia let it bleed with “Gimme Shelter,” laying on some gritty Cee-Lo-like soul as he awkwardly paced across the front of the stage with the mic stand while hitting a series of big notes at the end. For Randy it was way pitchy, while Ellen dubbed it his best performance to date. Kara focused on the meaning of the lyrics again, saying the anti-Vietnam War intensity didn’t come through even as the vocal chops finally crept back. “I wanted to feel that from you, what you were talking about,” she said. “I felt it at times, but most of the times I didn’t.” Cowell mocked DioGuardi for taking the song too literally and said the vocals were good, if a bit weaker then they were in rehearsal. Teenager Katie Stevens needed to go big to stay in the game, which she did with the iconic ballad “Wild Horses.” Sitting on a stool under a harsh spotlight center stage, Stevens sang a big pop-diva version of the tune recently covered by Susan Boyle, struggling at first with the melody and then finding her big voice on the long final note. Randy and Paula thought, despite some pitch problems, it was a strong performance, and Simon said it was the first time she’s chosen a good song, even if the emotion drained out in the second half. Clawing back from the abyss, Tim Urban had a chance to solidify his place on the show with a Jason Mraz-y acoustic reggae run through “Under My Thumb.” The arrangement was lively and fun, though the vocals fell flat at points. Kara and Simon applauded him for going out on a limb and making it his own, but Cowell said it just didn’t work and probably offended Stones fans. “I think it was a crazy decision,” he said. Resident quirky girl Siobhan Magnus went with “Paint It Black.” Wearing a gothy dress, Magnus opened the tune as a turgid symphonic ballad, then rocked it out, unleashing another one of her Adam Lambert-esque rebel yells as the song built to a wild crescendo. “You rise above. … You’re like Snooki’s poof — you just stand out and I like it,” Ellen gushed. Cowell said it was the standout performance of the night because some people would love it while others would hate it. Former paint-store clerk Lee Dewyze took on “Beast of Burden,” transforming the sultry rock tune into a clap-along bro-down acoustic ditty with shades of Hootie and the Blowfish-meets-Dave Matthews. Simon said he likes Lee and his voice but that he again chose a safe, forgettable song. “Stamp your mark on the competition and stop thinking other people are better than you,” he said. Kara, meanwhile, said he’s growing more than any other contestant from week-to-week. Paige Miles just squeaked into the top 12 despite a rough week, so choosing the country swinging “Honky Tonk Women” was a bold move. The bump-and-grind urban-cowgirl arrangement suited her scratchy-soul vocal style. Randy liked it but wanted more energy, and both women and Simon applauded her for hitting big notes despite struggling with laryngitis, though Cowell thinks she still needs to find a way to connect. The other remaining teen in the competition, Pennsylvania native Aaron Kelly, took the sensitive route with a piano-ballad take on “Angie.” Though it was low-energy and a bit glum, Kelly’s urgent vocals were strong, and he brought his country twang to the soft-rock arrangement. “Your mom was right — you were born to sing,” Randy said, comparing Kelly to a young Justin Timberlake. After slamming him for not connecting with his song last week, Kara said the high-schooler set her straight with his emotional delivery. Cowell predicted disaster during Stones week but was pleasantly surprised by how Kelly sang the song well within his range. Closing the show was this year’s singer to beat, Crystal Bowersox, who couldn’t miss with “You Can’t Always Get What You Want.” Strumming her beat-up acoustic, Bowersox strolled out and laid her bluesy pipes on a funky soul reworking of the legendary ode to yearning. None of the judges thought it was her best performance, though Ellen started to see some personality for the first time in the competition as Crystal loosened up onstage. Despite coming out the clear favorite, Cowell said Magnus bested Crystal because her song had more of a dramatic flair. What did you think of Tuesday night’s performances? Who killed it? Who blew it? What was your favorite? Who should go home? Leave your comments below. Related Photos ‘American Idol’ Top 12 Party ‘American Idol’ Season Nine Performances

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‘American Idol’ Top 12: Crystal Bowersox, Siobhan Magnus Come Out On Top

‘American Idol’ Top 12 Can Step It Up On Rolling Stones Night

The British rockers’ songs will give contestants plenty of chances to shine. By Gil Kaufman Michael Lynche Photo: Jesse Grant/ WireImage Forget everything we’ve heard up until now. On Tuesday night (March 16), the top 12 finalists will step out onto the new and improved “American Idol” thunder dome stage to try to make us fall in love all over again. Some will try to make us forget about last week’s surprise eliminations , while others will dig deep to cement their status as the ones to beat this year.

Alex Lambert Says ‘American Idol’ Stage Fright Was ‘All In My Head’

He also addresses Ellen’s metaphors: ‘I probably won’t be able to look at a banana the same way.’ By Katie Byrne Alex Lambert performs on “American Idol” Photo: Frank Micelotta/ Getty Images While Alex Lambert’s nerves got the best of him during his early “American Idol” performances, the singer seemed to be getting on the right track, choosing perfect-fit songs by Ray LaMontagne and John Legend. Unfortunately, Lambert fell victim to Thursday’s shocking results night and didn’t quite make the top 12. We caught up with him Friday (March 12) to talk about his surprise elimination, what’s next and much more. Q : After you were eliminated, you said that you had more to show America. What did you mean by that? A : When I said I want to break out of my shell and show America what I can do, man, honestly, every time I got up there, I couldn’t even sing my best because I was so nervous, and I have a whole series of songs that I can sing that sound so much better than singing on the show. I don’t regret anything, because it’s the beginning of my career. I have never really been onstage before, so I think I did great for not having any experience. Q : Do you think you’ll be able to get past the nerves and have a music career? A : I feel like I’m already past it. I feel like I just needed a few more weeks of just having a little bit more experience on that stage. … It wasn’t a nerve thing, because I would get up there and be comfortable and it felt right, but I didn’t know how to look at the camera. I didn’t know how to interact with the audience, because I had never done it before. I mean, definitely, it’s something that I’ll easily be able to get past. Q : Did you get a chance to talk to the judges after the show? A : They talked to me, and they pretty much told me that I need more experience. And it’s true, but I felt like, vocally, it was my time. … I didn’t have enough experience on the stage is pretty much what they were telling me. They all know I have a good voice, and they told me I had a lot of future ahead of me. Q : The judges have made a big deal about the contestants knowing what kind of artist they want to be. Do you know? A : I know exactly what kind of artist I want to be. I really would like to do a bunch of acoustic stuff and I would also like some R&B tracks — a whole bunch of different stuff. I know my voice and what I can and cannot do, and I know what would sound good on what, and I believe that I could sound good on not only one genre of music; I could put it on anything. Q : What helped you through the nerves? Did the judges help or your friends or … A : I would say it was all me. The only person who was going to help me overcome my nervousness and my stage fright was me, and it was all in my head. I could have gone up there and had a great performance, but in my head, I was thinking to nail the song vocally, and I wasn’t really worried about performing, I guess. I never thought that the show was so much of a performing show as a singing competition. I had it in my head so much, like, “I want my vocals to be so much better than everyone else’s.” And I guess that’s all. I lost track of the fact that this is a TV show. Q : When the show came back from commercial after you were eliminated, things looked pretty emotional. What was going on? A : A lot of people were talking to me and, yeah, it was emotional, because a lot of people weren’t expecting the people that went home to go home. There’s people in the top 12 that everyone thought was going home, and then when they found out it was me, that whole day I was nervous, and people were like, “Dude, why are you nervous? You have no reason to be nervous. You’re going to be here.” And then when I got cut, they were just like, “What?!?” And a lot of people that were upset were like, “I made it and he didn’t?” Q : Do you think if you’d made it to the top 12 you would have been encouraged to cut off your mullet? A : [ Laughs. ] The stylists have already asked me if I wanted to cut it. I mean, even if they did tell me to — yeah, they probably would want me to cut it, but I wouldn’t let them cut it. I wouldn’t ever let them cut my mullet. Q : What did you think of Ellen’s constant banana metaphors? A : [ Laughs. ] Well, I mean, I know it’s all for entertainment, but it does make sense, I guess. I mean, I probably won’t be able to look at a banana the same way. Were you sad to see Alex go? Will you listen to his post-“Idol” music? Let us know! Get your “Idol” fix on MTV News’ “American Idol” page , where you’ll find all the latest news, interviews and opinions. Related Videos Check Out A Preview Of ‘Summit On The Summit: Kilimanjaro’ Meet The ‘American Idol’ Top 12 ‘American Idol’ In 60 Seconds Related Photos ‘American Idol’ Top 12 Party ‘American Idol’ Season Nine Performances

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Alex Lambert Says ‘American Idol’ Stage Fright Was ‘All In My Head’

American Idol: It’s Reigning Men [American Idol]

Well. I think it’s official. Men are more interesting and better at things than women. Sorry JezeFriskyXX.com. It’s just how things played out in the ol’ game of evolution. I’m basing this on scientific Idol Evidence, mind you. Truly credible. Last night the final eight dudes crooned for their life and, I gotta say, they did well. They did better , and were more interesting, than the ladies. It had a lot to do with song selection, but it also had to do with the fact that the Girls side of the competition is four versions of the same white lady singing and then Paige Miles wandering around and bumping into walls. Whereas the Boys team is five versions of the same white lady. VARIATIONS. If it worked for Diabelli, it should work for Idol . But here’s the real reason the girls officially lost last night. Kara Dio Gordy cried. Yes, she wept like a nincompoop after Big Mike sang his stirring Kate Bush number and it was the most ridiculous and awful thing any of us have ever seen. I was watching the show last night with an old fellow who liberated the camps during the war. He shook his head at Kara of the Gourds crying there and said “Worst damn thing I ever seen.” Lynne Curtin’s husband stopped staring at his wife in mild terror for a moment to watch Idol last night and when Kara started crying he thought This is the ugliest thing I’ve ever seen . It was very, very bad. Not that Big Mike’s performance wasn’t good. It totally was. But Kara. Kara . This is American freaking Idol , not the end of Gallipoli . You don’t cry. The singers can cry if they want I suppose. But the judges?? That is only allowed if you are Paula Abdul. And Kara, I served with Paula Abdul, I knew Paula Abdul, Paula Abdul was a friend of mine. Kara, you’re no Paula Abdul. So can it with the waterworks please. Also, Ellen? If you like Tim so much why don’t you just marry him? Did you see when she ran out and hugged Tim Urban after his emotions-lite performance? I don’t understand what she’s doing on this show. Is it some sort of weird, inscrutable sexual politics performance art? I really hope that’s what it is. So that’s why the girls lost last night. Here’s Why the Boys Won As mentioned above, Big Mike did a nice job. He sang Kate Bush’s “A Woman’s Work,” though I suppose he was really taking his inspiration from Maxwell’s version, if Randy Jackson is to be believed. And, actually, he’s not, so Big Mike was doing a Kate Bush homage last night. Normally I’ve found him to be super boring, and he still sort of is — his voice and carriage in performances are rather bland, potato buds from a box rather than mom’s homemade heartattack mashed. But he just picked such a great song. Have we ever heard that on Idol before? I really don’t think we have. Which makes it an automatic win, as long as it’s pulled off with some level of competency. So yes, it was good. Not worth blubbering and stopping the show completely and standing up and clapping robotically while mascara streams artfully down your face, but good. I don’t think Big Mike is destined to win the big dance, but this ought to guarantee him safe passage for a least a few more rounds. Carol Brady with the Carol Brady hair did well again. I don’t know. I think I kind of like him. He just sort of has this weird, interesting tone to his voice. He sounds not unlike Jennifer Coolidge’s character in A Mighty Wind . But he’s always clear and clean and crisp and seems to actually know his limits, which is something of a compliment for this particular season of Idol , for this miserable overreaching theatre troupe. Well done, Carol. I wonder if he misses his son, Johnny Bravo nee Greg. I’m sure he does. Why the Rest of Us Are Crying Oh my beloved Egghead Latino. Where did he go? There used to be a guy named Andrew Garcia who was interesting and had big Carol Channing glasses and sang fun, moody reworked covers of pop songs. I don’t know where that dude went. He hopped a plane to Biarritz. He rode a bicycle over a hill one day and no one ever saw him again. He disappeared into the abstract. Now we’ve got something else, a snatched body, an avatar. Last night there was a dark-ish cover of “Genie in a Bottle,” but it just didn’t feel right, it didn’t work. Plus, there’s an element of the grotesque in singing about getting rubbed the right way on American Idol . It’s just unpleasant. I’m sorry, Mr. Garcia. Might he go home tonight? Casey Potato Head Johnson is in danger too. I can’t even remember what he sang. It was something, y’know, strummy and croony and all that other stuff that he does, or tries to do. But he’s such a blur, so insubstantial in one’s memory. He’s like trying to remember what you did in high school. Not things that happened in high school, but what you did. How did classes work, day in, day out? What did you do on the weekends? I don’t know about you, but I can’t remember that stuff for the life of me. When I was seventeen, what did I do on a Saturday afternoon? What did Casey Johnson sing last night? I don’t know. But I’m sure both involved watching TV. Dweezil Zappa or whatever that reheated David Cook (recooked?) guy’s name is can’t really sing all that well, can he? I mean for the world he can, but for the music industry, I don’t know. He kind of overthrows it every night, doesn’t he? He’s going for stadium roar and it just comes out like a reasonably talented kid in a garage band and they’ve got the door open because it’s spring and getting warm and then a cute girl from school walks by so he tries to sound extra Into It and Emotive. But I’m just not sure America is going to want to make out with you at Mike Fenster’s party next Friday after hearing that, Dweezil. I’m just not sure that’s how it’s going to play out. The teenaged boy who sang “I’m Already There” just makes me sad — a kind of soft, sprawling sad — so I don’t really want to say anything about him. He’s got miles to go before he’s himself, I’ll just say. Urban Renewal Well, well, well. They liked it, they really liked it. After last week’s slight uptick, Tim Urban studied his recent Idol history and busted out the “Hallelujah,” Jeff Buckley edition, which served Jason Castro so well during semis two years ago. This has gone from a song that makes pond-eyed 19-year-olds who smoke too much feel deep and weary to a song that makes the souls of pimply explode-o-teens do mournful jigs. Yes being Sad is sort of in these days, like it was almost twenty years ago for a different generation I suppose, and Jason Castro sang “Hallelujah” and then Justin Timberlake sang it (very well) with another dude on the Hope for Haiti telethon thing, so it’s just very Now. So it was a clever choice on Timmy Kapowski’s part. How’d he sing that shit? Oh, well enough. It was near flat as Nebraska, not dynamic at all, but it’ll do, it’ll do. One thing that was funny and annoyed me was at the very end (you can see it above) he was like “Hahhh layyy looooooo…” and then took this breathy pause and went “Yahhhhhhhhh.” Which, like, a full separated “Yuh” is not a terribly pretty way to end a pretty song. If you go listen to professionals sing the tune, they smooth out that ending, shade it. It was sort of another little cutesy telling sign that wee Timothy Bertinelli has no idea what he’s doing. So who will go home tonight? Of the ladies I suspect it will be Lacey and Paige. Or maybe Katie instead of Lacey. Of the fellows? Well, I didn’t even mention Todrick Hall, so probably him. He sang something that Simon declared “Broadway.” Great, Simon. You watch this kid drag himself OUT of the musical theater and you keep him on the show this far and this long only to tell him, “Hey, why aren’t you in the theater?” Blergh. Other than Todrick… I dunno, dawg. Maybe the sad, Texas-evening teenager. Sigh. That poor kid. He makes me feel a little like this:

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American Idol: It’s Reigning Men [American Idol]

Michael Lynche’s ‘This Woman’s Work’ Brings Kara To Tears On ‘American Idol’

Simon Cowell dubbed it ‘the best performance we’ve had of all these live shows so far.’ By Gil Kaufman Michael Lynche Photo: Fox Praise from the “American Idol” judges is one thing, but tears? That’s when you know you’ve really nailed it. And big Michael Lynche definitely brought down the house Wednesday night (March 10) when he closed the top eight men’s live performances with a seductive, between-the-sheets cover of one of British singer Kate Bush’s most iconic tunes, “This Woman’s Work,” that made judge Kara DioGuardi openly weep. Wearing a black suit coat with a red pocket square, black tie, jeans and a white dress shirt, the brawny Lynche opened with a fragile, operatic falsetto vocalization over piano that sent chills. The choice was a bold one, as Bush is a beloved figure and the song is a tricky-to-sing modern classic has been used to dramatic effect in a number of TV shows over the years (“Felicity,” “Alias,” “Party of Five”). It was also famously covered by soul singer Maxwell on his 1997 MTV Unplugged album and later on his 2001 Now studio album, a version that clearly informed Lynche’s take on the song. Bush wrote it specifically for a sequence in the 1987 John Hughes film “She’s Having a Baby,” during which Kevin Bacon is pacing outside the delivery room where his wife is having their first child and he’s fretting about the changes they’re about to face and the rush of emotions he’s feeling. Making expert use of his breathy falsetto, Lynche, a new father whose firstborn arrived while he was toiling during Hollywood Week, wrenched every bit of emotion from the lyrics about life-changing events. “Ooh, it’s hard on the man/ Now his part is over/ Now starts the craft of the father,” he crooned in a clean, clear voice. On a night when the judges said some of the singers didn’t connect with their chosen lyrics, Lynche astutely picked a song that mirrored the tumultuous adult changes he’s going through in his personal life, helping to give the performance an added gravity and believability. As he leaned into the second verse, Lynche came out from behind the mic stand and began laying a gospel edge on the song, shaking his head and shoulders, bobbing up and down and waving his hands as if giving a Sunday sermon. With a long, sustained note on the line “Oh, darling, make it go,” Lynche provided the night’s much-needed “wow” moment and easily punched his ticket to the top 12. How good was it? DioGuardi was literally brought to tears. “I’ve never cried after hearing something like that,” she said, her voice cracking with emotion. “It’s amazing. You were amazing. And it’s so relevant for you, and I can feel it. It’s your life right now. It’s your respect for your wife, what you’ve gone through … and as a woman who doesn’t have a child, I can relate to it so much and it brought me to tears.” All Randy Jackson could say was, “Really?” telling Mike he was going to put Maxwell on notice that he should watch his back. “For everybody that doesn’t know, it was dope, it was unbelievable,” he said. “I wanna call Maxwell and tell him, ‘Yo, big Mike is knockin’ on the door, dog, be ready! But the last note? … I was like, what?” Ellen DeGeneres said it was so good it felt like the show had just begun and Lynche was suddenly the one to beat. “This was so needed tonight,” Simon Cowell said of the breath of fresh air on an otherwise-boring show. “You come out with an incredibly difficult song to sing and you 100 percent nailed it. Not just the best performance of the night, it’s the best performance we’ve had of all these live shows so far.” Get your “Idol” fix on MTV News’ “American Idol” page , where you’ll find all the latest news, interviews and opinions. Related Photos ‘American Idol’ Season Nine Performances The ‘American Idol’ Season 9 Top 24

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Michael Lynche’s ‘This Woman’s Work’ Brings Kara To Tears On ‘American Idol’

Jay Electronica Disguised His Voice To Avoid Hip-Hop Prejudice

‘I was embarrassed from being from the South,’ he tells Mixtape Daily. By Shaheem Reid Jay Electronica Photo: MTV News The O.D.: A Mixtape Daily Exclusive Hearing the commanding voice of Jay Electronica on the microphone, one probably couldn’t detect his New Orleans roots. Years ago, like many MCs from the South, Electronica experienced some hip-hop prejudice when people heard the Southern twang in his voice — so he started disguising it. “I would go somewhere — I would go to an open mic and when they heard my accent and not understand what I’m saying, it would just be a door-closer,” Jay told MTV UK on a recent trip to Europe. “I made a point in being able to speak in a certain way that I wouldn’t get the door closed on me. All of these things make me who I am now, you know. “I have to admit, you know, a few years ago, I wouldn’t have admitted this — or maybe I wouldn’t have been conscious of it in a way to admit or be embarrassed — but in my earlier years from when I first left home, I was embarrassed from being from the South,” he added. “Not in general, but as a rapper because all of the negative things that people in the States put on the South. Like, ‘The South, they’re slow. They move slow, they think slow, they’re less intelligent. They’re less exposed, they’re underexposed, they’re more sheltered.’ So as a rapper — I’ve been rapping since I was 10 years old — I always had a feeling of ‘I’m gonna show you’ because we down here doing it. Not that I was embarrassed necessarily — I don’t know if that’s the correct word — but I know that when I left home, if someone had heard my accent and heard where I was from, the door was immediately closed.” Electronica said he had to adapt and become a chameleon on the mic. While trying to break into the music industry, he moved between different cities such as New York, Atlanta and Chicago. “I kind of stiff-armed my roots for a couple of years,” the Brooklyn transplant continued of his journey. “Then my sister told me one day, ‘You know, you act like you’re ashamed of being from home.’ It was like a reality check. I checked myself. I mean, this is years ago, but now I’m at a place where I understand where I’m from. I understand my culture and I’m more proud to be from there than associate with somewhere else.” Despite trying to hide his roots early on, Jay thinks back to the early days of New Orleans hip-hop with a smile. “I’m from New Orleans and there’s a certain type of music,” he explained. “I come from a bounce culture — bounce music. You been to New Orleans a couple times, you probably heard of the bounce music. It’s a part of me; I grew up with bounce music. It’s call-and-response, it’s trance, it’s tribal, it’s communal, it’s African, it’s based in Africa … the energy of it.” For other artists featured in Mixtape Daily, check out Mixtape Daily Headlines . Related Videos Mixtape Daily: Notorious, B.I.G., Tyga

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Jay Electronica Disguised His Voice To Avoid Hip-Hop Prejudice

Crystal Bowersox’s ‘Give Me One Reason’ Dominates ‘American Idol’

‘Right now, you are the one everyone has to beat,’ Simon says after Tracy Chapman cover. By James Montgomery Crystal Bowersox Photo: Fox If her straight-outta-the-hospital performance on last week’s “American Idol” established Crystal Bowersox as the unlikely front-runner, well, her Tuesday night (March 9) performance definitely put some distance between her and the rest of the field. Miles of it. Bowersox roared though a version of Tracy Chapman’s “Give Me One Reason,” armed with an electric guitar and a newfound sense of confidence — perhaps influenced by “Idol” judge Simon Cowell’s praise of her during an appearance on Monday night’s “The Tonight Show With Jay Leno.” She positively blew away the competition, earned a much-deserved standing ovation and absolutely wowed the judges. “I need a new adjective for you; I’m sick and tired of saying you’re amazing,” Ellen DeGeneres enthused. “It was the best performance of the night.” “Now I’m starting to see what the record is you’re making,” Kara DioGuardi said, praising Bowersox’s selection of the song. “And that’s when I get really excited.” Not surprisingly, however, the biggest praise came from Cowell, who complimented her brand-new swagger and all but gave her the season-nine crown. “You are 1 million, billion percent going to be in the top 12 next week,” he said. “What you’ve got now is confidence, and I can see that, and you’re starting to believe in yourself. Right now, you are the one everyone has to beat, I’m telling you. It’s yours to lose.” The song, a mid-’90s staple and Chapman’s biggest U.S. hit to date, allowed Bowersox to show off both her big, soulful vocals and scratchy, worn-in style of guitar playing and new confidence — eyes closed, head back, smile on her face after a particularly tight vocal run. But as soon as she was finished performing it, the old Crystal returned, and she decided to sit down atop her amp to hear the judges’ verdicts. Luckily, there was no reason for her to take a seat (though it was kind of funny to see Ryan Seacrest squat down on that amp), and as each member of the judges’ table rained praise upon on her, she thanked them and laughed. Get your “Idol” fix on MTV News’ “American Idol” page , where you’ll find all the latest news, interviews and opinions. Related Photos ‘American Idol’ Season Nine Performances The ‘American Idol’ Season 9 Top 24

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Crystal Bowersox’s ‘Give Me One Reason’ Dominates ‘American Idol’

‘American Idol’ Ladies Night: Didi Benami And Crystal Bowersox Shine

Paige Miles and Katie Stevens, however, might not have done enough to make the top 12. By Gil Kaufman Didi Benami Photo: Fox With last week’s medical drama behind them, the top eight ladies took the “American Idol” stage Tuesday night (March 9) in the final performance before this year’s top 12 is chosen. In what is becoming an Adam Lambert-like bit of d