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Daughtry
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Daughtry
   
Release date: 04/03/2007

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Track Listings
1. Listen It's Not Over
2. Listen Used To
3. Listen Home
4. Listen Over You
5. Listen Crashed
6. Listen Feels Like Tonight
7. Listen What I Want - Featuring Slash
8. Listen Breakdown
9. Listen Gone
10. Listen There And Back Again
11. Listen All These Lives
12. Listen What About Now

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About the Album

For anyone who is keeping score, the female alumni of American Idol have fared much better on the charts than their male counterparts. With his self-titled debut, season five contestant Chris Daughtry threatens to even that score.

Coming out of the box with the strongest male showing since Clay Aiken's 2003 Measure of a Man, which went straight to No. 1, Daughtry is fronting a band, aptly titled Daughtry, and made an excellent first disc. Unlike some of the disappointing musical displays released by his predecessors and competitors, Daughtry has given fans a solid album with more than a dozen good reasons to bring it home.

Opening with the album's first single, "It's Not Over," Daughtry immediately shows the sound and style that earned him an offer to front the band Fuel upon his elimination from American Idol. It's a pained and powerful song that refuses to let go of a love that is slipping away and he begs for a second chance to get it right.

From the outset, it is clear that Daughtry loves to rock, and he immediately provides several great examples of his versatility. On "Used To," he serves up a delicious, catchy relationship song that has listeners singing along to the chorus by the second verse. The song looks back on a good relationship that has somehow been ignored, but he is determined to find the way back to where they used to be. It's a well-written, well-executed song, and it is just waiting for some radio airplay.

Daughtry's softer side gets the chance to shine through on some edgy ballads, the first of which is the compelling "Home." Easily related to by anyone whose work takes them on the road, this song is about being pulled in two different directions and it focuses on the relief that accompanies being able to return to the place where he feels the safest.

Daughtry is packed with several strong, radio-worthy songs, most of which were co-written or written by the singer himself. He shows differing shades of his modern rock sound, which will easily appeal to fans of bands like Nickelback and Fuel. On "Crashed," he offers an edgy love song that manages to be tough and tender at the same time. (The great news for fans is that he includes bonus acoustic cuts of "Home" and "Crashed" at the end of the disc.)

He is joined by Slash on "What I Want," another high-octane, fist-pumping love song. Daughtry barrels through this one with sheer force and the results are magnificent. He is both vulnerable and demanding, and that makes for an appealing mix. There's a bit of '80s musical leftovers seeping through on this one, but it sounds perfectly at home in the context of the rest of the disc.

On "What About Now," one of the album's final tracks, Daughtry delivers a touching song about longing for the one that he left behind. It sounds like a close cousin to Heart's "Alone", both musically and lyrically. Like much of the rest of this impressive debut, it is emotional, compelling and, in Daughtry's capable hands, completely believable.

By Paula Felps

Artist: Daughtry
Edited: No
Format: CD
Enhanced: No
Number of Discs: 1
Release Date: 04/03/2007
Shipping Weight (in pounds): 0.22
Product in Inches (L x W x H): 5.58 x 0.49 x 4.96
Assembled in Country of Origin: United States
Origin of Components: United States
Wal-Mart No.:
000000000
UPC: 0088697087572

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About the Artist

Bo Bice proved that American Idol could have a rocker as a finalist, but Chris Daughtry proved that the show could generate a successful rocker outside the context of the show. Of course, it helped that Daughtry was the polar opposite of Bice, a shaggy retro-rocker soaked in the South: bold and bald, he was the picture of a modern rocker, living by the rulebook written by Live and Fuel. These were the qualities that helped make Chris Daughtry the most successful new rock & roll singer of 2006.

Like any AmIdol finalist, Daughtry had a long run as an amateur musician. The North Carolina native -- born in Roanoke Rapids, he lived in Charlottesville, VA, before establishing himself in the Greensboro area -- began singing in local rock bands when he was 16 years old. He continued to play locally after his high-school graduation in 1998, marrying his girlfriend Deanna in 2000, a few months after the January 2000 birth of their son Griffin (he adopted Deanna's daughter from a previous marriage). Family man he may have been, but Daughtry didn't let his rock & roll dream die, as he continued to play guitar and sing in a band called Absent Element. He auditioned for Rock Star: INXS in 2005 but was rejected -- a rejection that turned out to be rather fortunate since it freed him to audition for the far more popular televised singing competition American Idol.

Daughtry was featured heavily during the show's seemingly never-ending audition rounds for two reasons: he was telegenic and he capitalized on the rocker promise of Bo Bice and Constantine Maroulis from the previous season. He was bald and handsome, he possessed a terrific smile, and his devotion to his family made for great TV. He sailed through to Hollywood and made it into the final 12, where he was hailed as a standout early on and soon seemed to be a favorite to win. Daughtry mania began to peak in March when his rendition of Fuel's "Hemorrhage (In My Hands)" caused such a sensation that rumors began to fly that Fuel wanted to hire him as their lead singer -- something that proved no rumor, as the modern rock group, savoring the new press, practically pleaded for his presence after he was voted off the show. But this was still two long months away -- two months where he continued to be one of the top draws in the season, even courting some controversy when he sang Live's arrangement for Johnny Cash's "I Walk the Line." This moody reinterpretation was misinterpreted as a Daughtry original, and on the results show he had to clarify where he learned this version. Still, this controversy paled to when he was voted off the show in May: Daughtry was one of the final four and Katharine McPhee just narrowly beat him, a result that visibly shocked the rocker. Daughtry would soon have the last laugh.

After he was kicked off of Idol, he turned down Fuel's standing offer of replacing their lead singer and set off on his own career, signing with Idol's 19 Entertainment group and RCA Records in July of 2006. By the time the album materialized in November, it had turned into a project by a band called DAUGHTRY (spelled all in capital letters) -- the band featured guitarist Jeremy Brady, guitarist Josh Steely, bassist Josh Paul, and drummer Joey Barnes, but they did not play as a band on the finished album; Brady was replaced after the album's release by Brian Craddock -- a matter of semantics overlooked by most, especially in light of the album's blockbuster success. Like many hotly anticipated albums of the SoundScan era, it debuted high on the charts but it didn't drop down quickly: it stayed in the Top Ten for month after month, as did the first single, "It's Not Over." This meant that DAUGHTRY was not only a huge hit by Idol standards, it was one of the few hit rock albums -- period -- in 2006. DAUGHTRY didn't debut at number one, but it climbed to the top in January 2007 (granted, it only sold about 65,000 copies the week it was at number one, but that's still an impressive feat) and stayed in the Top Ten well into the new year, as did the single "It's Not Over." By February, it was evident that his popularity eclipsed those of his American Idol rivals Taylor Hicks and Katharine McPhee. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide

Information provided by Macrovision Corporation © 2009. All Rights Reserved.
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