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Archive for the ‘David Cook’ Category

posted by Administrator on May 22

David Cook, a bartender from Missouri, was declared the winner of the U.S. singing competition show “American Idol” Wednesday night.

He beat out his fellow finalist David Archuleta for the honor.

“I am absolutely at a loss for words,” Cook said, tearing up as he learned the news. “This is amazing. Thank you.”

The show’s two-hour Season 7 finale featured performances by the finalists, the season’s castoffs and recording stars Bryan Adams, Donna Summer, ZZ Top, George Michael, Graham Nash, OneRepublic, Carrie Underwood and the Jonas Brothers.

Jimmy Kimmel stopped by to poke fun of host Ryan Seacrest and judges Paula Abdul, Randy Jackson and Simon Cowell, while actors Robert Downey Jr., Ben Stiller and Jack Black acted as backup singers in a virtual performance of “Midnight Train to Georgia” with Gladys Knight.

More than 97.5 million votes were cast for the finale, Usmagazine.com said.

Seacrest said on the show that Cook won by 12 million votes.

posted by Administrator on May 21

The Arch triumphed on “American Idol,” but this is still a democracy, after all.

David Archuleta brought his A-game on Tuesday’s final sing-off, earning the praise of Simon Cowell, who called it a “knockout” performance.

If it were up to Cowell, he’d hand the doe-eyed teen from Murray, Utah, the “Idol” title right now. Archuleta out-sang competitor David Cook and has been the one to beat since the beginning of the Fox show’s seventh season.

Cook, 25, of Blue Springs, Mo., delivered solid performances, rocking and emotional as usual — but didn’t measure up to his 17-year-old rival. Archuleta performed as if it was his last gig on earth, singing the right songs for his smooth voice, hitting the right notes and squeezing the right amount of emotion from each lyric.

And yet, America’s votes would decide. Results will be announced on Wednesday’s finale.

Each David performed three songs in the live telecast, which opened with Michael Buffer (”Let’s get ready to rumble!”) introducing the finalists, who came bounding out in boxing robes and gloves.

Three rounds later, Cowell made his traditional prediction:

“You came out here tonight to win,” Cowell said to Archuleta, “and what we have witnessed is a knockout.”

In the first round, Cook and Archuleta received stellar reviews; Cook for his rendition of U2’s “I Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking For,” and Archuleta for the Elton John anthem “Don’t Let the Sun Go Down on Me.” All the same, Cowell declared Archuleta the winner.

Cowell also handed the second round to Archuleta, whose performance of the inspirational ballad “In This Moment” impressed the judge more than Cook’s take on the power ballad “Dream Big.”

For the third and final round, Archuleta went back to the well: he closed the show with a repeat of his version of John Lennon’s “Imagine,” which cemented him as a favorite earlier in the competition. Cook, who chose a song he hadn’t yet performed in Collective Soul’s “The World I Know,” didn’t stand a chance against that.

It pays to pick the right song on “Idol,” especially in the final number, and Cook might have sealed his loss with the stale ’90s tune that Cowell called “completely and utterly the wrong song choice.”

Maybe it wouldn’t hurt Cook to finish second. Several runners-up — unburdened by the pressure of winning the show — have had more commercial success than some “Idol” champs. The best example: Chris Daughtry, who placed fourth in season five, yet came out on top when his debut album out-sold winner Taylor Hicks’ post-”Idol” disc by a landslide.

Album flops aside, the goofy, homespun Hicks charmed viewers into rooting for him and proved the show is more than a singing competition: it’s a popularity contest, too.

And it’s easy to root for baby-faced Archuleta, whose father, Jeff, stirred up “Idol” drama this year with reports that he was too heavily involved in his son’s rehearsals. That controversy could make fans more sympathetic to the shy, sweet singer.

Archuleta and Cook exchanged compliments during the live telecast.

“This guy’s awesome,” Archuleta said about Cook, who called The Arch “consistently nice.”

“As far as I’m concerned,” Cook said, “competition’s over and we’re just having fun.”

Source: AP News

posted by Administrator on May 7

It’s Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Week, otherwise known as David Cook Immunity Week, though his Duran Duran cover is nothing special. He suffers partly for reasons beyond his control from a weird sound mix that makes him seem like he’s almost singing a capella, partly because he doesn’t have the raw sexual stage presence this song needs. But also, singing in something close to his genre means he can’t do the David Cook thing of radically changing the song’s arrangement. Maybe he’d have been better off with Paul Anka Week.

— by James Poniewozik

posted by AINews on Apr 22

david-cook-at-american-idol-partyAlthough America has yet to choose its 2008 “Idol,” contestant David Cook has the No.1 downloaded album on Amazon.com, FoxNews.com says.

Cook released his CD “Analog Heart” in 2006 and although it failed to shoot him to stardom back then, downloads of it beat Mariah Carey’s “E=MC2″ on the Web site this past weekend, Fox columnist Roger Friedman notes.

It marks the first time an “American Idol” contestant has marketed a product before the end of the season and murks up the show’s stated goal of making stars of undiscovered artists, Friedman wrote.

While fingering Cook as a “ringer,” the columnist gave him props for possibly being smarter than judge Simon Cowell by releasing his music digitally — thus possibly avoiding the mandatory first refusal right all “Idols” are required to give to recording giant BMG.