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Category: Michael Sarver

An Idol Tracker's journey ends

August 4, 2009 |  2:33 am

N542386411_2181456_2682644 Forgive me for interrupting regularly scheduled Idol news with some personal business, but I have an announcement to make to Idol Tracker readers. Tuesday will be my last day with the L.A. Times and thus my stint as the L.A. Times' Idol Tracker comes to an end.

It has been an amazing three years covering the most important spectacle in the history of the world.  Three years ago, when we started the Show Tracker blog, I volunteered to write the occasional review of the occasional episode of "Idol," never imagining my life would disappear down the "Idol" rabbit hole.  But then I came face to face with the incredible stories of these young people, these warriors of song, who every year risked the worst fate any of us can imagine -- public humiliation before tens of millions -- all for a shot at their dreams.  I also got to meet the incredibly talented group of people who put the show together and on so many occasions was allowed to peek backstage at what goes into creating a goliath like "Idol."

So many memories from three years on the "Idol" beat.  Come with me now on a little stroll down Memory Boulevard, as we visit an Idol Tracker's greatest days, with a few of the pictures and videos I've snapped over the years.  Ah, yes, I remember it well ....

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Ann Powers: The Idols wave their hands at Staples

July 17, 2009 |  8:18 am
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Every "American Idol" season is a lively, long argument about what matters most in contemporary music. Some think it's vocal talent; others, personality, an image that startles or a crooked smile that helps fans relate. People vote their loyalties and create an intriguing snapshot of the zeitgeist.

This year's American Idols Live tour, which brought the top 10 finalists to Staples Center on  Thursday, reflected all of those aspects of stardom but ultimately focused on something more specific: body language. Bent on proving that they deserved the fame and glory toward which "Idol" points them, Adam Lambert, Kris Allen and the others posed and pointed and swayed and shook, forming a concordance of arena pop moves.

They sang too, of course, all well, even in the lower rungs of hierarchy. The top four contestants -- winner Allen, season sensation Lambert and runners-up Danny Gokey and Allison Iraheta -- each easily found a comfort zone and excelled within it. Everyone in the crowd knew that would happen; this was a season of well-defined types (yes, even the unassuming Allen is one: the Quiet Surprise), all working at a fairly sophisticated level.

'American Idol' live

So Gokey did his inspirational thing, walking the line between gruff soul and country crooning, and Iraheta rocked like a whirlwind. Allen displayed his musical competence and added extra guts. Lambert emerged in a mist, armed with a throat full of gorgeous, impossible notes, ready to slay the ghosts of all who'd come before him.

But let's get back to the gestures. Group numbers and choreography were fairly scarce in this production. Yet everybody seemed to have a trademark move, and to let his or her performance spin out from it. Pointing was a favorite. Michael Sarver, amiable in the lucky-to-be-there opening spot, had the most aggressive index finger; for the big-voiced but somewhat bland Texan, it offered a way to gain connection. Anoop Desai, who's nicely evolving into a heartthrob, made a kind of dance of his salutes, clutching his chest and reaching outward to distribute some love.

Megan Joy, who was reportedly under the weather last night, has worked up some dizzy little hand flips to go with her patented shimmy. Her crackly alto has an appealing tone, but she's still unsure onstage -- she smacked herself in the face with her microphone at one point. Lil Rounds delivered the urban hits she favors with confidence and verve but busted a few really strange dance moves, seeming more like a kickboxer than the next Beyoncé.

The two performers whose hands mostly stay busy at the piano still managed to work in some pointing, including at each other. Matt Giraud and Scott MacIntyre have very different strengths but were paired for a rendition of Billy Joel's "Tell Her About It" that was the night's silliest moment.

Individually, each did better. Giraud was relaxed and masterful covering the soulful standards "Hard to Handle" and "Georgia on My Mind." MacIntyre stressed vocal sweetness with singer-songwriterly choices and created his own semaphore: a slowly raised open hand that followed his vocal ascents.

Gokey also mostly pointed upward, which made sense, since he turned his mini-set into a revival meeting. Failing to convince with a couple of up-tempo numbers, the recent widower invoked his lost wife and used two Rascal Flatts songs -- "What Hurts the Most," one of his big numbers during the season, and "My Wish" -- to whip the crowd into a nondenominational lather, shouting phrases like, "Do we got any dreamers in the room?" and using that voice, scratchy like a beloved blanket, to soothe and inspire.

His performance was the night's biggest revelation, because it laid out a clear possible future for the devout Wisconsinite: praise and worship superstar.

After Gokey's brief foray into the megachurch, Lambert emerged to a firestorm of fans' screams and took the evening somewhere that felt distinctly more dangerous -- in the best way. His brief star turn wasn't a revelation, since it's been widely acknowledged that the young Angeleno is a great in the making. But it was extremely satisfying.

Reprising several "Idol" high points (including the inevitable "Mad World") and adding a David Bowie medley that started in an old-time music hall and ended at a rave, Lambert moved from pose to pose, gesture to gesture, with the poise of an artist who's absorbed the history and meaning of every eye flicker. But his favorite was a bump and grind that was both playful and entirely serious.

Lambert also reprised his duet with Iraheta on Foghat's "Slow Ride," which gave the teenage firebrand her own chance at a trademark move: She'd throw her hands over her head in wonder every time her friend hit a particularly amazing note. During her solo spot, Iraheta didn't pose much. She stomped and grinned widely as she belted out songs by Pink, Janis Joplin and Heart. She also played guitar on one song, as if to make it clear that she's no pop tart. Her punchy vocals weren't always perfect, but the rough patches only added to their appeal.

It seemed that all these strong turns would make for a letdown at the end of the night.  Allen was always the underdog on "Idol," and he might have stayed that way in the postseason. But he made a case for his own victory by playing a different game. He took on the trickiest pose of all -- that of the natural -- and made it work.

Beginning with the gentle reworking of Kanye West's "Heartless" that he'd borrowed from the Fray, Allen kept himself occupied with first guitar, then piano, then guitar again. He sang more aggressively than he had pursuing his prize but also showed himself to be having fun. We'd had rock as release, soul (and country) as religion and rock as theater and erotic game; now Allen gave us rock as plain, unadorned fun.

He ended his set with "Hey Jude," and another performer taking on the Beatles might have seemed audacious. In Allen's hands, it was pure singalong, better because it was shared. If he'd had a pose, it would have been arms wide open.

--Ann Powers

Photo: Adam Lambert: Credit: Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times


Tacoma farewell: The Idols Live Tour rides off into the sunset

July 8, 2009 |  4:29 am

RG - American Idol 7-5-09 (2)

On the second night of the American Idols Live: 2009 Tour, the 10 were settling comfortably into their lives as wandering rock stars.   At 3 p.m., the day was gray, frigid and windy outside the Tacoma Dome.  The subdued crowd of a hundred or so leaned in eerie silence against the metal barricade as Megan Joy walked down the row singing autographs and posing for pictures. 

Inside, the ancient Dome seemed like it was just waking up, a universe away from the frenzied hub of activity around the tour kickoff at the Paul Allen-built Portland stadium.  In a cafeteria-like room set up with round tables and folding chairs, half the Idols came to visit the four members of the press corps on hand.

Building up to Show 2, gone already was the repressed frenzy of anticipation the Idols felt in the hours before opening night.  Now that it was over, nearly all confessed to fighting back serious attacks of nerves, either from excitement or fear, in the countdown to Sunday night’s show.  The giddiness that followed opening night seemed to have led the Idols' emotional roller coaster on a long loop-the-loop; the group reported staying up until 5 a.m. Monday, despite fatigue, to celebrate their their bow.



On Tuesday morning, the tour buses made their maiden voyage, ferrying the group on the three-hour drive from Portland to Tacoma.  Most reported sleeping through their first trip, and there were many bleary eyes to be found in the press room, although the irrepressible high jinks of Matt Giraud and Danny Gokey were evident in full force.

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The tour opens - live from Portland

July 6, 2009 |  4:10 am

For  millions, or tens of millions who watch American Idol only on television the Idols Live tour is an afterthought to the game.  The journey from audition to finale is a complete arc, with from which each year one or maybe two emerge alive to continue straight to the very last stage - pop super-stardom.

But for the stars of American Idol, the past is merely prologue and life began today in Portland, Oregon when free of the competition, of being pitted against each other, of the judges cold glares and Angel of Death Seacrest's icy embrace, it is at last just about the music and performing for an audience.  And a fantastically vast audience, filling the Trailblazers arena with uncontainable enthusiasm.

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'Idols Live Tour' descends on Portland, Ore.

July 5, 2009 |  3:08 am

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Portland, Ore., is not a city that makes a big fuss about itself. From its single-driving-lane streets to its bicycling and microbrewery culture to its gentle hills and ever-present greenery, pleasant, livable, amiable Portland gives off a constant sense of understatement, of a city whose charms are best enjoyed at a slow meander -- not from the rear view of a speeding Ferrari.  

This weekend "American Idol" came to town. On Sunday night, the 50-city "Idols Live Tour" kicks off at the Rose Garden Arena, and all week long the goliath in entertainment has occupied the city.

Not that you'd necessarily notice at first glance. A hotel bellman, asked whether he had seen the Idols, nodded that he had; they'd been out and about for the last week -- in town rehearsing. Asked whether the Idols were mobbed when they went out, he shook his head. "I guess people in Portland don't watch much TV," he said.

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VIDEO: Hanging with the Idols at tour rehearsal

June 24, 2009 |  6:25 pm

In two weeks, the Top 10 contestants of Season 8 of “American Idol” will climb aboard buses for the final rite of an Idol’s passage: the 50-city concert tour set to kick off in Portland, Ore., on July 5. For the Idols, the tour represents not only a chance to play rock star before packed arenas, but the biggest paydays of their young careers, with checks reportedly over $100,000 coming their way for the four months of labor.
But before the road, there are songs to arrange, dance moves to choreograph, wardrobes to fit, and a few last moments of peace before the storm begins anew.

Last week, a giddy first-day-of-school feeling reigned over lunch at the “Idols’” Burbank rehearsal space, where the 10 convened for their first group rehearsal. Over beef kabobs and chocolate cake, which they enjoyed on Formica tabletops in a fluorescent-lit break room, the mood was cheerful and hyper as this year’s winner, Kris Allen, along with Megan Joy, Matt Giraud, Michael Sarver, Anoop Desai and Lil Rounds chatted, breaking sporadically into Journey’s ubiquitous “Don’t Stop Believing.”

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VIDEO: 'American Idol' finale, finalists and more

May 20, 2009 |  8:45 pm
Get your "American Idol" fix with exclusive interviews, backstage access and more.

           
    
    
   
    
   
 

Visiting with 'Idol's' fashion guru Miles Siggins

May 19, 2009 | 11:54 pm

IMG_1329 On Sunday morning, just over 48 hours before the finale, the CBS lot which once housed the Idoldome is eerily quiet. The storied "American Idol" set has been dismantled and moved downtown to the stage of the Nokia Theatre, taking along with it almost all of the legions of crew members who service the production round the clock during "Idol" season.

The soundstage where  millions saw the rise of Adam Lambert and Kris Allen now sits cold, dark and barren.


Several stories up, however, down a long hallway, one man still labors on the final preparations of the season. The person  --  apart from the contestants -- whose work is the most discussed, analyzed, criticized and imitated of anyone on the show is men's stylist Miles Siggins, who sits among racks and racks of suits, sweaters and distressed jeans, sifting through his notes. 


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'American Idol' tour presale has started. What are you waiting for?

May 8, 2009 | 12:51 pm

Top 10 The 'American Idol' tour does not kick off for another two months, but that's no reason you can't get your ticket now. Presale begins today. Just go to ticketmaster and type in the password Idols2009.

And if you don't get around to buying tickets at the presale today, don't fret. The real sale begins tomorrow.

The Season 8 American Idols Live! Tour, debuts in Portland, Ore. on July 5, and then travels to 50 North American cities.  The entire top 10 -- Danny Gokey, Adam Lambert, Kris Allen, Allison Iraheta, Anoop Desai, Lil Rounds, Scott MacIntyre, Matt Giraud, Megan Joy and Michael Sarver -- are confirmed to appear.

Did any of you attend the 'Idol' tour last season. If so, were there any standout performances?

-- Stephanie Lysaght

Related: 

Mark your calendar: 'American Idol' tour tix on sale May 9

Photo: Fox


The top 10 invade your town; 'American Idols Live!' tour dates announced

April 16, 2009 | 12:07 pm

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Break out your calendars, America, because on May 9, 2009, tickets for season 8's "American Idols Live!" tour go on sale. Beginning July 5, 2009 in Portland, Oregon your top 10 songbirds will warble, caw, and belt their way across the country that chose them. L.A.-dwellers will have to wait until July 16 to see Adam Lambert, Allison Iraheta, Anoop Desai, Danny Gokey, Kris Allen, Lil Rounds, Matt Giraud, Megan Joy, Michael Sarver and Scott MacIntyre perform at the Staples Center, the Los Angeles arena that hosts everybody from the Lakers to Britney Spears.

More ticket info is available on ticketmaster.com, americanidol.com and aeglive.com.

"American Idol" creator and executive producer Simon Fuller, for one, is giddy about the impending tour. “American Idol gives undiscovered talent the once in a lifetime opportunity to perform live every week on the show and now the tour will give America the unique chance to see these newly discovered stars performing in their own home town,” he said in a statement.

Which "Idol" contestant are you most looking forward to seeing live and in person?

-- Stephanie Lysaght

Photo credit: FOX



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