Wednesday, December 2, 2009

In Your Face, Simon Cowell

(Bloggers Note: I've been away for a while. Between moving to a new apartment and a busted MacBook, it has been hard to find time to blog, but I'm back. There are quite a few new posts coming including reviews of Sandra Bullock's career-reviving performance in The Blind Side, Adam Lambert's surprising debut album, Leona Lewis' much-improved sophomore record, and the emotionally gut-wrenching Precious. However, I'm marking my comeback with Allison Iraheta's Just Like You.)

If Kelly Clarkson and P!nk had a love child, her name would be Allison Iraheta. The fourth-place finisher on American Idol's eighth season, the 17-year-old Iraheta has turned out an album (Just Like You) that showcases vocal pipes similar to those of the original American Idol and vulnerability identical to that of the used-to-be-pink-haired rocker.

Iraheta opens her debut effort with the rip-roaring "Friday I'll Be Over U," penned by Max Martin, who also wrote Clarkson's "Since U Been Gone" and P!nk's "So What." "Friday" is the ideal lead single for Just Like You as Iraheta's husky, raw voice takes center stage over fist-pumping guitar beats.

Iraheta, often falsely accused by Simon Cowell during her American Idol stint of lacking charisma, oozes personality throughout Just Like You. Whether she's lamenting an obnoxious boyfriend on the tongue-in-cheek "Robot Love" or giving advice on the moving "Don't Waste the Pretty," there is no doubt that Iraheta connects with her material -- and has a blast while doing it.

The album veers slightly off track with the forgettable "Pieces" and "Just Like You" and the juvenile "D is for Dangerous." However, Iraheta comes back with a vengeance on the album's second half. She embodies heartbreak as she belts, "I'm still breathing / Don't you think I'm not because you're leaving / I'm moving up and away" on "Still Breathing." Her voice soars on "No One Else," a track that P!nk ironically co-wrote. Near the album's conclusion, she sheds all comparisons and tears through the fantastic, dance-floor-worthy "Beat Me Up."

Just Like You is one of the best freshman album's to come from an American Idol alumnus. The red-haired rocker sounds impeccable, and there isn't a vocal imperfection to be found. Though in order to achieve the pop super-stardom of Clarkson and P!nk, she needs to differentiate herself on her next album. However, we should expect great things from Iraheta. After all, she is only 17.

Grade: A-

Download It: "Friday I'll Be Over U," "Beat Me Up," "Still Breathing," "No One Else"
Ditch It: "D is for Dangerous"

1 comment:

Brian @ PWYJudges said...

Great to have you blogging again! When it comes to Idols, I usually wait for your review to decide whether or not to invest :-)