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  • The X Factor USA Recap: Season 3 – And Then There Were 3

    X Factor usa recap

    You have to hand it to the X Factor producers. They were able to stretch a show with just three acts left who were performing three times each, all the way up to the two hour mark. They sure stretched that first hour out, getting in just three full performances. But it was good TV.

    One of the things they do well is produce compelling human interest packages. It’s one thing to produce a talent show and it’s another to make people care about things they didn’t know they cared about. And it sounds like they’ll be back next year which is a good thing since this season was so excellent. The question is if Simon Cowell will have the same role that he’s had since the beginning of the US version of the show.

    We’re going to do this a bit differently than we’ve done this season. Who deserves to win? And who is going to win.

    Let’s get to the X Factor USA recap.

    Who should win?

    X Factor USA recap
    Via their Twitter page
    Everyone should know my love for Sierra by now. She’s all that and a bag of chips. While I jokingly say things like Alex doesn’t deserve Sierra and how when they break up I have dibs, he truly is the steak of the group. She’s the sizzle. But from the beginning of this show until now, she’s improved so much that if she were a solo act, I still think she’d be the front runner to win the show. She’s that magnetic.

    They also smartly performed Say Something which reminded everyone how their first performance of the same song was the best performance all season. They reminded folks who was boss.

    Carlito Olivero is the obviously not in the same class of singer that the other two acts are. But does he need to be? He probably doesn’t need to be now that he’s in the final three. I thought it would catch up with him before the finals, but his charisma carried him. He’s also clearly a hard worker. The man nearly sweats as much as James Brown in his prime. It’s all about the female vote. If he kills it with them, he could definitely win. But it doesn’t mean he deserves it.

    Jeff Gutt is also very deserving. I feel like Jeff wins last season running away and gives Melanie Amaro a helluva run on season one. He just has Alex & Sierra in front of him. But he also has a fantastic story. He was too big of a downer for me early on and while he has opened up his personality somewhat, there’s still some dark edges there. Will that hurt him? I think it will.

    I’m leaning Alex & Sierra with Jeff Gutt on their heels when it comes to who should win.

    Who will win?

    I think it comes down to a few things.

    1. Do the female voters love Sierra enough?
    It seems that they do. While the haters may be out there, I haven’t really seen them. I don’t think she did anything to irritate the young female voter on Wednesday, she and Alex are probably okay with the females.

    2. Is Carlito just cooler than everyone else?
    This is still a popularity contest. And you have to admit that Carlito is a cool dude. His performance with Prince Royce on Wednesday’s show wasn’t the greatest performance of all-time, but he looked like he belonged on stage. Now, I don’t really know Prince Royce’s work other than the popular cover of Stand By Me, but Carlito wasn’t overshadowed by him and belonged.

    3. Will Jeff’s tears overcome?
    I’m not sure if this was strategic or not, but Jeff Gutt cried his eyes out. He showed love for his mentor Kelly Rowand by giving her a photo of them together. He was cut previously. He does it for his son. His son gives him inspiration. If you’re looking to vote for someone based on story, Jeff has to be your guy. But to people like me, it came off a little heavy handed and I found myself a slightly lesser fan. It’s not because I’m cold-hearted. It just seemed a bit strategic, even if it wasn’t.

    Measuring all of those things, I still think Alex & Sierra win the entire thing. But if they don’t, I can see Carlito sneaking in. And if he does, we riot.

  • Rest in Peace, Ray Price…

    Rest in Peace, Ray Price…

    A popular country legend has died. Rest in Peace, Ray Price…

    On Sunday afternoon, I was watching a movie on CMT when I noticed a banner across the bottom of the screen that read that country legend Ray Price had died at age 87. I immediately remembered his crossover country pop hit from 1970, “For the Good Times”, which I had heard many times over the years. I posted about Price’s death on Facebook and a friend later said that Price’s death was a rumor. It turned out that it was true Price’s death was a rumor, but only for a few more hours. Ray Price died yesterday at his home in Mount Pleasant, Texas. He was 87 years old and had been suffering from pancreatic cancer. He would have been 88 on January 12, 2014.

    Price was well-known for a career that spanned almost 40 years. He had a couple of big hits in the 1950s in “Crazy Arms” and “Heartaches By The Number”.


    Ray Price performs “Crazy Arms” and “Heartaches By The Number” live, well after they were hits.

    Ray Price considered Hank Williams a mentor and they toured together during the 50s. When Williams died at age 29 in 1953, Ray Price took over his band. According to the Los Angeles Times, Price also came up with what was later dubbed the “Ray Price shuffle”. Early country music songs often emphasized the second and fourth beats of a measure. Price asked his bass player to play each beat evenly, which changed the way his music sounded. The band thought it sounded odd, but the change proved to be popular with listeners. Price had a hit that was on the chart for 45 weeks!

    Ray Price also notably helped launch the careers of several country singers. Willie Nelson, Johnny Paycheck, Roger Miller, and Johnny Bush were all once members of his band, the Cherokee Cowboys. Indeed, it was Willie Nelson who broke the news of Ray Price’s death to me last night, just as I was about to go to sleep. Okay, it was Willie Nelson’s Facebook page that broke the news, which is probably run by someone who works with him. But still, it was pretty obvious that Price had earned a place of respect among plenty of great singers in popular country music.

    I will admit that when Ray Price was really popular, I either wasn’t born or wasn’t interested in country music. But there is one song, written by Kris Kristofferson, which I will always associate with the late singer. That would be the gentle break up ballad, “For The Good Times”…


    Ray Price sings “For The Good Times” live

    There’s something really touching and sweet about this song. The lyrics are comforting and kindly, even though they are about a couple parting ways. The melody is lovely, too. “For The Good Times” resonated with a lot of audiences and was a huge hit. It’s one of those classic songs that will always be in style.

    He also sang a beautiful version of “Danny Boy”, a song that is near and dear to a lot of people, especially those of us with Celtic heritage.


    This song is paired with a lovely video.

    And here, he sings the classic “Faded Love” with Willie Nelson.


    I never knew they did this together, but I like it…

    Ray Price lived a long and fruitful life and he leaves behind quite a remarkable legacy. I hope wherever he is right now, he is at peace. I am sure that forevermore, he will be remembered “for the good times”…

  • A review of Pat Benatar’s Between a Heart and a Rock Place

    A review of Pat Benatar’s Between a Heart and a Rock Place

    Between A Heart and a Rock Place
    Between A Heart and a Rock Place

    With a career spanning decades, Pat Benatar is one of rock’s leading ladies. Here’s a review of Pat Benatar’s Between A Heart and a Rock Place.

    I have enjoyed Pat Benatar’s powerhouse vocals ever since I was a young girl. I was introduced to her music by FM radio and my older sister, Sarah, who happened to own a copy of Benatar’s 1980 album, Crimes of Passion, on vinyl. That album has the distinction of being the very first one I ever purchased with my own money. I bought it at a local discount store, having walked there all by myself. I took the record home and played it over and over again. Pat Benatar’s music was a big part of the soundtrack of my youth. I was excited when I saw her 2010 memoir Between a Heart and a Rock Place for sale on Amazon.com. I managed to finish it within a couple of days.

    Benatar starts at the beginning, writing about her upbringing in Lindenhurst, Long Island in a close-knit Polish-Irish family. She took to music early and caught the attention of choir teachers in her local school district. Because she had an extraordinary voice from an early age, she took voice lessons. She set her sights on attending Juilliard and becoming an opera singer. Her voice was supposedly not unlike Julie Andrews’. But then Pat fell in love with her first husband, Dennis Benatar, and temporarily abandoned her music dreams in favor of a brief stint in college. She decided she’d teach sex ed.

    Dennis Benatar was a draftee in the Army and when Pat married him, she became an Army wife. She was moved to South Carolina and Virginia and she eventually took jobs working in banks. She was good at the work, but still wanted to sing. After seeing Liza Minnelli perform at the Richmond Coliseum, Pat’s desire to be a singer was rekindled. She took a job as a singing waitress in Richmond. Later, when Dennis got out of the Army, they moved back to New York and Pat started singing regularly at a club called Catch A Rising Star.

    It wasn’t long before Pat Benatar’s star began to rise. She found a manager and assembled a band. She recorded some songs and soon met the man who would become her star guitarist and husband, Neil Giraldo. Pat Benatar refers to him as “Spyder”. Though their relationship was initially professional, Pat eventually divorced Dennis Benatar and married Spyder. They have two daughters, Haley and Hana, and have been married since 1982.

    One thing I like to do before and after I read a book is check out what other people have to say about them. Many folks on Amazon.com seemed to think Pat Benatar’s life story is dull and boring. I didn’t feel that way at all. It’s true that as rock stars go, Pat Benatar has led a pretty straight-laced lifestyle. She doesn’t smoke, drink, do drugs, or have random sex with other celebrities. She doesn’t have a lot of juicy gossip to share with readers. What she does have is a story about her time pioneering rock music as a woman. Back in the dark ages of the 1980s, there weren’t a whole lot of female rock stars. Benatar was expected to be sexy and sultry, even though she wasn’t really like that. She had to deal with a lot of sexism.

    Benatar writes a lot about her dealings with her first label, Chrysalis, which was co-founded by Briton Terry Ellis. I was interested in reading about Ellis because I read Ray Coleman’s 1994 book The Carpenters: The Untold Story, which revealed that Ellis had dated Karen Carpenter. Coleman wrote a lot about their relationship and why it eventually failed. I got the impression that Terry Ellis was “fun” and liked to go out on the town. Pat Benatar’s comments about Ellis were far from complimentary. They had a strictly business relationship and Ellis apparently overworked her and treated her like a sex object. He even told her that people don’t go to a Pat Benatar concert to hear her sing! What?!!

    Aside from the business aspect of her music career, Benatar also writes about working with her husband, who is quite the musical genius. She comes across as very down-to-earth and family oriented. I got the sense that I would like Pat Benatar as a person. Benatar also includes color photos, which were fun to look at. I particularly enjoyed the photo of her daughters, born nine years apart. They look like they could be twins! Benatar was a very devoted mother to them and writes of getting them tickets to see Miley Cyrus, N-Sync, and other teen oriented acts. She’s charming as she explains that just like every other mom, she’s been to her share of teeny bopper concerts!

    Benatar also has a special love for a place in Hawaii. She writes lovingly of Hana, a small town in Maui, where she and Spyder got married and eventually built a home. Her description of the place makes me want to visit. It sounds heavenly.

    I really enjoyed Between a Heart and a Rock Place and would recommend it to anyone who likes to read memoirs about rock stars. Don’t read it expecting to read juicy gossip, though. Read it to learn about an extraordinary and dynamic woman’s rise to the top in a male oriented business. Pat Benatar is a great role model for young women. I’m proud to endorse her book.


    Pat Benatar sings “Heartbreaker” in 2001.