āAmerican Idolā recap: Now itās down to three
Thereās been a valedictory tinge to everything on āAmerican Idolā this season. Of course there has. It is the final season. (What? You didnāt know?) But this week it was clear that the end was especially near. Next week, itās all over and 15 seasons of āIdolā ā some more memorable than others -- will start receding in the rear-view mirror.
At the outset of Thursday nightās show, on which Keith Urban performed, Ryan Seacrest, our trusty touchstone through it all, noted that the evening was especially ābittersweet.ā
It was āthe last time we do our show live from our Hollywood stage,ā he explained. āThe moving trucks are here. We officially haul everything across town to the famed Dolby Theaterā ā famed, so āIdol, so Seacrest -- āfor our last week of āAmerican Idol.ā I cannot believe it, but Iām glad youāre here.ā
COMPLETE COVERAGE: Saying farewell to the competition show that changed television
Aw, Ryan. Weāre glad youāre here too, and that youāve been there all along. But thereās no need for maudlin goodbyes just yet. Thereāll be time enough for them next week, during the showās three-night finale, when a host of āIdolā alums ā from the fiercely successful to the sadly forgotten ā will appear to bid the show adieu and the final winner will be crowned.
And speaking of the final winner, we got one step closer to that Thursday night, when one member of the Top 4 ā MacKenzie Bourg ā was sent home, leaving just Dalton Rapattoni, Trent Harmon and LaāPorsha Renae to duke it out for the final āIdolā crown, as the Top 3.
When it come down to Bourg and Renae in contention for the final Top 3 seat, Bourg seemed ready to throw it to her no matter what happened ā alarming Seacrest and charming the rest of us with his insistence that Renaeās remarkable talent get its due. Ultimately, Renae did prevail, and Bourg offered upbeat final remarks about how far heād come, how much his life had changed and how the support of his fans made him feel as if he hadnāt lost ā and his connection to his fellow contestants made him feel as if he had āalready won.ā
āSuch a good dude,ā Seacrest said, echoing everyoneās thoughts.
But that didnāt happen before all four singers made their āhometown heroā visits back to see their families, friends and the wildly cheering members of their communities and were made aware of the extent of their sudden fame and potential impact.
Rapattoni tearily shared that heād been struggling to get people in his hometown of Dallas āto listen toā him and his music, āand now they are.ā Harmon said that giving a free concert for his townspeople, in Amory, Miss., was the realization of a long-held dream. Both singers seemed moved by the attention but not yet to have a clear sense of what to do with it ā although Rapattoni often discusses his difficulty overcoming the challenges of bipolar disorder and may want to serve as an example to others.
Bourg, whoās from Lafayette, La., used the opportunity to visit children in the same hospital that treated him for a life-threatening illness when he was a kid, wishing to offer hope. Renae, of McComb, Miss., spoke at a shelter for women who had suffered domestic violence and said she wanted to help them heal and to provide a bridge for members of her community to come together and rise above deep-seated divisions brought by racism. āIf they could come together over little olā me ā¦,ā she said.
All four singers performed in the first round of the evening, in which they dedicated a song to their hometowns. Then, after Bourg got the news that he would not proceed, the Top 3 singers each performed a song chosen for them by the show mentor Scott Borchetta and another selected by the judges ā some more successfully than others.
Hereās how the eveningās performances played out:
MacKenzie Bourg
Round 1: His hometown dedication, Leonard Cohenās āHallelujah,ā was moving and sweet. Urban called it āsuperb.ā Jennifer Lopez said he had played to his strengths and called the performance āclassic MacKenzie.ā Harry Connick Jr. said it showed how far he had come yet proved he had still stayed true to his roots.
Dalton Rapattoni
Round 1: While his hometown dedication, Blue Octoberās āCalling You,ā was maybe a little esoteric for āIdol,ā Rapattoni explained that he had a personal connection to the band, also from Texas, and considered one of its members, also bipolar, a āgood buddy.ā Lopez commended the āfreedomā with which he had performed. Connick continued to express appreciation for the way Rapattoni conveyed lyrics. Urban said Rapattoni had shown āconcentrationā and āfocusā and said he had done āthe best Daltonizationā of that song he could.
Round 2: Borchetta gave Rapattoni Bruce Springsteenās āDancing in the Dark,ā and Rapattoni took ownership of it like a boss, giving the song his own retro flair. (Does anyone else get Billy Idol from this guy?) Lopez was moving around in her chair so much she nearly jumped out of her dress ā and said sheād been ready to jump onstage and be the Courteney Cox to Rapattoniās Bruuuuce. She said Rapattoniās performance had made the song sound āfresh and new all over again.ā Connick was reminded of ā80s English New Wave and gave Rapattoni a backhanded compliment when he told him that although he was a āgood singerā competing with āgreat singers,ā his ability to make a song his own ātrumps any lack of vocal ability.ā (Thanks?) Urban said he had been true to himself and therefore had stood out.
A behind-the-scenes peek as āAmerican Idolā tunes up for its final bow
Round 3: The judgesā pick, Tears for Fearsā āEverybody Wants to Rule the Worldā seemed like it should have been right in Rapattoniās wheelhouse, but the performance seemed to roll away from him. It wasnāt just that he ended by making some very strange faces, the judges, disappointed as they were, concluded that Rapattoni had erred by lowering the key of the song, robbing his performance of energy. Oh, well.
Trent Harmon
Round 1: For reasons that remain unclear, Harmon picked Chris Stapletonās āTennessee Whiskeyā for his hometown dedication. Connick deemed it to be āfantastic,ā Urban a ābullās-eyeā and Lopez called it āeasy-peasy breezy,ā predicting that Harmon could make it all the way to the end of the competition. Seacrest then surprised Harmon by bringing out his family (including the family dog!), which Harmon had said he would do only if he made it the finale. Foreshadowing, it turned out.
Round 2: Harmonās take on Borchettaās pick, Justin Timberlakeās āDrink You Away,ā came off as strange and frenetic. Mostly, it just didnāt seem a great song choice for him, for that moment, but the judges seemed to eat it up. Lopez told Harmon he was āsinging to win.ā
Round 3: Harmon had his best moment of the night with the judgesā pick for him, showing his range and style with Parson Jamesā āWaiting Game.ā Urban, who had selected the song, said it had been ātailor-madeā for Harmon. Lopez reported that sheād gotten āgoosies.ā And Connick declared that it had been āan honorā to critique a singer like Harmon, āwho is an extraordinary talent.ā
LaāPorsha Renae
Round 1: Renae hit it out of the park with her rousing hometown dedication, Common and John Legendās āGlory,ā bringing Urban to his feet. āYour gift is so strong and so pure,ā he told her, adding that he felt as if he had ājust had a baptism.ā Lopez said that the āinspirationalā performance had proved that āmusic heals the spiritā and ātakes people to a better place.ā Connick called it ācritique-proofā and admired the way Renae carried herself with āelegance and grace.ā
Round 2: Although Renae hated the message of Lorraine Ellisonās āStay With Me,ā the song Borchetta assigned to her ā āI would never tell a woman to beg,ā she said -- she sang it beautifully. The judges noted both her dislike of the lyric and her ability to rise above it and kill it vocally all the same.
Round 3: The judges assigned Renae Adeleās āHello,ā saying they hoped to challenge her with an āimmensely popularā song sheād have to figure out a way to make her own. She rose to the challenge, showing off her lush vocals, as ever. Lopez was pleased at the way the song had āstretchedā Renaeās range.
Next week, a winner. The final winner of āAmerican Idol.ā Who will it be? If thereās any justice it will be Renae. But weāll just have to wait and see ā¦
MORE:
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āAmerican Idolā recap: The Top 4 (and others) take the stage
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