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Posts Tagged ‘jerson trinidad’

Now that we’ve been given a week to recover from the hot mess that was the Chris Sebastian‘s “Firework”, last night’s final battle rounds promised a lot…but again, under delivered.

The  talent was more consistent off stage than on last night, Ricki-Lee and Washington should have Seal and Keith‘s jobs next year. Seal is a pretentious wanker who thinks the show is called Seal Of Approval. Keith Urban’s relevance was questioned more than ever when he chose a country song for his contestants that was so out of place, even Chinese Opera would have sufficed in place.

He’s still doing better than Darren Hayes, who has made an art out of getting paid for standing around and flicking his hair dramatically.

So here we go….

Carmen Smith VS Michelle Serret-Cursio

Song: Rihanna – “We Found Love”

Quality: 9/10

Who Won: Carmen Smith

Who Should Have: Carmen Smith

Notes: Their performances were almost identical, but Michelle had pitch issues with the high notes. It was definitely Carmen’s by the end. As a combo they were one of the best so far, but the girls are fortunate that Rihanna’s live vocals sound like the doomsday siren. The victory was so exciting; Disney Pixar decided to make a movie about it!

Sam Ludeman VS Kieran Fraser

Song: Coldplay – Viva La Vida

Quality: 6/10

Who Won: Sam Ludeman

Who Should Have: Kieran Fraser

Notes: None of this interested me in the slightest. Kieran Fraser’s dancing was like watching Big Bird undergoing electroshock therapy but his vocals were stronger than Sam’s, who for the record is the campest man alive. No wonder Kieran Fraser ditched the tracksuit, that Straight Guy was Queer Eyed by Sam!

Kelsie Rimmer VS Brittany Cairns

Song: Adele – Turning Tables

Quality: 8.5/10

Who Won: Brittany Cairns

Who Should Have: 50/50

Notes: If you’re going to force them to sing Adele, could you at least pick an interesting song? Brittany had the high notes here while Kelsie had the artistry. It was one of the toughest decisions thus far. At least now I don’t have to type Rimmer anymore, consequently giggling like a 14 year old school girl.

Matt Hetherington VS Jerson Trinidad

Song: Stevie Wonder – Highest Ground

Quality: 7/10

Who Won: Matt Hetherington.

Who Should Have: Matt Hetherington

Notes: Terrible song choice, would have to be Stevie Wonder’s most boring song. While Jerson has had better moments with his audition, Matt had more stage presence. Neither were amazing, but this was largely to Delta’s appalling song choice.

Sarah De Bono VS Yianna Stavrou

Song: The Gossip – Heavy Cross

Quality: 7/10

Who Won: Sarah De Bono

Who Should Have: Sarah De Bono

Notes: Yianna’s dress wasn’t exactly a nun’s habit; I could see her uterus for half the performance. Sarah had way more control and better voice from the word go. There was no question here. At least Yianna was able to get a lift home (below.)

Darren Percival VS Brett Clarke

Song:  James Taylor – Shower The People

Quality: 7.5/10

Who Won: Darren Percival.

Who Should Have: Darren Percival.

Notes: I’m sorry Keith, this isn’t Nashville. No cheesy, badly written country song with lyrics my 11 year old niece could have bettered. As soon as Darren started, it was his. Seal’s claim that Brett should win was abhorrent.

Ben Bennett VS Jesse & Ashleigh

Song: Owl City – Fireflies

Quality: 6.5/10

Who Won: Ben Bennett

Who Should Have: Ben Bennett

Notes: It left me feeling very meh. Maybe it was the song, maybe it was the performances, maybe it’s because I don’t give a shit about squeaky clean tweens from Teen Scene Magazine? It was all just a bit….

Casey Withoos VS Emma Louise Birdsall

Song: Etta James – At Last

Quality: 8.5/10

Who Won: Emma Louise Birdsall

Who Should Have: Emma Louise Birdsall, just…

Notes: A very interesting result. While Emma Louise was TERRIBLE in the audition, Casey rocked my world with Regina Spektor’s “Samson” and she had extraordinary likeability. Casey struggled first half and while she wowed in the second half, Emma Louise already had this in the bag. But this is how you do it…

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The auditions are officially starting to outstay their welcome. I understand that judges have the requirements of selecting a team of 12 each, but that unfortunately means we have to sit through at least 48 audition performances (not to mention another 10 or so to keep it exciting.)

I think a lot of people are going out of their way to hate Delta. Yes, she  has several elements that make her unlikeable – she was a teen pop star, she’s inexplicably happy 24/7 and she had sex with both a Westlife member and a Jonas brother. However, apart from the first episode, she’s really started to find both her feet and a constructive argument.

I’ll keep the performances quick for two reasons. The first is that critiquing the auditions individually is exhausting. The second is that generally, they were horse shit last night.

Realistically, there has been only five knockout performers thus far, but in saying that, five and counting is still better than any season of Australian Idol. The potential, mixed with the new format, is a breath of a fresh air.

Sam Ludeman might have sung “Not Over You,” but it looked like his girlfriend was Not Across the fact he was clearly a homosexual. It kicked off a night of terrible song choices, being so cheesy and unmemorable. The guy obviously had talent but it was not a show-winning performance by any stretch.

Viktoria Bolonia actually impressed me with her rendition of “Babooshka.” Speaking of, what’s with the Kate Bush comeback? If someone busts out “Running Up That Hill,” I won’t cope with the amazingness of it all! Viktoria  may have had her pitch issues but those high notes soared. The polish might reveal a star.

Glenn Whitehall ‘s “A Change is Gonna Come” did what it needed to. It was a solid, bogan pub version of a soul classic. He came across as a massive fuckwit at the end though.

Diana Rouvas’ “Work It Out,”  Esther Welsh’s “Fell In Love With A Boy” and Cory Heargraves – “We Are The Champions” were all decent enough but ultimately unremarkable.

During Mitchell Thompson’s  ”The A Team”, I couldn’t help but notice that all of the judges make faces but don’t press the button ? IF YOU ARE IMPRESSED, PRESS THE FUCKING BUTTON. I thought the lad was very solid.

Keiran Fraser was James Blunt’s vocal doppelganger with “Same Mistake.” Despite the nerves, I thought it was a strong and moving show.

I am still in shock that Jazz Flowers managed to have all four judges turn around with her woeful choice of “Big White Room.” She hit the high notes, but the rest of it was a little bit meh. Not to mention she looks like she lives in 1991.

Jerson Trinidad’s “Ordinary People” was a ballsy song choice, given that John Legend is almost uncoverable. Jerson managed to pull it off, even though the last note sounded like a howler monkey giving birth to a pterodactyl.

Finally, Michelle Serret’s “Only Girl in  the World” was flat and not half the performance the judges made it out to be. In fairness, the song would be tremendously difficult to sing, but that’s why you don’t bite off more than you can chew.

An average night on the whole. Tonight is the last night, as well as the debut performance of my friend Nick Len, who let’s face it, might not like me tomorrow!

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