 
   Fox
   Pia Toscano performs on "American Idol"
                               UPDATED Thursday, 3/10/2011, 9:15 PM. Scroll down for this week's voting results.        
              All performers are shaped by their idols -- the greats who struck a  chord in them and helped shape their sound and style. But performers  only become true artists when they absorb and transform those influences  into something new and personal. When a listener says, "She sings like  Diana Ross," they're complimenting mimicry. But when they say, "She  reminds me of Diana Ross," they're complimenting artistry. They're  saying a performer has the potential to be as good as Diana Ross, but in  her own way.
              That's the appeal of idol night on "American Idol" -- the chance to  watch performers try to convince us they can be as great as their  heroes, but different. The phrase "but different" is crucial. If singers  can't bring something fresh to an iconic rendition of a well-known  song, it doesn't matter how polished the performances are, or how  strongly the crowd seems to be pulling for them. On this night, the  would-be Idols had to show us (and judges Steven Tyler, Jennifer Lopez  and Randy Jackson) something we haven't seen before -- a spark that sets  them apart from the heroes they study and emulate. Granted, part of  that struggle is in the hands of unseen arrangers and coaches (in this  case, the Svengali is Interscope Records' Jimmy Iovine  and an army of producers, including Don Was and Rodney Jerkins). But  it's ultimately the singer's moment to rise or fall. A performance has  soul and originality or it doesn't. If it doesn't, the dismissals can be  brutal and final: "In a million years, this girl could never be a tenth  as good as Diana Ross." Or worse: "It's a bad Diana Ross impression."
                               That's what happened to Ashthon Jones. During last night's first  Top 13 performance by finalists, she made it clear that she's a  crushingly literal performer. Last week she was told she could be Diana  Ross, so she showed up the next week doing "When You Tell Me That You Love Me" in the style of Diana Ross,  but without Ross' strength and sincerity; basically really, really good  karaoke, complete with vaguely Ross-like hand gestures and  ice-cream-scooped notes. And it was weirdly listless. Jones didn't come  to life until the line, "Everytime you touch me/I become a hero," and  from then on, the performance was lively when it should have been  stirring.  It wasn't Ross-worthy, it was Ross-flavored.
              Casey Abrams' performance of "With a Little Help From My Friends"  was better karaoke. In the run-up video, Abrams told us he adored Joe  Cocker and that his gateway into Cocker's work was the English rocker's  cover of the Beatles' "With a Little Help From My Friends," as heard in  the opening credits to "The Wonder Years." Every musical obsession has  to start somewhere, and a sitcom as good a place as any. But after an  intriguingly sweet and reflective first verse (love that fluttery "Wha-a-a-a-a-t....would you do...."),  Abrams launched into a mid-level Joe Cocker impression, complete with  studied approximations of Cocker's one-of-a-kind vocal tics -- that  bright yet fuzzy delivery, the  Sheffield-by-way-of-a-Mississippi-bluesman inflections, and the stuttery  "Ooo ooo ooh" interjections that only Cocker can do, or should be  allowed to do. Abrams had me, then he lost me; that lovely first verse  made me want to follow him anywhere, but after that he was so obvious I  could hardly stand to watch him. Ringo Starr's original recording was a  gentle paean to the power of friendship. Cocker's cover was a searing  confession by a man whose friends were the only thing standing between  him and the abyss. Abrams' version was about a kid watching "The Wonder  Years," then trying to sing like Joe Cocker.
              At least Abrams connected with Cocker, or seemed to be with him in spirit. That's more than you can say for James Durbin's rendition of "Maybe I'm Amazed."  No man should sing that song unless he's suffered unimaginable misery  and then found -- or thought he found -- salvation through love. Nothing  in Durbin's performance suggested he'd been through an experience that  powerful, or even that he understood it in the abstract. "James Durbin  is dangerous, America! “ Jackson proclaimed. “This man can  sing!" I agree with the second part, but the first is laughable. Durbin  just didn't have the gravitas or imagination to sing "Maybe I'm Amazed.”  It was mildly exciting on a technical level -- Paul McCartney's songs  often demand range, and Durbin's was acceptable -- but it wasn't  surprising, or even that affecting. McCartney's original performance  welded ecstasy to misery. His voice cracked and fell apart on the high  notes, on that super-high "Help meeeeeeeeeeeeeee," it  disintegrated. The man was lying at the bottom of a pit thinking all was  lost, and then he saw a silhouette at the top and realized there was  hope. Durbin's rendition was more along the lines of, "I like you, but  I'm going through a lot right now, so be patient with me."
              It's not easy for a pop singer to be technically impeccable while connecting with audiences on a gut level. Haley Reinhart's "Blue"  managed the first part; I liked the bluesy inflections in the second  half of the performance and the yodel-y vocal effects liberally  scattered throughout (much showier than LeAnn Rimes', but still fun).  But there's a touch of chilling android awesomeness to Reinhart, and if  there's a heart buried in the circuitry, she didn't show it last night.  The judges didn't see it, either. Tyler offered a anecdote about how the  song ended up on Rimes' debut album and told Reinhart she was "so, so  fine, thank you very much," the nice guy's version of "Don't call us,  we'll call you." Lopez said "You do things with your voice that are so  diverse!" which is demonstrably true. But I don't see how Lopez's  compliment "Really, really special" applied to this performance, unless  Lopez was referring to Reinhart's chameleon quality. Jackson said, "Last  week you're doing Alicia Keys, then you do LeAnn Rimes," but that  turned out to be faint praise. I don't agree with Jackson on everything,  but I like that he's rarely dazzled by technique alone, and when he  called Reinhart's performance "a little boring, actually," he was right.
              Thia Megia's version of a Posse-produced "Smile"  -- a song based on a melody for Charlie Chaplin's score for the 1936  comedy "City Lights" -- was a relief; any time a contestant doesn't come  barrelling in like a manic cheerleader, it sets her apart from the  competition. And while the arrangement's light backbeat seemed a  horrible idea at first -- This song is too quiet! Sex it up! --  it grew on me, and Megia made it feel natural. But there was nothing  revelatory in her delivery, and certainly nothing that improved or  expanded on her inspiration, Michael Jackson's 1995 cover. (Megia, like  Jones, lacks imagination; last week the judges told her she sounded like  Michael Jackson, so this week she did a song covered by Michael  Jackson. If they'd told her she sounded like Miss Piggy, she would have  done "Never Before" from "The Muppet Movie" while seated on a red velvet throne.)
              Naima Adedapo's gratingly off-key cover of Rihanna's "Umbrella"  was a near-disaster until the arrangement morphed into reggae and gave  her an excuse to bust out the arena-goddess dance spasms. But that  midpoint rally was more a triumph of arrangement and choreography than  musicianship, and it was undercut by the dumb backdrops behind Adedapo (It's raining, she needs an umbrella!). Lauren Alainas' "Any Man of Mine"  was an okay country-western cover band version, with slurry phrasing;  Tyler's "I wish it had been a little more kick-ass" was too kind. Scotty  McCreery's "The River" was solid but more likable than dazzling, and it  was hampered by weak phrasing and McCreery's inability to hit the  song's country-rumble low notes as gracefully as Garth Brooks. (More  dumb backdrops. Look, a river!) Karen Rodriguez's performance of Selena's "I Could Fall in Love"  was a closure moment for the singer -- her mom used to dress her like  Selena -- but it had the same kid-singing-into-a-hairbrush aspect that  marred Abrams' "With a Little Help From My Friends." 
              Covering "Lately" was just a bad idea from the start -- with their  key changes, multiple-octave ranges and acrobatic flourishes, Stevie  Wonder's songs are for great singers only -- and throughout Steven Langone's cover,  I kept thinking, "He doesn't have the range or the chops for this.  Someone should have talked him out of it." (Although that first "Good-bye-eee-eye!"  was killer.) Having loved and identified with a performer is not reason  enough to do his music on "American Idol." The material has to mesh  with the singer's own gifts, and there has to be something going on in a  performance besides enthusiasm and nostalgia. That's why I liked Paul  McDonald's cover of Ryan Adams' "Come Pick Me Up." The  vocals were nothing special, but everything else about the performance  was surprising, fun and uniquely McDonald -- the giddy grin, the  skittering-and-hopscotching dance moves, the sheer bouncy energy. He's a  charming kook. Again, Jackson nailed it: "After last week's performance  of you doing Rod Stewart, it probably wasn't the most exciting thing for people, but what I love about you is, I love the character of who you are."
              The same could be said for Jacob Lusk, who did "I Believe I Can Fly"  not in the style of R. Kelly, but the style of Jacob Lusk. On the list  of what matters most in art, perfection should be near the bottom. The  ability to communicate emotion is much more important; Lusk has always  understood that, and he proved it again last night. The performance was  frequently off-key and sometimes off-rhythm, and in the buildup to the  first chorus, there was a moment where his vocals became almost totally  detached from the music. But none of that mattered. Lusk’s “I Believe I  Can Fly” was awkward, crazy and beautiful, like a church performance by a  singer who's so moved by forces larger than himself that he gets drunk  on the rush and starts winging it . His switch to falsetto in the final  stretch was heartfelt, powerful and pure, and when he followed four  repetitions of a quavering "Whyyy-y-yyy-yyy" with a church-friendly "God  dawg it!", I laughed with joy. 
              The highlight of the night was Pia Toscano covering "All By Myself,"  a song that has been marked "Property of Celine Dion" since 1996. As a  registered Dion hater, I was relieved that Toscano not only avoided the  temptation to imitate Dion, but rejected her knee-jerk narcissism as  well. Dion's "All By Myself" felt past-tense, like a report by a woman  who studied a situation, made a sensible decision and expected to be  congratulated on her excellent judgment. Toscano's performance was as  technically clean as Dion’s, but more searching, reflective and active.  It was present-tense. As she sang, you could see the narrator looking  back on her past, studying her present, admitting her desolation and  resolving to connect with the world -- a simple account of a hard  journey. There were competent singers last night, and a few good ones,  but only a handful of performances that didn't tempt me to pause the  show and listen to the recordings that inspired them.  Of those  performances, only one told a story: Toscano's "All By Myself." 
                                                                            
              UPDATE: Ashthon Jones was booted off  "Idol" during the March 10, 2011 results show. "I was rooting for you,  baby," Lopez told her. Jones wept while a video monitor played a  farewell montage backed by former "Idol" contestant David Cook's cover  of 'Don't You Forget About Me." Haley Reinhart and Karen Rodriguez were  with Jones in the bottom three, but will return next week.
              At the start of the program, Ryan Seacrest announced that competitor Casey Abrams was not present because he was "sick and in the hospital right now," then invited the others to wave to him on TV. Abrams, 19, had been hospitalized once before during this run of "Idol" for severe stomach pains, and had a blood transfusion while in the hospital.