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Clay Aiken – 45 Visits on The Insider

By musicfan123 · Comments 12383(9)http%3A%2F%2Fclaynewsnetwork.com%2F2011%2F10%2F05%2Fclay-aiken-45-visits-on-the-insider%2FClay+Aiken+-+45+Visits+on+The+Insider2011-10-05+07%3A15%3A12musicfan123http%3A%2F%2Fclaynewsnetwork.com%2F%3Fp%3D12383
Wednesday, October 5th, 2011

Have you ever watched the television show, The Insider?  Considered a news program that has become tabloid television, The Insider covers the news, celebrities and events in the entertainment field.

Clay Aiken has been a frequent visitor to The Insider.  According to what I have found, Clay has been featured on the show 45 times.  The show appeared to like Clay and it seemed that Clay enjoyed talking to Pat O’Brien, the original host of the show.  Lara Spencer also interviewed Clay when he was in New York.

The following pictures are only a few of the available pictures of Clay when he was on The Insider.  Do you remember any of these visits?

The Insider always supported Clay when he traveled for UNICEF.

 On January 4, 2005,  Clay was featured as he talked about how we all could help Indonesia.

On April 5, 2005, The Insider covered Clay’s trip to Indonesia

The Insider visited Clay backstage at the Joyful Noise Tour on October 31, 2005

SMILE…On August 21, 2006 The Insider featured the ATDW photo shoot.  They showed many great shots of the photographer and Clay.

Look at some of the screen cap messages from The Insider

These are only a few of the pictures from The Insider.  I am certainly glad that they enjoyed having Clay on their program.  Those pictures are so much fun to see!!  Which one is your favorite?

 

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Categories : Clay History, Clay News
Tags : A Thousand Different Ways, Clay Aiken, Indonesia, Joyful Noise Tour 2005, Lara Spencer, Pat O'Brien, The Insider, Tried & True, UNICEF

Clay Aiken – Making a Difference In The World

By musicfan123 · Comments 12331(11)http%3A%2F%2Fclaynewsnetwork.com%2F2011%2F10%2F02%2Fclay-aiken-making-a-difference-in-the-world-2%2FClay+Aiken+-+Making+a+Difference+In+The+World2011-10-02+07%3A05%3A46musicfan123http%3A%2F%2Fclaynewsnetwork.com%2F%3Fp%3D12331
Sunday, October 2nd, 2011

It’s important that I make a difference in some way. It’s not necessarily how I make a difference, but I want to make sure that I do.

~ Clay Aiken (born 1978);

American singer, actor, author and humanitarian.

 

The world is not interested in what we do for a living. What they are interested in is what we have to offer freely – hope, strength, love and the power to make a difference!

 ~ Sasha Azevedo (born 1978);
Entertainer

I am only one, but still I am one. I cannot do everything, but still I can do something; and because I cannot do everything, I will not refuse to do something that I can do.

 ~ Helen Keller (1880-1968);
Author, Lecturer, Activist

I feel that the greatest reward for doing is the opportunity to do more.

 ~Dr. Jonas Salk (1914-1995);
Physician, Discovered Eponymous Vaccine For Polio

Never lose sight of the fact that the most important yardstick of your success will be how you treat other people – your family, friends, and coworkers, and even strangers you meet along the way.

~ Barbara Bush (born 1925);
Wife Of The 41st President Of The United States

We can choose to be affected by the world or we can choose to affect the world.

~ Heidi Wills - Author

Go out into the world and do good until there is too much good in the world.

~ Larry H. Miller – Businessman, Philanthropist

I’m through accepting limits ‘cuz someone says they’re so. Some things I cannot change, but ’til I try I’ll never know. ~Lyrics from the song Defying Gravity, found in the musical Wicked

~ Stephen Schwartz (born 1948);
Musical Theater Lyricist And Composer

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Categories : Clay News, Editorial
Tags : Barbara Bush, Clay Aiken, Defying Gravity, Dr Jonas Salk, Heidi Wills, Helen Keller, Larry H Miller, Sasha Azevedo, Stephen Schwartz, Tried & True, UNICEF, Wicked

Clay Aiken – May Your Life Be Filled With Joy and Love

By musicfan123 · Comments 12307(12)http%3A%2F%2Fclaynewsnetwork.com%2F2011%2F09%2F30%2Fclay-aiken-may-your-life-be-filled-with-joy-and-love-2%2FClay+Aiken+-+May+Your+Life+Be+Filled+With+Joy+and+Love2011-09-30+07%3A32%3A29musicfan123http%3A%2F%2Fclaynewsnetwork.com%2F%3Fp%3D12307
Friday, September 30th, 2011

I am posting a few pictures of Clay Aiken. Sometimes it’s important to remember some of the reasons you are a fan of Clay Aiken. I hope that each picture puts a smile on your face and produces a pull on your heart.

Clay…Your fans love you and respect you. May your life be filled with joy and love!!


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Categories : Clay News
Tags : Best Buddies, Clay Aiken, Spamalot, Tried & True, UNICEF

Words of Wisdom by Clay Aiken

By musicfan123 · Comments 12134(15)http%3A%2F%2Fclaynewsnetwork.com%2F2011%2F09%2F21%2Fwords-of-wisdom-by-clay-aiken%2FWords+of+Wisdom+by+Clay+Aiken2011-09-21+07%3A53%3A07musicfan123http%3A%2F%2Fclaynewsnetwork.com%2F%3Fp%3D12134
Wednesday, September 21st, 2011

Yes…Clay Aiken has something to say!!

“Use your voice.”

“I’m really not that special. Really, I’m not. I was on a big TV show, but it was just a TV show.”

“Pain happens to everyone. To grow up, to fulfill your potential, to develop into what God wants you to be–this process takes support. No one succeeds alone.”

“A song is like a smile. If you meet people from another country, even if you don’t speak the same language, you know what a smile means. A song works the same way. Music produces feelings that need no translation.”

“You don’t have to be around people you are related to be with family.”

 

“There is no better exercise for strengthening the heart than reaching down and lifting people up…The Bubel/Aiken Foundation is the culmination of that realization. It is my purpose now. It is the why of me.”

“Singing in front of a stadium of fans is wonderful, but it pales in comparison to being embraced by a child.”

“I believe that in every life there is a song to be sung.”

“It’s about damn time!”

 

“Thank you.”

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Categories : Clay News
Tags : American Idol, Clay Aiken, Faye Parker, Tried & True, UNICEF

Clay Aiken – Impressions Of Life in Spamalot

By musicfan123 · Comments 12016(8)http%3A%2F%2Fclaynewsnetwork.com%2F2011%2F09%2F14%2Fclay-aiken-impressions-of-life-in-spamalot%2FClay+Aiken+-+Impressions+Of+Life+in+Spamalot2011-09-14+07%3A06%3A35musicfan123http%3A%2F%2Fclaynewsnetwork.com%2F%3Fp%3D12016
Wednesday, September 14th, 2011

Tuesday night, I found the following review/interview about Clay Aiken.  It was first published on Broadway.com/buzz.  The interview is rather long, but it is very interesting.  I am sure I read this article in 2008, but there is a lot I didn’t remember.

The link for the story is no longer available so I tried to add pictures that I have that fit the text.  I hope you enjoy this look into Clay Aiken history.

Clay Aiken
by Kathy Henderson 

Everybody knows that Clay Aiken can sing, but—surprise!—he can also hold his own on a Broadway stage. To be more precise, he can hula, ogle scantily clad girls, discuss flying coconuts in a British accent, pretend to poop in his tunic, do a Cossack-style line dance and perform a lightning-fast patter song (“You won’t succeed on Broadway if you don’t have any Jews”) without dropping a syllable. As Sir Robin in Spamalot, the 29-year-old American Idol runner-up appears perfectly at ease in the world of Monty Python—which, he recently claimed, he thought was a person until he saw the show. The “fish out of water” angle of Clay Aiken starring in Spamalot has already led to a couple of snarky magazine articles, including one in New York in which the writer recorded Aiken’s quotes in an exaggerated imitation of his North Carolina accent. No wonder his personal publicist now keeps a sharp ear (and a stopwatch) on Aiken’s interviews. The truth is, Clay is smart guy who knows what works for him, and he was shrewd enough to realize that Spamalot, in its own nutty way, would be a good match for his talents and his sunny sensibility. “If somebody said to me, ‘Who in this cast has never done theater?’ he is the last person I would have chosen,” says Hannah Waddingham, the Olivier Award-nominated British musical star who joined the Tony-winning musical as the Lady of the Lake the same night Aiken debuted. Three weeks into his run, Broadway’s new Sir Robin shared his impressions of life in Spamalot.

How did you feel after your first Broadway performance? 

I thought, “Well, thank god that’s over!” [Laughs.] A lot of people had asked me if I was nervous, and I didn’t know the appropriate response. I really wasn’t. I don’t know if that’s bad—to not be nervous. Yeah, it was the first time I was doing this, but the audience thing doesn’t freak me out that much. I figured I was going to screw up at some point, so there’s no reason to be nervous about wondering when [laughs]. It was actually somewhat relaxing, because the rehearsals are sooo grueling. It’s not just the schedule, it’s all the information and learning “this that, this that, this that, this that.” Having the opportunity to go out and do everything you learned was kind of refreshing and kind of nice.

Had you ever acted on stage? 

I played Will Parker in Oklahoma! when I was in tenth grade.

That’s a good part for you. 

After that, nothing. I got cut from a high school musical [Guys and Dolls]. I must have done so bad, they didn’t want me back! [Laughs.]

Were you a fan of Broadway musicals? 

I didn’t really know much about them. My knowledge of Broadway musicals ended at Oklahoma! When you do a show in high school, it’s supposed to be a learning experience, so you learn a little bit about where the show started and who wrote it and where it was produced, etcetera. I saw Miss Saigon on Broadway when I was in tenth grade; I drove up here with some friends from church and we saw that, and it was pretty impressive. But as I’ve told a number of people, the only other show I remember seeing outside of high school was a regional theater production of Big River when I was in seventh or eighth grade.

And Martin Moran, who preceded you as Sir Robin on Broadway, was the star of that show, right? 

Yeah, that was kind of neat for me. I still haven’t met him, actually!

So, who talked you into coming to Broadway? 

I wasn’t talked into it. My manager is not a pushy person at all; he brings opportunities to me and says, “Think about it. If you want to do it, that’s great. If you don’t, you don’t.” We had had…I wouldn’t say offers, I would say interest from a number of shows in the past.

Which ones? 

I’m not telling who I didn’t pick! We’d had interest, but it was never something I ever thought I’d do. Nothing really struck me as exciting, but my manager said, “You know what? If you’re going to do one, I think [Spamalot] is the one to do.” And I was like, “Really?” So I saw the show and then I called him and said, “How do you figure this is the one to do?” He said, “Because of that reaction—because no one is going to expect it. It’s not a show where you get to sing huge ballads and moving, soaring numbers. It’s something completely different, and if you’re going to do something like this, you should do it not as ‘I’m bored,’ but as ‘This is an opportunity for me to grow and learn something new and branch out a little bit.’” And that’s the reason I wanted to do it.

You didn’t have to audition, or try out a British accent? 

Well, almost all the people I work with are British; it’s been that way for five years, so I just mimic them. I did meet with [Spamalot director] Mike Nichols and we discussed some things and I did a few lines with him. They didn’t ask me to sing or dance; they probably should have asked me to dance. We sat down and very casually walked through a few things that they had already asked me to do before we committed to it on either side. I think they wanted to see how they felt about it and I wanted to see how I felt about it too, so we kind of auditioned each other. I didn’t audition Mike Nichols—don’t say that! But I wanted to get a feel for what this would be like, because I knew it was going to be very different from what I’m used to.

That meeting obviously went well.

There was a big concern for me—and I’ll speak to you about this because your outlet speaks directly to [theater] people—about what they call “stunt casting.” Based on some research I did, I know that a lot of diehard Broadway fans can’t stand it, so there was automatic concern that people within the industry were going to be upset that I was doing this because I took [the role] away from somebody else or I didn’t earn my way; I didn’t audition the way everybody else does. I was concerned about that, not just in terms of Broadway fans but people in the cast who might have wanted to see somebody else get it. And I could not have been more wrong when it comes to the people who work in the industry. There’s always going to be some 13-year-old sitting at his computer in Topeka who’s bitter. But every person I’ve worked with has been unbelievably phenomenal and welcoming.

Mike Nichols isn’t known for stunt casting. And in any case, you are a natural at this. What’s been the biggest challenge for you?

It’s so physically demanding, which is interesting because [original Sir Robin] David Hyde Pierce is an amazing actor, but he’s not a dancer and neither am I. The fact that they would ask us to do this part cracks me up. David Hibbard, who plays Patsy in the show and whose dressing room is next to mine, has become one of my favorite people because he’s been so warm and inviting. He was telling me that when he first got to the show, for whatever reason they had him play Robin for two weeks, and he said he was never able to breathe because it’s such a hard part. And he was in Cats for years. I said, “How interesting, because I can’t breathe either!” Every single night, it just kicks my rear end! It’s exhausting. So I’m not to the point where I think I’ve got everything right. They say that eventually your body gets used to it and it doesn’t wear you out as much. I’m hoping that when that day happens, I’ll be able to reflect a little bit more as I’m doing it. When I do a concert, I know the songs frontways and backways; I can sing a song and be thinking about something completely different while I’m doing it.

I doubt that! 

Are you kidding me? When I’m singing a song onstage in concert, I’m wondering what I’m doing for dinner. I’m like, “Oh wow, look at that person in the third row. Does she know her buttons are not in order?” I don’t worry, I don’t listen to the lyrics, I don’t pay attention at all. I know that sounds horrible and I probably shouldn’t tell you that, but it’s true. I can think, “Oh that sounded good, I did well there.” I can critique myself as I go. Here, I’m still thinking about “OK, left, right, jump, left, up, down, left, left, switch switch, flip, turn!” I don’t have enough brain cells left over to consider whether or not I’m doing it well.

Is it fun to sing the show’s politically incorrect song about Broadway shows needing Jews to be a success? 

You know, I’m kind of politically incorrect myself. I do worry sometimes, because it’s a very fine line between humor and anti-Semitism, so I’m very careful as to how I say it. It’s interesting, though—the first time I saw the show, I remember that being the song I laughed the hardest at. Every time I’ve seen it, it always gets the biggest laugh. I don’t know that I’m doing it justice because I can’t really get the audience’s reaction. I’ll watch other people’s scenes and listen to the audience laughing and enjoying themselves, but in mine, I can’t hear the audience for the amount of breathing that’s going on in my ear [laughs].What are you enjoying most about being on Broadway? 

I love the people I work with. I really enjoy getting there [to the theater] and talking to them and listening to what goes on backstage. It’s kind of nice to have a big group of people to work with as opposed to being by yourself [doing concerts]. I’ve only been doing this for three weeks, so it’s still new.

What’s been the biggest surprise? 

I think I’ve been surprised at how much of a family the backstage is. David [Hibbard] put together this little quiz about knowing your fellow cast and crew members and whatnot. He got tiny secrets about each person, things that no one would expect about you, and he put about 100 of them into this quiz. You would not believe how much that has occupied everybody in the building. Everybody is running around trying to figure out everybody else’s thing. It’s really like a family.

How does eight Broadway shows a week compare in difficulty to ten weeks of competition on American Idol? 

Sixteen weeks! Without question, Idol was harder because there was the rehearsal period, kind of like I was telling you about for this, and the performance period all put together. There were so many different things involved, with eight-hour days, 10-hour days, 13, 14, every day of the week on Idol. Here, it is eight shows a week, but only two and a half hours a night. The weekends are unbelievably exhausting because we do five shows, but Idol does beat it as far as the amount of work. I don’t think people understand how much work is involved for the contestants on that show. It’s not just showing up on Tuesday and Wednesday night. At the same time, it’s different than a touring schedule. On tour, I do five shows a week, and they’re not as physically exhausting because I’m not dancing. But I’m sleeping on a bus and traveling to a different city every night, so it’s six of one, half a dozen of the other.

Are you surprised that so many American Idol alums have turned up on Broadway? 

Not really. My situation is slightly different because I went into a show that was kind of unexpected; it’s not a singing show. The other people who have done stage work from Idol have done shows where singing is important, and Idol finds people who are vocally talented. Fantasia was unbelievable in The Color Purple, but we always knew she could sing; we knew she had the ability to perform on stage. And we knew, because she was on Idol, that she had the ability to work hard. The same, I think, is true for everybody who has done [Broadway]. Diana DeGarmo was there with Fantasia, Frenchie Davis, Ruben [Studdard] is about to head out [on tour in Ain't Misbehavin'], so it doesn’t surprise me that much. If you can handle three weeks of Idol, you’ve got the stamina [to do Broadway] because it’s very stressful. I will say this, though: If I ever hear Simon Cowell insult someone on the show by using “You belong on Broadway” as a put-down, he can kiss my butt for that!

There you go! 

People on Broadway are, without question, the most talented people in the country because they’re doing seven things at once! They’re dancing and they’re singing and they’re acting and they’re speaking in tongues and they’re playing piano and tapping. I mean, if Simon uses that as an insult again, he can kiss it! If you think about the people who are most well known for being phenomenal at their craft—Glenn Close as a prime example—the reason they’re so good is because they started on stage. If you can do this Broadway thing, you can do anything. I’m considering running for President! [Laughs.]

How do you see your career progressing? Will you continue to do covers or record new music? 

We did the cover thing last time; it’s not a goal to do that again right now. Our next album is going to be all new stuff. That’s kind of what I wanted to do last time and we took a detour. We’re in the process of working on it. There’s not horribly much to say about the next album, but we’re hoping it’s out in May.

Where are you on the spectrum of, say, a singer like Michael Buble vs. the kind of pop music they play on a top-40 station? 

I’m not going to compare myself to anybody. I don’t know that I want to be on the spectrum. I don’t plan to be on the radio. I’m not cool enough to be on radio. I’m still dorky and not relevant enough to some people to be on radio, and it’s not a goal of mine. We’ve got this amazing producer who’s going to do the entire album, and one of the challenges for him has been not worrying about radio, because he’s been so attuned to trying to make hits. We’re like, “Uhhh, nooo,” because once you try to cater to the radio stations, you stop catering to (a) the listener and (cool.gif me. I was discussing this very thing with my executive producers the other day and we said, if you try to make the music fit what you think radio is going to want, you’re going to miss the mark. But if we just go out and do what we do well, then it’s going to be natural and maybe radio will like it. It’s not something that I’m averse to; I would absolutely love it if it happens, but it’s not something to work toward at the expense of doing what we want to do.

You were a teacher before American Idol, and now you’re involved with UNICEF. Do you see yourself performing for the rest of your life, or could you walk away and do something totally different? 

I’m never really good at answering that question; the answer changes every day. I enjoy what I’m doing right now. As long as I’m having fun, I’m going to continue to do it. When it stops being fun, I’ll stop. But right now, it’s fun.

Did you get to see Clay in Spamalot on Broadway?  Do you think he might be returning to Broadway soon?
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Categories : Clay History, Clay News
Tags : American Idol, Big River, Broadway.com, Clay Aiken, David Hibbard, David Hyde Pierce, Diana DeGarmo, Fantasia, Frenchie Davis, Guys and Dolls, Hannah Waddingham, Kathy Henderson, Martin Moran, Mike Nichols, Miss Saigon, Monty Python, Oklahoma, Ruben Studdard, Shubert Theatre, Spamalot, Tried & True, UNICEF, Will Parker

Clay Aiken – First Place With Fans

By musicfan123 · Comments 11702(11)http%3A%2F%2Fclaynewsnetwork.com%2F2011%2F08%2F29%2Fclay-aiken-first-place-with-fans%2FClay+Aiken+-+First+Place+With+Fans2011-08-29+07%3A23%3A17musicfan123http%3A%2F%2Fclaynewsnetwork.com%2F%3Fp%3D11702
Monday, August 29th, 2011

Summer – 2011 – The time I organized my computer.

It’s actually rather fun.  I have found some of the greatest  things that have been hidden, labeled “Unknown.”  Of course I would be done by now if I didn’t stop all the time to watch videos and read every word…but I am having fun!!

This past week I found the following review of Clay Aiken’s  Jukebox Tour.  I was lucky enough to see the tour twice in 2005 and it is one of my favorite concerts.  I hope you enjoy the review as much as I do.

From MSNBC.com

Audience is clay in Aiken’s hands

Singer won second place on ‘Idol,’ but first place with fans

COMMENTARY
By Andy Dehnart
MSNBC contributor
Updated: 6:23 p.m. ET Aug. 9, 2005
Less than a week after kicking off his 25-city “Jukebox Tour,” Clay Aiken performed in Greenville, South Carolina. After performing an energetic review of hits from the ‘50s, ‘60s, ‘70s, ‘80s, and ‘90s, he concluded with a few original songs, including “When You Say You Love Me,” which was on his first album, “Measure of a Man.”

As he began to sing, he stumbled, arriving at the wrong words at the wrong time. The music kept playing but Clay turned to the singers on stage with him and said, “That’s the third night in a row!” He laughed. “I don’t know the words to this song!” Then Clay pretended to sulk off stage, letting one of his back-up singers take over, but he quickly came back to give it another try.

Then, in the front of the Peace Center’s auditorium, near stage left, a fan held up a sign. But she wasn’t proclaiming her love for Clay; instead, she was offering assistance. “Are those the cue cards for that song?” he asked, walking over toward her. In her hands were, in fact, homemade cue cards with the lyrics to “When You Say You Love Me.” Having known of his tendency on this barely week-old tour to have trouble with the song, someone had constructed cue cards to help him out and passed them to the front of the auditorium. His fans knew he was going to mess up before he did.

“Although I feel completely, miserably embarrassed, I’m going to try to continue, if that’s okay,” Clay said. Then he asked, with mock incredulity, “How do you know I’m going to do the same ones I did last night?”

That’s a good question, but there’s an easy answer: Clay Aiken may have been the runner-up on “American Idol 2,” but two years after he lost that competition, he has become the single most successful and popular reality TV show contestant ever. No other reality TV stars—and few stars of any other origin—have managed to build a fan base like that at the Peace Center last Wednesday. Other reality show participants have recognizable names (such as Omarosa, Richard Hatch), and others have gone on to successful careers (like Clay’s “Idol” predecessor Kelly Clarkson, for example), but Clay has an audience like no other.

Even though Clay lost “Idol,” he easily outsold winner Ruben Studdard in both singles and albums, and his debut record landed at number one upon its release. His fans are obsessively devoted to both Clay and his art, going online to discuss his music and his charity work (as a UNICEF ambassador, among other things).

There’s even a Clay Aiken credit card, which can be used to buy everything from a Clay Aiken bucket hat to a Clay Aiken thong.

Play that not-so-funky music, skinny white boy
Why exactly is this “skinny white boy,” as Clay described himself in Greenville, such a sensation? I went to Greenville to try to find out. What has inspired the rabid devotion that characterizes Claymates, as his fans are known? What sort of performance causes fans to attend concert after concert on the same tour?

Although a single concert just skims the surface of the phenomenon, from the moment Clay strutted out on-stage arm-in-arm with his back-up singers, the audience was, well, clay in Clay’s hands.

Before the concert began, I asked a fan sitting in front of me to explain, in a sentence, why so many people loved Clay Aiken. “We came for the music, but we stayed for the man,” she said.

This enthusiasm for both Clay and his art didn’t subside the entire evening. Throughout the two-and-a-half-hour show, the audience stood up (during the fast songs) and sat down (when Clay was telling a story or singing a slower song). Waves of energy rippled throughout the auditorium as he performed medleys of well-known hits from the past half-century, more than capably tackling covers of songs by everyone from Elvis to Prince.

As Clay moved on stage, camera flashes strobed constantly, and tiny images of the stage were visible on dozens of video cameras’ view screens. Some fans stood with cell phones open, broadcasting the concert to others around the country, who transcribed it online for the benefit of other fans. The audience cheered wildly when Clay accompanied himself on piano, because, someone quickly told me, he was just learning to play.

Everyone who’s heard him knows that Clay can sing. But on stage, Clay is also energetic, humble, and awkward. He mixes self-depreciation with a dose of pretend, over-exaggerated ego, and genuinely appears to be having a great time interacting with his audience and his band. Far more experienced performers would have been thrown off after forgetting words to a song, but it didn’t really phase Clay at all; in fact, he embraced it. His personality and persona are as much a part of his performance as his music.

During the performance, Angela Fisher and Quiana Parler sang back-up for him throughout the evening, but the phrase “back-up singer” doesn’t really apply to either one. Clay literally shared the stage with them, as they performed their own solos as he stepped aside.

His gawkiness is especially endearing. Clay may be able to sing exceptionally well, but his on-stage talent drops off rapidly after that. Primarily, he dances like a wooden puppet on a stick.

But every time he’d awkwardly attempt a dance move, or just attempt to move a body part, screams would ripple through the crowd. And he played along, giving them more of what they wanted.

Watching Clay and his audience interact was revealing, but in many ways, the concert seems to be just the public side of his popularity. Fans gather online and in person, and have two and a half years of history with Clay; I don’t know if I’ll ever fully be able to see the Clay phenomenon in exactly the same way they do. But the performance made it clear that, in this era of manufactured pop, where top-40 music is constructed for the benefit of the audience by marketers and radio station conglomerates, Clay Aiken’s fans believe they have found something real. That’s ironic since Clay Aiken, the phenomenon, was born of “American Idol,” which, with its narrow focus and snap judgments, is a televised look inside the machine that produces our entertainers.

At the same time, Clay’s fans were introduced to him and his music and saw him work his way up throughout the competition. His talent and his personality are genuine, or at least appear to be, because we’ve watched him grow along the way. Clay Aiken may be a product of the “American Idol” factory, but to some degree, what went in is what came out, and that’s just the way his fans like it.

Andy Dehnart is a writer and teacher who publishes reality blurred, a daily summary of reality TV news.

Did you see Clay live when he performed on the Jukebox Tour?  If yes, where did you see the concert?  Would you like to see another Jukebox Tour from Clay?

Comments 11702(11)http%3A%2F%2Fclaynewsnetwork.com%2F2011%2F08%2F29%2Fclay-aiken-first-place-with-fans%2FClay+Aiken+-+First+Place+With+Fans2011-08-29+07%3A23%3A17musicfan123http%3A%2F%2Fclaynewsnetwork.com%2F%3Fp%3D11702
Categories : Clay History, Clay News
Tags : American Idol Season 2, Andy Dehnart, Angela Fisher, Clay Aiken, Claymates, Greenville South Carolina, Jukebox Tour Clay Aiken, Kelly Clarkson, measure of a man, MSNBC, Peace Center Greenville, Quiana Parler, Ruben Studdard, Tried & True, UNICEF

Clay Aiken – Summer Traditions

By musicfan123 · Comments 11348(5)http%3A%2F%2Fclaynewsnetwork.com%2F2011%2F08%2F09%2Fclay-aiken-summer-traditions%2FClay+Aiken+-+Summer+Traditions2011-08-09+08%3A20%3A56musicfan123http%3A%2F%2Fclaynewsnetwork.com%2F%3Fp%3D11348
Tuesday, August 9th, 2011

One of the traditions of summer in New York is the summer concerts that are sponsored by the morning news shows.  Both the Today Show and Good Morning America ask oustanding artists to be a part of their popular concert series.  The crowds are huge and the artists have the opportunity to perform both a live audience and a built- in TV audience.

Clay Aiken has participated in many of the Summer Concerts.  I think my favorite was on July 29th, 2005.  As part of the Summer Concert Series sponsored by Good Morning America, the concert was held in Bryant Park.  The crowd was very excited and huge!!  The night before, Clay had opened the JukeBox Tour in Tom’s River, New Jersey.  He claimed to have only about 2 hours of sleep before the his appearance at Bryant Park.

Clay performed three songs on the program; Invisible, Suspicious Minds, and Back For More.  The fans who were there in person said that he also sang Twisting The Night Away in the warm-up….and Clay actually did the TWIST!!  During the show, when Clay sang Invisible, the audience sang along.  It really looked like Clay enjoyed it and he smiled a lot!!

Besides the concert, Clay was interviewed by Diane Sawyer.  They talked about Clay trips for UNICEF and his move back to Raleigh. Diane asked, “What do you know about do-wop, anyway?” Answer: “Not much, but it’s good stuff.”

Clay had a lot of fun with the audience.   Someone in the audience asked about Clay’s shoe..”We want to see your shoe.” So…Clay took off his shoe and showed it to the audience.

The following review was posted at the ABC Website:

Aiken’s loyal fans got a real treat this morning when he debuted a new song called “Coming Back for More” and performed Elvis Presley’s “Suspicious Minds” at New York City’s Bryant Park as part of “Good Morning America’s” Summer Concert Series.

The 26-year-old began his Jukebox Summer Tour 2005 on Thursday in Tom’s River, N.J. Aiken will visit 25 cities and sing covers of more than 70 songs from five decades of rock ‘n’ roll on the tour, his fifth in the past two years. The tour will finish Sept. 1.

In addition to performing, his work as a UNICEF ambassador has been keeping him busy.

“It’s the closest thing I can do now to being in a classroom and teaching,” said Aiken, who studied special education at UNC-Charlotte. He recently returned from northern Uganda, where he visited “night commuters” — children who must leave their homes in the countryside every night to sleep in UNICEF shelters to avoid being abducted by a rebel group. In March, Aiken visited children living in camps for tsunami survivors in Aceh, Indonesia.

Aiken said he has decided to leave Los Angeles and return to his hometown of Raleigh, N.C. “I like L.A., I like California, but there’s a different energy there,” he said.

In June 2003, Aiken made history when his debut single, “This is the Night” went to No. 1 on Billboard’s Hot 100 chart, selling more than 392,000 copies in its first week and beating Elton John’s 1997 record for “Candle in the Wind.” In October 2003, he released his first album, “Measure of a Man.” His second, “Merry Christmas with Love,” came out last November.

Despite his success in the music industry, Aiken hasn’t forgotten his first passion: helping children with disabilities. Shortly after “American Idol” ended, he created the Bubel/Aiken Foundation, named after an autistic boy he took care of while he was at UNC-Charlotte. The foundation provides grants, services and inclusive programs for children with special needs and their typical peers.

Do you think we will see Clay perform on a Summer Concert Series again?  Did any of you get to see any of the concerts live?  Be sure and check out the great video that is at the bottom of this post.  what agreat performance!!

Comments 11348(5)http%3A%2F%2Fclaynewsnetwork.com%2F2011%2F08%2F09%2Fclay-aiken-summer-traditions%2FClay+Aiken+-+Summer+Traditions2011-08-09+08%3A20%3A56musicfan123http%3A%2F%2Fclaynewsnetwork.com%2F%3Fp%3D11348
Categories : Clay News
Tags : "Invisible", Back For More, Billboards Hot 100 chart, Clay Aiken, Diane Sawyer, Good Morning America, JukeBox Tour, Suspicious Minds, The Today Show, Tom's River NJ, Tried & True, UNICEF

Clay Aiken – Written Appeal at the Huffington Post

By musicfan123 · Comments 11166(9)http%3A%2F%2Fclaynewsnetwork.com%2F2011%2F07%2F28%2Fclay-aiken-written-appeal-at-the-huffington-post%2FClay+Aiken+-++Written+Appeal+at+the+Huffington+Post2011-07-28+22%3A49%3A09musicfan123http%3A%2F%2Fclaynewsnetwork.com%2F%3Fp%3D11166
Thursday, July 28th, 2011

Clay Aiken just posted an amazing letter at the Huffington Post.

With rising fuel and food prices, and drought, added to an already dire humanitarian situation, it seems that Mother Nature is kicking the people of Somalia while they are down.

Please go over and read the entire  post.  It is an intelligent plea for help.

ClaysPost

Comments 11166(9)http%3A%2F%2Fclaynewsnetwork.com%2F2011%2F07%2F28%2Fclay-aiken-written-appeal-at-the-huffington-post%2FClay+Aiken+-++Written+Appeal+at+the+Huffington+Post2011-07-28+22%3A49%3A09musicfan123http%3A%2F%2Fclaynewsnetwork.com%2F%3Fp%3D11166
Categories : Clay News
Tags : Clay Aiken, Huffington Post, Somalia, Tried & True, UNICEF
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It is not always about performance art, but about receiving positive energy from people with positive spirits. Sometimes we can see someone's spirit, and those are the people with great energy. Those are the people that get me through the day, especially on Broadway. -Clay Aiken

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