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Clay Aiken - A Thousand Different Ways
Music CD CoverArtist: Clay Aiken Edition: Music CD CD Release Date: 2006-09-19 Music Label: RCA Soundtracks: - Right Here Waiting
- Lonely No More
- Without You
- Every Time You Go Away
- Sorry Seems to Be the Hardest Word
- When I See You Smile
- Thousand Days
- Everything I Do (I Do It for You)
- Because You Loved Me
- I Want to Know What Love Is - Clay Aiken, Suzie McNeil
- These Open Arms
- Here You Come Again
- Everything I Have - Clay Aiken, William Joseph
- Broken Wings
Free Music Notes for A Thousand Different WaysFree Music Review: Fantastic! Hit: 5 StarsI watched a shy young man grow into a great and mature musical voice. I expect I will be buying every CD he makes till I'm old and grey. Each one is better than the last and his latest is his greatest.
A Thousand Different Ways PosterThe project, Aiken's first outing since 2004, combines 10 cover versions of well-known songs from the '70s, '80s and '90s with four brand-new songs. The album is a follow-up to Aiken's debut set, "Measure of a Man," which debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard album chart and is certified triple-platinum, as well as the platinum-selling "Merry Christmas with Love," the best-selling holiday album of the 2004 season. More from Clay  Measure of a Man |  Merry Christmas with Love |  A Clay Aiken Christmas (DVD) |
A Thousand Different Ways, the follow-up to Clay Aiken's chart-burning debut Measure of a Man, trots out the kind of material a fleet-voiced former American Idol contestant can't help having a field day with: Aiken's version of Richard Marx's "Right Here Waiting" is bathed in a smoothness that renders it arguably better than the original; his step into Celine Dion's shoes for "Because You Loved Me" sees nary a stumble (no easy feat, considering it's a vocal obstacle course of a song); and his cover of Paul Young's '80s classic "Everytime You Go Away" comes across as a clean-sounding, much-needed update. More proof that Aiken ain't fakin' when it comes to being a stylish interpreter comes courtesy of his convincing carry-off of Dolly Parton's sweet "Here You Come Again," but where he'll earn the most merit points for this disc is with its four originals--"A Thousand Days" especially. Aiken has the kind of voice that makes listeners want to scoot close to the speaker. He may be a softy, but when it comes to trapping raw emotion in song, he's become a mop-topped man of steel. --Tammy La Gorce
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