I think Carter stole the show . I hope he is in the f4
Teen 'Voice' contestant has coach Gwen Stefani in tears: 'That was God answering my prayers' (yahoo.com)
Teen 'Voice' contestant has coach Gwen Stefani in tears: 'That was God answering my prayers'
Gwen Stefani is in her fifth Voice season, and she has only made it to the finale twice, with Jeffery Austin in Season 9 and Rose Short in Season 17. Those contestants both placed a respectable fourth, but the latest Team Gwen standout, Carter Rubin, seems like Season 19's overall one to beat. The teen prodigy closed Monday's top nine show — the episode determining who will make next week's final four — with a beloved Muppets classic, and Gwen was already crying happy, congratulatory tears on what already felt like Carter's finale night.
Here are some reaction shots, because a screen-capture says a thousand words:
Gwen really should love this show, now that she seems set to finally win it. But which of the other nine semifinalists will join frontrunner Carter on next week's finale? Let's assess all of Monday's performances…
Jim Ranger (Team Blake), "Without You"
Cami Clune (Team Kelly), "The Joke"
Ben Allen (Team Gwen), "All About Tonight"
Gwen has always wanted to win The Voice, and to do it with a country contestant — one that she stole from her offscreen fiancé and onscreen friendly rival, Blake — would make the victory all the sweeter, especially since Ben actually covered a Blake song this week. ("I have your guy Ben, and I'm going to beat you," she teased her other half.) This was a solid and competent performance, but it was very copycat. (Maybe that's why Gwen liked Ben so much — he reminds her of Blake!) I can't imagine Ben will get more votes than Blake's own contestants — or even more than Team Legend's country contender, Bailey Rae — despite Gwen's confident prediction of, "I'm gonna win The Voice with [Ben] doing Blake's song! America's going to be all over that!" Let's face it, if Gwen wins this season, it will be with Carter, not Ben.
John Holiday (Team Legend), "Fix You"
This was sure to be an emotional performance, with John H. dedicating the Coldplay weeper to both his coach's wife, Chrissy Teigen (who recently suffered a heartbreaking baby loss), and to his own grandmother. The opera belter feared he'd be a "mess" onstage, but he held it together like the consummate professional that he is. I do wish he'd kept it simple and stayed at his neon piano for the duration of his somber performance, rather than relying on the predictable big-finish shtick. And I do think his acquired-taste voice crept into a painfully shrill register during those final off-the-rails adlibs. But Kelly loved the "brokenness" that Holiday brought to this performance, and Legend, who semi-joked, "I'm over here crying," praised Holiday for "letting [himself] not be perfect." Overall, though, this was close enough to perfect to ensure the fan favorite's spot in the top four.
DeSz (Team Kelly), "Don't Let Go (Love)"
I love that DeSz has been doing lesser-covered '90s slow jams by the likes of Toni Braxton and Tevin Campbell this season, and this similarly nostalgic En Vogue power ballad was a gauntlet-throwing, go-for-broke tour de force. DeSz did not come to play this week — she came to win! The diva, whom John has nicknamed "The Assassin," oozed confidence, spat fire, and commanded the stage from start to finish, and she assassinated her competition. Her positively stunned coach declared this possibly the best Team Kelly performance of all time and said, "There's no way you aren't making the finale!" I hope Kelly is right, because DeSz deserves that spot — but this is a highly competitive top nine, so we will see.
Bailey Rae (Team Legend), "Georgia on My Mind"
Bailey, who is only 18, has aged herself throughout the season with her ho-hum song choices. While past Voice contestants like Grace Askew or Mary Sarah have successfully branded themselves as old-timey, vintage-country crooners, Bailey has suffered from an identity crisis, failing to fully to commit to that aesthetic and therefore just seeming middle-of-the-road. I don't think having John as her coach — instead of country specialist like Blake, or even Kelly — helped matters much. Bailey does have talent, but she needed more time to find her true voice, and she probably should've waited a couple more years before trying out for this show.
Ian Flanigan (Team Blake), "Angel"
How interesting it was that both of Blake's country-adjacent contestants went with such unexpected songs tonight. I would not have picked Sarah McLachlan's sad-stray-dogs tearjerker for the gruff and husky (no pun intended) Ian, but as he connected to its lyrics about addiction, which he has battled in the past, he cut right to the heart of the song. The stripped-down arrangement allowed his pure pain and emotion to ooze through, proving that sometimes, a Voice performance doesn't have to be all about vocal acrobatics and theatrics. This was lovely. I could see Ian winning this whole thing with a whisper, not a scream, if Carter falters next week.
Tamara Jade (Team Legend), "Let It Be"
Doing any Beatles song is always a tall order on any singing competition, let alone a version inspired by Aretha Franklin's famous cover. But Tamara was up for the challenge, tapping into the song's gospel fire and doing both the Beatles and Aretha proud. She didn't even need that churchy backing choir; if anything, it only stole focus from her own stupendous vocal. I do fear, however, that this season's two other power-singing soul stars, DeSz and John Holiday, might steal focus, split the vote, and edge out Tamara.. But if Tamara has a chance to sing for the Instant Save on Tuesday, I think she'll run away with it — just as long as she doesn't have to sing against DeSz.
Posted by: SHARON <ceegee2006@yahoo.com>
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