Detailed item info | Track listing | 1. What the World Needs Now Is Love - American Idol 10 Finalists (Season 2) 2. Superstar - Ruben Studdard 3. On the Wings of Love - Clay Aiken 4. At Last - Julia DeMato 5. Three Times a Lady - Joshua Gracin 6. Let's Stay Together - Trenyce 7. Back at One - Rickey Smith 8. Killing Me Softly With His Song - Kimberly Caldwell 9. Open Arms - Corey Clark 10. How Do I Live (Without You) - Carmen Rasmusen 11. Over the Rainbow - Kimberly Locke 12. Overjoyed - Charles Grigsby 13. God Bless the U.S.A. (Proud to Be an American) - Clay Aiken/Kimberley Caldwell/Corey Clark/Julia DeMato/Joshua Gracin/Kimberley Locke/Carmen Rasmusen (Rickey Smith/Ruben Studdard/Trenyce)
| | Details | | Producer: | James McMillan | | Distributor: | BMG (distributor) | | Recording type: | Studio | | Recording mode: | Stereo | | SPAR Code: | n/a |
| | Album notes | This is an Enhanced CD, which contains both regular audio tracks and multimedia computer files. This is an Enhanced CD, which contains both regular audio tracks and multimedia computer files. The wildly successful TV show AMERICAN IDOL continues to be a source of material for hit albums. After the initial AMERICAN IDOL disc, and the solo debut of IDOL winner Kelly Clarkson, you'd think that might be the end of the story. What should come sauntering along to prove you wrong but the SEASON 2 disc, featuring another round of well-scrubbed, perfectly pitched young vocalists bent on winning the hearts and ears of the US, whether you're watching them on TV or just listening to them on the stereo or radio. There's a theme to this collection: classic love songs. Accordingly, Ruben Studdard delivers an impassioned version of the Carpenters' "Superstar," Kimberly Caldwell lays her sensuous pipes on the Roberta Flack hit "Killing Me Softly," and Corey Clark takes a trip into '80s power-ballad territory with a full-bore take on Journey's lighters-aloft smash "Open Arms." At first listen, it's hard to figure where the bonus cut, Lee Greenwood's country flag-waver "God Bless the U.S.A." fits into the concept, but that's presumably where the "American" part of the show's name comes in.
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