Track Picks: "Breakaway," "Since U Been Gone," "Walk Away"
Review
Kelly Clarkson was the first American Idol winner and the first vocalist to achieve success, but her 2003 debut, Thankful, didn't completely define her outside of the parameters of the show. While the dance-pop and adult contemporary ballads on that record were fresher than the music on AmIdol, Clarkson still hadn't escaped the show's shadow entirely: since it was a hit so close to her time on TV, it was easy to pigeonhole her as simply a creation of television, not a popular singer in her own right. So, her second album, Breakaway, released late in 2004, was a pivotal moment for her, a chance to prove that she was not a one-hit wonder, a chance to prove that she could have a real, vibrant career. Happily, Breakaway delivers on that promise. This time around, the dance-pop elements have been almost entirely stripped away, and the record instead is a rock-influenced, MOR pop affair, not entirely dissimilar to Ashlee Simpson's Autobiography, only a little bit smoother and not as heavy on guitars. Since Clarkson is a better singer than Simpson -- not only does she possess more chops, but she has more on-record charisma -- she can sell the material even when the slow tempos in the middle of record drag its momentum; she prevents the songs from sounding too samey. While there may be one too many ballads here, they often are very good and sometimes are excellent, like the light, layered, yearning title tune. Clarkson may be a fine ballad singer, but what gives Breakaway its spine are the driving, anthemic pop tunes like "Since U Been Gone," "Walk Away," and "You Found Me." These are the numbers that sound simultaneously mainstream and youthful, which is a hard trick to pull off, and they are the tracks that illustrate that Kelly Clarkson is a rare thing in the 2000s: a pop singer who's neither hip nor square, just solidly and enjoyably in the mainstream. After a bunch of rather blah mainstream pop albums, including a glut of half-baked AmIdol projects, this is a nice, low-key relief. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide
Kenny Aronoff (Drums), Paul Bushnell (Bass), Clive Davis (Executive Producer), Tony Duran (Photography), Josh Freese (Drums), Brad Gilderman (Mixing), Victor Lawrence (String Quartet), Clif Magness (Guitar (Acoustic)), Clif Magness (Bass), Clif Magness (Piano), Clif Magness (Guitar (Electric)), Clif Magness (Keyboards), Clif Magness (Programming), Clif Magness (Producer), Clif Magness (Engineer), Shawn Pelton (Drums), Tim Roberts (Assistant), Serban Ghenea (Mixing), Kara DioGuardi (Producer), Jason Halbert (Piano), Jason Halbert (Piano Arrangement), Raine Maida (Guitar), Raine Maida (Producer), Raine Maida (Engineer), Raine Maida (String Arrangements), Chantal Kreviazuk (Producer), Chantal Kreviazuk (String Arrangements), Randy Cooke (Drums), Lars Fox (Engineer), John Shanks (Bass), John Shanks (Guitar), John Shanks (Keyboards), John Shanks (Producer), John Shanks (Mixing), Shari Sutcliffe (Production Coordination), Shari Sutcliffe (Contractor), Max Martin (Producer), Max Martin (Engineer), Max Martin (Instrumentation), Sergio Chavez (Assistant Engineer), Brian E. Garcia (Engineer), Joe Yannece (Mastering), Brett Kilroe (Art Direction), Aaron Lepley (Assistant Engineer), Cameron Webb (Engineer), Cameron Webb (Digital Editing), Cameron Webb (String Engineer), Mark Kiczula (Assistant Engineer), Kevin Guarnieri (Engineer), Mark Valentine (Engineer), John Hanes (Digital Editing), Mark Robertson (String Quartet), Olle Dahlstedt (Drums), Dan Certa (Engineer), Phil X (Guitar), Kelly Clarkson (Vocals), Jeff Rothschild (Drums), Jeff Rothschild (Engineer), Jeff Rothschild (Mixing), Jason Rankins (Assistant), Jon Berkowitz (Assistant Engineer), Shanti Randall (String Quartet), Shalini Vijayan (String Quartet), Robin C. Hendrickson (Art Direction), Jason Lader (Bass), Jason Lader (Programming), Renson Mateo (Assistant Engineer), Stephen Ferrera (A&R), Lukasz "Doctor Luke" Gottwald (Producer), Lukasz "Doctor Luke" Gottwald (Engineer), Lukasz "Doctor Luke" Gottwald (Instrumentation), David Hodges (Piano), David Hodges (Programming), David Hodges (Producer), David Hodges (String Arrangements), Lasse Mårtén (Engineer), Ben Moody (Guitar), Ben Moody (Producer), Glenn Pittman (Assistant Engineer), Johan "Brorsan" Brorsson (Digital Editing), Johan "Brorsan" Brorsson (Assistant), David Camobell (String Arrangements), Mark Colbert (Drums)
It debuted at number three on the Billboard 200 album chart with sales of
250,000 units. After spending sixty-one consecutive weeks in the top twenty of the Billboard 200, Breakaway
descended to number twenty-four. It is only the fourth album in history to stay in the top twenty consecutively for a year. It
remained in the top thirty for seventy-four consecutive weeks. It spent 103 weeks on the Billboard 200 (as of
November 23, 2006), re-entering the chart (issue date:
February 32007) for its 104th week; this was its last eligible
week on the chart. It was certified six times platinum (5.83 million sold) in the U.S., and it has sold over 11 million copies
worldwide. According to Blender magazine, Breakaway generated more than
$100 million in revenue for RCA. The first four singles from the album reached the top ten
on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100, with the fifth single peaking at number twelve.
Currently, the five singles released have sold over 4.75 million downloads combined in the U.S.
Breakaway was the second best-selling album of 2005 in Australia, with sales of over
450,000 copies in that year, and it was certified six times Platinum by the Australian Recording Industry Association.[1] The album ended 2005 as the eighth best selling album in the United Kingdom, with sales of over 950,000 copies; a further 501,000 copies were sold in 2006.[2]
Singles
"Breakaway" was the first single from the album in the U.S. and
Australia, and the fifth single in Europe. It originally appeared on the soundtrack to The Princess Diaries 2: Royal Engagement. A departure from the pop and soul
sound for which Clarkson had become known, the song was co-written by fellow singer Avril
Lavigne. It peaked at number six on the Billboard Hot 100, and reached
the top ten of more than ten Billboard charts (including twenty-one non-consecutive weeks at number one on the
BillboardAdult Contemporary chart). In Canada, the song peaked at number three. It has sold over 1,000,000 downloads to date.
"Since U Been Gone" was the second single from the album, but the first in Europe.
It peaked at number two on the Billboard Hot 100 and came in at number four on the 2005 year-end chart. It is now
Clarkson's most successful single in radio and sales terms; it has sold over 1,700,000 digital downloads in the U.S. It reached
number one on several Billboard charts, and topped the Canadian chart for two weeks. It peaked at number three on the
Australian ARIA Top 50 Singles Chart and was certified
platinum in 2005 with sales of 70,000+. The RIAA certified the
track gold for 500,000 ringtones sold on June 14, 2006.
"Behind These Hazel Eyes" was the third single from the album in the U.S. and
the second in Europe. The song continued the streak of extremely popular releases from Clarkson. It reached number six on the
Billboard Hot 100 and came in at number ten on the 2005 year-end chart. It peaked at number six on the Australian ARIA Top
50 Singles Charts and reached number four on the Canadian chart. It has sold over 1,000,000 downloads to date. It had great
success on the Hot AC format, peaking at number one. "Behind These Hazel Eyes" finished as one of Clarkson's three songs in the
top five year-end Pop 100 songs. It peaked at number one on the Billboard Recurrents
chart.
"Because of You" was the fourth single from the album, and the
third in Europe. The song debuted at number ninety-nine on the Billboard Hot 100 on September 32005, and reached number seven on November 102005. It has sold over 1,000,000 downloads. It debuted and peaked
at number four on the Australian ARIA Top 50 Singles Chart and was certfied gold in 2005 with sales of 35,000+. The track did
exceptionally well in Canada, peaking at number two and staying in the top twenty for twenty-seven consecutive weeks. Over one
year after its release to radio in Canada, it was still on the Canadian airplay chart. The single was a huge hit in Switzerland,
still on the chart until August 2007.
"Walk Away" was the fifth single release from the album (fourth in
Europe), having debuted at number ninety-seven on the Billboard Hot 100, a week before its original January 17, 2006 release date. The song debuted on the Canadian chart the
following week at number 100. The single peaked at number twelve on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 and at number four in
Canada. "Walk Away" was released on March 6, 2006 in the UK as the
fifth single and hit number twenty-one. In Australia, the single had moderate success, reaching number twenty-seven. Over 880,000
downloads have been sold.
Other tracks
Although "Gone" was never officially released as a single, U.S. Top 40 radio
stations began playing the song around November 2005, and it gained significant airplay on such stations as New York's Z100,
Boston's Kiss 108 and Atlanta's Q100. Because of this, "Gone" charted at number seventy-seven on the Pop 100. A Spanish version
of "Gone" titled "Me Voy" ("I Leave") was recorded by Mexican pop group RBD, who recorded a cover
version of "Gone" for their English language CD in Japan.
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