101 DISTRIBUTION
2009
The Distance
About This Album
Even when Taylor Hicks was on American Idol it was never clear if there was a record-buying audience for his brand of blue-eyed soul, so when they didn't manifest in large numbers for his major-label post-Idol debut in 2006, it wasn't too much of a surprise when 19 Entertainment dropped him afterward. For some AmIdol finalists, this abandonment would be the kiss of death, but Hicks was a journeyman before Idol and he was a journeyman after it...the only difference is, he has a national audience and the budget to hire Eric Clapton's latter-day collaborator Simon Climie as a producer for his second album, The Distance. Climie also produced Michael McDonald's two Motown albums, so it follows that The Distance is somewhere between Clapton's well-tailored blues-rock and McDonald's soulful soft rock -- which also means it's not too far removed from Taylor Hicks, it just lacks the crossover inclination that led to such wannabe hits as "The Runaround." It's also true that The Distance lacks the need for a crossover hit: this album is pitched solely to the faithful, to those who are already paying attention, to those who will silently thrill at fellow Idol soulman Elliott Yamin's duet on Bobby Womack's "Woman's Got to Have It," to those who will chuckle at Hicks' hamfisted jabs at Paris, Britney, and OJ on "Keeping It Real.
Track List (try tracks 1,2,3,4,5,6,7 and 8)

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