Singing doesn't always come easy for Kris Allen

SINGAPORE : It's been his dream since he was 13 to become a
singer but singing doesn't always come easy for American Idol 8
champion Kris Allen.
The 24-year-old dreads singing in front of
small groups as he gets "tensed up" and "scared". One wonders how
he made it through the Idol auditions.
"I'd rather sing in front of a million people
than you guys," Allen told reporters during an interview at
Mandarin Oriental Singapore on Tuesday.
And it's worse if you are family. So the
Arkansas native decided to take action and gave his mum song
cards for Christmas which she could use to force him to
sing.
"She would pull it out once in a while and go
'okay now you have to sing' because I couldn't say no to it, so
that was really rough," he said.
Interestingly, he has no qualms about singing
in front of a small audience in karaoke
bars.
"I actually like karaoke because karaoke's
fun... you can sing anything, sing stupid songs that no one even
likes and you don't even have to sing," he said, yelping away as
he demonstrated his karaoke singing.
Well, thankfully there will be plenty of fans
present to calm his nerves when he performs at mega club Zirca on
Wednesday. And even more so after organisers waived the minimum
age requirement for entry into the club, though those under 14
years must be accompanied by a parent or guardian who is at least
18.
Allen, the first American Idol winner to
stage a solo concert here, will be performing tracks from his
self-titled album as well as familiar covers of songs that he
sang on American Idol.
Singapore is his last stop of the Asian leg
of his tour which included shows in the Philippines and a
stopover in Malaysia.
Idol-ised
2009 has been a whirlwind year for Allen.
Since winning the eighth season of American Idol in May, he has
been working on his self-titled album which he released in
November, and is now on a world tour to promote
it.
But all this would have remained just a dream
had his brother not convinced Allen, who was close to giving up
his music career, to tag along for the American Idol
audition.
"American idol was something that just kind
of happened. I just went and I just kept getting through the
audition rounds," he said, though he had resisted the call of
Idol initially as he wanted to make it on his
own.
"[But] Idol's given me the opportunity to at
least have a career right now and hopefully have one for a really
long time, so I'm happy with how things are going right now. But
the thing about it is, when you are on the show, people expect a
lot out of you, which is fine, but there's a lot of
expectations."
So any advice for Idol
hopefuls?
"I always tell people to take the risks that
you want to take because people appreciate them and understand
them and I think that people vote on that for sure and just be
yourself. Everyone has their niche, their genre whether it be
their music or their style, stay true to that," he said
- CNA


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