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Q&A: Awards, tours, hits mark strong year for Daughtry
12/14/2007 6:00 PM, Reuters
Chris Daughtry sounded a bit bleary
the day after the recent American Music Awards, and for good
reason. "Oh, yeah, we all celebrated," he promised, still
basking in the glow of three AMA wins for his namesake band.
They had plenty to rejoice about. After the singer's
fourth-place finish on the fifth season of "American Idol,"
Daughtry's self-titled RCA debut became the fastest-selling
rock debut album in Nielsen SoundScan history -- and its 2.287
million copies made it the top-selling album by an artist in
2007. "Daughtry" topped the Billboard 200 for two weeks and the
Top Rock Albums chart for 14. It has spawned six singles so far
and is up for four Grammy Awards, including rock album and best
rock song for "It's Not Over."
All of this has made the 13 months since the album's
release the proverbial whirlwind, and the title of the hit
"It's Not Over" certainly rings true as Daughtry prepares to
hit the road in 2008 with Bon Jovi. Suffice to say that he's
had no second thoughts about turning down that offer to join
the rock band Fuel as lead singer.
Q: What's your take on the success Daughtry had in 2007?
Daughtry: It's a little bit of a shock. We're still a very
new band to the industry, so every time we go to these events
we kind of feel like the freshmen in high school, not really
affiliated with the big, successful artists. And now we feel
like we've graduated a little bit. We were certainly new to the
industry, but getting recognized for your hard work is a pretty
big deal. It's cool that people recognize us for what we do,
and it makes us feel good.
Q: Any thoughts about why everything took off for you?
Daughtry: I'm really not sure, to be honest with you. The
only thing I can really attribute it to is the fan base.
They're certainly very diehard and loyal to us, and they've
continued to buy our record. They've continued to come to our
shows. It doesn't matter how good you are as a band or how good
your music may be; if the fans aren't supporting it and buying
your music, it's hard to make it. So they're the ones that are
making it for us.
Q: What is it about you they like so much?
Daughtry: I guess they see us as regular dudes. We're just
normal guys who are doing what we've always wanted to do and
what we love to do. These are five guys who worked hard to get
where they are. And they're not letting it to go their heads.
Q: Does the world know Daughtry is a band as opposed to
Chris Daughtry's band?
Daughtry: I think the majority of the people get it.
Obviously our fans totally get it and know it's not a one-man
show, and I think everybody else is catching on. We've tried to
make sure that it's known that it's not just me. I've never
been a solo artist. When the band doesn't get the credit that
they deserve, it kind of bums me out a little bit. They're
working just as hard as I am, if not more, up there. I think
people get it.
Q: Do you feel at this point that everything -- you, the
band, the album -- has graduated from the "American Idol" world
and taken on a life of its own?
Daughtry: Absolutely, 100 percent. On ("American Idol"), I
wasn't able to do fully what I'm capable of; that was just, to
me, a way of showing my voice off. This is a totally different
thing. This is who we are -- we're musicians, we write our
music, and it's a totally different ballgame.
Q: What's your perspective on "American Idol" at this
point?
Daughtry: It changes from year to year. I don't have a
solid opinion on it. I think it's a great tool for people to
use. I mean, it's all about taking the opportunities that are
in front of you and making the best of them and using them to
your advantage.
I don't think it's cheesy one bit. I think it's cheesy if
you're going to go on there and use gimmicks and not be
yourself. But if you're going to go on there and you're going
to be yourself and you think you have what it takes, I think
it's a great opportunity to show that to the world. So I think
the people that go on there have to take it seriously.
People see right through that stuff; the public aren't
idiots. They're going to recognize something real when they see
it. I think that's part of what happened with us.
Q: Would Daughtry have gotten a deal if you hadn't done
"Idol?"
Daughtry: Well, I definitely think it accelerated it. I
wasn't getting any of that exposure in North Carolina. Being
that I had a family, financially we couldn't go out and tour
and get our names out there. So we had to basically play the
same old clubs over and over, and for mostly the same people.
When you do that, you just don't get the exposure and the buzz
that you need to make a name for yourself and get the
attention. So I felt that was my only option at the time, to
take a TV show like that and just get myself out there.
Q: At the time the album came out, were you apprehensive
about whether the fans you'd won on "Idol" would stick with
this rock 'n' roll band?
Daughtry: Well, I wasn't really as worried about that as I
was about everybody taking it seriously. Normally when you get
fans from a show like that, they're pretty loyal to you -- but
you still have to put the work in to make sure you put out the
best thing you can. It was everything else we were worried
about. "Is rock radio going to take us seriously? Are we going
to be taken seriously as a band in general, for our songwriting
and who we are?" We have been, and that's a really cool thing
for us.
Q: What have been some of the major touchstones of the year
for you?
Daughtry: Well, (the AMAs) were definitely a big one for
us. And getting the Bon Jovi tour is definitely another staple;
you have a very well-respected band that's been around for as
long as I can remember, and they respect us as a band and take
us seriously. When you have people like that and Nickelback and
all these other bands that are in the same class, so to speak,
taking you seriously for what you do, it kind of validates what
we're doing.
Q: What's the plan for the next Daughtry album?
Daughtry: I can't really say at this point. It's a little
early to tell. We're doing some writing when we have the
opportunity, and we're going to be working on getting it out
some time hopefully next year -- when we get it right.
Reuters/Billboard
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