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CD
FOR PARENTS
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Clay Aiken may be sporting a fashionable shag haircut these days, but on his third studio album, he sticks with his now-familiar -- and endearing -- earnest and squeaky-clean sound. In keeping with his image as a romantic crooner, the American Idol runner-up is in full ballad mode -- 8 of the album's 14 songs are covers of seminal love songs from the past few decades. Aiken turns in an impassioned vocal on a lushly orchestrated version of the Bad English smash "When I See You Smile," gently rocks his way through Richard Marx's "Right Here Waiting," and delivers an emotive interpretation of Elton John's "Sorry Seems to Be the Hardest Word," spiced up with electric sitar nuances. Elsewhere, Aiken shows his vulnerability via a strings-soaked reading of Dolly Parton's country-pop nugget "Here You Come Again" and an ethereal rendition of the Mr. Mister hit "Broken Wings," featuring spoken-word vocals by poet Erin Taylor. Equally notable is a duet with vocalist Suzie McNeil on an uplifting reading of Foreigner's "I Want to Know What Love Is," sans gospel choir. The album's newer material also impresses, from Aiken's collaboration with David Foster acolyte William Joseph on the beautiful, piano-driven "Everything I Have" to "These Open Arms," an epic Jon Bon Jovi/Desmond Child-penned cut that packs the punch of a Bon Jovi power ballad. This unlikely heartthrob continues to march to the beat of his own MOR drummer, making wholesome, tastefully presented pop that nostalgic moms can enjoy alongside their tween daughters. Dave Gil de Rubio, Barnes & Noble

Only the subtlest of innuendo.
Clay's a lover, not a fighter.
Not an issue.
Love is the only drug.
Not an issue.
About AThousand Different Ways
Parents need to know that there's nothing offensive in this collection of sentimental love ballads.
Families can talk about what happens physically, emotionally, and mentally when people fall in love. Why does falling in love make people want to listen to sappy music? How does it make what you've heard thousands of times/ways sound new and fresh?