By Glenn Gamboa - Newsday
Issue date: 6/19/08 Section: Music
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She has the big, powerful voice and poise under pressure of singers twice _ maybe, three times _ her age. She has a natural ease at being onstage, at being in the spotlight.
But catch her behind the scenes _ like backstage at Nassau Coliseum last summer, when she was bouncing around with Sanjaya Malakar, giggling like, well, the schoolgirl she was _ or talk to her about real life, like wanting to go to her prom or struggling to keep her room clean, and the teenager comes out.
It's a mix that even fits her current tour of arenas, her first without her "American Idol" pals, opening for Alicia Keys _ an idea that couldn't have even been a dream 18 months ago. "When they told me that I was going with her, my jaw just dropped to the floor," Sparks says. "I was like, seriously? Really? Alicia Keys that has the No. 1 album in the country right now wants me to be out on her tour? ... I sang 'Fallin,' I mean, I don't know how many times, for friends and family and some competitions, so it's just crazy that everything's kind of coming full circle for me from singing her stuff to now opening up for her. Wow, it's insane."
Of course, Sparks has enough chart successes of her own to merit the call. Her single, "No Air," with Chris Brown, has been lodged in the Top 10 for months now, and the new single "One Step at a Time" was launched last month on the "American Idol" finale, when she passed the "Idol" torch to David Cook. Though many have called sales of her eponymous debut, which recently went gold, disappointing, Sparks reacts with the big-picture view of a veteran and the optimism of a thrilled newcomer.
"I'm pretty sure it's just the way the industry is changing, because I know even before any of this happened _ I just wanted the song, and not so much maybe the whole album, unless it was really good," she says. "I'm proud of the numbers that I've sold, because I've just broken in this thing, and I'm working on it, so I'm excited. From (when Kelly Clarkson won in 2002) to now, everything has changed so much, and it's all about downloading and iTunes and singles, and so I kind of think that's what part of it is, but I'm really glad that my singles are doing well."
Sparks says she is looking forward to working on her next album, when she will get a chance to write more and have more control over what it sounds like.
2008 Woodie Awards



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