Calgary Herald

Making history

Mississipp­i pastor with no profession­al music background is The Voice champ

- EMILY YAHR

Like every other production in Hollywood, the coronaviru­s pandemic upended NBC’S The Voice, and it has filmed remotely for the past several weeks. But even if things had proceeded normally this season, there’s little doubt that Todd Tilghman still would have won.

Earlier this week, Tilghman triumphed over finalists Thundersto­rm Artis, Toneisha Harris, Cammwess and Micah Iverson, winning US$100,000 and a record deal. At age 41, Tilghman made show history as the oldest singer to win in all 18 seasons. And his victory stands out for another reason: He has no profession­al music background, unusual in a competitio­n series that heavily recruits the best singers it can find.

Looking back at other winners, many had already been in bands or performed as touring artists, some previously had record deals and one was even nominated for a Grammy Award. But Tilghman — a pastor from Mississipp­i and a father of eight — said he never gave serious thought to a music career.

“The Voice could change everything for me. Right now, I only sing at church. I don’t perform or record,” Tilghman said in the early weeks of the show. “To be able to support my family strictly through music would be a dream.”

The celebrity coaches were huge fans of Tilghman from the start. His was the very first audition shown during the season premiere in February. Tilghman belted out Bob Seger’s We’ve Got Tonight and instantly spurred the coveted “four-chair turn,” as all the coaches (Blake Shelton, Kelly Clarkson, John Legend and Nick Jonas) hit their buttons and tried to persuade him to join their team.

“I’ve literally never performed. I just sing at church,” Tilghman said, introducin­g himself as a pastor. This sparked an attempt to prove who was the biggest church fan. Legend revealed his grandfathe­r was a pastor, and Jonas one-upped him by boasting his father was a pastor. Tilghman went with Shelton, who compliment­ed his energy and “not smooth” vocals.

Even though other contestant­s offered some competitio­n — Artis in particular was a fan favourite — Tilghman looked like the winner for most of the season. He delivered consistent­ly.

In Monday’s penultimat­e episode, he performed Mercyme’s I Can Only Imagine, which brought Clarkson to tears, and original track Long Way Home, which flew to the top of the itunes all-genre chart.

Goldderby, a predictor of reality competitio­ns, pointed out that Tilghman’s sales were far ahead of his fellow finalists, a clear sign of his impending championsh­ip.

So really, it was no surprise when host Carson Daly announced him as the winner. Earlier, Shelton all but predicted he would be victorious, and succinctly summed up his unusual path.

“Todd’s really what this show is all about. He’s never (sung) outside of church before. He lives in a small town. He’s got eight kids. The world should know about these artists.”

 ??  ?? Todd Tilghman
Todd Tilghman

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