Black Country Bugle

Contestant­s aim to hit the high note

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Stop! It’s time to give a little respect, break those chains of love and take a chance on I Can Hearyourvo­ice (Saturday, BBC1, 9.15pm). Sometimes the show features a surprising but wonderful guest, and that’s certainly the case with the latest episode – bona fide 1980s pop superstar Andy Bell, frontman of Erasure, is joining in the fun. He’ll be assisting regular celebrity investigat­ors Jimmy Carr, Alison Hammond and Amanda Holden when they try to help two sisters from Leeds figure out which singers have the voice of an angel, and who is tone deaf – simply by watching them lip-sync to a well-known tune.

Andy may have more of a chance of guessing correctly – after all, despite having a brilliant voice, he was forced to mime many, many times during performanc­es alongside his bandmate Vince Clarke during their appearance­s on Top of the Pops back in the day. It promises to be a cracking edition of the game show which is now in its second series. Like The Masked Singer, the format started life in South Korea and has since been remade around the world. The BBC version is given a downto-earth British feel by its host, Paddy Mcguinness. He promises that at the start of each programme, he’s as much in the dark about who’s good and who’s bad as the competitor­s and everyone watching at home. “I like it that way because otherwise I think I’d be the type of person to be giving the contestant­s a wink,” he laughs. “It’s always a surprise at the end, and although I have my own opinions, I don’t share those with the guys as I’m not there for that, I’m there to host the show. That is the job of the celebrity investigat­ors, they are there to help the contestant­s with any little nuggets they have spotted. “So, on that final round, when the singer sings, whether they are good or bad, I always think the other way around! I always think a bad singer is going to be good, and a good singer is going to be bad. So, every show is a surprise for me.” Mcguinness loves the series, but perhaps not for the reasons you might think – it’s not necessaril­y the competitio­n itself that prompted him to take on the presenter’s role. “When I heard the format and watched the American pilot, I instantly knew I had a bit of free rein,” he explains. “The reason I loved Take Me Out was because I had that element. “There is the script but after that you can have fun with it, and that’s what I can do with this show.”

 ?? ?? On song Paddy Mcguinness presents
On song Paddy Mcguinness presents

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