Daughtry – Daughtry (2006) Review
TV talent shows sell an interesting fame paradox.
They promise a career in the spotlight — but for most contestants, that spotlight begins to fade as soon as the credits roll.
Daughtry is the rare exception to this rule.
The former American Idol singer has crafted a proper mid-2000s rock record — thick guitars, stacked choruses, and a voice built for radio without sounding like it’s begging for it. It doesn’t reinvent the era’s post-grunge template, but it executes it with unusually high discipline, which is why the record still lands when a lot of its peers now feel like time capsules.

Not Over Yet
Few would have blamed the North Carolina frontman had he taken the safe route — a pop-leaning solo launch and a few polite singles — but the record he made is deliberately tougher than expected.
Lead single It’s Not Over sets the stall out.
It’s a moody, chorus-forward, heavyweight affair that hits like it’s been mixed for US radio first and everything else second. The key to its success is that it doesn’t try to “prove” he belongs — having already shown his chops in front of the nation, it simply behaves like he already does.

The Benson Treatment
A lot of the album’s identity comes down to one decision: putting Howard Benson in the chair.
This is mid-2000s mainstream rock done with maximum efficiency — compressed crunch, tight low end, choruses stacked to hit hard and hit clean. The production doesn’t chase subtlety. It chases impact.
That polish can be a drawback if you’re allergic to the era’s radio sheen, but it also explains why the record holds up: the songs are built to move, and the mixes are built to carry them.
"Open up the book you beat me with again."
BREAKDOWN

The Deep Cuts Don’t Flinch
The best surprise is that the singles aren’t dragging passengers.
Tracks like Crashed and Gone lean into the heavier template without feeling like recycled parts. Breakdown is a slow-burner that’s designed to do exactly what Daughtry does best: take bruised melodrama and make it feel functional, not self-pitying, by delivering a chorus capable of soundtracking even the baddest of bad days.
Then there’s What I Want, which lands as a genuine rock moment rather than a celebrity cameo — in part because the song is already doing the work before Slash turns up to decorate it.
“I grew up listening to Guns N’ Roses, Skid Row, and Soundgarden. There’s something special about those records, you know? So having Slash appear on my music was a dream come true. I was too nervous to speak to him, so I sat outside the studio like a little kid while he cut his solo (laughs).”
– Chris Daughtry

What Might Have Been
The topic of Slash presents us with an interesting conundrum.
In the weeks following his surprise guest appearance, the top-hatted virtuoso spoke at length about how impressed he was with Daughtry’s powerful singing style on the new track.
Indeed, we’re left to wonder what might have been had the frontman managed to break through just a couple of years earlier, when the ex-Gunners unit (Slash, bass guitarist Duff McKagan, and drummer Matt Sorum) were conducting a nationwide search for a vocalist, eventually handing Stone Temple Pilots leader Scott Weiland the mic for the short-lived but much-loved Velvet Revolver project.

Ballads With a Job to Do
Yes, the record makes room for the softer side — it would have been commercial malpractice not to — but the better ballads don’t feel like a label memo.
Home is the obvious crossover centrepiece: simple, direct, and built around a vocal that sells sincerity without trying too hard.
Elsewhere, Over You and What About Now do a similar job, broadening Daughtry’s palette to appeal to a mass audience while never taking the album’s main focus away from the singer-songwriter’s uncanny ability to pen Bon Jovi-esque radio-friendly rock choruses.
” A critic called us “as annoying as Nickelback” and I couldn’t help but laugh. I know he intended it as a snarky insult, but I disagree. They’ve sold five million records! Please give us that kind of reach!”
– Chris Daughtry

Start Of Something Good
Extra credit must be given to Chris Daughtry for sticking to his guns.
Shortly after his surprise exit from American Idol, he was offered the chance to become the new frontman of Fuel — a band he counts among his biggest influences. He turned it down, chose a solo deal with RCA instead, and used the label’s machine to hit the ground running.
With the record company’s long-standing Idol connections behind him, Daughtry was surrounded by top-tier session muscle — including guitarist Phil X and drummer Josh Freese — and the debut was built quickly and professionally.
The interesting twist is what happened next. Despite the album’s “solo project” origins, Daughtry later persuaded RCA to let him formalise a proper band for the road. The new unit — imaginatively titled DAUGHTRY (yes, all caps) — took the album on tour, and the project then shifted into a true five-piece model for future releases.

A Debut That Outran Its Origins
Daughtry was one of the best-selling albums of 2007 in the US, and is widely described as the fastest-selling debut rock album in Nielsen SoundScan history.
But the more interesting point is why it happened: the record didn’t win because it was “the Idol guy’s album”. It won because it delivered what mid-2000s rock radio wanted — big choruses, thick production, and a voice built to live at the centre of a mix.
Further proof was delivered by the fact that it spawned a whopping seven singles, and two of those — It’s Not Over and Home — catapulted the band into the coveted top five of the Billboard Hot 100.
"You took a hammer to these walls,
Dragged the memories down the hall."
OVER YOU

Daughtry – Daughtry (2006)
Daughtry’s self-titled debut isn’t reinventing the wheel.
Instead, it builds the most efficient, radio-proof version of it — thick guitars, big choruses, zero hesitation — and drives it straight through the wall.
The singles land, the deep cuts hold their own, and the ballads do their job without drowning the record in syrup. Most importantly, it’s held up: not because it’s fashionable, but because the craft is solid and the hooks are built to last.
For a debut with this much expectation and this much mainstream exposure, that’s a minor miracle.
These Go To Eleven Reworked Tracklist
These Go To Eleven Reworked Tracklist
Daughtry (2006) is already built like a hit machine — thick guitars, big choruses, and hardly a wasted hook — but the original sequencing leans a little too hard on the mid-tempo comfort zone.
This reworked tracklist is about flow, not revisionism: front-loading the punchiest rockers, spacing the ballads so they land as breathers rather than momentum killers, and keeping the album’s best choruses in a run that feels relentless.
Here’s how you should listen to Daughtry: Daughtry (2006) for maximum impact:
- It’s Not Over (3:35) ★
- What I Want (feat. Slash) (2:48)
- Used To (3:32)
- Crashed (3:30) ★
- There And Back Again (3:15)
- Home (4:15) ★
- Over You (3:24)
- Feels Like Tonight (3:58)
- Breakdown (4:01)
- Gone (3:21)
- All These Lives (3:23)
- Sorry (3:40)
- What About Now (4:10)
★ Standout track
In summary:
A post-Idol debut that sounds like a proper modern rock record — polished, heavy, and far more consistent than it has any right to be.
Daughtry receives 8/11.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★
>> Daughtry (2006) is part of our Daughtry album review series.
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