Can You Duet Performances
List of Joey + Rory's performances on Can You DuetSemi-Finals (Season 2)
- Original Song Night - "Cheater, Cheater"
- Returned as a guest performer on the series' second season, and gave advice to the remaining competitors.
Finals (Season 1)
- And the Winner Is... - "I Want to Be Loved Like That", Shenandoah
- The judges cited the performance as being weaker than previous ones, and they were eliminated (receiving third place).
Semifinals (Season 1)
- The Final Three - "Things That Never Cross a Man's Mind", Kellie Pickler
- The judges were pleased to see Rory sing a verse by himself for the first time.
- Five Duets Down to Four - "Young Love", The Judds
- Naomi felt that they had likability and marketability, Brett declared that "America needs this", and Aimee compared it to a "sweet dream."
- Six Duets Cut to Five - "Cheater, Cheater", Joey + Rory (original song)
- The judges loved the performance and felt they showed real star quality and great interaction between the two while on stage.
- Seven Duets Down to Six - "Lord I Hope This Day Is Good", Lee Ann Womack
- Joey played an acoustic guitar in this performance, when previously only Rory had played the guitar.
- Eight Duets Perform - "455 Rocket", Kathy Mattea
- The first performance on the big stage before a live studio audience.
Pre-Semifinals (Season 1)
- 12 Duets Become Eight - "Free Bird", Lynyrd Skynyrd
- Final performance performance before they perform on the live stage in the semifinals.
- Workshop Week - "How's the World Treating You", Alison Krauss
- Workshop week; second performance before they perform on the live stage.
- Audition - "Play the Song", Joey + Rory (original song)
- The judges thought they were the real deal, and they were chosen to continue.
Read more about this topic: Joey + Rory
Famous quotes containing the word performances:
“This play holds the seasons record [for early closing], thus far, with a run of four evening performances and one matinee. By an odd coincidence it ran just five performances too many.”
—Dorothy Parker (18931967)