If any pop album of 2007 seemed like a sure thing, it was
Kelly Clarkson's third record,
My December.
Kelly definitively shook off the stigma of American Idol with her second album,
Breakaway, and, in particular, its smash hit "Since U Been Gone," an anthem so irresistible it was inescapable, beloved by teenage girls and hipsters alike (it even inspired a pretty good cover from oak-hearted indie hero
Ted Leo).
Kelly had it all: hits and some burgeoning cred, so it seemed that there was no way to screw up the next album, the one that would cement her as a rock & roll queen. Turns out, that was a large part of the problem:
Clarkson wanted to be a rocker, while her benefactor, the legendary record mogul
Clive Davis, wanted her to stick as a pop star, setting the stage for a massive battle that spilled over into the tabloids and blogs.
Kelly wrote and recorded her album as a rock record -- getting much mileage out of PR shots of her mugging with
Minuteman Mike Watt, which also helped strengthen her legitimacy as a rocker (even though all the accompanying articles suggested she didn't really know
fIREHOSE from
Firehouse, but to be fair, how many people do?) -- but when it came time to release it,
Davis balked, allegedly claiming there were no hit singles on the record at a label conference (then playing a few cuts as proof) and then taking several not-so-veiled swipes at her during the 2007 American Idol finale.
Clarkson held her ground, insisting that
My December come out the way she intended, firing her management team after the fight with
Davis (afterward, her first headlining arena tour was canceled, only increasing her bad press), but eventually getting the album in the stores in late June 2007.