Browse Music
Rock & Pop
R&B & Hip-Hop
Country
Blues
Jazz
Classical
Latin
Christian
Soundtracks
Collections
Van Hunt
On The Jungle Floor
Van Hunt:  On The Jungle Floor

$6.99
AMG Top Pick Listen

Album Review

Released: 2006
Label: Capitol
Selection #: 164446
Soul man nets comparisons to Prince for his sexy melding of R&B and rock. Character, Being A Girl, Priest Or Police, ...A Slow Dance, Hot Stage Lites, more.
Listen RM WM
1 Intro N/A N/A
2 If I Take You Home (Upon...)
3 Hot Stage Lights
4 Daredevil, Baby
5 Ride, Ride, Ride
6 Being a Girl
7 Suspicion (She Knows Me Too Well)
8 Mean Sleep
9 Priest or Police
10 Character
11 Interlude N/A N/A
12 No Sense of Crime
13 At the End of a Slow Dance
14 The Thrill of This Love
15 Hole in My Heart
16 The Night Is Young
  
Download Player:    Real Media Real Media    Windows Media Windows Media
Album Review

Van Hunt's first album peaked at the bottom of the Top 40 R&B Albums chart. Anyone who heard it and liked it couldn't help but be surprised that it didn't create a bigger ripple, particularly since it wasn't hard to imagine hearing the likes of "Dust" or "Down Here In Hell (With You)" on regular daytime rotation across the country. But the album sort of tanked, despite its unmistakable strengths and positive reviews. Hunt must have been somewhat frustrated while watching similarly organic and musical singles by Anthony Hamilton, John Legend, and Alicia Keys ride to glory, but then again, all he has needed for a cold dose of reality is a talk with frequent collaborator Rahsaan Patterson, another supremely talented and likeminded artist who has had to settle for an unfairly cult-size following. Hunt's second album, "On the Jungle Floor", has no overtones of desire for crossing over, so perhaps he's already content with his position. In fact, the album seems less self-conscious and compromised than the debut. Hunt's songwriting is also sharper and more assured, though it doesn't always pay off; he's occasionally overambitious and overextends himself when he goes out of his way to prove his individualism. Minus a few songs, the album would be a great deal tighter and run no risk of neutralizing any of the aspects that make Hunt one of the smartest and most slyly creative R&B artists. He continues to boldly blend styles like some of his heroes (Prince, Rick James), goes off on a couple hard rock tangents (one of which retains his melodic sense), and continuously finds ways to base the material he writes in '70s soul and funk without making any blatant throwbacks (even the flashes of fellow Dayton natives Slave within "Stage Lights" are kept brief). At least eight of the songs written in whole or in part by Hunt are worth singling out, but the cover of Iggy Pop and James Williamson's "No Sense Of Crime" must be mentioned for its pumping of Technicolor into the black-and-white original, as if it had been meant for the second side of Sly & the Family Stone's "There's a Riot Goin' On" or Prince & the Revolution's "Around the World in a Day". ~ Andy Kellman, All Music Guide

Back To Top
About This Artist
Biography


Other albums by: Van Hunt
Van Hunt:  Van Hunt Listen Van Hunt
Van Hunt

$6.99

more
Related Artists
The Isley Brothers
Rick James
Lenny Kravitz
Ohio Players
D'Angelo
Erykah Badu
Rahsaan Patterson
Raphael Saadiq
Dwele
more

Any reproduction, publication, further distribution, or public exhibition of materials provided at this site, in whole or in part, is strictly prohibited.
©2006 All Media Guide, LLC
Portions of content provided by All Music Guide®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC