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Eric Benet - Hurricane (CD)

Hurricane
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4.3 out of 5.0 stars 16 Ratings (8 Reviews)

Album Details: Hurricane

Release Date:06/21/2005
Label:Wea Japan
UPC:4943674056460

Other Available Formats: Hurricane

User Reviews: Hurricane

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    Hurricane

    By Yahoo! Shopping User  Oct 27, 2005 | 4 out of 4 found this Hurricane review helpful

    Pros: Eric Benet

    Cons: Love it

    Great Relaxing CD! My fav is Pretty Baby...lovely lyrics! Feel good song is I know...a uplifting song! Love it!

  • Overall:

    Lyrics:

    Music:

    Hurricane

    By Yahoo! Shopping User  Jun 21, 2005 | 3 out of 3 found this Hurricane review helpful

    Pros: great voice

    Cons: too much of the same type of song

    Eric has a great voice and poured out his heart to Ms. Halle on this one (yeah, i had to go there...) However, I felt like I was listening to a collection of lullabies the whole time on this cd. There wasn't as much diversity as I'm use to w...ith his other albums. I absolutely LOVED his previous 2 albums, but really couldn't get into this one. Most of the songs sounded too much alike and there was too much mellowness in his songs throughout the whole album. Nice album if you want to listen to the same type of music throughout a cd. Read more Less

Pro Reviews: Hurricane

  • All Music Guide

    Eric Benet spent the better part of a decade carving out a niche for his laidback loverman RB, notching a minor hit in 1999 with "Spend My Life with You," before he hooked up with actress Halle Berry. The couple married in 2001 and things almost immediately started to unravel for the singer. He started to pursue an acting career in earnest by appearing in Mariah Carey's legendary bomb Glitter, released the very year Berry starred in the gritty Monster's Ball, a careermaking role that landed her the Academy Award for Best Actress. That soulbaring performance, combined with her chestbaring performance in Swordfish, made Berry a superstar and a sex symbol, which overshadowed Benet's perfectly respectable career as a quiet storm crooner and Clevel actor, resulting in a downward spiral of jealousy manifesting itself in a lot of sleeping around. All this came to light in 2003, when Berry filed for divorce from Benet. Not long afterward, Benet's serial infidelities were revealed, and while he... claimed to suffer from sex addiction, he was quickly pegged as the idiot who cheated on Halle Berry by both tabloids and the public, and nothing he did, including a gloriously weepy interview on Primetime Live in the summer of 2004, erased that perception. Hurricane his longgestating third album, delivered in the summer of 2005, delivered well over six years after his second, A Day in the Life won't rehabilitate his image, either. Hurricane is a quintessential divorce album, where Benet spends the course of the record ruminating on what exactly went wrong in his marriage. There have been plenty of interesting, even brilliant, divorce albums in pop and soul history, and the best of them like Bob Dylan's Blood on the Tracks or Marvin Gaye's Here, My Dear have lyrical ambiguities and some degree of selfrecrimination, a realization that both parties share some guilt in the dissolution of their relationship. While Benet may indeed be "Man Enough to Cry," he's not willing to fess up some guilt on his end anywhere on Hurricane the closest he comes is acknowledging "I always loved, I always cared/But there was a part of me that wasn't always there" preferring to wonder why his love has vanished and to wish that he weren't alone. Which is all well and good, and perhaps it would even be mildly sympathetic if the audience didn't know one crucial fact: he cheated on Halle Berry. Repeatedly. This makes it a little difficult to buy the argument that he's been wounded by a love gone wrong he may not admit it, but anybody listening to Hurricane knows that Benet is the guilty party in his broken marriage. Not only that, but he uses his alleged heartbreak as well as his love for his daughter, who has the syrupy "India" dedicated to her as fuel for seduction, trying to turn his tales of loneliness into a bid for romance. That's because, no matter what he sings about, Benet simply makes sultry music that's intended to be the soundtrack to a romantic evening. There are plenty of lyrics about breaking up, but Hurricane sounds as if it were designed for hooking up. About half of the album is sleepy, maudlin quiet storm, while the other half is built directly on the template Prince created with "Adore," the warm, elegant closer to his 1987 doublealbum Sign 'O' the Times. The quiet storm is well performed but dull, yet the Princestyled numbers are engaging, melodic, and nimble, strong showcases for Benet's mellow skills. (Hurricane does have the best linernote thank you of the summer of 2005: "David Foster...This album never would have seen the light of day without you. How do I ever repay you? Maybe another Grammy for your collection?") - Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Eric Benet

Eric Benet is a contemporary gospel singer with heavy hip-hop and urban soul influences. As a teenager, Benet was in a vocal group called Benet with his sister and cousin. The group signed with Capitol and released an eponymous album in 1992 that went ignored. Eric went out as a solo artist shortly afterward, signing to Warner Bros. and releasing his debut album, True t... Read more