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Van Hunt - What Were You Hoping For? Any of you guys checked this out?
Was a big fan of Jungle Groove and Popular is probably the greatest unreleased album I've ever heard... just ordered the CD of What Were You Hoping For and wondered how you guys feel the album holds up to his others?
I truly rate Van Hunt as one of the best and most criminally overlooked artists to emerge post-00s. What the hell is wrong with this damn industry letting someone as talented as Van fly so far under the radar? [Edited 11/24/13 3:30am] | |
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It's a great album — Van seems incapable of making anything else — but there was a lot more discussion about it when it was released. I'm surprised you waited this long to cop it! "Whitney was purely and simply one of a kind." ~ Clive Davis | |
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I listened to him a lot around the time of his second and third record and kept meaning to check out the new one but went on a bit of a rock music hiatus for a few years.... At The End Of A Slow Dance came on my iPod shuffle last week and I was like dayum, I gotta check out Van's last joint. | |
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He remains a wonderfully gifted songwriter and recording artist. He's not popular because he's intelligent and uncategorizable. Van Gogh (pun intended) ran into the same problems, I'm sure of it. . . wonder why we paid so much attention to D'Angelo and R. Kelly. | |
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Van Hunt played locally after the album came out and I went to see him. He played some new songs off the album and they sounded even better live. "Music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination and life to everything." --Plato
https://youtu.be/CVwv9LZMah0 | |
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Van Hunt will be the Shuggie Ottis of our generation. PRINCE: Always and Forever
MICHAEL JACKSON: Always and Forever ----- Live Your Life How U Wanna Live It | |
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That album turned me from super-fan to zero fan. I dont even have the stuff i used to love on my ipod anymore
Maybeee one day i will re-visit it. Such a monumental let down. RIP 1958-2016 Prince RIP 1947-2016 David Bowie | |
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Clearly not that.
I also have the signed CD he offered for pre-orders somewhere...still in the parcel post packaging didnt bother to open it after hearing the album on download (legally!) RIP 1958-2016 Prince RIP 1947-2016 David Bowie | |
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Interesting you bought this up. I have been on repeat the last few days with Van Hunt's debut and On the Jungle Floor. I got a Bose cd player for my birthday last month so i've been bumping those two. I tried listening to What Were You Hoping For but outside of 4 tracks I really don't like the album too much. I do love North Hollywood and Like Pearls. Don't laugh at my funk
This funk is a serious joint | |
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I like the title track and It's A Mysterious Hustle. Thank You San Alejo for getting rid of my enemies. :-0
Thank You SO much Saint Expedite for your help Thank You Virgin de Guadalupe for helping my friend Thank You Saint Anthony for returning my wallet to me untouched | |
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"Whitney was purely and simply one of a kind." ~ Clive Davis | |
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I've listened to the tracks on youtube and I like a few tracks but it seemed like the album was just missing something. I'd have to give it another listen. Don't laugh at my funk
This funk is a serious joint | |
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My only problem with this album is the way it's mixed. Too much cold reverb, filtered electric guitar and too little bass makes the album hard to digest as a whole. I do like all the songs individually when they pop up on my ipod. "Life's an elevator, it goes up and down. Life's an elevator can't you dig the sound?" -Marc Bolan | |
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As gifted as he is, he decided to make a bunch of music that only a niché few were interested in. That's why his shows fell off the way they did. You can make the songs but you can't make people like them. Maybe he will realize that and find his way back to a place where people dig him again. | |
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This too. Don't laugh at my funk
This funk is a serious joint | |
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I wish he would release a live recording with these songs, they have quite a different sound live... "Music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination and life to everything." --Plato
https://youtu.be/CVwv9LZMah0 | |
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that is accessible and easily digestible. But Van Hunt seems to be an artist more concerned with following the direction and guidance of his muse, as opposed to the shallow, uninformed, dare I say stupid, desires of the populace. He could easily put out an album chockfull of "Dust"s, and "At The End of a Slow Dance"s, and "Down Here in Hell With You"s so that pop-rockers get their fill and so do those annoying neo-soul listeners and admirers. albums deep, Van Hunt's catalogue, at this point in his career, is more interesting than he who shall remain nameless lest I mention him and start a holy war.
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the album reminded me of OK Computer and Kid A. I agree with you about the lack of base: I like to hear the low-end on albums and I missed it on a couple of these cuts, especially after what was heard on Popular. Voodoo and Parade and House of Music. | |
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The so-called "desires of the populace" when relating to Van Hunt's followers are unlikely to be overly concerned with how commercially accessible his new music is. Popular was a massive hit with his fanbase and was equally as inventive and experimental as WWYHF.
Is "At The End Of A Slow Dance" any less a genuine expression of his muse than, say, "Eyes Like Pearls", simply because of its blatant pop sensibilities? Listening to his new record, it's like he's gone straight from 1999 to Around The World In A Day and it's not too hard to see how that could unsettle a few of his listeners.
Whilst it is argueably admirable of Van Hunt to stick to his guns creatively speaking, sometimes you can't help but wonder if he has shot himself in the foot by choosing the path less travelled. It is the risk you take when you decide to disregard the expectations of your audience and follow your own muse, but the question is, has it really served Van Hunt well? Creatively, maybe it has (I'm really enjoying WWYHF), but it could be argued that it's unwise to risk alienating your audience when you're already something of a underground artist to begin with.
Food for thought, I guess.
[Edited 11/27/13 0:52am] | |
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it sold. That being said, I was granting truth to BK's post about Hunt's audience wanting a re- turn to a more accessible music. But I disagree with you about the comparative inventive- ness/experimental tones of album three to album four. his career seems to indicate to me that because he has not released an "easy listening" album since OTJF, that he is, perhaps, uninterested in maintaining a grip on any particular audience. I hope he continues to shoot himself in the foot because it makes for great art.
thing other than what you want to hear. He deserves my apotheosizing: he's intelligently crafting spectacular, musically interesting albums. As a musician, I appreciate and will celebrate this. | |
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Plum is my jam. This album is a bold musical statement, one that I appreciated greatly when it was released, and my appreciation grows. | |
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I can't put my finger on why I love Designer Jeans so much, maybe it's that relentless beat but there's a hypnotic quality to the song that I really dig. Am surprised to see no-one having mentioned it thus far.
And I also love Falls (Violet) - something about the vocal delivery and Van's phrasing reminds me of Sly circa Riot Goin' On.
The album is indeed a masterpiece. I love how Van continually evolves with every album and never makes the same record twice. When I first heard Popular I was disappointed it wasn't like OTJG, but I grew to love it even more than the latter. On my first listen of WWYWF I was disappointed it wasn't like Popular, but after repeated listens, the same thing is starting to happen.
[Edited 11/29/13 0:55am] | |
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Long time Van Hunt fan here. I found "What Were You Hoping For?" challenging at first. Even reading some of the press that Van did around the time of release I remember him saying something along the lines of the album was like getting a bunch of stuff out of his system. Makes sense considering "Popular" was shelved and that seemed to have a big impact on him. I don't think of "What Were You Hoping For?" as a very cohesive album but I can see the genius that is Van Hunt come through. It grew on me as I listened to it. It is not my favorite Van Hunt album but I can appreciate the artistry. For people just discovering Van Hunt, it is probably not the best introduction as it doesn't have a defining track that you can say "that's what Van Hunt is like" (but the fact that he isn't easily defined is clear and why a major label would never know what to do with him). Some of the earlier comments that talk about alienating a core audience with the record are certainly valid, and I think one of the issues is that it was so long in between releases (I think around 5 years) that the time never allowed the audience to see a natural progression of an artist. I think it will be interesting to see what he does next and I hope it comes out soon. | |
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