Music
Store



 Location:  Home » Music » I Look to You  
Music Home

  • Music Lyrics
  • Top 10 Music
  • New Music Releases
  • Music News


  • Movie Store
  • Book Store
  • Game Store
  • Software Store
  • Tool Store
  • Shopping Mall
  • Categories
    Music
    MP3s
    Music DVDs
    IPod/MP3 Players
    DJ Equipment
    Musical Instruments
    Related Categories
    • General
    Pop
    Styles
    Music
    • General AAS
    Adult Contemporary
    Pop
    Styles
    Music
    • General
    R&B
    Styles
    Music
    • General AAS
    Soul
    R&B
    Styles
    Music
    • Gift Ideas for Music Lovers
    Special Features
    Music
    • CD
    First to Know
    Custom Stores
    Specialty Stores
    Music
    • CD Album
    CD
    Format (binding)
    Refinements
    Music
    • First to Know
    Format (binding)
    Refinements
    Music
    • First to Know
    Features & Promotions
    Refinements
    Music
    • Main Albums (Discography Pages)
    Edition (format)
    Refinements
    Music
    • Main Albums
    Edition (format)
    Refinements
    Music

    I Look to You

    I Look to You

    Other Views:
    Artist: Whitney Houston
    Label: Sony BMG
    Category: Music

    List Price: $13.98
    Buy Used: $2.02
    as of 2/10/2010 00:00 EST details
    You Save: $11.96 (86%)



    New (51) Used (31) from $2.02

    Seller: ET4LESS_MW
    Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 350 reviews
    Sales Rank: 262

    Media: Audio CD
    Discs: 1
    Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
    Dimensions (in): 5.4 x 4.9 x 0.4

    MPN: 710033
    UPC: 886971003321
    EAN: 0886971003321
    ASIN: B001AQTWF2

    Release Date: August 31, 2009
    Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

    Tracks:

      • Million Dollar Bill
      • Nothin' But Love
      • Call You Tonight
      • I Look To You
      • Like I Never Left (feat. Akon)
      • A Song For You
      • I Didn't Know My Own Strength
      • Worth It
      • For The Lovers
      • I Got You
      • Salute

    Similar Items:


    Editorial Reviews:

    Album Description
    With over 170 million combined albums, singles, and videos sold worldwide during her career with Arista Records, Whitney Houston has established a benchmark for superstardom that will quite simply never be eclipsed in the modern era. She is a singer's singer who has influenced countless other vocalists, male and female. Houston is triumphed by the Guinness Book of World Records as music's "Most Awarded Female Artist of All Time" with an amazing tally of 411 awards. She holds both the biggest-selling U.S. single of all-time (her career defining rendition of Dolly Parton's "I Will Always Love You") and one of the top 10 best-selling albums of all time (The Bodyguard soundtrack) to her many credits. She's also the only artist to chart seven consecutive #1 Billboard Hot 100 hits, hold seven consecutive multi-platinum albums. She reigns as the first female artist to have entered the Billboard 200 album chart at #1. Whitney's highly anticipated new studio album features a wide array of A-list producers including Stargate, R Kelly, Akon, Eric Hudson & Johnta Austin, Fernando Garabay & Harvey Mason Jr., Tricky Stewart, Swizz Beatz, David Foster and Diane Warren. On September 1, 2009, the Legend, the Icon, the Worldwide Superstar returns with her best work yet.

    Album Description
    Long awaited 2009 album from the world's most awarded female recording artist (411 awards to date). From Pop fanatics to R&B aficionados, everybody loves Whitney! On I Look To You, Houston works with an A-list of producers including Stargate, R Kelly, Akon, Eric Hudson & Johnta Austin, Fernando Garabay & Harvey Mason Jr, Tricky, Swizz Beatz, David Foster and, of course, Diane Warren.


    Customer Reviews:
    Showing reviews 1-5 of 350
    1 2 3 4 5 6 ...70Next »



    5 out of 5 stars If you're not looking for the old, it'll be easy to embrace the new   September 1, 2009
    J. Baker
    140 out of 168 found this review helpful

    If you're looking for the old Whitney when you get this CD, then you'll be disappointed. The range and caliber of her voice has inarguably deteriorated (I'm not going to speculate into all the debatable reasons why, but I'm sure a part of it has to do with age, vocal nodules, etc). As a result, the songs on this album seemed to have been chosen to fit with Whitney's new, much more limited voice. You won't find an I Will Always Love You or All the Man I Need song on this album. That's just not happening. At first listen, I was a little disappointed with many of the songs. But that was because I was comparing 40something Whitney to 20something Whitney, and I was expecting more ballads, even though few people nowadays even sing them. But on second listen, taking the album for what it was, not comparing her to who she was, but simply listening to the music, I realized this is an excellent album. So from this point in the review, I'll be talking about the songs on the album itself, not how Whitney of today compares with Whitney of yesteryear.

    Of the two slow, ballad-like songs on the album only I Look To You is worth listening to. Though I love the message in I Didn't Know My Own Strength, it's a pretty mundane ballad and Whitney's voice is nearly monotonous throughout the entire song. No "wow" moments in there. It was great for getting her messge out, but I doubt you'll be putting it on repeat. On the other hand, her vocals in I Look To You are delivered much more soothingly, with much more impassioned vocals. It's also a very well-written song, R Kelly did a wonderful job on both lyrics and composition.

    Most of the other songs pretty much fit with the trend of today's music: dance/club songs. Million Dllar Bill straddles the line between good and great. It may take some getting used to due to the 70s disco beat at the beginning, but when you get into the song it'll definitely have you "going left, right, up, down, got you spinning 'round and 'round."

    "Nothing But love" has a great beat to it, and her vocals are excellent. You'll definitely be bumping this in the car. It's motivational, and the lyrics attack all the haters that we know have attacked Whitney. Definiely one of the best songs. Also at the top of the list: A Song For You. If only for the note she holds at the end. The song is one of the few that showcase her vocals. Maybe Whit decided to go all out because she's been singing it for so long. Who knows? But she's hitting some clear, high notes and holding some long vibrato notes. It's also got a great, fast, disco-type beat about a minute into it. And seriously, you gotta hear that note she holds at the end. It's like 20 seconds long. That's Whit for you.

    My favorite song on the album is Call You Tonight. It's mid-tempo, she seems to do her best work on mid-tempo songs. It has a smooth beat that'll have you swaying back and forth, trying to sing along with Whitney, but failing of course. It's also cross-generational. Not with the message of the lyrics, but with the flow of it. I'm 25 and played this for my married 51-year-old mother who listens to gospel music all the time and she loved it.

    My mother did not, however, like some of the lyrics in Salute, which I really enjoyed. In particular, she had a problem with the line "you think your s*** don't stink, but it do." I'm not sure if it was the incorrect grammar, or the fact that Whitney said it but my mother replied upon hearing it, quote, "that doesn't sound right." I love it though. I think some of the lyrics are lazy(R.Kelly wrote it) but "Queen of the Night" Whitney sings it and you can tell she's feeling it. It sounds like a response to both her ex and the media.

    There are other gems on this album, including Like I Never Left. But I heard that when it leaked last year, so it's pretty old to me now. But if you haven't heard it, it'll definitely be one of your favs. I could do without Akon singing on it though.

    Worth It and For the Lovers are good, not great. For the Lovers sounds like a club dance song and will have you swinging yor hands, so maybe you shouldn't drive and listen to this one, might have an accident. Worth It is about, well...as Whitney sings "somebody's gonna make love to this song tonight." Great vocals in here too, and you can hear her easily shift from chest voice to head voice, a trait which she's known for.

    I don't know how I feel about I Got You. It's got a smooth Jamaican-type vibe to it. It's not bad, but she's not really singing in it...just kinda talking and doing a hollow, calling out type thing. You may sway to it, but I'm glad it's at the end of the CD. I just wish it wasn't before Salute.

    Overall, Whitney and Clive did a great job picking songs for this album. Only a few songs are lacking (as can be expected with any album), but all the great ones make up for it. The songs also mesh well with Whitney's voice, and brings her into the music industry of today without sacrificing her class.



    5 out of 5 stars Welcome Back Whitney!   August 31, 2009
    Around the World (Boston, MA USA)
    35 out of 43 found this review helpful

    Whitney's absence from the music scene has been well chronicled by others and there's no need to revisit all of that gossip here. The question is whether I Look To You makes for a great listening experience.

    And the answer is most certainly YES!

    Back with strong vocals, albeit in a more limited range, Whitney's newest album is a new sound but still an enjoyable listen. Huskier and more gravelly than we remember, her voice is still The Voice and we should rejoice in a new era rather than mourn the passing of the past.

    Its tempting to read more into her lyrics than perhaps she intended, but thats what great music allows for.

    When she sings the title cut "I Look to You" by R. Kelly, which some have called churchy and schmaltzy, I wonder who she is really singing to...God? Perhaps...but maybe its really intended for her daughter whom she has credited with bringing her strength during her time away. I know I looked to mine as I conquered a period of depression and substance abuse in my life. "Who on earth can I turn to? I look to you...". Thank you Bobbi Christina!

    On the track "Like I Never Left" with Akon we might think she is speaking to a former lover, but I wonder: is she really talking to Clive Davis? Her snubs of him were famous in the early 2000s and she eventually turned away from his guiding hand. Her last studio album, Just Whitney, was produced not by Clive but by Bobby Brown. And it was a dismal disappointment. Is Clive's girl back, and back on top? Lets hope so.

    I have read most of the reviews of this album on here and in the print and online media and the thing that strikes me is how each track is a favorite of different writers, which speaks to the consistent strength of the entire album. Now that is classic Whitney.

    I love this album, not because it soars like her previous albums but because it soars in new ways, with a new found emotional commitment to the lyric and the melody. Music we will remember, for sure!




    3 out of 5 stars Whitney Unmodulated   August 31, 2009
    David Cady (Jersey City, NJ USA)
    16 out of 19 found this review helpful

    On an early track of her latest CD, Whitney Houston poignantly sings "I want you to love me/Like I never left." Having listened twice through now, I can wholeheartedly claim that I still do. Which is not to say that "I Look to You" is a great album, or even a good one. But, hold on, it's not really a bad one, either. For the most part it plays out like a greatest hits collection in that we pretty much know what's coming next. Early bubblegum ("Million Dollar Bill") is followed by some power ballads (like the title track), followed by some mild flirtations with electronic hip-hop ("For the Lovers" for example). Houston is playing squarely in her comfort zone here, but she's earned it, no? Not every album can, should or needs to reinvent the wheel. The only true misfire is a disco (yes, you heard it here first) version of the Donny Hathaway classic "A Song for You." It's bizarre, to say the least, unlikely to be remembered as one of that song's best renditions.

    And how is Houston's voice? A little heavier and thicker than it was, frankly, but still quite strong and supple. Perhaps the single most telling indication that something's changed is that every song stays solidly in the same key from beginning to end. A couple of times I thought, "Here comes the old Whitney Houston kick-ass modulation"...but it never happened. OK, so now we know, we can all move on.

    Neither a triumphant return to form nor a crash-and-burn disaster, "I Look to You" is the uneventful return of an old friend. I, for one, am just fine with that.



    5 out of 5 stars At Long Last   August 31, 2009
    Michael T. Rognlien (Chicago, IL USA)
    23 out of 30 found this review helpful

    There are so many different ways to say what a triumph this CD is, but at the end of the day, it's just a sheer pleasure to be able to say the words "I love the new Whitney CD!" after 11 years of waiting (and no, I don't count the quickly-cobbled-together "Just Whitney" or her Christmas album).

    Yeah, her voice is older and smokier than in the past, and if that's the only litmus test you have for her new CD you might be tempted to rate it lower. But there is still nobody in music who can sing like Whitney, there just isn't. When every wannabe singer on American Idol tries to replicate her voice and her delivery, they just can't. There is/always will be only on Whitney.

    As for the music - I would have listened to her sing her ABC's and loved it, but I really do genuinely like this whole set. A great mix of slow/mid/uptempo R&B, there's something here for every mood. She seems to realize that her voice and her range can suitably fit just about any genre, but the selection of songs here (including the totally club-ready torch song "A Song for You" - one of my favorites) shows that she is once again in the masterful hands of Clive Davis, the man who made her career and, ultimately, saved her life in every sense of the word.

    LOVE this CD and am so, so glad that Whitney is back.

    PS - since some reviewers are commenting that the vocal acrobatics are absent from this CD: she doesn't need them. Put a gospel song in front of her today and I can guarantee you she would sing her face off. That she took so much heat for them in the past and is now taking heat for NOT having them is amusing - she has nothing to prove, and she sounds better for knowing so.



    5 out of 5 stars A Project From the Heart.   October 10, 2009
    Saundra Marsh
    4 out of 4 found this review helpful

    It's apparent that Whitney has learned a great deal from life's experiences. It comes out in her latest CD and (in my opinion), is her best work yet. As I listen to the CD, I'm so happy to say, "Whitney is still Whitney!"

    Showing reviews 1-5 of 350
    1 2 3 4 5 6 ...70Next »


    CERTAIN CONTENT THAT APPEARS ON THIS SITE COMES FROM AMAZON SERVICES LLC. THIS CONTENT IS PROVIDED ‘AS IS’ AND IS SUBJECT TO CHANGE OR REMOVAL AT ANY TIME.

    Proud member of the Celebrity Pro Network. Make sure you check out these other great Celebrity Pro Network sites:

    Lyrics Database   Celebrity Blog   Celebrity Thing   Celebrity PC   Celebrity Latest   Portal Site   Travel Photos   Quotes   Flash Games


    Is there a better
    price available?


    Find out: