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Zero 7
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The Ecleftic 2 Sides II a Book

Generally favorable reviews
Based on 21 critic reviews
How did we calculate this?
Based on 3 votes
Read user comments
Rate this album >
Album Info
Label: Sony
Release Date: 22 August 2000
Discs: 1 disc
Genre(s): Rap
Summary
The second solo release from the former Fugee features guest appearances by Mary J. Blige, Youssou N'Dour, and Kenny Rogers (yes, that Kenny Rogers).
Also By This Artist: Carnival II: Memoirs Of An Immigrant Masquerade The Preacher's Son
What The Critics Said
All critic scores are converted to a 100-point scale. If a critic does not indicate a score, we assign a score based on the general impression given by the text of the review. Learn more...
Village Voice (Consumer Guide)
He sings roughly but warmly, and makes up as many hooks as he samples...
Read Full Review >Vibe
Although everything on The Ecleftic might not be for everybody, make no mistake, this album is ahead of its time. Forget about Britney Spears... Wyclef's done it again!
Read Full Review >Wall of Sound
There will be few albums released this year that are as exciting, artistic, and, yes, eclectic as this one, and it's scary to think of what Wyclef will be capable of when he gets all of the elements in their perfect proportions.
Read Full Review >Entertainment Weekly
The album finds Jean refining his multi culti aesthetic, crafting straight up rock and reggae jams, creating invigorating, cliché free rap songs, throwing disparate musical elements together at every turn...
Read Full Review >CDNow
He's still slicing and dicing styles like this week's challenger on Iron Chef, but this time he's got some serious guest firepower to back up these cross-cultural forays.
Read Full Review >Rolling Stone
The most pleasingly direct yet musically adventurous hip-hop long-player you're likely to hear all year.
Read Full Review >The Onion (A.V. Club)
Even when Jean missteps, as on the heavy-handed "Diallo," he missteps in the most interesting way possible, pushing his music into weird and exciting directions that work more often than not.
Read Full Review >All Music Guide
Loaded with pop culture commentary and often directly naming social names, The Ecleftic is sure to stir up some emotions from not only the famous, but from the general public as well.
Read Full Review >MTV.com
[A] tighter, indigo-deeper, more vision cohesive joint than its predecessor.
Read Full Review >Checkout.com
Packed to the brim with all sorts of surprising twists and turns, Jean's Ecleftic plays like a cheeky earful of the multi-culti future of hip-hop.
Sonicnet
Actually, all through this, his second solo disc, Wyclef goes for skin-deep musical ideas.... Still, most of Wyclef's little ideas are terrific.
Read Full Review >Billboard
Although not as cohesive as Jean's "Carnival," "The Ecleftic" spins a compelling tale of a hip-hop superstar who defies convention.
Read Full Review >Select
The Mary J. Blige duet '911' and dope ode 'Homegrown' confirm his knack for reggae-inflected hits. [Sep 2000, p.108]
L.A. Weekly
Wyclef seems to reinvent himself for the worse on his sophomore effort. In place of his trademark iconoclasm, he delivers some good old-fashioned conformity in a bid to renew his street-credibility card... Thankfully, 'Clef strikes a balance with some outstanding selections, starting with the acoustically driven ballads "Diallo," "911" and "Something About Mary", which show that Wyclef armed with a guitar is still more powerful than an army of producers strapped with drum machines.... It's enough to make The Ecleftic a good but not grand album, one that finds Wyclef's vision falling short of his abilities.
Read Full Review >New Musical Express
A mammoth indulgence, an 80-minute justification of his own ill-defined status.
Read Full Review >Village Voice
So while Ecleftic ain't wack, it's no carnival. It realizes the B-boy boho dream much better than caricaturist "hiphop metal" acts, but Clef served our interests much better last time at bat.
Read Full Review >Dot Music
The Ecleftic' just tries to please too many people, open up too many markets, and simply ends up diluting the sound in which it purports to be rooted.
Read Full Review >Launch.com
The disc lacks the coherent vision that would have made the best argument for Clef's claims.
Read Full Review >Q Magazine
At his best, Jean writes great tunes that don't give a stuff for anyone else's criteria of cool, but amid the overlong skits/underlong songs of Ecleftic, and despite the super-silly brilliance of It Doesn't Matter, the lasting impression is of a talent at sea, cut off from his roots and uncertain of the path ahead.
Read Full Review >New York Magazine
True eclectics like De La Soul and A Tribe Called Quest seek out samples and inspiration -- in jazz, electronic music, even rock -- while Jean merely traffics in superficial gloss.
Read Full Review >Spin
By the time one gets to the final track, a head-scratching take on Pink Floyd's "Wish You Were Here," the overall effect is a decidedly uncomfortable numbness.
Read Full Review >What Our Users Said
The average user rating for this album is 9.3 (out of 10) based on 3 User Votes
Note: User votes are NOT included in the Metascore calculation.
Jonathan F. gave it a 8:
Funny album from Wyclef... Although most of the tunes are sampled and remixed, it is made in high quality... The lyrics are interesting in most of the songs... My opinion, Wyclef did it.
