More articles by Gergely HamarWhitney is back, her voice is not...
Whitney Houston's much-anticipated new album "I Look to You" hit stores Tuesday, and judging by the reaction of fans at "Good Morning America," she's going to do all right with it. Houston performed a mini-concert on "GMA's" Central Park stage Tuesday, and it aired Wednesday on the ABC morning show. Whitney Houston struggled with her voice during her much-hyped comeback performance. But industry prognosticators don't expect the diva to trip up on the charts next week. "I Look To You" -- Houston's first album in seven years -- is expected to sell upward of 200,000 copies during the week ended September 6, which should easily enable it to debut at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 chart when rankings are released next Wednesday. Houston would do well to suppress any loud cheers so that she doesn't hurt her famous pipes. During Tuesday's performance for 5,000 concert-goers at Central Park's Rumsey Playfield, she apologized for her voice. "I'm sorry. I did 'Oprah.' I've been talking so long ... I talked so much, my voice," she attempted to explain. "I shouldn't be talking, I should be singing," she said before breaking into "I'm every woman," the last of her three-song set. Other tracks performed included "Million Dollar Bill" and the album's title track, during which Houston choked up. Sponsored by EnterTo.com the first REAL spam free email
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More articles by Gergely Hamar |