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Lights Out Zoltar!

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Download links and information about Lights Out Zoltar! by Gemma Ray. This album was released in 2009 and it belongs to Pop, Alternative genres. It contains 12 tracks with total duration of 39:21 minutes.

Artist: Gemma Ray
Release date: 2009
Genre: Pop, Alternative
Tracks: 12
Duration: 39:21
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. 100 MPH (in 2nd Gear) 3:04
2. Snuck a Peek 3:58
3. Tough Love 2:39
4. Fist of a Flower 2:29
5. 1952 3:41
6. (You Got Me In A) Death Roll 2:52
7. Goody Hoo 3:15
8. No Water 3:27
9. Dig Me a River 2:51
10. If You Want to Rock and Roll 3:35
11. Something Shifted 3:19
12. So Do I 4:11

Details

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On her second album, British singer/songwriter Gemma Ray lights out again on the adventurous trajectory she established with her 2008 debut. The word used repeatedly to describe Ray's cinematic retro sound is "noirish," and while that accurately describes the spacious, tremolo-heavy atmosphere of many of the songs here, it misses the warmth, quirky wit, and low-gloss sparkle of Ray's writing. She references pre-Fab Four rock for the melody and melodrama, ‘60s girl groups for the harmonies, spaghetti western soundtracks for the sense of space, and indie-pop for the cheek.

Recorded (with co-producer Michael J. Sheehy) in a home-studio setting, the tracks benefit from thoughtful production and, in some cases, a concert-hall largeness of scope that belies the modest production. The familiar rubs shoulders with the off-kilter, as on the lush space opera "Fist of a Flower," which layers multiple Gemmas over a languorous minor-key shuffle, with an insistent Beach Boys harmony hook that sounds both comfortingly recognizable and spookily out of context. On "(You Got Me in a) Death Roll," Ray toughens up and deepens her voice for a dirgey blues number with weird, stentorian, Greek-chorus backing vocals that turn a simple blues into a theatrical show-stopper. A similar sense of drama informs the rest of the songs here, and while the noir thing can be a lot to digest over the course of 12 songs, the gentle, unadorned album-closer, "So Do I," demonstrates that Ray can do "subtle," too.