All it takes is 3 chords and a dream!
Showing posts with label Nina Simone. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nina Simone. Show all posts

Sunday, August 23, 2009

Review: Gemma Ray - Lights Out Zoltar!


Gemma Ray - Lights Out Zoltar!
2009, Bronzerat Records


Gemma Ray is a sensation in her native England, writing dark and emotive songs in styles that range from Americana to 1950's and 1960's pop. If you find musical embodiment to Quentin Tarrantino's psyche it might just be a Gemma Ray album. Comparisons have included Lee Hazelwood, Nina Simone, Isobel Campbell and Norah Jones on Amy Winehouse's drugs, but it's clear that Gemma Ray has struck a chord so vital in UK fans that she's become something of a phenomenon. Ray's US debut, Lights Out Zoltar! drops on October 26, 2009, and has few peers stylistically. Fans of Canadian singer/songwriter Sarah Slean will be highly intrigued, and the comparisons to Tori Amos, Milla Jovovich and Bjork will be made, but Gemma Ray is no one if she's not herself.

Traditional instrumentation isn't an issue for Ray, who uses whatever sounds right to her irrespective of whether it's conventional. The opening track, 100 mph (in 2nd gear) is beaten out on a hollow body guitar with a kitchen knife while a toy piano tinkles in the background. Ethereal backing vocals and a gothic European cabaret pathos fills out the sonic landscape in support of Ray's entrancing vocal. Snuck A Peak sounds a bit like a Fiona Apple song played at the wrong speed on a phonograph. The surreal effects applied here make the song sound like it's in dimensional limbo with Ray's voice acting as the focus point. The song is beautiful in bleak fashion. 1952 takes an almost Surf sound and turns it into music noir with lyrics in both English and French. Death Roll is one of the more unusual tracks on the disc. Death Roll sounds like French Cabaret in a mad house; highly entertaining yet disturbing all at once.

No Water is an allegory for being caught in the emotional wastelands that we all find ourselves in from time to time. Considering the darkness of the subject matter, the chorus is bright and full of warm vocal harmonies. Ray eschews the gothic feel that pervades the album for gentle pop that runs entirely counter to the neurosis it envelopes. If You Want To Rock N Roll is bleak with depressive overtones and kind of gets stuck in itself, but Ray returns strong with Something Shifted, returning to the Americana style she started out with. The song represents a coming-to-terms with change even if it never really defines what's changed. Ray closes out with So Do I, a return to Carol King-style songwriting with a melody you could hear a group like the Chiffons Doo-Dooing along to.

Gemma Ray is unique and interesting as a songwriter, opting for an almost Madrigal Rock built on a wide range of traditional and toy instruments, all wrapped around the highly textured and beautiful voice she possesses. Lights Out Zoltar! is a dynamic Cabaret/Lounge trip you don't want to miss.

Rating: 3 Stars (Out of 5)

You can learn more about Gemma Ray at www.myspace.com/gemmaraymusic. Lights Out, Zoltar! will be released in the US on October 26, 2009. If you can’t wait, the UK release will drop on September 7, 2009. You can purchase a copy of UK release of Lights Out Zoltar! At BronzeRat.com. Digital copies will be available through BronzeRat on the date of release.

Friday, May 15, 2009

Review: Nancy Newlis - Dreamers 2009


Nancy Newlis - Dreamers 2009
2009, Nancy Newlis


Nancy Newlis is a Russian born singer/songwriter who studied composition with a teacher who studied with Dmitri Shostakovich. Newlis is known inside Russia as a member of Babie Leto, and has appeared on television several times in her homeland. These days Newlis is living in New York City and gigging in support of her EP, Dreamers 2009. With a deep voice ala Nina Simone, Newlis is distinctive in sound and style.

Newlis has a highly distinctive voice, sounding like an odd but interesting vocal composite of Freddie Mercury, K.D. Lang and Nina Simone. Her swarthy contralto can be a bit unsettling at first, but you'll never forget that voice once you've heard it. Dreamers 2009 opens with Dreamers, a song with wonderful pop sensibility and real movement. You'll find yourself wanting to clap and sing along. Newlis tackles keeping up with the Joneses in Social Standing, a bizarre diatribe with piano work reminiscent of Tori Amos. Mistakes is an interesting one minute snippet that I'd be curious to hear fleshed out, as it has real potential. Dear Friend is a bizarre letter to a friend set to music that doesn't make a lot of sense lyrically but is set to a great musical arrangement. The album closes out with the highlight, Good Morning, Heartache. Newlis gives a wrenching vocal push to this song.

Nancy Newlis is a bit outside the pop box. Hers is a voice and style that will automatically turn off some listeners, but those aren't the folks she's singing to/for anyway. I can't say I got into everything on Dreamers 2009, but she has a distinctive talent and style that makes you curious to hear what she'll come out with next. Everyone once in a while it's a real gem.

Rating: 3 Stars (Out of 5)

You can learn more about Nancy Newlis at www.myspace.com/nancynewlis or http://www.nancynewlis.com/, where you can purchase a copy of Dreamers 2009.