Tag Archives: gemma

Spine-Tingling New Albums by Two Powerful Chanteuses

Mother Jones

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Gemma Ray
The Exodus Suite
Bronzerat

Brigid Mae Power
Brigid Mae Power
Tompkins Square

Courtesy of Chromatic Publicity

Once upon a time, the notion of mood music signified the kind of easy-listening slush that record companies tried to sell as lounge culture back in the ’90s. Today, all manner of credible artists prefer carefully crafted atmospherics to rock’n’roll bravado. Britain’s Gemma Ray has been releasing transfixing albums since 2008, and The Exodus Suite is one of her best. Languid tempos, dreamy melodies and Ray’s coolly insinuating vocals add up to spooky, spine-tingling fun—dig that eerie funhouse organ on “Ifs & Buts” and “We Are All Wandering”—even as sobering themes of global strife and techno-stress inform her narratives. She’s be the perfect choice to score the next James Bond movie.

After Ray’s film-noir poise, Ireland’s Brigid Mae Power comes off like a full-blown lunatic on her terrific self-titled debut. Framed by spare acoustic arrangements that beautifully showcase her strong, delirium-tinged voice, Power gives a riveting portrayal of a restless, disembodied spirit from another dimension, searching desperately for peace and finding scant solace. From the wild-eyed eight-minute opening track, “It’s Clearing Now,” to the sweetly unnerving “How You Feel,” Power makes an overwhelming first impression.

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Spine-Tingling New Albums by Two Powerful Chanteuses

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Gemma Ray’s Latest Is Fresh and Unsettling

Mother Jones

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Gemma Ray
Milk for Your Motors
Bronze Rat

A perfect master of noir pop, British-born Gemma Ray turns a familiar recipe—twangy guitars, dreamy melodies, hazy rhythms and wistful voices—into something fresh and more than a little unsettling. Milk for Your Motors transcends artful background music because her songs are smart and unpredictable, encompassing the nostalgic desire of “When I Kissed You” (“I want to remember how I kissed you / ’round the back of the air-raid shelter”) and the gruesome dark comedy of “Waving at Mirrors” (“It was all a terrible mess / Which came from nothing less / Than a moment carelessly spent applying make up instead of driving”) Aching and wry at once, Ray is a mesmerizing presence, mixing brainy cool and genuine passion with precise skill. For added hipster cred, note cameos by Howe Gelb (Giant Sand) and Alan Vega (Suicide), who references his own classic “Dream Baby Dream” on the spooky “Out in the Rain.”

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Gemma Ray’s Latest Is Fresh and Unsettling

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