The Day

Macy Gray is enthusiast­ic, infectious on fun ‘Ruby’

- By PABLO GORONDI

Macy Gray sounds mainly joyful and enthusiast­ic on “Ruby” and the zest evident across her 10th album, even when the theme is misfortune or heartbreak, is infectious. Her trademark jazzy soul and R&B foundation­s are accounted for but the arrangemen­ts have a deceptivel­y light touch and

Macy Gray RUBY Artistry Music let Gray’s vocals and effervesce­nt personalit­y shine through.

Opener “Buddha” features a guitar solo by Gary Clark Jr. and background vocals with a gospel feel, alternatin­g an uplifting refrain of being “alright now” with the knowing “our days are numbered.”

The ultra-romantic “Over You” — “I haven’t had a drink since my last one/No clouds in my sky but I’m on one” — has a dynamic horn arrangemen­t and a catchy refrain and sounds most like her early hits. It’s followed by “White Man” — no extra credit for guessing who Gray is singing about — whose hatred, judgment and offensive chatter may end up hurting him.

“Sugar Daddy” is a bubbly collaborat­ion with Meghan Trainor, whose influence is evident already on the piano introducti­on and cooing backing vocals, while “When It Ends” is all drama underpinne­d by a slinky bass line.

“But He Loves Me” is such a plausible descriptio­n of when our instinct for self-preservati­on fails us that it sounds almost like a parody, while reggae-tinged closer “Witness” is among the album’s musical peaks.

Producers Johan Carlsson, Tommy Brown and Tommy (Lumpkins) Parker may have helped boost Gray’s confidence and “Ruby” is a sure-footed album set in a mischievou­s heart of gold.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States