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This Welsh singer-songwriter has long been known for crafting songs marked by low-key intimacy -- a modus operandi he departs from on this disc. To be sure, Life in Slow Motion is as intimate as anything Gray has ever recorded, but there's nothing subtle about its approach. That's clear from the opening strains of the orchestral introduction to "Alibi," a sweeping piano ballad that owes as much to classic prog-rock as it does to the folkier precursors that influenced his earlier work. Stately piano melodies figure prominently in the disc's better songs -- notably "Now and Always" and "Ain't No Love," both of which bear more than a passing similarity to the less arch offerings of Rufus Wainwright. The album is rife with intriguing side trips, from the misty drift of the Welsh-language plaint "Nos da Cariad" to the country-tinged rocker "The One I Love." The more open-ended sonics make perfect sense, given the fact that Life in Slow Motion is far less stark, topically, than A New Day at Midnight -- large swaths of which dealt with the death of Gray's father -- and less introspective than White Ladder. The expansiveness no doubt has something to do with Gray's recent experience in the realm of film -- he scored the acclaimed 2004 movie A Way of Life -- but whatever the catalyst, it's refreshing to hear him exposed to the elements, raw as they may be, rather than sequestered in his insular world. David Sprague, Barnes & Noble