The plaintive Catch A Little Rain drizzles into a throbbing trance-ballad, and is far more mature, possibly comparable to a decent Ian Van Dahl album track. Being under 2 minutes long I only wish it were double the length, it's certainly the one track here that really could be tarted up a bit into becoming a hit. It's actually very stunning, hitting it's galloping stride before we have even had proper verses beyond casual moaning and groaning.
Once again leaning heavily on the flashy uber-pop formula, the latin flavoured Hello is slow-witted love computerised disco set to a frisky speed suggesting more than her prosaic charm would have you believe ('I gotta say hello, I don't know why / But I gotta give my luck a try'). Even spastic pop tarts have feelings: I Miss You Now is the token sad one, oozing clogging aspartame-tears, but I'll go out on a limb and say it is shit.
Crucial tempo-ballad On The Run is immediately a highlight. The snowflake weight of the faintly faux-RnB tinged electronica is as moody as vintage Ace of Base (complete with Don't Turn Around style ghostly down-the-phone backing vocals). A three-minute slice of effervescent pop goodness.
Her PG-rated Eurodisco is catchy with every single beat, not least on the contageous closer Spaceman and is S.O.A.P's unnoficial B-side to This Is How We Party. Weak voiced not willed, 'I wanna see your rocket' is one chat up line I've yet to use. Filthy bitch.
Lynn might be too bubblegum-specific for her own good, but for those reasons her album here is a kingpin landmark of a genre that evaporated from the UK charts at least well over a decade ago. Doubtlessly drowning in a one-size-fits-all formula, she has a voice (not saying it's a great one, but a voice nonetheless), body (I can only assume), sonic texture, and the songwriting is as sweet as it gets in this genre. In fact, nearly every song on this set is a effectively-produced and keenly-delivered effort. This fine album is a must for fans of enthusiastic, well-produced Europop and sickly-sweet pop music. Track after track, the album continues with more of the same minnute, wide-eyed dance-influenced numbers that made Aqua's first album so appealing, but ranks slightly lower than its contemporary simply because the territory covered is a little too similar. Virtually all the songs are high energy Euro-pop propelled by nimble, sincere vocals and immaculately cheapskate production. Standouts include the pretty naive Are You Online, the moody, atmospheric dance epic Catch A Little Rain, the jittery Dr Jones-sounding In The Middle of The Night, the thumping Lucky No One, and the fantastic On The Run, which definitely deserves some form of exposure as a poptastic ballad along the lines of Ace of Base or even S.O.A.P's Stand By You at a push. Quite possibly it is her dreamy cover of New Order's Bizarre Love Triangle that shines most brightly of all, but overall this album is an experience I did not see coming.
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