Moonlight

Moonlight

Artist: Coast
Release Year: 2010

Description: A dreamy collection of echoes, evolutions, and new nocturnes.

Moonlight is a reflective, genre-blurring album that feels both like a follow-up and a reimagining.
Familiar tracks return — some reshaped, others just more at home in this moody new setting — while fresh material stretches in all directions, catching glimmers of synthpop, Americana, soft rock, and cinematic soundscapes.

It’s an album caught between the moon and the memory.

New Lights in the Sky: “Moonlight” – A lush homage to Julee Cruise’s The Nightingale — slow, dreamlike, and heartbreakingly sincere.

“Daylight” – Think Ultravox’s Vienna crossed with Blade Runner's neon melancholy. Haunting and romantic.

“Summer Days” – Breezy and nostalgic, somewhere between Lee Hazlewood and a sepia-toned memory.

“We Can Make It” – Breathy falsetto meets Bee Gees swagger. Glitzy, tight, and instantly hummable.

“Hold On to Love” – Ethereal pop with soaring vocals — imagine Jon Anderson fronting a Phil Collins production.

“Urban Cowboy” – Wry Americana with swagger. A six-string strut through barstool romance.

“Devil Woman” – A slow-burning rocker with a vibe straight from late-career Robert Plant.

“Some Day Soon” – A raw, emotional highlight. Beautifully restrained with lyrics that cut to the bone.

This is Coast at its most diverse — and most deliberate. A record that doesn’t just revisit old ideas, but sheds new light on them. Where earlier albums showed discovery, Moonlight shows refinement.

Whether you play it loud on a stereo or alone in headphones at 2 a.m., it glows.