A New Day at Midnight David Gray

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CD

  • Release Date: 01/13/2008
  • Original Release: 2002
  • Label: ATLANTIC UK
  • UPC: 5050466165824
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CD$7.99
CD - Bonus Tracks$45.99

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  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
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A New Day at Midnight

1LISTENDead in the Water 3:06
2LISTENCaroline 3:39
3LISTENLong Distance Call 3:41
4LISTENFreedom 6:48
5LISTENKangaroo 3:31
6LISTENLast Boat to America 4:50
7LISTENReal Love 4:40
8LISTENKnowhere 3:54
9LISTENDecember 3:35
10LISTENBe Mine 4:23
11LISTENEasy Way to Cry 3:53
12LISTENThe Other Side 4:31

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

Following up his first international hit, White Ladder, which sold more than 2 million copies in the U.S., Welsh singer-songwriter David Gray seems at first to have played it safe. But as the sinuous, deeply affecting New Day at Midnight unspools, it becomes obvious that Gray doing what he knows is Gray doing what he does best. On his sixth album, the Grammy nominee reconvenes with partners Clune and Iestyn Polson, sticking to the same subtly electronic folkie vibe that gave White Ladder its crossover wings. But here the orchestrations are modestly grander: Pedal steel guitar from Brit wiz B. J. Cole meshes with the blips and beats on "Caroline"; brass and strings augment some songs; and a hypnotic kalimba lends space and depth to "Last Boat to America." But none of these detract from Gray's voice, the most endearing bleat since Dylan (or Leonard Cohen, whose lyrical penchant for "honey" and women's names Gray shares). As the title hints, Gray's incisive focus falls on the moments of hope that flash from the deepest despair -- whether it's the global cataclysm rued on "Dead in the Water" or the more personal loss of "December," Gray finds a counterbalance: the aching piano chords of "Freedom" that celebrate commitment and the euphoric "Be Mine," a frankly delirious ("Jumpin' Jesus, holy cow!") celebration of love that echoes White Ladder's "Sail Away." While he's equally adept at limning misery as bliss, it's love that really sends Gray over the moon, and even at his most downbeat, this gift resounds with a disarming hopefulness that's spiritual soul food in these dark days. Choosing to end the album with the elegiac "The Other Side," Gray confesses, "Honey, now if I'm honest/ I still don't know what love is." It's a patent fiction, though: New Day at Midnight shows a universal compassion deeply understood, a declaration of love in all its tattered glory. Mark Schwartz, Barnes & Noble



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Customer Reviews

A New Day at Midnightby Anonymous

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January 19, 2003: This is a fantastic CD from start to finish. I particularly enjoy the tracks "Dead in the Water" and "The Other Side". David Gray is one of my all time favorite singer/songwriters. Highly recommend!

This review was written about the CD edition.

A New Day at Midnightby Anonymous

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January 17, 2003: Four years between albums is a long time for any artist, but when it's someone as talented as David Gray and the album is as amazing as A New Day at Midnight, it's worth it! While there may not be the "big hit" song like "Babylon" on the album, David has found a way to mix the melancholy and the merry, creating some of the most poetic songs I've ever heard. One of my favorite songs, "The Other Side" (which is also the most recent single, so request it on the radio!) begins as a piano solo and maintains this beautiful melody, even as other instruments enter into the mix. The lyrics remind us that "We may race and we may run, We'll not undo what has been done, Or change the moment when it's gone." Davids emotions come through on other songs as well, from the trying-to-get-the-girl "Be Mine" to "Dead in the Water," where despite almost depressing lyrics listeners are given hope and faith through the strength of David's voice. Even if you aren't a fan of David's, try this album. It's worth every penny.

This review was written about the CD edition.


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