- Critic score
- Publication
- By date
-
VibeComes off likea rave-era update of Van Morrison's blue-eyed soul. [Feb 2003, p.138]
-
A New Day at Midnight is not White Ladder part 2, but it does bear certain similarities, namely emotional, beautiful music matched with equally beautiful lyrics, and, of course David Gray's unmistakable voice.
-
A work of exceptional songwriting, performance and production.
-
If you liked Gray before, you'll still like him now.
-
MojoAs a whole it lacks the unity of mood the characterised White Ladder... but there is much to love. [Dec 2002, p.106]
-
UncutA dozen vivid and deeply personal songs.... Gray has made a record that anybody who cares about great songwriting should hear. [Dec 2002, p.130]
-
''Midnight'''s only drawback is its rinky-dink production, which, while less distracting than on ''White Ladder,'' is woefully inappropriate for such delicate, heartfelt music.
-
Gray is smart enough to stick to a winning formula, making these dour but likable songs instantly recognizable as his own.
-
His beautiful detachment makes these nondescript hooks -- so plain they'd be forgettable if sung by anyone else -- into something special.
-
Q MagazineSo is it White Ladder II? In a word, "yes." [Nov 2002, p.94]
-
While not much of a departure from the honed formula of 'White Ladder', much of 'A New Day At Midnight' opts to pare down that winning mix of gentle dance beats and piano even further, leaving Gray's gorgeous gutsy vocal to do more of the talking on his melancholy tales of love and loss.
User score distribution:
-
Positive: 10 out of 12
-
Mixed: 1 out of 12
-
Negative: 1 out of 12
-
Feb 26, 2022
-
Jan 13, 2016
-
buzzApr 11, 2003