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10 David Gray Songs You Need to Hear (That Aren't "Babylon") » PopMatters
Music

10 David Gray Songs You Need to Hear (That Aren’t “Babylon”) » PopMatters

by jummy84 November 12, 2025
written by jummy84

David Gray made his musical name at the turn of the 21st century, but it would not be until halfway through its first decade that he released his true masterpiece. 1999’s White Ladder put Gray on the global map, fueled by the success of lead single “Babylon”. On that album and its successor, A New Day at Midnight, Gray pursues an electronic-inflected style of folk – “folktronica”, as one neologism has it – that lends him aesthetic uniqueness, bridging the old-fashioned guy-with-a-guitar setup and the new kinds of production and instrumentation available in a changing technological landscape.

After breaking into the international mainstream, however, Gray would not stick to folktronica. As 2005’s Life in Slow Motion attests, his music blossomed with organic instrumentation and fuller arrangements, in contrast to the intimate bedroom sound that makes White Ladder endearing still. Life in Slow Motion, now re-released in deluxe digital and vinyl editions that include demos and B-sides, testifies that for whatever Gray was able to get out of a spare recording setup, he knew how to take advantage of a full studio setup and a whole series of accoutrements, including brass string sections on the likes of “Alibi” and the haunting title track. The sonic canvas is as expansive as the arctic environs on the cover art.

Six albums have followed Life in Slow Motion, bringing the tally to 13 for Gray’s career. With the new edition of that LP as exigence, PopMatters looks back on Gray’s artistic output, delving deep into his catalogue to highlight ten songs that, in various ways, illustrate the many facets of his songwriting that culminate on Life in Slow Motion.

No songs from the much-lauded White Ladder appear here, intentionally. “Babylon” and its siblings, like “Sail Away” and “This Year’s Love”, still feature at any concert of Gray’s, and more ink, physical and digital, has been spilled about them than anything else in his discography. This article prefers the deep cut over the smash single, and Gray is one of those artists who shine most brightly on the songs that were never meant for radio’s circulation. The singles featured below dropped after the days when radio charts reigned supreme, but in a different musical reality, they still deserved to shoot to number one.

“Falling Free” (from Flesh, 1994)

This hushed piece from David Gray’s early and pre-fame years sounds in every aspect like an artist coming into his voice. Consisting of nothing more than Gray and a piano, “Falling Free” signaled his aptitude for writing love songs. “We’re standing face-to-face / With the angel of grace / Don’t it just taste so pure?” he cries at the song’s climax, a rupture of emotion in a gentle ballad.

The juxtaposition of stark piano chords and Gray’s poignant lyrics marks an essential passing of a test for a young songwriter: how well can you paint a musical picture with the barest of ingredients? “Falling Free” gives us a protean version of the Gray that would blossom in the years to come: earnest without being cloying, emotionally direct, and lyrically rich.


“Late Night Radio” (from Sell, Sell, Sell, 1996)

Despite its title, Sell, Sell, Sell ended up being the record that preceded the one that sold copies in the millions. Still, “Late Night Radio” should have been as big a hit as “Babylon” was, perhaps even more so. The song tells a story familiar to the annals of rock ‘n’ roll – a small-town woman having her world expanded with a move to a big city – but does so with a catchy chord progression and an intriguing chorus metaphor (“She don’t mind the late-night radio”).

Gray peppers in imagery that adds vivacity to the familiar picture he conjures, as when he describes New York as “dark, dirty and stark / Burning with yellow wings.” When in the final verse he describes his protagonist as “alive with the sound”, the same feels true of him. 


“Flame Turns Blue” (from Lost Songs 95-98, 2000)

Of the songs written by David Gray that should make the mythical songwriter’s canon, the kind of song that anyone with a voice and a guitar would do well to know, “Flame Turns Blue” stands out as the best candidate. Gray regularly introduces the song onstage by explaining its backstory, which was written after a stolen tour bus incident during a US tour. However, “Flame Turns Blue” might be the most timeless thing he’s written; the particularity of his experience in writing the song translates into an expression of universality.

The final verse contains some of Gray’s finest lyrical poetry: “Through the lemon trees the diamonds of light / Break in splinters on the pages where I write.” Lost Songs is an interstitial moment in Gray’s career, compiling tracks written in the years leading up to White Ladder. “Flame Turns Blue” confirmed a year after that record’s release that the brilliance had been in the works for some time.


“Knowhere” (from A New Day at Midnight, 2002)

The deepest of deep cuts, “Knowhere” might not be on the radar of even the most enthusiastic Gray devotees. No live versions of the song exist on YouTube, and the archival website Setlist only logs three performances, all in 2002, the year of A New Day at Midnight’s release. This brooding electronic number captures the outer edge of Gray’s “folktronica” experimentation.

Unlike “Flame Turns Blue”, “Knowhere” doesn’t sound like the kind of song one could effectively capture with only a guitar or piano as an aid. The brooding opening image (“Slow voices speaking through a hurricane”) and skeptical chorus refrain (“I don’t know where I / I don’t know what I’m / Supposed to do now”) provoke a curious disquiet. One could call it a mood piece, albeit one with which it is easy to sing along.  


“Ain’t No Love” (from Life in Slow Motion, 2005)

Nestled in the midsection of Life in Slow Motion, an album that begins with orchestral bombast (“Alibi”) and concludes in a squall of distortion (“Disappearing World”), “Ain’t No Love” does not assert itself the way one might expect of a great song. The simple C-major chord progression and brief structure – which, unusually, concludes after just a single chorus, right as the music achieves liftoff – is downright spartan in contrast to the string-soaked lushness of “Alibi” or the gradual build of “Now and Always”.

Simplicity works to Gray’s advantage in this case. The delicate piano chords that augment the closing verse’s glistening imagery (“On winter trees the fruit of rain / Is hanging trembling on the branches / Like a thousand diamond buds”) are a respite amidst the dynamic volleys of Life in Slow Motion, a reminder that resting for a breather affords its own kind of power.


“Full Steam” (from Draw the Line, 2009)

Gray would do well to indulge in a duets record, considering the collaborations he’s put to tape over the years. “Full Steam” is the boldest of that small group, a rousing tune featuring Annie Lennox that, given its context of the Great Recession, feels like a renunciation of neoliberalism. “Forlorn, adrift, on seas of beige / In this, our golden age,” Gray and Lennox harmonize together, before admitting in the chorus: “Now you saw it coming / And I saw it coming / We all saw it coming / And we still bought it.”

Gray, of course, is hardly a polemicist, and “Full Steam” is no fiery manifesto. The reluctance in the lyrics to name specific political targets ultimately proves to be an asset. In many situations, Gray and Lennox remind us, the first step toward change often involves recognizing our own complicity. Barring that, we are “running full steam ahead” into destruction.


“Birds of the High Arctic” (from Mutineers, 2014)

Arriving after the more organically instrumented Draw the Line and the stripped-bare Foundling (2010), Mutineers hearkened back to the electronic textures of Gray’s years most centrally in the public spotlight. Yet there is a maturity there built from the more robust arrangements on Life in Slow Motion and Draw the Line, making Mutineers a unique point of synthesis. “Birds of the High Arctic” recalls the dramatic piano balladry of “Alibi” while washing it in layers of reverb.

Gray sounds like he set up microphones in the frigid landscape on the cover of Life in Slow Motion. The song ascends to a pained moment of revelation: “Baby say that it isn’t true / You were never there and it wasn’t you.” Lyrically, he indulges one of his beloved topics, avian life, equating a now-departed presence to a speck with wings on a whiteout sky. 


“Hall of Mirrors” (from Gold in a Brass Age, 2019)

Gold in a Brass Age is, in many ways, the logical aesthetic follow-up to White Ladder and A New Day at Midnight, in its embrace of electronic textures. Still, it could only have been written by a songwriter who expanded his horizons in the way Gray did after the early 2000s. The jittery “Hall of Mirrors” proves illustrative in this regard: chiming guitars intertwine with spastic programmed drums and layered vocals, coming to glorious fruition with a hymnal of an outro: “Baby when that oh-too-solid ground / Comes a-risin’ up, hey don’t look down now,” Gray chants, his voice a choir in miniature. New-school in sound but old-school in feeling, “Hall of Mirrors” is, as its name suggests, a showcase of Gray’s artistry. (Read the author’s interview with Gray about this album for PopMatters here.)


“Accumulates” (from Skellig, 2021)

A simple hammered-on guitar lick defines David Gray’s biggest hit in “Babylon”, so it’s unsurprising that a reprisal of that technique works brilliantly on “Accumulates”. Like the rest of the tunes on Skellig, “Accumulates” captures Gray at his most elemental, with voice and guitar doing the heavy lifting, adornments minimal at most. The origin of the album’s name, taken from remote islands off the coast of Ireland, informs the meditative isolation that characterizes “Accumulates”, whose post-2020 release felt all the more apt, given the containment experienced by Gray’s listeners worldwide.

He dances around the subject of the song; “Well it grips / And it grins / It cavorts / and it gyrates,” he sings, never giving the “it” a proper noun. The repetitive hammered guitar note and lyrically hypnotic quality of “Accumulates” suggest the image of someone trying their best, on their own, to think their way to identifying a force they sense but cannot name. Who among us hasn’t been there?


“Plus and Minus” (from Dear Life, 2025)

Now over 30 years into a musical life, David Gray continues to add gems to his songwriting trove. “Plus and Minus”, the first single from his latest LP Dear Life, ranks with the likes of “Sail Away” and “Please Forgive Me.” A mercurial duet with a young UK singer named Talia Ray, “Plus and Minus” deploys a perfectly placed modulation in the prechorus that includes a poetic phrase that could be describing the trials of creativity, or of the pursuit of love: “For the fire that gets lit / And the flame that regrets it.”

The electronic drum track and repetitive Euro dance-style piano chords that anchor the song evoke Gray’s 1990s roots. However, the cumulative effect is contemporary, a testament to an artist who can adapt to the times while still sounding like himself. “This whole routine is getting old,” Gray sings in unison with Rae, an ironic statement for an artist like himself.


November 12, 2025 0 comments
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Ms. Rachel Has Poignant Message at Glamour’s Women of the Year Awards: ‘Hateful Responses Aren’t What Matters’
Fashion

Ms. Rachel Has Poignant Message at Glamour’s Women of the Year Awards: ‘Hateful Responses Aren’t What Matters’

by jummy84 November 5, 2025
written by jummy84

We’re always paying attention to what Rachel Accurso, better known to the world as Ms. Rachel, has to say—and not just because she’s mostly speaking in a delightfully high-pitched singsong voice.

The children’s entertainer and entrepreneur, who was honored tonight as one of Glamour’s Women of the Year, addressed the (adult) crowd at this year’s WOTY ceremony, held at The Plaza hotel in New York City.

In her speech, Ms. Rachel reflected on the theme of sisterhood, thanking her mother, who raised her and her sister as a single mom, as well as her actual sister, Rebecca.

“We started a band called the Sisteristics, so I think that’s really in the spirt of sisterhood,” she said, adding, “It was really weird,” to laughter in the room. “She always reminded me that the hateful responses aren’t what matters; what matters are the people who are suffering. And those of us who see things clearly and morally need to support their voices and their calls for justice.”

Ms. Rachel continued with a message of perseverance: “No matter how hard some people try to convince us that empathy is wrong, it’s right,” she said. “No matter how hard people try to convince us that diversity is a weakness, it’s a strength. No matter how hard people try to convince us that love is limited, it’s limitless.”

Speaking earlier to Glamour’s global editorial director, Samantha Barry, Ms. Rachel opened up about her decision to advocate for children all over the world, specifically in areas of crisis such as Gaza and Sudan.

“My love and care for children doesn’t stop at my own children,” she explained. “It doesn’t stop at the children in our country. It embraces every child of the world. I don’t think that our love should end at religion or skin color or where people are born.”

Ms. Rachel arrived to the Women of the Year Awards ceremony alongside her husband, Aron Accurso, whom fans often refer to as Mr. Aron. Though the couple make an adorable pair, all eyes were on Ms. Rachel and her stunning evening gown. Her upcycled dress features embroidery on the capelet and train, the designs drawn from drawings that were sent to her by Gazan children.

Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images

November 5, 2025 0 comments
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Ek Deewane Ki Deewaniyat Harshvardhan Rane Sonam Bajwa
Bollywood

Ek Deewane Ki Deewaniyat Movie REVIEW: Harshvardhan Rane’s Shoulders Aren’t Strong Enough To Carry This Obsessive Love Story

by jummy84 October 21, 2025
written by jummy84

Film:
Ek Deewane Ki Deewaniyat

Bubble Rating:
1.5 stars

Director: Milap Milan Zaveri

Writer: Milap Milan Zaveri, Mushtaq Shiekh

Cast: Harshvardhan Rane, Sonam Bajwa, Shaad Randhawa, Sachin Khedekar

Runtime: 141 minutes (2 hours, 21 minutes)

Platform: In Theatres

Ek Deewane Ki Deewaniyat Review

Milap Milan Zaveri’s Ek Deewane Ki Deewaniyat is a story we’ve seen time and time again in Bollywood just repackage with some stellar acting chops. The premise is simple – an entitled brat belonging to a rich and powerful family – who thinks he can buy the world, falls obsessively in love with a strong woman and crosses all limits to make her his. But does he succeed? Does the strong woman give into his relentless courtship or does she stand strong and take a stand? Well, that’s all EDKD is all about, punctuated with well placed songs and narrative that would have being a money maker in the 80s and 90s.

Ek Deewane Ki Deewaniyat tells the obsessive love story that follows when politician Vikramaditya (Harshvardhan Rane) gets captivated with the beauty of leading Bollywood star Adaa (Sonam Bajwa) and decides she will become his wife. From clearing her schedule to make sure she spends time with him to approaching her family with shagun while telling them about the soon-to-take place marriage, this loving and community serving politician moves mountains and sees to make the female fall for him. However, she’s a strong woman who has a mind of her own and sticks to ‘NO’ is a statement. Will they have a happily ever after – like we’ve seen in 100s of films in the past, despite the ‘hero’s’ obsession increasing?

Read our review to know if the film is worth watching in theatres.

What Works

The actor’s face cards and Harshvardhan’s acting talent

What Doesn’t Work

Every thing aside from the lead actor’s acting and the manner in which the songs are incorporated into he story.

Conclusion

Skip this movie and save your money – you can burn it in another manner if you want by gambling or buying crackers, and time. While Harshvardhan and to a certain extent Sonam’s performances are strong, the problematic story is regressive, misleading and something that doesn’t belong in 2025.

Watch The Trailer Of Ek Deewane Ki Deewaniyat Here:

For more reviews, news and updates from the entertainment world, stay tuned to Bollywood Bubble.

Also Read: Thamma REVIEW: Ayushmann Khurrana, Rashmika Mandanna’s Horror Comedy Is The Perfect Diwali Watch; Pataakha Cameos Add More Sparkle

Grinell JacintoGrinell Jacinto

With nearly 10 years of experience, Grinell Esther Jacinto is the Desk Head of Bollywood Bubble. Her interests lie in everything that is kaleshi and she loves to dig deeper into the lives of B-town actors. She has a problem though – she loves horror films but will have chills the minute the theatres lights dims. She’s previously worked with Koimoi, UrbanAsian and SpotboyE.

October 21, 2025 0 comments
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Ludhiana endocrinologist explains why your thyroid medicines aren't working: ‘Uncontrolled hypothyroidism can result…’
Lifestyle

Ludhiana endocrinologist explains why your thyroid medicines aren’t working: ‘Uncontrolled hypothyroidism can result…’

by jummy84 October 12, 2025
written by jummy84

If you’re taking thyroid medication but still struggling to keep your hypothyroidism under control, you’re not alone. While prescription medicines are effective, their success can be influenced by several factors and understanding these influences can help ensure your treatment works as intended and keeps your thyroid levels balanced.

Dr Arora highlights the rules you must keep in mind while being on thyroid medication.(Unsplash)

Also Read | Manipal endocrinologist explains hidden link between diabetes and weak bones you ignore but should not

Dr Isha Arora, a Ludhiana-based endocrinologist and specialist in diabetes and hormonal health, explains how thyroid medications function, what factors can affect their effectiveness, and why they may sometimes fail to work as expected.

In an Instagram post on April 3, the endocrinologist outlines several factors – such as underlying health conditions, storage methods, and medication interactions – that could impact the effectiveness of your hypothyroidism treatment. She emphasises that regular check-ups, correct medication timing, and managing underlying conditions are essential for keeping hypothyroidism under control.

Why are your thyroid meds not working?

According to Dr Arora, “Uncontrolled hypothyroidism can result from even gastrointestinal disorders like celiac disease and atrophic gastritis, which impair thyroxine absorption.” Hypothyroidism is treated with prescription medication, but certain factors play a role in treatment, including how your thyroid medicines are absorbed in your body.

The endocrinologist mentions parameters such as where you store the medicine, how you take them, and interference from other medications, that influence the treatment of hypothyroidism.

Medication interferences

Dr Arora highlights, “Certain medicines, such as calcium supplements, iron tablets, antacids, and proton pump inhibitors, can reduce the absorption of thyroxine. Additionally, drugs like phenytoin, carbamazepine, and phenobarbital can accelerate thyroxine metabolism.”

Faulty storage

The endocrinologist warns against storing your thyroid medicines in the kitchen or fridge, since cold temperatures and humidity can affect their potency. She recommends, “Keep your thyroid meds away from heat, light, and humidity to maintain their effectiveness.”

Also Read | Endocrinologist explains hidden dangers of eating too much protein and what your optimal daily protein intake should be

Problem with intake

The timing and method of taking your thyroid medication can significantly influence how effectively it works in your body. Dr Arora stresses, “Tablet has to be taken in an empty stomach in the morning, with a gap of one hour between tablet intake and having tea or breakfast.”

Note to readers: This article is for informational purposes only and not a substitute for professional medical advice. It is based on user-generated content from social media. HT.com has not independently verified the claims and does not endorse them.

October 12, 2025 0 comments
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YFN Lucci Has A Young Thug Feature On His Album & Fans Aren't Too Happy
Celebrity News

YFN Lucci Has A Young Thug Feature On His Album & Fans Aren’t Too Happy

by jummy84 September 26, 2025
written by jummy84


YFN Lucci Has A Young Thug Feature On His Album & Fans Aren’t Too Happy

YFN Lucci’s decision to include Young Thug on his new album track “Still Waiting” has stunned fans, especially given the deeply personal and v*olent history between the two rappers.

Their feud dates back to 2017, when Young Thug called himself the new Tupac. Lucci responded by mocking the comparison.

In 2022, things took a darker turn when prosecutors claimed in a sweeping RICO indictment that affiliates of Young Thug’s YSL crew had asked Thug for permission to attempt a hit on Lucci while he was incarcerated. Lucci, who was also in jail at the time on separate charges, was reportedly the target of a jailhouse st*bbing attempt allegedly linked to this rivalry.

With all this history, the new collaboration has fans confused and upset. Many took to social media to question why Lucci would feature someone previously connected to such dangerous conflict.

The track is set to be unveiled at midnight with Lucci’s album, “Already Legend.”

What are your thoughts on this truce?


September 26, 2025 0 comments
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Tamannaah says Karan Johar ‘champions people’ who aren’t from Bollywood amid nepotism debate: 'He’s warm, welcoming'
Bollywood

Tamannaah says Karan Johar ‘champions people’ who aren’t from Bollywood amid nepotism debate: ‘He’s warm, welcoming’

by jummy84 September 13, 2025
written by jummy84

Actor Tamannaah has heaped praises on filmmaker Karan Johar saying that he even “champions people” who aren’t from the industry. Speaking with News18 Showsha, Tamannaah said Karan understand the “importance of making films with very strong female characters.”

Tamannaah has only good things to say about Karan Johar.

Tamannaah says Karan Johar champions outsiders

Tamannaah called Karan “extremely warm and welcoming”. “As a person, I think he’s extremely warm and welcoming, and he champions people who’re from the industry and those who aren’t from the industry,” she said.

Tamannaah says Karan has in-depth understanding of women

Tamannaah said that Karan has been consistently understanding women “for many, many years now.” “Maybe Karan has an in-depth understanding of women, but he isn’t validated enough for that. He’s a person who has consistently done that for many, many years now. Many a times, he has and continues to be the face of great causes while he enjoys being in this set-up of glamour and is his fun self. He’s a great example for how to take the responsibility of the industry that he belongs to, and he holds that very proudly.”

Karan has time and again faced criticism on social media platforms for giving opportunities to “nepo-kids.” On Koffee With Karan 5, actor Kangana Ranaut called him ‘the flag-bearer of nepotism’ and he has been facing flak since then. Recently, Karan got angry when an Instagram user called him “nepo kid ka daijaan (nanny for nepo kids).”

Karan responded, “Chup kar!!! Ghar baithe baithee negativity mat paal! Do bachon ka kaam dekh !! Aur khud kuch kaam kar (Shut up! Don’t breed negativity sitting at home! Watch the work of the two kids! And do some work yourself)!!!!”

Tamannaah and Karan’s next project

Tamannaah and Karan are collaborating on their upcoming series Do You Wanna Partner. It also stars Diana Penty, Jaaved Jaaferi, Nakuul Mehta, Shweta Tiwari, Neeraj Kabi, Sufi Motiwala, and Rannvijay Singha. It is written by Nandini Gupta, Aarsh Vora and Mithun Gangopadhyay. Do You Wanna Partner premiered on Prime Video on September 12.

Produced by Dharmatic Entertainment, with Karan Johar, Adar Poonawalla, and Apoorva Mehta backing the project, the show is directed by Collin D’Cunha and Archit Kumar.

September 13, 2025 0 comments
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