Life in Slow Motion

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (186 ratings)
Life in Slow Motion album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 44:57

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His Best

benyamen

I own most of his albums and have heard the rest a few times and of all of David Gray's great works this album is easily the best in my opinion. It's the best balance of emotion, rock, pop, songwriting, guitar, and electronic pieces. I love this album and it's been added to the short list of albums that I can just put on and listen to every track over and over again.

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Good album...

puertoland

This is a good album, certainly not great. That being said, The One I Love is my favorite David Gray song, and it's just great pop, and Slow Motion is also a good song. At the very least, get those 2.

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My wife loves this record

eJDL

As much as I enjoyed this terrific album, I'm grateful to not commute with my wife who _refused_ to eject this from her CD player for weeks... 'Slow Motion' and 'Hospital Food' are favorites.

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Fantastic Album

m_miller81

I love David Gray, so when this album came out, without question I bought it. I'm glad it did. Although it's vastly different from White Ladder, which is the first album I heard by him, I adore it anyway. I've enjoyed hearing the progression of his music. The song The One I Love is very anthemic, very Bruce Springsteen-ish, and by far the fastest paced and most raucous song on the CD. I always listen to it first then the rest of the album.

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GREAT!

vikasii2

One of my favorite albums from David Gray. A must here from this album is "From here you can almost see the sea".

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They Say All Music Guide

Life in Slow Motion is an appropriate name for David Gray’s sixth album. It’s languid and deliberate — not that this is a bad place for Gray to be, or that it’s even a big change of pace for him. As the years passed, he’s trimmed away the faster tempos from his music, leaving behind an even-keeled, meditative, soft reflective folk-pop that brought him a hit in 2000 with “Babylon” from his fourth album, White Ladder. Life in Slow Motion isn’t too far removed from that album, although it does lack the then-fashionable vague electronica underpinnings. In their place is a mildly lush but not elaborate production that’s tasteful and classy, and Gray’s songwriting is well mannered and well intentioned. If Gray didn’t have a slight rasp to his voice, this music would simply wash over you, since it’s a calm, clean album ideal for either background music at work or late-night introspection. Thankfully, the bit of grit in his voice is enough to ground the music. Life in Slow Motion is especially low-key and quiet compared to Gray’s other albums, requiring close listening to catch the subtleties in either the lyrics or the music. That means it’s a rewarding listen mainly for the faithful who have the time, patience, and inclination to dig into this. – Stephen Thomas Erlewine

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