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New Day

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Download links and information about New Day by Kieran Goss. This album was released in 1994 and it belongs to World Music, Songwriter/Lyricist, Celtic genres. It contains 11 tracks with total duration of 46:52 minutes.

Artist: Kieran Goss
Release date: 1994
Genre: World Music, Songwriter/Lyricist, Celtic
Tracks: 11
Duration: 46:52
Buy on iTunes $6.99
Buy on iTunes $10.89

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Take a Look At My Heart 4:25
2. Words Across the Sky 5:07
3. Somebody's Love 3:37
4. New Day 4:30
5. Find the Words 3:25
6. Lean On Me 4:13
7. Twisting and Turning 5:06
8. Look My Way 3:50
9. You Wait for Me 4:48
10. All That You Ask Me 3:24
11. Reach Out (I'll Be There) 4:27

Details

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Kieran Goss' second album, New Day, features more expansive light folk-pop production, making significant use of keyboards and including more of Goss' six- and 12-string acoustic guitars while retaining the pianos that dominated Brand New Star. Most of the tracks contain some steel guitar, nudging the music gently in a country & western direction. The lyrics and music remain mellow and soothing, although the slicker production at times results in a less genuine reading of Goss' songs. The opening track, "Take a Look at My Heart," is a radio-friendly adult contemporary song, but it lacks the soul of Goss' best work. Some of that best work is nonetheless contained on New Day. The title track is a beautifully rendered guitar-based ballad. "Lean on Me" features some excellent harmonies provided by Liam Bradley. "Look My Way" demonstrates more than any other track on the album the deft musicianship of Goss and his band, and "You Wait For Me" breaks into a rapturous fiddle solo, making it the only track that identifies Goss as an Irish artist. But the best track may be Goss' cover of "Reach Out (I'll Be There)," which blends a quietly funky acoustic guitar backing on the verses with haunting piano-based harmonies in the chorus. It is a perfect cover for New Day, which pulls off the difficult feat of exploring the positive side of life — hope in the midst of darkness, the comfort provided by human contact and the presence of friends — without succumbing to sentimentality.