A Light That Waits
The Fray
A Light That Waits is The Fray’s fifth studio album and their first full-length release in more than a decade, arriving on March 13, 2026 after a 12-year gap since their previous LP. Written and recorded by the trio of Joe King (vocals, guitar), Ben Wysocki (drums), and Dave Welsh (guitar) after Isaac Slade’s departure in 2022, it is the band’s first album fully co-written by the three remaining core members, with Jason Suwito producing the bulk of the eleven-track set. Songs such as A Light That Waits, Still Got You, Ice Cold Lakes, Emerald, My Heart’s a Crowded Room, Wherever You Reach for Me, Let Me Go First, Songs I’d Rather Not Sing, Tasted Glory, After You, Only God, and Sea Level Drive present a pop‑rock sound that leans more towards guitars and contemporary production than the piano‑centric style of their mid‑2000s hits, while still carrying their familiar focus on life lessons, relationships, and faith.
The band and their label describe the album as a “constellation” of songs that already existed emotionally and needed to be captured, emphasizing hopeful energy and the sense of a “new season” rather than a reinvention. The title track opens the record with an upbeat, radio-ready groove and lyrics about a guiding light through uncertainty, flowing into equally bright tracks like Still Got You and Ice Cold Lakes, which mix indie-leaning guitars with subtle nods to the Fray’s classic piano chords. Deeper cuts such as Emerald and Let Me Go First are singled out by reviewers as album highlights: Emerald balances modern pop sheen with hints of ’70s and ’80s rock, while Let Me Go First pairs a skip‑beat rhythm with a bittersweet, emotionally resonant lyric that many fans and critics have called the most “classic Fray” song on the album. Although some commentary notes a loss of the cracked, emotional vocal timbre Isaac Slade once brought, A Light That Waits still functions as a carefully crafted, fresh-sounding reintroduction, offering smooth, reflective pop‑rock that extends the band’s catalog into a post‑hiatus era.
A Light That Waits
The Fray
A Light That Waits is The Fray’s fifth studio album and their first full-length release in more than a decade, arriving on March 13, 2026 after a 12-year gap since their previous LP. Written and recorded by the trio of Joe King (vocals, guitar), Ben Wysocki (drums), and Dave Welsh (guitar) after Isaac Slade’s departure in 2022, it is the band’s first album fully co-written by the three remaining core members, with Jason Suwito producing the bulk of the eleven-track set. Songs such as A Light That Waits, Still Got You, Ice Cold Lakes, Emerald, My Heart’s a Crowded Room, Wherever You Reach for Me, Let Me Go First, Songs I’d Rather Not Sing, Tasted Glory, After You, Only God, and Sea Level Drive present a pop‑rock sound that leans more towards guitars and contemporary production than the piano‑centric style of their mid‑2000s hits, while still carrying their familiar focus on life lessons, relationships, and faith.
The band and their label describe the album as a “constellation” of songs that already existed emotionally and needed to be captured, emphasizing hopeful energy and the sense of a “new season” rather than a reinvention. The title track opens the record with an upbeat, radio-ready groove and lyrics about a guiding light through uncertainty, flowing into equally bright tracks like Still Got You and Ice Cold Lakes, which mix indie-leaning guitars with subtle nods to the Fray’s classic piano chords. Deeper cuts such as Emerald and Let Me Go First are singled out by reviewers as album highlights: Emerald balances modern pop sheen with hints of ’70s and ’80s rock, while Let Me Go First pairs a skip‑beat rhythm with a bittersweet, emotionally resonant lyric that many fans and critics have called the most “classic Fray” song on the album. Although some commentary notes a loss of the cracked, emotional vocal timbre Isaac Slade once brought, A Light That Waits still functions as a carefully crafted, fresh-sounding reintroduction, offering smooth, reflective pop‑rock that extends the band’s catalog into a post‑hiatus era.
