Remixed versions of these songs were to form the basis of All The Ghosts,[4] which was released by Naim Edge on 13 July 2009 in Europe and on 8 June 2010 in the United States.
[1] Writing for BBC Music, John Eyles said: "Herbert's songs are rightly starting to draw comparisons with those of 60s Ray Davies and Paul McCartney.
[4] In a four-starred review for The Guardian, John Fordham said: "This fine album... [is] the truest to her distinctive muse, with its debts to Janis Ian, Joni Mitchell and Tom Waits, as much as to Billie Holiday or Nina Simone....Herbert's earlier jazz following perhaps won't find many familiar landmarks... but as an idiosyncratic singer-songwriter album, All the Ghosts will be on the year-end hitlists whatever its genre".
[2] In a four-starred review for The Daily Telegraph, Andrew Perry said that Herbert "whips up beautiful, vaguely jazzy, keenly observed vignettes, mostly about outsider women.
[1] In a four-starred review for Metro, Arwa Haider said: "The beguiling storytelling voice she demonstrated on her last album, 2006’s Between Me And The Wardrobe, beautifully enriches these nine tracks, along with creatively atmospheric band instrumentation".