Billboard commented that "the Californian quartet's spare '60s-influenced
pop/rock gets a facelift from producer Kahne, who shepherds the band's shift toward a more emphatic pop sensibility by focusing on a lusher, more layered vocal sound." "Old fans will be divided over whether the change represents new subtlety or simply a softer edge," the review continued, "but the polish should help broaden their radio profile."
Cashbox said that the band had "taken its ragged L.A. street image and polished it for what looks like a national campaign", noting that the album's "American sound, repleat with guitar-laden nascent
psychedelia," makes it "right in line with current musical taste."
Rolling Stone critic Laura Fissinger observed that
Different Light uses "less
hook-happy song structure and more modernized production" than the Bangles' 1984 debut
All Over the Place, "covering their roots without burying them ten feet under." She disagreed with objections to its more "deliberate, sophisticated and airwaves ready" production and felt that the album "puts then and now in significantly better balance", while also finding that the band had advanced "past the fan-apes-idol phase" in their musicianship. In a retrospective review for
Slant Magazine, Sal Cinquemani wrote that while
Different Light was perceived as "a slicker, more commercial move for the Bangles at the time of its release", it "sounds surprisingly fresh in hindsight", adding that the band's "'60s-style pop melodies and
classic rock references... were deftly matched with the then-current
new wave and rock rhythms of the early '80s."
Slant also included it on their 2003 list of 50 Essential Pop Albums. ==Track listing==