Gray recorded the album, his first set of new songs since 2005's
Life in Slow Motion, in his own studio—The Church Studios—while unsigned to a record label. The studio previously belonged to the
Eurythmics, and when Gray invited
Annie Lennox to guest-record the duet "
Full Steam," she reprimanded him for not changing the carpets. The track, described as "a broad political thing," is one of two duets on the album. The second, "Kathleen," features
Jolie Holland. Gray revealed in an interview that the original choice for "Kathleen" was
Dolly Parton, to whom he wrote a letter with a demo of the song. Parton turned down the offer, as she was busy.
Draw the Line is the first studio album after Gray parted with longtime collaborator
Craig McClune in 2007. Gray said that he felt "the creative spark was sort of diminishing between the people who were involved." The album includes 11 new songs, with a new band: Neill MacColl on guitar (brother of
Kirsty MacColl and who had played on Gray's first two albums), Robbie Malone on bass and Keith Prior on drums. Gray told
The Irish Times that these changes were part of the thinking behind the title: "It's the end of one thing and the start of another. Because there was a chapter and it's ended and now there's a new one. But also it's like, 'don't cross this line!' It's confrontational, which is intentional. That's how I feel." A deluxe hardcover book edition of the album, featuring a booklet with 20 pages of illustrations and a bonus CD of tracks recorded live at
The Roundhouse, was also released simultaneously. ==Commercial performance==