True Confessions
Sara Groves turns in her most self-revelatory album yet, opening up about everything from marital spats to anxiety attacks to the notion of 'confessional living.'
Andrea Bailey Willits | posted 11/17/2009

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When Sara Groves sings, you know she's about to speak truth—about life, faith, and herself. On her ninth album, Fireflies and Songs, the acclaimed songwriter further demonstrates what she calls "confessional living" in hopes that others will do the same. Groves talked to CT about her new album, her challenges, her courage to confess—and what her husband thinks about unveiling their marriage to the world.
You're well known for your songwriting, yet you've said Fireflies and Songs is "your songwriter's album." What's new this time?
I've been writing about justice, the Kingdom of God, observing external things for the last three albums. So what I meant by that is that this time, I'm writing about myself. I just turned the spotlight inward. [INO Records president] Jeff Moseley basically said, "It feels like a long time since we've heard what it's like to be you—a wife, friend, child of God at 37." I'd made a very conscious departure from talking about myself after All Right Here and a little bit after Other Side of Something because I felt like I was growing in that way, like it's not all about me and my introspective thoughts; it has to be about something bigger. I did write about bigger things, but I felt permission, I guess, to come back home.
I have to say that when I knew that's where I was headed, it made me tired (laughs). It's a lot easier to write about external things than to dig in the dirt again. And I wasn't sure how transparent I wanted to be. I decided to pretty much disclose a lot; I wanted it to sound very confessional. It felt like I was working out some muscles that I hadn't worked out in a while as a songwriter.
What gave you the courage to confess to the world in these songs?
I had a conversation once with a friend who had a very public moral failure. We were talking about confession and how it's hard to confess in the church; it's kind of the last place you want to confess. My friend said, "Yeah, someone's gotta go first." And that's been in my head as I'm writing these songs. At times it was like, I could write something less true, but at the end of the day, ah, no, I'd better just say what I mean.
Fireflies and Songs gives an even more personal look at your marriage. Do you and your husband Troy always agree on how much to share?
From the beginning, he's been [supportive]. It started with "Roll to the Middle" on my album Other Side of Something. It's about a couple in bed with their backs to each other after a massive fight—one of our biggest. And I wrote that 10 minutes after the fight. I was so angry, but he was leaving for Africa the next day, so I knew that reconciliation had to happen. So I went and wrote "Roll to the Middle" freshly out of that place. The album was already done, but Troy insisted that song be on the album. I tend to be the more confessional and talkative one, and Troy's more private and quiet. But he does not care what people think about him—and I give way too much time to what other people think. He's the one who championed the song "Love" on this album. It's very indicative of what our struggle was—both of us were kind of looking for love in all the wrong places, in our different ways. Year seven was our crisis year, and God did a miracle in our marriage. But it was rough, a close call.