Subscribe to Christianity Today
Subscribe to Christianity Today
Donate to Christianity Today
login | my account
May 27, 2012

Home > Music > Reviews > 2010
Amy Grant
Somewhere Down the Road (Sparrow)
Our Rating4 Stars - Excellent
Your Ratingcomment

Style: Roots-driven rock/pop; compare to Sheryl Crow, Shawn Colvin, Kate Campbell

Top tracks: "Better Than a Hallelujah," "Third World Woman," "Arms of Love"

In August 1999, just two months after her well-publicized divorce from husband Gary Chapman was final, Amy Grant took the stage at the Gospel Music Association's "Music in the Rockies" seminar in Estes Park, Colorado. The divorce—and the resulting public firestorm, especially in the Christian community—left Grant's emotions raw, and it showed. She broke down crying while singing "'Tis So Sweet to Trust in Jesus" as the audience watched in complete silence.

In that moment, Grant garnered renewed affection from the crowd as her story, vulnerable with fear and grief, resonated real-time with the roller-coaster journeys of many in attendance. It is with the same naked honesty that she has now mapped out a song-by-song journey of the past thirty years with Somewhere Down the Road. It's a project rife with pain, struggle, hope, and the honesty that has endeared her to millions.

The first single, "Better Than a Hallelujah," thematically proposes that a believer's broken pleas to God are "better than a hallelujah sometimes," placing Grant's compassionate vocal within a haunting musical track that is both intimately stirring and radio-ready. "Overnight" introduces the vocal gifts of Grant's daughter, 17-year-old Sarah Chapman, conjecturing the melodic roundness of Frou Frou and Regina Spektor while lyrically challenging, "If it all just happened overnight / You would never learn to believe."

The acoustic rock of "Hard Times," a la Sheryl Crow and Bonnie Raitt, acknowledges that trials and tribulations come for us all, while "What Is the Chance of That" similarly injects Grant's Americana soul into the heartfelt line, "Pain and hard times they come and go / Like some test of faith that purifies my weak belief into something gold."

The equally transparent "Third World Woman," an infectious acoustic blues performance (think Ben Harper and the Blind Boys of Alabama There Will Be Light collaboration), effectively contrasts Western affluence with worldwide poverty while issuing a universal spiritual plea ("Lord have mercy") for all souls on the chorus.

Wisely executed instrumentation affords Grant's unguarded voice and prose space to work, a fashion that retired her slick princess pop for the gutsy defiance of 1997's Behind the Eyes—a collection from which this album borrows two tracks. (MercyMe's "I Can Only Imagine," which Grant recorded on 2002's Legacy CD, is also recycled here.)

Even with the repeats, these songs sound right for today's Grant. Though she's smiling more these days—with a happy marriage to country singer Vince Gill—Grant won't shy away from life's harsh realities. Somewhere Down the Road once again bravely broaches the here and now with candor while also pointing out hope on the other side.

For the music world, Amy Grant is a treasure. This record seconds that notion.




Christianity Today


  


Subscribe to Christianity Today and get 3 free trial issues. No credit card required.

Please allow 4-6 weeks for delivery. Offer valid in U.S. only.

If you decide you want to keep Christianity Today coming, honor your invoice for just $19.95 and receive nine more issues, a full year in all. If not, simply write "cancel" across the invoice and return it. The three trial issues are yours to keep, regardless.


Click here for international orders2-for-1 Gifts!
[Reader Reviews]

Displaying 1–3 of 6 comments

Bill B

April 09, 2010  10:18am

I have come to be a huge Amy Grant fan. My own life has shown me that we all find ourselves in places we never thought we would be. This is a wonderful collection of songs. I am very glad that Amy shared them with us.

Don Finnie

April 02, 2010  8:16pm

That is the difference between Amy Grant and many self-righteous Christians. If it is true, she admits it. She is truthful. I believe the divorce happened for many reasons that had nothing to do with Gill. It is useful to recall that Christ came to dispense grace and mercy, not to congratulate the perfect among us. If you require perfection in your Christian musicians, you probably need to stop listening.

Judy Holbrook

April 02, 2010  6:40pm

We are not here to judge her life...God knows her heart. But I do love her new CD. I had heard "Better than a Hallelujah" on the radio and decided to buy the CD. Though I have only heard it through once, I am really glad I did. I especially like "Overnight" for all the young adults I know that want it all now, but don't know what that is and "Arms of Love"... well it is Easter and who can refute the love of God!

The allotted time for commenting has ended.

[Browse More Christianity Today]



Quiet

Quiet

Shhh! Introverts working

The Conversation

The Conversation

A tribute to "The Reformed Journal."

more | current issue

Christian Bible Studies

Unbalanced Blessings

Unbalanced Blessings

The balancing act of...

Books & Culture

Quiet

Quiet

Shhh! Introverts working...

Preaching Today

NFL Star Junior Seau Searched for Peace

Small Groups

Prepare with Prayer

Prepare with Prayer

Don't leave out this...

Search
Search
Search
Scripture Search
Go Deeper