Amy Grant (born November 25 1960) is an American Christian and pop singer-songwriter and occasional actress.
Grant made her debut in 1977 under the guidance of Myrrh Records, and became the first Christian recording act to have an album be certified platinum. Following her marriage to Gary Chapman in 1982 and a subsequent deal between her record company and A&M Records, a series of successful pop-crossover records consolidated her position as both Christian music's highest-selling act and a formidable force in mainstream music, and according to Billboard magazine she was the most successful Christian recording artist of the 1980s and 1990s.
The year 1982 marked a turning point in both Grant's career and her personal life. After she married Chapman in June, her album Age to Age forced critics to sit up and take notice. The breakthrough album contained the now signature track, "El Shaddai" and the Grant-Chapman penned song, "In A Little While." Now a star, Grant received her first Grammy Award for Best Contemporary Gospel Performance, as well as two Dove Awards for Gospel Artist of the Year and Pop/Contemporary Album of the Year. It was around this time that Grant began touring and recording with young up-and-coming songwriter Michael W. Smith. To this day, Grant and Smith continue to have a strong friendship and creative relationship, often writing songs for or contributing vocals to each other's albums.
Grant followed up this album with the first of her Christmas albums - albums that later would be the basis for her trademark holiday shows. 1984 saw the release of another pop-oriented Christian hit, Straight Ahead, earning Grant her first appearance at the Grammy Awards show.
Hardly had Grant established herself as the "Queen of Christian Pop," however, when she changed directions to widen her fan base (and hence her musical message). Her goal was to become the first Christian singer-songwriter who was also successful as a contemporary pop singer. 1985's Unguarded shocked some fans for its very mainstream sound (and Grant's leopard-print jacket, in four poses for four different covers). "Find a Way," from Unguarded, became the first Christian song to hit Billboard's Top 40 list, also reaching #7 on the Adult Contemporary chart. Amy Grant scored her first Billboard Number One hit in 1986 with "The Next Time I Fall", a breezy duet with former Chicago singer/bassist Peter Cetera. That year, she also recorded a duet with singer Randy Stonehill for his Love Beyond Reason album, entitled "I Could Never Say Goodbye."
1988's Lead Me On, released after Grant had become a mother and undergone considerable strain in her marriage, is considered her most mature album, both lyrically and musically. This album also contained many songs that were still about Christianity and love relationships, but some interpreted it as not being an obviously "Christian" record, though the album's title track is now considered a CCM classic. (Years later, Lead Me On would be chosen as the greatest Contemporary Christian album of all time by CCM Magazine.)This song talks about intense sufferings among people because of racism, and how the comfort they seek, as their lives are threatened, is in their relationships with God. The track "1974" is clearly about young people experiencing the salvation of Christ for the first time; as the lyrics state, "Quite a change, somewhere we had crossed a big line, down upon our knees we had tasted Holy wine and nothing could sway us in a lifetime." The mainstream song, "Saved by Love", was a minor hit, receiving airplay on radio stations featuring the newly emerging Adult Contemporary format. It gives a message of great love for family, affected by her greatest love for Jesus. "Faithless Heart" is an honest, heartfelt song about resisting inner temptations of infidelity. "What About The Love?" talks about the absence of faith in certain worldly things and the importance of resisting the judgment of others. Other songs included were engaging love songs, including "If These Walls Could Speak," which, like "Saved By Love," includes a message about love of family and children. This was a deeply introspective album that she dedicated to one of her children, so that they could understand her at that time in her life. The album's fiery title song received some Top 40 airplay (including on WCZY-FM in Detroit) and crossed over to #96 on the Billboard Hot 100, and "1974 (We Were Young)" and "Saved By Love" also charted AC.
House of Love in 1994 continued in the same vein, boasting catchy pop songs mingled with spiritual lyrics. The album was a multi-platinum success and produced the minor pop hit "Lucky One" (#18 pop and #2 AC) as well as the title track (a duet with country music star, and Grant's future second husband, Vince Gill) (#37 pop) and a cover of Joni Mitchell's frequently-covered "Big Yellow Taxi" (#67 pop).
In 1995, Amy was interviewed, pointing to Hootie & The Blowfish and Sheryl Crow, with their acoustic guitars and more rock-oriented music, and wondered what she was still doing on the pop side of things. She knew she could bring her unique voice and songwriting skills to a different music genre. As part of this newfound direction, she participated in Lifetime's 1st Annual "Girls & Guitars" benefit, singing a number of songs, including a duet with Melissa Etheridge of "You Sleep While I Drive."
After she covered the 10cc song "The Things We Do For Love" for the Mr. Wrong soundtrack, 1997's Behind the Eyes was released in September. BTE struck a much darker note, leaning more toward downtempo, acoustic soft-rock songs with more mature (yet still optimistic) lyrics (such as the radio hit "Takes A Little Time"). She called it her "razor blades and Prozac" album. The video for "Takes A Little Time" was certainly a new direction for Grant; with a blue light filter, acoustic guitar, the streets and characters of New York City, and a plot, Amy was re-cast as an adult light rocker.
Grant and Chapman separated and divorced in 1999, disappointing many Christian fans. In 2000 Grant married Vince Gill, who divorced country singer Janis Gill of Sweethearts of the Rodeo.
Grant released a sequel to her hymns collection in 2005 titled Rock of Ages. Despite publicly musing that life would be easier if she weren't working, Grant joined the reality television phenomenon by hosting Three Wishes, a show in which she and a team of helpers make wishes come true for small-town residents. The show debuted on NBC in the fall of 2005, but was cancelled in November after 9 episodes.
After Three Wishes was cancelled, Grant won her 6th Grammy Award for Rock of Ages. In a February, 2006 webchat, Amy stated she believes her "best music is still ahead."
In April, 2006, a live CD/DVD entitled Time Again...Amy Grant Live was recorded in Fort Worth, TX, the location of her very first paid performance; it will be released on September 26, 2006.
1960 births | Kappa Alpha Theta sisters | Living people | Christian musicians | American female singers | Amy Grant | People from Augusta, Georgia | Georgia (U.S. state) musicians
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