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Better Than a Hallelujah Music Video World TV Premiere on GMC
Saturday July 31, 2010
Amy Grant Releases ‘She Colors My Day’ EP on iTunes
Monday May 11, 2009
Christmas with Amy and Vince 2008 Edition
Monday November 10, 2008
Amy and Smitty Celebrate On Ice
Monday November 10, 2008
Autographed Mosaic Books Still Available
Wednesday August 20, 2008
Amy Grant: Looking Back, The Interview Podcast
Thursday August 7, 2008
Out With the Old
Tuesday August 5, 2008
View Amy’s pictures in the Amy Grant Fan Gallery
Amy Grant In Concert, Volume 2 (1981)
Somewhere Down the Road (2010)
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Please excuse the shortened discography list as it continues to be built. I am getting to it, don’t worry.
Out of 12 tracks, six are brand new … This may prove to bother those who already have every song that she’s recorded and their iTunes collection will again be littered by duplicate tracks, but this compilation is a definite must-have for her most loyal fans.
By this time in her career, Amy had pretty much accomplished everything she wanted commercially and now was the time to kick back and release a set of tracks as casual as a familiar pair of used jeans.
The album fused the worlds of pop, rock, folk and country into a tightly produced gem of timeless tracks that would cross over into several genre markets.
Released in 1985, Unguarded would prove to be Amy Grant’s most ambitious project to that point in her career.
This album was a revelation into what a holiday album could be if allowed to explore avenues not normally trod by the average artist.
Contemporary Christian music was still quite nascent at the end of the seventies and Amy Grant was already emerging as a virtual overnight success, so the public’s hunger for more material from Amy early on could be forgiven.
Volume 2 feels more like a truer concert album, offering longer tracks with more ambitious arrangements that adds incentive to the fan to buy the album in hopes of gaining a different experience than the studio albums.
The timidity and innocence once evident in her earlier works were set aside for a more strident, confident collection of songs that would approach the sophistication of mainstream recordings already in the market.
The album for the most part is quite mellow in keeping with the predominant styling of adult contemporary music at the end of the seventies.
Songwriters of that era like James Taylor and Carole King had a lot of musical influence on a budding young teenager named Amy Lee Grant and it’s apparent in her first attempt at being a bona fide recording artist.