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Imagine how thick the air would be if every
word from our mouths flew up toward the sky and hung there, like a cloud. Like
the dialog in cartoon strips, only floating free above our heads, without a
bubble to contain them. Now imagine the shock of seeing the words we think, but
never say, gathered there as well. Our pride, our anger, our doubts, our fears
all spelled out and undeniable. How could we live like that?
For Sara Groves,
whose music speaks into existence words most of us would never dare, as
vulnerable at that would make us all, it's a prospect worth pondering.
From a very young age, Sara always wrestled with words. She'd get them down on
paper and even put music to them, but she never really considered their worth.
After graduating from Evangel College in 1994, Sara taught high school English
and History for four years and began singing her songs 'on the side.' But the
more her relationship with God began to be challenged and shaped by life
experience, the more Sara felt compelled to do more with her words. Music became
driving force because life simply left her with too much to say.
As a result, in 1998, Sara, with the help of
husband/manager Troy, recorded Past the Wishing on a shoestring budget as a gift
for family and friends. By word of mouth, the album project grew in popularity,
becoming one of the standout independent recordings of that year. Sara's concert
schedule grew exponentially, and major labels came calling with recording deals,
but Sara chose to remain independent to focus on developing a ministry and
growing as a songwriter.
speaking from experience
Encouraged by the
reception of Past the Wishing, Sara recorded her second album, Conversations, at
The Sound Kitchen, by invitation of Pamplin Music's Dino Elefante. The album
released independently in 1999, and in 2000 Sara met industry veteran and owner
of INO records¹ Jeff Moseley. Sara felt Moseley¹s innovative and new way of
doing things met her desire to have more marketing support and larger
distribution of her albums, but also allow her to remain very involved in her
career. In fall 2000 Sara recorded new songs for the INO release of
Conversations, which released March 2001.
On this project, Sara was able to give her poignantly honest songs the musical
attention they deserved. There's a distinctive clarity in the production that
enhances the rich acoustic folk/pop settings in which Sara frames her lyrics.
Musically Sara is reminiscent of Shawn Colvin and Sarah McLachlan, and although
her lyrical style is uniquely hers, she has been compared to Rich Mullins.
Complex in its simplicity, powerful in its weakness, whimsical but wise.
Conversations gives the listeners a chance to eavesdrop on
scenes in Sara's life-from struggling to talk about faith with a friend in the
title track, to asking God to speak up when faced with big decisions
("Hello Lord"), to trying to comfort a person facing death ("What
Do I Know").
"These songs are all real experiences," Sara explains. "I hope to
unveil the things we feel but don't always say...about life, about our
relationships with each other and with God... and basically to say it's okay.
Because I think God is saying 'It's okay.' He knows who we are, and he knows
when we're trying to put on a brave face, and that's such a joke. He sees us for
real, and it's okay."
Conversations is an album that communicates, in subtle and
forthright ways, that faith is not a subject to be shied away from, that honest
discussion among friends--believers and non-believers alike--can only make us
stronger.
"I believe every person has a next step with God, something next to
do," she says. "I want my music to challenge people to take that next
step. Whatever that next step is, even if it is coming from a place of
doubt--where you aren't sure God even exists--say that, that's a step.
Yell it out."
the universal language
Sara Groves knows
that music is a universal language, and she is excited about the opportunity to
speak it on her own terms, as a songwriter with a Christian worldview.
"It's amazing to me the doors music can open. You cannot say five words to
someone, but you can talk to them about Christ and who He is...in the
music," she says. "I used to struggle with the fact that I don't write
as poetic as some people... I used to think good music was something you
couldn't understand, all these veiled literary references that the average
person couldn't decipher."
But, she says, when it comes down to it, "My music is not so much about the
poetry or the art, as it is about being understood...."