
Amy Grant - The Me That Remains
Six-time GRAMMY Winner & recent Kennedy Center Honoree Amy Grant returns with her first album of all-new music in over a decade. Produced by legendary Mac McAnally, this very personal album is a journey through themes of healing, human and spiritual connection, unity and hope. The album features collaborations with guest artists Ruby Amanfu & Vince Gill, along with co-writing partners Jon Foreman (Switchfoot), Tom Douglas, Mike Reid, Mac McAnally and more. The title song is a reflection of Amy’s journey over the last few years, overcoming heart surgery and a bike accident that nearly took her life. Amy’s music always looks through a lens of hope and faith while probing the human condition with honest commentary, inviting a conversation. With references to Woodstock, Harper’s Ferry and John Lennon, the album's opening track, 'The 6th Of January (Yasgur’s Farm),' reflects on the unrest of the world and invokes a conversation that all is not lost, but if we can choose to look through a lens other than just our own, maybe there is hope to come together and find the way forward through the unrest. The album sounds and reads somewhat like a ‘life manual’ written from the perspective of an artist who has lived through it all, knows who she is as an artist and human,and as Amy has said, "I want to be present for whatever emerges in my time." The story is not over; it is just the beginning of new chapters to come.
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Description
Six-time GRAMMY Winner & recent Kennedy Center Honoree Amy Grant returns with her first album of all-new music in over a decade. Produced by legendary Mac McAnally, this very personal album is a journey through themes of healing, human and spiritual connection, unity and hope. The album features collaborations with guest artists Ruby Amanfu & Vince Gill, along with co-writing partners Jon Foreman (Switchfoot), Tom Douglas, Mike Reid, Mac McAnally and more. The title song is a reflection of Amy’s journey over the last few years, overcoming heart surgery and a bike accident that nearly took her life. Amy’s music always looks through a lens of hope and faith while probing the human condition with honest commentary, inviting a conversation. With references to Woodstock, Harper’s Ferry and John Lennon, the album's opening track, 'The 6th Of January (Yasgur’s Farm),' reflects on the unrest of the world and invokes a conversation that all is not lost, but if we can choose to look through a lens other than just our own, maybe there is hope to come together and find the way forward through the unrest. The album sounds and reads somewhat like a ‘life manual’ written from the perspective of an artist who has lived through it all, knows who she is as an artist and human,and as Amy has said, "I want to be present for whatever emerges in my time." The story is not over; it is just the beginning of new chapters to come.
















