
Amy Grant
Amy Grant can be booked through this site. Amy Grant entertainment booking site. Amy Grant
is available for public concerts and events. Amy Grant can be booked for
private events and Amy Grant can be booked for corporate events and
meetings through this Amy Grant booking page.
Unlike most middle agents that would mark
up the performance or appearance fee for Amy Grant, we act as YOUR agent in
securing Amy Grant at the best possible price. We go over the rider for
Amy Grant and work directly with Amy Grant or the responsible agent for
Amy Grant to secure the talent for your event. We become YOUR agent,
representing YOU, the buyer.
In fact, in most cases we can negotiate for
the acquisition of Amy Grant for international dates and newer promoters
providing you meet professional requirements.
Amy Grant Biography
Although Amy Grant cannot claim to have invented the
Contemporary Christian Music (CCM) style of gospel music, she did the
most to popularize it in the 1970s and 1980s before successfully
crossing over to pop music in the '80s and early '90s. When Grant came
along as a teenager in the mid-'70s, inspirational (i.e., white)
gospel music was a tiny subgenre, its records sold almost exclusively
in Christian bookstores and almost exclusively in small numbers. By the
mid-'80s, when she released Unguarded, her first album to be marketed
to a secular as well as a Christian audience, gospel music constituted
eight percent of U.S. record sales, a higher percentage than that for
jazz or classical music.
She achieved this breakthrough for CCM and for herself by forging a
pop/rock sound that matched the production values, and often aped the
styles, of pop/rock, and by writing lyrics that often were ambiguous in
their meaning, sounding to Christian music fans like appeals to God and
to more general pop fans like love songs. She also matched the staging
of rock concerts in her shows, which often played in venues more
typical of secular performances than religious ones. And her music
videos, which emphasized her photogenic appearance, were on a par with
those of pop stars. When it occurred, her complete crossover to pop was
more a slight shift of emphasis than a major change of direction.
Nevertheless, it made her a controversial figure in the Christian music
community of the '80s in a way similar to Bob Dylan in the folk music
of the 1960s: she was both the field's biggest star and came to be
viewed as something of a traitor. As her career went on, however, she
managed to mend fences with traditional fans and achieve a balance of
pop and Christian-oriented songs on her albums as her career became
less of a full-time focus for her and her record sales declined from
the heights of her pop heyday.
Born November 25, 1960, in Augusta, GA, where her father, Dr. Burton
Paine Grant, was doing his residency, Amy Lee Grant was a descendent of
one of the most prominent and prosperous families of Nashville, TN. Her
great-grandfather, Andrew Mizell Burton, was a wealthy insurance
executive and philanthropist. She was the fourth and final daughter
born to her father and her mother, Gloria Grant, following her sisters
Mimi, Kathy, and Carol. The family moved briefly to Houston, TX, in
1961 before returning to settle in Nashville. In addition to being well
established socially and financially, the Grant family was also deeply
religious, belonging to the strict Protestant sect the Church of
Christ, which was sufficiently conservative to ban the playing of
musical instruments at its services; worshipers sang the hymns a
cappella. Despite this stricture, Grant was allowed to begin taking
piano lessons when she was ten. While in the seventh grade at the
private Ensworth grammar school, she turned to the guitar. Although she
was baptized in the Church of Christ, she soon followed her sister Mimi
in attending a breakaway variant of the faith, the Belmont Church of
Christ, which took a less formal approach, more in keeping with the
Charismatic movement.
While attending the private girls' prep school Harpeth Hall, Grant
began performing with her guitar at devotional meetings at the school,
playing songs by such favorites as James Taylor, Carole King, and John
Denver. None of them, however, sang religious songs, so Grant augmented
her program with her own Christian-oriented compositions. While working
as an intern at a recording studio, she made a tape of her songs for
her parents that was heard by producer Brown Bannister, who in turn
played it for gospel singer Chris Christian, recently retained by
gospel label Word Records as a talent scout. Christian took the tape to
Word, which signed Grant to a recording contract while she was still in
her mid-teens.
Amy Grant, her debut album, was released on Word's Myrrh Records
imprint in 1977. It sold 50,000 copies during its first year of
release, a very good sale for a Christian album at the time. The songs
Old Man's Rubble (written by Bannister), What a Difference You've
Made in My Life (written by Archie Jordan), and Beautiful Music
(written by Lanier Ferguson) all ranked as Top Ten hits on Christian
radio. Grant graduated from high school in the spring of 1978 and began
performing concerts around the country that summer. At first, her
touring was restricted to two weekends a month as she attempted to
combine her budding musical career with college; she enrolled at Furman
University in Greenville, SC, in September.
My Father's Eyes, Grant's second album, was released in April 1979. The
ballad Father's Eyes had been written by Gary Chapman, a young
aspiring Christian songwriter, and it carried a subtle religious
message rather than the sort of overt statement typical of gospel
music. That message was positive, and it alluded to elements of
Christian belief, but it also could be appreciated in nearly secular
terms. The more openly religious Faith Walkin' People also earned Top
Ten airplay on Christian radio, but Father's Eyes was the real hit
off the album, helping it to strong sales that would accumulate to a
gold record certification by 1987. In the short term, My Father's Eyes
attracted enough attention to earn Grant her first nomination for the
Grammy Award for Best Gospel Performance, Contemporary or
Inspirational.
Grant focused on her schoolwork while still finding time to perform and
record. Her third album, Never Alone (1980), featured songs mostly
written by some combination of her, Chris Christian, Bannister, and
Chapman, among them Look What Has Happened to Me, which Christian
radio made a Top Ten hit, but the LP was not as popular as My Father's
Eyes, even though it earned her a second Grammy nomination for Best
Gospel Performance, Contemporary or Inspirational. She toured with
Chapman as her opening act during the summer of 1980. She then took a
semester off from college and accepted concert dates on the Billy
Graham Crusade and as an opening act for the Bill Gaither Trio.
Instead of returning to Furman, she enrolled at Vanderbilt University
in Nashville for the spring 1981 semester, but prior to that she
undertook her first national headlining tour, playing 40 dates starting
in February, backed by the Christian rock band of DeGarmo & Key.
Some of the shows were recorded, and Myrrh released two separate LPs,
In Concert in May and In Concert, Vol. 2 in November. Christian radio
made Top Ten hits out of two new songs from the discs, Singing a Love
Song (written by Jim Weber) from the first album and I'm Gonna Fly
from the second, and In Concert earned Grant her third consecutive
nomination for the Grammy Award for Best Gospel Performance,
Contemporary or Inspirational.
Grant's life and career reached a turning point in the spring of 1982.
Unable to balance her college studies with her performing and recording
work, she dropped out of Vanderbilt 20 credits shy of her degree.
Before that, she had accepted Chapman's proposal, and she married him
on June 19. By then, her star was on the rise following the April
release of her fourth studio album, Age to Age. This was her
breakthrough as a gospel singer and, more than that, an album that
tested the limits of how popular gospel music could be. Christian radio
found three Top Ten hits starting with the number one Sing Your Praise
to the Lord (written by Rich Mullins), followed by El Shaddai
(written by Michael Card and John Thompson) and In a Little While.
Age to Age entered Billboard magazine's Inspirational chart in July and
quickly raced to number one, where it stayed for an astonishing 85
weeks. It won Grant her first Grammy Award for Best Gospel Performance,
Contemporary, and it finally earned her recognition from the Gospel
Music Association, which gave her its Dove Awards for Gospel Artist of
the Year and Pop/Contemporary Album of the Year. ( El Shaddai was
named Gospel Song of the Year.) In November 1983, Age to Age became the
first gospel album by a solo artist to be certified gold; it went
platinum in June 1985. Myrrh assembled a medley of the album's songs
for release as an EP in the spring of 1983, and Ageless Medley made
the Top Ten of the Christian radio charts and won Grant her second
Grammy, for Best Gospel Performance, Female.
Age to Age made Grant a superstar within the gospel field. With that,
her managers, Michael Blanton and Dan Harrell, began considering
whether she could project her career beyond the gospel genre. In the
summer of 1983, they sent her to the Caribou Ranch in Colorado, a
first-rate recording facility used by the likes of Chicago and Elton
John, to record a holiday LP. The modestly titled A Christmas Album
appeared in October. Christian radio made Emmanuel, a song written by
Grant's keyboard player, Michael W. Smith, a Top 20 hit, and the album
peaked at number four in Billboard's Inspirational chart. It became a
perennial seller, going gold in November 1985 and platinum four years
later. As Grant worked on her next album, Blanton and Harrell began
booking her outside the usual gospel music circuit, and they did so
with success. In December 1983, she sold out two dates at the Universal
Amphitheatre in Los Angeles.
Straight Ahead, Grant's fifth studio album, was released in February
1984, and while it did not equal the commercial success of Age to Age,
it was also very popular. On March 31, it ascended to number one on
Billboard's Inspirational chart, holding that position for 61 weeks.
Christian radio made hits out of four of its songs: Angels, which hit
number one; Thy Word ; Jehovah (written by Geoffrey P. Thurman), and
The Now and the Not Yet (written by Pam Mark Hall). Angels won
Grant her third Grammy for Best Gospel Performance, Female, and the
album won the Dove Award for Pop/Contemporary Album of the Year.
Meanwhile, Blanton and Harrell continued to look beyond the gospel
market. In the spring of 1984, Grant starred with Paul Williams and Tom
Wopat in an hourlong TV special called Story, Songs and Stars that was
based on the Cinderella story; it featured her music video for It's
Not a Song, a track from Straight Ahead with no overt religious theme.
That summer, she toured the U.S. opening shows for country star Kenny
Rogers. By October, she had sold out two shows at Radio City Music Hall
in New York City, hardly a hotbed of gospel music.
All of this helped to set up Grant's major crossover move of 1985. Word
Records made a distribution deal with the large independent label
A&M Records, which reissued Straight Ahead just as Grant was
appearing on the Grammy Awards show in February 1985, singing Angels.
As a result, the year-old album broke into the Billboard pop album
chart in April; in May it went gold. That same month, Grant's sixth
regular studio album, Unguarded, was released simultaneously by Myrrh
for the Christian market and by A&M for the pop market. The overt
Christian messages of the songs on Age to Age and Straight Ahead were
scaled back considerably on Unguarded, which often featured hopeful,
but religiously ambiguous, lyrics. That, however, did not prevent
Christian radio from giving airplay to five songs: Find a Way, which
hit number one; Wise Up (by Wayne Kirkpatrick and Billy Simon);
Everywhere I Go (by Mary Lee Kortes); Sharayah ; and Love of
Another Kind. A&M's promotional muscle got Find a Way into the
pop Top 40, and Wise Up became a minor pop chart entry. ( Find a Way
reached the Top Ten of the Adult Contemporary chart, and both Wise Up
and Everywhere I Go also reached this chart.) Supported by an
18-month tour, the album went gold in September 1985 and platinum in
June 1986, after it had won Grant her fourth Grammy for Best Gospel
Performance, Female and the Dove Award for Artist of the Year.
As Grant continued to tour in support of Unguarded, A&M and Myrrh
released The Collection in July 1986, a compilation that topped the
Inspirational chart for 29 weeks and went gold in February 1987, then
platinum in August 1989. The album contained two newly recorded tracks,
Stay for Awhile and Love Can Do. Both made the Top Ten of the
Christian radio chart, Stay for Awhile at number one; Stay for
Awhile also made the Top 20 of the Adult Contemporary chart. Grant won
a Dove Award for Short Form Music Video of the Year for the song. Her
increasing profile in the music business resulted in opportunities to
work with other artists. Producer Michael Omartian, whom she knew from
the Christian music field, invited her to duet with former Chicago
singer Peter Cetera on The Next Time I Fall, a song for Cetera's
second solo album, Solitude/Solitaire. The album was released on Warner
Bros. Records in June 1986, and The Next Time I Fall, billed to Peter
Cetera with Amy Grant, was issued as its second single in September.
Spurred by a stylish video that ran frequently on MTV, the single
topped the Adult Contemporary chart in November and the pop chart in
December, leading to a Grammy nomination for Best Pop Performance by a
Duo or Group with Vocal. At the same time, the always
Christmas-conscious Grant had joined Art Garfunkel in recording a suite
of songs written by Jimmy Webb as The Animals' Christmas, released by
Columbia Records in November, and Garfunkel joined Grant on her first
network television special, Headin' Home for the Holidays, which was
broadcast on NBC in December. (There was also a home-video version,
retitled Amy Grant's Old Fashioned Christmas, which went gold in 1992.)
Having completed all her recording and promotional activities in
December 1986, Grant announced that she was pregnant and temporarily
retired to prepare for the arrival of her first child. Matthew Garrison
Chapman was born September 25, 1987. His mother returned to the music
business with the release of her seventh studio album of new material,
Lead Me On, in June 1988. Lead Me On was a surprisingly serious effort
from Grant, its title track discussing (albeit in poetically heightened
terms) slavery and the Holocaust, while Faithless Heart described
adulterous temptations and What About the Love (written by Kye
Fleming and Janis Ian) cast a skeptical eye on preachers, Wall Street
brokers, and nursing homes. With a glossy pop production and Grant's
impassioned vocals, the album was well received critically, leading to
the by-now expected awards: a fifth Grammy for Best Gospel Performance,
Female, Dove Awards for Artist of the Year, Pop/Contemporary Album of
the Year, and Short Form Music Video of the Year for the track Lead Me
On.
But it marked something of a speed bump in terms of Grant's career as a
record seller. Christian radio was enthralled, giving significant
airplay to six songs: Saved by Love (number one), Lead Me On
(number one), 1974 (a song about youthful conversion that led off the
LP), What About the Love (number one), Say Once More, and
Faithless Heart. The pop market was less impressed, however. The
Adult Contemporary chart listed both 1974 and Saved by Love, but
only in minor positions, and Lead Me On spent just two weeks in the
Billboard Hot 100, peaking at number 96. The album shipped gold and
topped the Inspirational chart for 36 weeks, but despite a promotional
tour that ran from September 1988 to March 1989, playing to a million
fans in 135 cities, Lead Me On was a commercial disappointment from a
pop perspective. (In March 2002, CCM magazine announced the results of
a poll of its readers that named Lead Me On the number one Contemporary
Christian Music album of all time.)
At the end of the Lead Me On tour, Grant took another pregnancy leave,
her only significant recording activity for the year being a
performance of the hymn 'Tis So Sweet to Trust in Jesus on the Word
Records various-artists album Our Hymns; she co-arranged the song,
which earned her a share of a Dove Award for Country Recorded Song of
the Year. On December 18, 1989, she gave birth to Gloria Mills Chapman,
known as Millie. On May 26, 1990, a Billboard poll on the 1980s named
Grant Gospel Artist of the Decade and Age to Age Album of the Decade.
She would become equally successful in the '90s, but would do so by
leaving gospel music behind almost entirely. Heart in Motion, her
eighth new studio album, largely downplayed the serious side she had
revealed on Lead Me On in favor of frothy pop/rock music.
Released in March 1991, it was accompanied by an aggressive promotional
campaign on the part of A&M Records. (Grant later claimed that the
label was trying to make up for its recent loss of Janet Jackson to
Virgin Records by creating a new female pop superstar.) That campaign,
along with a music video depicting Grant and a male actor pretending to
be in love, helped make Baby Baby (which Grant said she actually
wrote about her daughter) into a number one pop hit in April, leading
to Grammy nominations for Record of the Year, Song of the Year, and
Best Female Pop Vocal Performance. It was followed by four more Top 40
hits, each accompanied by a music video, the first three of which also
reached the Top Ten: Every Heartbeat, That's What Love Is For,
Good for Me, and I Will Remember You. As a result, the album sold
five million copies by the end of 1997. (The Heart in Motion Video
Collection, meanwhile, went gold.) The Christian market came along,
too, with Heart in Motion enjoying 32 weeks at number one on
Billboard's Top Contemporary Christian Albums chart, while Christian
radio found six songs it could broadcast, though it tended to prefer
more thoughtful fare such as Hope Set High and Ask Me (which
treated the subject of pedophilia and even asked the thorny theological
question of how God could let such a condition occur).
Grant toured North America and Europe from July 1991 to March 1992. The
following month, she was again named Artist of the Year at the Dove
Awards and also picked up a Dove for Song of the Year as the co-author
of Michael W. Smith's Place in This World. She went on pregnancy
leave a third time, but managed to contribute a cover of the Elvis
Presley hit Love Me Tender to the soundtrack for Honeymoon in Vegas,
released in August, and to record a second seasonal album, Home for
Christmas, released in October, which hit number two and went platinum
in short order. On October 11, 1992, she gave birth to Sarah Cannon
Chapman, named after Harpeth Hall alumna Minnie Pearl, the Grand Ole
Opry comedienne whose real name was Sarah Ophelia Colley.
With the massive success of Heart in Motion, Grant could afford to take
some time off before tackling another album, but she undertook several
recording projects in 1993. She participated in two spoken word albums
for children, The Gingham Dog & the Calico Cat with music by Chet
Atkins and The Creation with music by Béla Fleck, both released by the
Rabbit Ears label. And she and Chapman put together Songs from the
Loft, a various-artists collection of religious tunes for teenagers
that won the 1994 Dove Award for Praise and Worship Album of the Year.
Then she turned her attention to her ninth regular studio album,
emerging with House of Love in August 1994. The album was patterned
after Heart in Motion, with a combination of catchy romantic songs
meant to hit the pop charts and more spiritual efforts to satisfy her
Christian fans. The result was another multi-platinum success, even if
the album sold less than half what its predecessor had. Lucky One
made the Top 20, the title song (a duet with country star Vince Gill
written by Wally Wilson, Kenny Greenberg, and Greg Barnhill, and
featured in the film Speechless) hit the Top 40, and a cover of the
Joni Mitchell standard Big Yellow Taxi reached the lower end of the
singles chart. Meanwhile, the album topped Billboard's Contemporary
Christian (Albums) chart for 12 weeks and Christian radio found five
other songs to play, among them Children of the World and Helping
Hand, both of which hit number one. Grant embarked on a yearlong tour
in support of the album that concluded in September 1995. A month
earlier, she had been featured on the various-artists album My Utmost
for His Highest, singing the song Lover of My Soul. This enabled her
to share in a 1996 Dove Award for Special Event Album of the Year.
In February 1996, Grant was featured on the soundtrack for the film Mr.
Wrong, singing the 1976 10cc hit The Things We Do for Love, which
reached the Adult Contemporary chart. In December, she performed two
sold-out shows dubbed Amy Grant's Tennessee Christmas
at the Nashville Arena, beginning what became an annual event.
Otherwise, she spent 1996 and much of 1997 working on her tenth regular
studio album, Behind the Eyes, which was released in September 1997.
The album earned critical approbation for what reviewers saw as a
return to her early folk-rock style and for its serious, introspective
lyrics. It would have been equally accurate to note that Grant, who
always paid close attention to current trends in pop, had dropped the
heavy synthesizers and drum programming after listening to new
competitors like Sheryl Crow and Jewel. As for the lyrics, while Grant
had always emphasized the travails of life, contrasted with the
benefits of spiritual support, on Behind the Eyes many fans thought
they detected suggestions of real-life romantic discord.
The album entered the pop chart at number eight and went gold in less
than three months as Takes a Little Time became a Top 40 pop and Top
Ten Adult Contemporary hit, while Like I Love You also made the Adult
Contemporary Top Ten and I Will Be Your Friend (written by Michelle
Lewis, Dane DeVillier, and Sean Hosein) also reached the Adult
Contemporary chart. The album won a Dove Award for Pop/Contemporary
Album of the Year. Grant toured for a month in the fall of 1997,
returned to the road for four months in March 1998, and played 22
cities on a Christmas tour in November and December 1998. Meanwhile,
there was other recording activity. She sang a duet with actor Kevin
Costner on a cover of the Lovin' Spoonful's You Didn't Have to Be So
Nice for the soundtrack of his film The Postman (December 1997); she
and country singer Bryan White sang a duet on With These Hands from
the various-artists recording of songs from composer Frank Wildhorn's
Broadway musical The Civil War called The Civil War: The Nashville
Sessions (October 1998); and she sang River Lullaby on the soundtrack
of the animated movie musical The Prince of Egypt (December 1998).
Grant and Chapman announced their separation after more than 16 years
of marriage on December 30, 1998. Grant filed for divorce in March
1999, and the couple was divorced in June. The same month, she paired
with the British Christian rock band Delirious? on Find Me in the
River, a song on the various-artists album Streams that earned her a
share in the 2000 Dove Award for Special Event Album of the Year. In
September 1999, she returned to acting in the television movie A Song
from the Heart, a drama in which she played a blind cellist. In
October, she released her third seasonal album, A Christmas to
Remember, which topped Billboard's Contemporary Christian Albums chart
for five weeks starting in November, made the pop Top 40, and went
gold. Her television special of the same name was broadcast at the same
time.
On March 10, 2000, Grant married Vince Gill. She gave birth to her
fourth child, Corrina Grant Gill, one year and two days later. In May
2002, she released Legacy...Hymns & Faith, her first album of
overtly religious music since her pop crossover, consisting largely of
traditional material with several originals included. It topped
Billboard's Contemporary Christian Albums chart and entered the pop
chart at number 21. Grant and her producers, Gill and Brown Bannister,
won the 2003 Dove Award for Inspirational Album of the Year, and Grant
and Gill won the Dove for Country Recorded Song of the Year for the
track The River's Gonna Keep on Rolling (written by Gill). Grant
returned to pop music with her first secular album in six years when
she released Simple Things in August 2003. The album topped Billboard's
Christian Albums chart and entered the pop chart at number 23, the same
number achieved by the title song on the Adult Contemporary chart.
Grant seemed to sum up her hitmaking period with the release of
Greatest Hits 1986-2004 and the companion DVD Greatest Videos 1986-2004
in October 2004. Soon after, she announced that she had ended her
association with A&M Records, noting that she no longer fit with
the label.
In April 2005, Grant and NBC announced that she would host a reality TV
special, Three Wishes, that also would serve as the pilot for a
possible series. On the show, she and a team of experts would make
wishes come true for participants. Grant's follow-up to Legacy...Hymns
& Faith, titled Rock of Ages...Hymns & Faith, was released in
May 2005 on Word/Curb/Warner Bros. Records. Hymns for the Journey
follwed a year later as did Time Again: Amy Grant Live All Access. ~
William Ruhlmann, All Music Guide
Written by William Ruhlmann