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Home: S : Sara
Groves : Biography
Biography (courtesy
of INO Records)
She doesn't look like a very formidable opponent. You wouldn't
be afraid to meet her in a dark alley, she doesn't have washboard
abs or well-defined biceps, and if she ever landed a punch
it would probably be by accident. So while critically acclaimed
singer/songwriter Sara Groves won't be facing Tatiana Ali
in the ring anytime soon, she is definitely a fighter. Groves
spent 2003 wrestling with God and struggling against the
hold evil has on this world. She questioned, as David did,
a Creator that she loves but doesn't always understand, and
defended herself against an enemy she knows all too well.
She emerged with a few cuts and bruises, but she also gained
a new perspective, a more sure-footed faith despite life's
uncertainties. And as she prepares for the March 23 release
of her third album on INO Records, The Other Side of Something,
Groves is ready to get back in the ring, and this time she's
coming out swinging.
That wasn't the case last year. While
Groves was quick to pledge her own life to serving God,
the birth of her first child found her placing conditions
on her faith. "I
wanted a guarantee that because I believed and followed Him
with all my heart, because I was on the road doing what I
felt was the call of God, that my family was going to be
safe. I was kind of saying, 'hands off,' that if something
happened to my boys while I was on the road, I didn't know
if my faith would survive that." It was a good friend
who gently pointed out that if there is a scenario you don't
think your faith would survive, then your faith isn't surviving.
That sent Groves running to the Lord, but she didn't find
the assurances she hoped for. "I went to the Bible for
comfort and I found Job and Jonah and Paul in prison. So
then I had to go and look at what I believed about life,
about bad things happening to good people."
In the end, she didn't find answers
so much as peace amid the questions, and the eventual realization
that what we want isn't always what God knows we need. "I thought
I wanted to be safe, but I realized I don't want my kids
growing up watching me be safe," Groves says. "Jesus'
walk is very unsafe. If I live that out with safety as my
highest goal, then I'm not reaching out to the tax collector.
I'm not surrounding myself with sinners. I needed to realize
that so I could give my kids to Him again."
As she worked through these issues,
they naturally turned into songs. She wrote "The Boxer" in her bunk on
the tour bus when she was feeling particularly low. "I
was feeling defeated and I just kept repeating, "when
you said this was a fight, you weren't kidding." The
song follows her from defeat to a renewed confidence in her
ability to finish the fight well, ending fittingly with several
choruses of "greater is He who is in me." "Spiritually,
it's where I was," she says. "I felt beat up, but
I returned to my corner. Now I'm rested and ready to go.
And I feel more sure of my call, more confident in what I'm
doing."
When producer Charlie Peacock asked
her to define the effect the last year had on her, she
explained that it felt like she was on the other side of
something. That sentiment sparked "Compelled",
an ultimately optimistic tune she wrote with Peacock: "I
have a new hope that blows away/The small hopes I knew before/And
at the end of the day I am yours/And I am compelled."
"I had been a fan of Charlie's for a long time, watching
from afar," Groves says. She was also curious about
how her sound would change with another producer. That's
how Peacock was tapped to help Groves bring to life four
of the songs born out of last year's struggles. To produce
the balance of the album, she relied on the talents of long-time
collaborator Nate Sabin. The result is a mix of songs that
find Groves gamely exploring new musical territory while
remaining always true to who she is. From the introspective "Leave
It Like a Skin" to the marital honesty of "Roll
to the Middle" and the timely "Esther," which
touches on the African AIDS crisis, Groves isn't afraid to
probe some still tender topics if her insights can challenge
others and move them closer to God and each other.
While she may occasionally wish for
an easier road, a sunnier path or at least weaker eyes
that didn't see in such detail the darker side of this
life, in the end, she knows she's right where she belongs. "I
can't help myself. I have to follow Christ everyday. I've
tried to walk away and I've tried to shake this whole thing
off. I'd love to not know about the battle between good
and evil, but at the end of the day, I'm marked. I'm His
and I'm compelled to do the right thing. Realizing that
is a tremendous freedom for me."
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