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Home: S : Shaun
Groves : Biography
Biography (courtesy
of Rocketown Records)
Outside the darkness is slowly easing away as morning makes
its mark on the night sky. Light filters across the horizon,
and the dawning day washes over everything in its path, gradually
dissolving the blackness in its wake. It is twilight. No
longer night, but not yet morning.
"The sun and moon together in the gray" … a
strong metaphor for the abundant themes that make themselves
known on six-time Dove Award nominee Shaun Groves' sophomore
effort, Twilight.
"In Romans 7 Paul says that there's a civil war happening
in his soul," says Groves. "That what he wants
to do and what he does are not the same thing. He's torn.
That's an idea we can all relate to. The person I was before
I met Christ is night and day different from the person I
will be when I see God face to face in heaven.
"In this time in between, I'm
torn between God's way and my way. I am between the midnight
and dawn of my soul. I'm in twilight. The darkness is not
completely covering my heart, but the sun hasn't come up
yet. Hope comes from knowing that the God who began this
good work is going to complete it. Over time the sun is
coming up."
It's not a shallow topic, and this
29-year-old Texas native is not a shallow artist. In fact,
the depth of Twilight is only fitting for an artist and
writer of Shaun Groves' caliber. After the 2001 release
of his debut album, Invitation to Eavesdrop, Groves nominated
for six Dove Awards, including New Artist, Song ("Welcome Home") and Songwriter
of the Year. Groves was also the only new artist with a No.
1 AC radio hit in 2001 or 2002 ("Welcome Home").
But Invitation to Eavesdrop delivered more than hit radio
songs and peer awards-critics everywhere lauded the album
with words like "inventive," "unique," "irresistible" and "insightful." Tours
with Bebo Norman, Jars of Clay, Jennifer Knapp and Avalon
cemented this artist's favor with Christian music fans across
the country, and a summer 2003 international tour with Michael
W. Smith introduced Groves to thousands in Europe.
With so much success, it'd be easy
to succumb to the dreaded sophomore slump. Instead, Groves
rose to the challenge, delivering 10 songs of stunning
honesty and ebullient adoration. From the rockin' opening
strains of guitar-driven first single "See
You" to the gently-picked closing notes of "God
of Us," Twilight depicts an author living out the theme
of being caught between two worlds, two ways of life.
Groves says, "That theme of choosing
midnight or dawn runs throughout this record. I do have
a choice which desire I will feed-the desire to please
me or the desire to please God. For instance, 'I Love You'
is a song about choosing to love and continue to befriend
someone close to me who has made a mistake. Another song,
'Jesus,' talks about how when we love the least-those difficult
for us to love-we love Jesus. It's easy to choose to love
a wife or a child or even a difficult co-worker, but it's
hard to love a prostitute or a foreign soldier. Our desire
to love those people is not as great as our desire to stay
comfortable and clean."
One track that's appealed to fans since
Groves first wrote it in the summer of 2001, "Without You," depicts
Shaun's commitment to his wife Becky and their two small
children, Gabriella and Gresham. "It's about being torn
between home and the road. There's a constant balance of
working to keep in touch with my callings as a husband and
father as well as a traveling musician."
Musically, Twilight doesn't stray far from its lyrical theme.
Heavy guitar tracks are balanced by an equal number of piano-driven
ballads, all revealing the dichotomy that is Shaun Groves:
a performer who loves to rock out and have fun as much as
he enjoys playing simple, contemplative melodies that haunt
the memory as they prick the soul.
"This record is more basic in some ways than Invitation
to Eavesdrop," says Groves. "It's free of vocal
tuning, it's free of computers. There are no drum loops or
anything synthetic. It's me at an upright piano or on an
acoustic guitar with other guys in a circle in one big room
with the tape rolling making music. This is what I sound
like with a band."
From performing nearly 200 concerts since his debut released,
Shaun has certainly gotten comfortable on stage. But he'll
be the first to say that as much as he loves playing for
an audience, he feels most equipped to teach, to hide truth
in the midst of pop songs.
"I started out as a teacher," says Groves. "I
like the dialogue that happens when I sit in a circle with
a small group of students and we discuss scripture. I like
creating a safe place where we can all bring our questions,
share our answers, admit our defeats, celebrate our successes
and be a family."
Groves' quick wit and dry sarcasm have
endeared him to his Bible study members and college students
everywhere while his thought-provoking attitude towards
worship music has inspired many to extend their praise
beyond singing in their church pews. In fact, the first
pressing of the Twilight CD will include an exclusive live
recording of four worship songs Groves has written, including
new track "Here
I Am." His own thoughts on the subject of worship were
borne out of intense study in original biblical languages.
"The words in both Greek and Hebrew
that are translated into the English word 'worship' most
often in our Bible are words that mean most literally 'work'
and 'service.' Worship is my response with all that I am
to all that God is. I know now that if I raise my voice
and my hands in praise-but I don't use my voice and stretch
my hands out to feed the hungry, clothe the naked and fight
for the poor and oppressed-then I have only worshiped a
singer or a song, not God. God deserves all. I think, based
especially on the writing of the Old Testament prophets,
that God would rather have service without singing than
singing without service."
And Groves' desire for his own music is to inspire Christians
to serve by reminding them that God is at work in every moment
of their lives.
"After hearing Twilight, I want
people to walk away with the comfort that I found in reading
Romans 7. The process of refinement is continuing. I hope
this thought can inspire us to look at each moment in our
lives as an opportunity, an opportunity to love and to
learn. Every longing, every loneliness and heartache we
have, every need that is not fulfilled is a possibility
to be more dependent on God. Every relationship we have
is an opportunity to choose that person over the things
of this world. I hope Twilight can encourage each person
who hears it to look at every facet of their life and choose
sunlight over darkness, choose to follow Christ's way of
thinking and not their own."
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