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Well, welcome to Amy Grant's heart of darkness. With Behind the Eyes the first lady of Christian pop presents an unvarnished set of musical reflections on life, love and loss. Grant is no stranger to these themes, but she has never approached them with such a sense of harsh realism. And unlike the title cut from Lead Me On (1988) and "Ask Me," from Heart in Motion (1991), in which she sings of the pain and anguish of others, here almost every piece is sung in first person, not surprising considering she wrote or co-wrote 10 of the 12 tracks.
In fact, from the first line of the opener, "Nobody Home," Grant makes it clear that this isn't going to be what you're expecting: "Main Street U.S.A. boarded up and dry...." Not exactly "Every Heartbeat."
That sense of uncomfortable honesty continues and grows as you get deeper into Behind the Eyes. The airy production throughout contributes to the feeling of nakedness that permeates this record. Most of these songs have an open feel and sparse arrangement that enhances the feelings of loneliness ("Missing You"), sorrow ("Cry a River") or resolve ("Every Road"). The acoustic-based production gives off a vibe not unlike the "unplugged" segment of Grant's 1996 House of Love tour.
In "Like I Love You" Grant asks the hard question, "Why do lovers drift apart/And how does love fade away?" In "Cry a River," perhaps the record's boldest song, Grant lays bare the sadness of a forbidden love that "...was a long wait/It was just the wrong time." Here she reveals a struggle that almost makes the listener feel like an intruder, "How do you argue with a feeling in your bones/'Bout what is and what isn't meant to be?/Some things you live with/And you never let it show/Like the pain I felt/The day I watched you leave."
Grant also addresses issues of truth and trust with a feeling of being burned once too often. In "The Feeling I Had" you can hear the fatigue in her voice as she admits, "I cannot take the heat," and goes on to say, "I'm just a little weary of/All the talk and all the buzz.../Words are cheap and sometimes cruel/And stuff you hear is seldom true/And all I ever wanted was/The feeling I had with you." In fact, by the time Grant sings, "So much pain and no good reason why" on the last song, "Somewhere Down the Road," she actually sounds like she's approaching exhaustion. Catharsis can take a lot out of you.
But the strangest thing about Behind the Eyes is that throughout this deluge of brutal honesty, a thread of hope remains. In "I Will Be Your Friend," Grant pledges, "I'll make you laugh at a broken heart." In the record's first single, "Takes a Little Time," she notes with forthright clarity that things definitely need to change, and--eventually--change they surely will. In "Turn This World Around" she hopes that, "Maybe one day we can turn and face our fears." In "Every Road" she faces both the true difficulty of a committed relationship ("There you go making mountains out of such a little hill/Here I go mixing mortar for another wall to build.../I'd be lying if I said I had not tried to leave a time or two") and a determination to survive the struggles ("But there is nothing that we can't resolve when love's at stake"). And most significantly, in "Somewhere Down the Road" she knows that there are "mighty arms" that "hold the answers at the end of the road."
The record's two most engaging tracks also contain a sense of the hopeful grounded in the reality of life. In the acoustic shuffle of "Curious Thing," Grant discovers that life is "seldom what it seems." And only in the escapist "Leave it All Behind" does she hint that there still may be a pop star left after all this soul-baring. Although she confronts a friend's sense of a trapped existence ("You say your life is all but chiseled out in stone/And all you want is just a taste of the unknown"), the ultra-singable chorus--reminiscent of 1986's "Stay for Awhile"--and lilting guitar break aptly give the record its most truly carefree moment.
So Behind the Eyes is not a total downer--as it seems to be on a first listen. It's just that the hope here is a sober, melancholic hope. It's a distant hope seen confidently from a thick, heavy reality. In a time when many listeners are screaming for more authenticity and less candy-coating on their Christian pop, Amy Grant--at considerable risk to her "image"--bravely delivers a heartful of unadorned truth. -- Derek Wesley Selby (c) 1997 CCM Communications, Inc.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
17 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
This is pure Amy Grant,
By
This review is from: Behind the Eyes (Audio CD)
I have been a true fan of Amy from the time she released her first album 20 years ago. What drew me to her in the first place is what draws me again now. The lyrics on this album speak volumes to me. She may have written them out of the experiences that she was going through at the time, but the themes are universal. I miss some of the direct references to God that her older projects contained, but at the same time, I feel like I can see her dependance on Him still, even though it is more subtle now.To those of you who criticize and condemn her for the divorce, we need to remember that none of us have been in her place. None of us have known the struggles she has faced. Her honesty in this album, especially in "Cry A River", helped me to end a bad relationship before it had gone too far and I was married. God works all things for good and I believe that He can still use Amy to minister for Him. The music on this album is haunting and beautiful. The songs stay with me and I have thoroughly enjoyed them. Her simple and direct style is refreshing. This is no "Baby, Baby" album. This is the real thing. Thank you Amy for using what is inside you to minister to so many others.
15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Moody, Truthful, and Well-Done,
By Jeff (San Antonio, Texas) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Behind the Eyes (Audio CD)
I appreciate an artist that values truth, painful as it can be. My opinion of the album? Optimistic--maybe not. Real--definitely. Few Christian artists have the capacity to open their lives without seeming like they are trying too hard. Having gone through the pain of separation and divorce, I can't tell you how this recording speaks to me. There are songs, my own heart would sing if I had the ability that Amy has. Many Christians like the cotton-candy Christian entertainment. Sweet and empty. God speaks through our pain and mistakes. I'm glad to have others who are willing to take risks to tell it like it is. Musically, the songs are well-written, tightly produced, remarkably sung, and incredibly effective. This reminds me of a darker Lead Me On--perhaps the counterpart of this masterpiece, farther down the road. Beaten, bruised, but smarter. Thanks Amy.
14 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Grant gets naked and vulnerable,
By A Customer
This review is from: Behind the Eyes (Audio CD)
For years, Amy Grant has seemed like a real "artist" hiding neath too many layers of pop fluff. With Behind the Eyes, she strips away a bit of the gleam, coupling her knack for melody and poetic lyric with raw honesty and an acoustic groove that fits her ever-more-nuanced vocals. The stripped down arrangements and harmonies of Cry a River, Every Road and Missing You ring truer musically than any recent Grant offering. It's as if she's playing for you on her front porch or your living room. Like I Love You and The Feeling I Had sound simultaneously classic and relevant to modern radio. Great flute on the second. Harmonica-wailing Takes a Little Time and Beatles-esque Leave it All Behind are toe-tapping, top-down, driving-on-the-road ear-candy with bluesy shuffles and encouraging lyrics. And the fantastic Somewhere Down the Road is some of the best song-writing she's ever done. My only gripe is this: the two songs not penned by Grant, (and according to rumor pushed onto the album by her label), Nobody Home and I Will be Your Friend, seem out-of-place. Amy is stronger as a performer when her singer-songwriter sensibilities are allowed to shine. Kudos to Wayne Kirkpatrick of "Change Your World" fame for upstaging old-hat producer Keith Thomas. Here's hoping she continues down this road for her next album!
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