Sara Groves Tops Year's Best | Music | Christianity Today
1)
Sara Groves
Fireflies & Songs (INO)
Already known for her transparent songwriting, Sara Groves gets even more piercingly honest on this, her ninth album. Whether her relationship with God, marital tension, or a private battle with anxiety, it's poetically spilled forth in Groves' call for the church to "live confessionally." And paired with less poppy, stripped-down arrangements, her achingly clear vocal remains front and center. This is vintage Groves—yet more herself than ever.—Andrea Bailey Willits
2)
Switchfoot
Hello Hurricane (Atlantic)
After three years between albums, Switchfoot churns out its most urgent and immediate project to date, while kicking up the socially conscious songwriting another notch. Hello Hurricane reads like a sequel to the band's breakthrough The Beautiful Letdown, but finds the band taking additional sonic risks (such as extra grimy riffs and experimental programming), while never losing sight of its anthemic, stadium-shaking appeal.—Andy Argyrakis
3)
Buddy and Julie Miller
Written in Chalk (New West)
For years Americana's prize singer/songwriter team, Buddy and Julie Miller have issued standout alt-country records as a fresh alternative to Nashville's radio-ready schmaltz.Paving highways of heartache with each and every strum,the Millers write from a place where pain lives, but they always turn to eternal promises for a remedy. Written in Chalkallows the spouses space to hurt and hope, dipping into musical inspiration from a well that seemingly never runs dry.—Andrew Greer
4)
Bifrost Arts
Come O Spirit! (Great Comfort)
A song compilation with collaborators including Fleet Foxes, Sufjan Stevens, and Damien Jurado, Come O Spirit! avoids indie-rock clichés by approaching classic (and new) hymns with awe and reverence. Arranger/producers Isaac Wardell and Mason Neely prove that modern worship doesn't have to aim at the bombast of U2 or Coldplay to be contemporary or relevant; this collection feels humble and holy.—Joel Hartse
5)
David Bazan
Curse Your Branches (Barsuk)
With this solo effort, the grizzly singer/songwriter manages to make his boldest and bravest work. Over a bed of sparse acoustic-based pop, Bazan lays bare his struggles with alcohol, adult responsibility, and, most of all, his faith in God. With straightforward and sometimes brash language, Bazan gives voice to the intimate issues that all Christians wrestle with, but few are afraid to own up to.—Robert Ham
6)
Joe Henry
Blood from Stars (Anti)
Joe Henry doesn't just sing the blues—he sings about the blues, mentioning the form by name many times over on his masterful Blood from Stars. "Our every word now is a talking blues," he mourns, but there's something of a grin in his voice—probably because he knows that love is stronger than any ache, and that it's in the dark where we are so often found by grace.—Josh Hurst
7)
The Mountain Goats
The Life of the World to Come (4AD)
TMG's John Darnielle calls himself a "Catholic atheist," but he knows his Bible, and writes twelve songs based on specific verses here. This album, sparsely acoustic and beautiful, is neither "worship" nor "Christian" music per se, but it feels sacramental, with its intimate production and songs of beauty, depravity, faith, violence, love, hopelessness, hope, life, and death—kind of like, you know, the Bible.—Joel Hartse
Ashley Cleveland
God Don't Never Change (E1)
The gritty-voiced, Grammy-winning Cleveland continues to make some of the best music coming out of the CCM universe. This album of rousing oldies runs the gamut from the blues-soaked "I'm Going to Live the Life I Sing About in My Song" (by Thomas Dorsey) to the mass gospel choir romp "Going to Heaven to Meet the King" (from a rare 45 lp by Mattie Moss Clark). The album has also been nominated for a Grammy.—Mark Moring
9)
Derek Webb
Stockholm Syndrome (INO)
Controversy swirled around swear words in the song "What Matters More" and resulted in a clean label version and free single download from Webb. Webb has been pushing the church's buttons for years with provocative depth. This time he's done it by setting his skillful lyricism against a pulsating backbeat of trippy dubs and atmospheric electronica. What really matters more are Webb's prophetic proddings and his most creative and fresh sonic palette. A genius combination.—Jeremy V. Jones
10)
Various Artists
Fire in My Bones (Tompkins Square)
This 3-CD set spans sixty years and almost as many stylistic shifts in African-American gospel, offering the best available overview of the music. There's nothing polished to a studio sheen here. These are the unfiltered sounds heard in church services throughout black America, and as such it comes closer to worship music than most of the more sanitized imitators. Raw, raucous, and uplifting, this is music for Sunday morning, Saturday night, and everything in between.—Andy Whitman
11)
U2
No Line on the Horizon (Interscope)
For 30 years Bono has been about revolution in various forms. Though he promised reinvention on No Line, the foursome deliver more of their quintessential fare plus a few new production tricks. Tracks range from poignant confessionals to stadium rockers, and the songwriting raises the bar with its thematic richness and spiritual transparency. "Magnificent" and "Moment of Surrender" rank in the top tier of the supergroup's voluminous canon. Bono and Co. can still bring it—and keep expanding their abilities.—Jeremy V. Jones
12) (tie)
mewithoutYou
It's All Crazy! … It's Alright (Tooth & Nail)
Aaron Weiss and company drop the Screamo angst and head straight for freak folk territory on their fourth album, employing wheezing accordions, gently plucked mandolins, and the usual guitar onslaught as they spin out literate fables of talking animals, warring fruits and vegetables, and ever-relevant tales of sin, forgiveness, and grace. Childlike but not childish, it's more than alright. It's a whimsical and weird delight.—Andy Whitman
12) (tie)
Steven Curtis Chapman
Beauty Will Rise (EMI/CMG)
Beauty Will Rise CD: Steven Curtis Chapman: 5099922651624: Christianbook.com
With these gut-wrenching psalms of lament written in the wake of the death of his 5-year-old daughter, Maria, Chapman's songwriting is as raw, honest, and vulnerable as it gets. On these mostly acoustic tracks, recorded with little or no slick production, Chapman's pain is palpable, but so is the hope, even as he and his family walk through the valley of the shadow of death. A hauntingly beautiful mix of heartache and heaven.—Mark Moring