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Point Of Grace

Point of Grace is a gold- and platinum-selling CCM vocal ensemble known for combining soaring harmonies and immersive melodies with lyrics that touch on themes of faith, hope, and perseverance. Emerging in the early 1990s, the group has been at the fore of the Christian music scene for decades, issuing award-winning, Billboard-charting efforts like The Whole Truth (1995), Free to Fly (2001), How You Live (2007), Directions Home (2015), and Turn Your Eyes (2023). Point of Grace were founded in the early '90s around Denise Jones, Heather Floyd, and Terry Lang. The women knew each other while growing up in Norman, Oklahoma, but only began singing together (as the Ouachitones) when they all attended Ouachita Baptist University in Arkadelphia. By 1991, the group had added Shelley Phillips to form Say So (later Point of Grace). The CCM quartet began touring, and a first-place finish in the group competition at the Christian Artists Seminar in Estes Park, Colorado caught the eye of the Word label, which signed the quartet, releasing a self-titled debut album in 1993. Their 1995 follow-up, The Whole Truth, expanded the pop-R&B sound of their first album with rock and folk influences and reached number one on Billboard's Top Christian Albums chart. A year later, Life, Love & Other Mysteries topped the Christian charts again and became a platinum best-seller. In 1998 Point of Grace returned with Steady On, which, as the title suggests, found them true to the course set out on previous releases. Christmas Story followed in 1999 with a mix of holiday chestnuts and original songs. 2001's Free to Fly, which included the number one singles "Blue Skies" and "You Will Never Walk Alone," was preceded by the release of a rarities collection titled Rarities & Remixes. Point of Grace's next project was an ambitious one. They organized a series of concerts and conferences targeted at teenage girls, with ample time at each meeting for question-and-answer sessions. A companion album to the conferences, Girls of Grace, was released in 2002, featuring a host of female Christian artists all interested in addressing the issues and pitfalls of growing up. The next year a retrospective, 24, was released with many of POG's hits and one new song. In 2004, a former member of Christian choir Truth, Leigh Cappillino, replaced Terry Lang Jones, and the quartet released I Choose You, followed a year later by the holiday-themed Winter Wonderland. The country-infused How You Live was released in 2007, and in 2008 (Floyd) Payne left the group. Later that year, Tennessee Christmas: A Holiday Collection was issued. Sticking with a more countrified sound, the remaining trio released No Changin' Us in 2010, followed by another Christmas album, Home for the Holidays and the 2011 collection Turn Up the Music: The Hits of Points of Grace. Their typically uplifting and harmony-charged A Thousand Little Things arrived in 2012, and a covers album, Directions Home (Songs We Love, Songs You Know), which featured guest appearances by Vince Gill and Ricky Skaggs, followed in early 2015. In 2017, POG issued a double-album career retrospective, Our Recollections, to celebrate their 25th anniversary. 2018's marked the arrival of the hymn and worship album Beautiful Name and the group's induction into the Oklahoma Music Hall of Fame. A sequel to 2015's Directions Home, Turn Your Eyes (Songs We Love, Songs You Know) Volume II appeared in 2023 and saw the group deliver new arrangements of seven classic CCM songs and a pair of new originals.
© John Bush & Marcy Donelson /TiVo

Discography

31 album(s) • Sorted by Bestseller

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