
The 100 Greatest Albums in Christian Music — #47: Out Of The Grey, Out Of The Grey (1991)
Husband‑and‑wife pop that glows—chimey guitars, literate love songs, and vertical devotion woven through.
Intro
Appearing at #47 in The 100 Greatest Albums in Christian Music, Out Of The Grey’s Out Of The Grey (1991) captures a moment when craft and conviction aligned. It remains a touchstone for how faith can sing with both sincerity and skill.
The Album in Context
Every era of CCM faces a choice—chase fashion or distill conviction. This record chooses distillation, tightening arrangements around songs that breathe and testify. The performances feel lived‑in, balancing studio discipline with the kind of spontaneity that keeps the spirit near the surface.
Production choices serve the lyric: rhythm sections support without crowding, textures color without clutter, and vocals sit forward so the message lands plainly. Tempos and dynamics are purposeful, guiding the ear through confession, celebration, and calls to perseverance. You can hear musicians listening to one another—and to the text.
Within the scene, the project expanded what faith‑forward pop could sound like while honoring the church it came from. It gave emerging artists a template for excellence without excess, and it offered listeners songs durable enough for both weekday commutes and Sunday sanctuaries.
Standout Songs
- “Wishes” — A defining cut that captures the project’s blend of conviction and craft. Its arrangement invites repeated plays while the lyric turns familiar doctrine into lived devotion.
- “The Dance” — A defining cut that captures the project’s blend of conviction and craft. Its arrangement invites repeated plays while the lyric turns familiar doctrine into lived devotion.
- “Write My Life” — A defining cut that captures the project’s blend of conviction and craft. Its arrangement invites repeated plays while the lyric turns familiar doctrine into lived devotion.
Why It Matters
Artistically, the album shows how intentional limitations unlock clarity—parts interlock, hooks carry weight, and performances put the song first. The result is a body of work that sounds confident without bluster, memorable without pandering.
Historically, it helped mainstream audiences hear church language sung with radio‑ready grace. The record’s fingerprints appear on worship sets, songwriting workshops, and the broader sound of Christian pop that learned to value both excellence and empathy.
For listeners, these tracks became companions for transition seasons—weddings and funerals, road trips and quiet rooms. They testify that faith is not only proclaimed from pulpits; it’s carried in melodies people hum while doing the dishes.
What’s Next
Tomorrow on The 100 Greatest Albums in Christian Music countdown, we continue with #46 — Margaret Becker, Immigrant’s Daughter (1989). Be sure to catch the companion podcast episode of The CCM Professor with Greg Rice, where we connect the dots between these landmark recordings.
Soli Deo Gloria!
This post is part of the series The 100 Greatest Albums in Christian Music, celebrating the artists and recordings that defined a generation of faith-filled creativity.
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Album Details
| Artist: | Out Of The Grey |
| Album: | Out Of The Grey |
| Year Released: | 1991 |
| Record Label(s): | Sparrow |
| Producer(s): | Charlie Peacock |
Previous Post in the series:
| #48: The Winans – Tomorrow (1984) |
Next in the series:
| #46: Margaret Becker – Immigrant’s Daughter (1989) |
Listen to “Out Of The Grey” on Spotify
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