Amy Grant Returns with Her First Album of Original Songs in 13 Years
'The Me That Remains' is out now
Posted: May 11, 2026, 5:00 PM | Category:New Releases Artist Tags: Amy Grant Source: The M Collective
Six-time GRAMMY® Award winner and 2022 Kennedy Center Honoree Amy Grant has returned with her first collection of original songs in 13 years, The Me That Remains, out today via Thirty Tigers. A deeply personal and reflective work, The Me That Remains finds Grant taking a clear-eyed look at where she stands personally, spiritually, and creatively today. Across its ten tracks, the album reflects on healing, connection, endurance, and grace, shaped by the life experience of a beloved musician now more than 50 years into a groundbreaking career.
"I had so much fun going back into the studio again and making this project with Mac [McAnally]," Grant says. "To hear the talent every writer, musician and guest artist brought to the project put a big smile on my face. I feel like this project freed me from expectations that I didn't even know I had."
Produced by ten-time CMA Award winner and Nashville Songwriters Hall of Famer Mac McAnally, the album signals a more stripped-down, singer-songwriter approach, first previewed with "The 6th of January (Yasgur's Farm)," a meditation on unity and perspective inspired by the idealism of the Woodstock era.
Throughout The Me That Remains, McAnally's understated production allows Grant's voice--warm, intimate, and resolute--to take center stage, foregrounding the emotional clarity that defines the record. Written and recorded in the wake of significant personal challenges, including open heart surgery and a life-altering bike accident, the album carries a sense of hard-won perspective, balancing vulnerability with quiet strength.
Grant has introduced the album in recent weeks with a series of special appearances, including a performance of the title track on Live with Kelly & Mark and a sold-out "New York Evening With Amy Grant" at The Greene Space, hosted by the GRAMMY Museum in partnership with the Americana Music Foundation, where she debuted several songs from the project live for the first time.
Across the album, Grant blends deeply personal reflection with broader themes of collective healing. "How Do We Get There From Here" (feat. Ruby Amanfu) wrestles with division, grief, and the urgent question of how to move forward in the wake of tragedy--written following the 2023 Covenant School shooting in Nashville and released on its anniversary as a call for unity, compassion, and collective action. "The Saint," co-written with longtime collaborator Michael W. Smith, offers a portrait of redemption, while collaborations with Vince Gill, Sarah Cannon, and Corrina Gill underscore the personal and musical relationships that have shaped her life and career.
Co-written with McAnally, the title track "The Me That Remains" serves as the album's emotional centerpiece, directly reflecting on Grant's recent health journey ("Life cut me wide open / When my head hit the ground / Wasn't my time for dying / Guess my soul just stuck around"). Ultimately, the song emerges as a testament to survival, resilience, and gratitude ("My smile in the mirror is enough for today / Reflecting the light deep down inside that never will fade").
Visually, The Me That Remains extends these themes of reflection and reconstruction. Grant commissioned artist Wayne Brezinka to create the album cover as a mixed-media collage assembled from meaningful fragments of her life--including family photos, pieces of a treasured quilt, seashells from her collection, her childhood Bible, and an article about her great-grandfather--layering memory and meaning directly into the portrait. In conjunction with the release, the Museum of Christian and Gospel Music in Nashville will debut a special exhibition of the artwork beginning May 8.