UP: Unified Praise

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Walter Görlitz (talk | contribs) at 06:01, 8 July 2018 (Reverted good faith edits by 32.208.112.33 (talk): Never a plus sign. (TW)). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Untitled

UP: Unified Praise is a live praise and worship album of Praise & worship by the Australian Hillsong Church and English band Delirious?. The album appeared on the Billboard Top Heatseekers and reached No. 24 on the Top Christian Albums Chart.[1]

Making of the album

UP: Unified Praise was recorded live at the Sydney SuperDome by Darlene Zschech and the Hillsong Team with special guests Delirious? at the Hillsong Conference 2003, at which there were over 20,000 people.

Track listing

CD

  1. "Everyday" (Joel Houston) - 5:19
  2. "Free" (Marty Sampson) - 4:06
  3. "I Give You My Heart" (Reuben Morgan) - 8:07
  4. "Worthy Is the Lamb" (Darlene Zschech) - 6:16
  5. "I Could Sing of Your Love Forever"/"God's Romance" (Martin Smith) - 8:12
  6. "King of Majesty" (Sampson) - 4:09
  7. "Did You Feel the Mountains Tremble" (Smith) - 9:55
  8. "Rain Down" (Smith & Stuart Garrard) - 6:22
  9. "Majesty (Here I Am)" (Garrard & Smith) - 6:08
  10. "What a Friend I've Found" (Smith) - 5:25
  11. "History Maker" (Smith) - 10:05

DVD

  1. "Everyday"
  2. "Free"
  3. "I Give You My Heart"
  4. "More Than Life" (Morgan)
  5. "Worthy Is the Lamb"
  6. "I Could Sing of Your Love Forever"/"God's Romance"
  7. "King of Majesty"
  8. "Did You Feel the Mountains Tremble"
  9. "My Glorious" (Smith & Garrard)
  10. "Rain Down"
  11. "Majesty (Here I Am)"
  12. "What a Friend I've Found"
  13. "History Maker"

Featured musicians

Electric Guitar

  • Nigel Hendroff
  • Nathan Taylor
  • Marcus Beaumont
  • Luke Holmes
  • Micheal Guy Chislett
  • Albert Sampson

Bass guitar

  • Ian Fisher
  • Matt Tenikoff

Drums

  • Luke Munns
  • Brandon Gillies
  • Rolf Wam Fjell
  • Mitch Farmer

References

  1. ^ "Hillsong Awards". AllMusic. Retrieved 21 June 2014.