From Rwanda to Cape Town, Buenos Aires to Mexico City, Los Angeles to Toronto, London to Budapest, Shanghai to Sydney... We've recorded almost every UNITED worship service for the last 2 years, bottled just some of the moments and put them together for all who'd choose to hear. The end result is the sound of a generation across the earth singing praise and worship to our God... The sound of the nations joining as one in the same song.
"We've recorded a double album worth of songs old and new, and I have to say, it's all about the people and the passion of their worship toward God... It's very live... A little rugged in places, but that's the beauty of it - it's not about 'UNITED' or even the songs... It's about the heart cry of a generation consumed with their Maker." - Joel Houston
While UNITED's first film, 'With Hearts As One', was focused on the worship we have within church and words that we proclaim within our music, this second part is about putting those words into action and becoming the hands and feet of Jesus in a world that desperately needs Him. It tells the stories of many across our world and opens up doors for us, not only to understand but to be inspired and to help make a difference.
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by Andree Farias
By the time Australian modern worship sensation Hillsong United released their seventh album, All of the Above, they were already a phenomenon not only in the land down under, but also in the United States, Mexico, Argentina, Brazil, and even parts of Africa. Delirious? frontman Martin Smith declared them "the best youth worship band on the planet" -- quite a compliment, considering Smith's own history in the modern worship canon. But United didn't need endorsements to achieve mass success. Instead, it was a slow and steady climb, driven by a tireless, one-album-per-calendar-year work ethic that eventually had fans counting the days until the next scheduled United release. But they were in for a surprise this time: All of the Above is the group's most atypical release thus far. For starters, the album was recorded in the studio -- a first for a band whose bread and butter are live recordings. As the youthful progeny of Darlene Zschech and the Hillsong Australia team, United grew into a heavyweight of its own with the albums Look to You and United We Stand, both of which were large on stadium-sized pop/rock anthems, Brit-pop sensibilities, earnest balladry, and catchiness to spare. But All of the Above is the antithesis: it's moody, pensive, even shoegazing at times. There are explosive, rousing moments such as the raucous "Break Free," the post-punk "whoas" of "Solution," and the breathtaking, apocalyptic catharsis of "Hosanna," but these are in short order compared to the bulk of the album, which favors a more individual expression of devotion to God than the group's customary corporate approach. While still a modern worship band at their core, United have shifted their focus to faith in action, which explains why the songs are decidedly more horizontal than vertical in scope -- that is, more about reaching out than simply reaching up. A number of veterans in Christian music could take some cues from these twentysomething Aussies.