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Elevation Worship began in 2007 at Elevation Church in Charlotte. [1] [3] [5] The band released four independent albums prior to signing with Essential Records.The Sound was released in 2007 (under the name Elevation Church Live), We Are Alive in 2008, God With Us in 2009, and Kingdom Come in 2010. [3]
It should only contain pages that are Elevation Worship songs or lists of Elevation Worship songs, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about Elevation Worship songs in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
"O Come to the Altar" is a song by American worship group Elevation Worship. It was released on February 24, 2017, as the lead single from their fifth live album, Here as in Heaven (2016). [ 1 ] The song was written by Chris Brown, Mack Brock, Steven Furtick , and Wade Joye. [ 2 ]
Here as in Heaven is the fifth live album from Elevation Worship. It was recorded live at Time Warner Cable Arena in Charlotte, North Carolina , United States with more than 16,000 in attendance. Essential Worship released the album on February 5, 2016.
The album was recorded over a night in March 2018 at Elevation Church's Ballantyne campus in Charlotte, North Carolina, where previous Elevation Worship projects have been recorded. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] The Christian Beat noted the album consists of "honest confessions of brokenness mixed with soaring declarations of faith". [ 5 ]
Graves into Gardens is the eighth live album (twelfth album overall) by American contemporary worship band Elevation Worship. It was released on May 1, 2020, via Elevation Worship Records alongside Provident Label Group. The album contains guest appearances by Brandon Lake of Bethel Music, Cody Carnes, Kari Jobe, Tauren Wells and Isaiah Templeton.
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Awarding the album four stars at Worship Leader, Jeremy Armstrong states, "Wake Up generally looks to help people find the wonder of God in the gospel message." [4] Tony Cummings, rating the album a seven out of ten for Cross Rhythms, says, "So one is left trying to find particular songs that might have the legs to travel to churches beyond North Carolina."