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Hillsong Australia For All You've Done (Hillsong/Integrity)
Released September 2004
reviewed by Andree Farias
Sounds like
the contemporary worship pop Hillsong is known for, with scattered moments of energetic praise rockers a la United or Sonicflood.
At a glance
an overabundance of lengthy epics, ineffective melodies, and muddy mixing make For All You've Done the weakest Hillsong release thus far.
Track Listing |
Disc One
1. For All You've Done
2. One Way
3. Evermore
4. With All I Am
5. Sing (Your Love)
6. Hallelujah
7. You Are Worthy
8. Home
Disc Two
1. Forever and a Day
2. Jesus the Same
3. I Will Love
4. Take All of Me
5. More Than Life
6. Glorify Your Name
7. To You Alone |
The music of Hillsong Australia has evolved much since its simple yet energetic mid-nineties glory. As they've grown in popularity, the team has moved from synthetic horns and campy choruses to grander arrangements and more accessible melodies. And the worship teamvocalists (including Darlene Zschech), choir, musicians, and miscellaneous instrumentalistsseems to get bigger with each new release, reaching its zenith with 2002's Blessed, an extravagant album that flawlessly married the vitality of United (the church's youth band) and the more elegant side of the adult team.
With the double-disc sets Hope and now For All You've Done, it seems Hillsong's creative forces are either stuck in a rut or desperately trying to fulfill its obligatory one-album-per-year quota. The latest United release, More Than Life, suffered from this same problem, and the fact that five songs from it found their way onto For All You've Done call into question just how fresh this material is. Rather than serving up a cohesive, one-disc collection of the year's best choruses, we get an erratic, ill-paced worship mammoth that's spread over two discs, with an excess of generic ballads in between.
Of the album's 15 tracks, for example, four are energetic numbers, two are mid-tempo, and a whopping nine of them are slowand I do mean slowballads. Except for "Forever and a Day," Disc Two alone is an interminable snoozefest replete with songs that are heartfelt, but ultimately indistinguishable from one another. Less is more would've definitely helped here, and it's something Hillsong will have to understand if it doesn't want its releases to collapse under the weight of their own arsenal.
Hillsong Australia For All You've Done (Hillsong/Integrity)
Released September 2004
reviewed by Andree Farias
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