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Heart to Heart with Ryan Ellis

Ryan Ellis comes out of Southern California's worship scene, blending pop-R&B phrasing with congregational choruses.

Sunshine soul, church roots

His songs lean smooth and melodic, but the message stays simple and vertical. Expect a set built around Heart of the Father, Gonna Be Alright, and All My Praise, with space for spontaneous tags and quiet prayer moments.

Who shows up, what it feels like

The room usually holds young church teams, parents with middle-schoolers wearing ear protection, and a cluster of bilingual SoCal fans who know every counter-melody. One neat detail is how he often records voice memos of hooks on the road and later reworks them with the band, which explains those nimble turnarounds between songs. Early on, he spent time leading in small college ministries before streaming numbers took off, so he still favors intimate talk breaks over flashy transitions. Note that set choices and production flourishes described here are thoughtful guesses based on recent shows, not a confirmed run-of-show.

The Community in the Room

The scene feels like a weeknight church hang that happens to have a strong R&B pulse, with friends greeting ushers by name and kids dancing on the edges.

Everyday style, open hearts

You will spot earth-tone tees, denim jackets, modest dresses with sneakers, and a lot of dad hats that keep the focus off the stage and on the words. Common moments include the room humming a wordless oo-oh line before a chorus, or a soft call-and-response that lands on a single held note.

Rituals that travel

Merch tends toward calm colors and clear statements, think a Better Days script on sand-colored tees and a hoodie with a familiar lyric printed small. Before the encore, small groups often circle up to pray, and no one rushes the aisle when the band downshifts into a quiet tag. After the show, lines form not just for signatures but for quick stories about why a song mattered, and the team handles it with steady care. Overall it is a social space that invites reflection without pressure, and you can feel the shared memory of youth-group nights in how people sing the final refrain.

Pocket, Prayer, and Pop Craft

Ryan Ellis sings with a soft, airy tenor that can slip into falsetto on the turnarounds, and he keeps his runs tidy enough for the room to follow.

Pocket first, flash second

Arrangements favor pocket over flash, with drums riding a dry kick and snare, bass gluing the groove, and electric guitar adding glassy chords rather than long solos. Keys and pads carry much of the harmony, and a few 808 drops give the R&B color without swamping the lyrics. Live, he often shortens a verse and tags the hook, then lets the bridge swell on a slower count so people can breathe between phrases.

Small choices, big sing

A small but useful habit is dropping certain songs a half-step to keep choruses in a friendly range, which makes Heart of the Father sit right where most voices can reach. Lighting is warm and simple, timed to downbeats and lifts, so the dynamics you feel mostly come from the band listening and pulling back together. When the band breaks things down to just vocal and keys, the pocket stays tight enough that when drums re-enter, the lift feels earned rather than forced.

Kindred Sounds on the Road

Fans of Brandon Lake often cross over because both acts mix gritty pop hooks with worship refrains that open up for big singalongs.

Where styles overlap

Phil Wickham is a fit for listeners who like soaring tenor leads and clean, guitar-forward arrangements that still feel prayerful. Housefires and Maverick City Music share the loose, in-the-moment flow that Ryan Ellis leans into when a bridge stretches and the band listens more than they push.

Who might love this bill

If you connect with Cory Asbury, you will hear the same tender storytelling and gentle R&B touches that sit just under the worship core. All of these artists draw crowds that want voice-first songs, steady grooves, and room for simple choruses to loop until the room settles.

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