Born out of a late-90s college movement, Passion is known for simple choruses built to be sung by the whole room.
From college halls to arena hymns
Australian vocalist
Taya, long associated with
Hillsong-UNITED, has stepped into a focused solo season, bringing a tender, prayerful tone to her sets. Expect a blended run where Passion anchors big congregational moments like
Glorious Day and
Build My Life, while Taya centers reflective pieces such as
For All My Life and
Oceans (Where Feet May Fail).
Songs you may hear, hearts you may meet
You will see church groups and college ministries standing beside families, with many singing from memory and others jotting lines in small notebooks. Phones tend to drop during prayers, and the room often shifts from full-voice choruses to near-silence as leaders speak Scripture over gentle pads. Passion has a habit of recording live in conference settings, which is why many of their arrangements breathe like a single take rather than a studio stack. Taya's signature on
Oceans (Where Feet May Fail) helped that song top the Hot Christian Songs chart for over a year, shaping expectations for her intimate, dynamic phrasing. Treat the setlist and production details here as informed possibilities drawn from recent shows, not a fixed promise.
The Quiet Roar: Passion and Taya Fans in the Wild
Quiet reverence, open hands
The floor fills with church tees, denim jackets, and simple sneakers, plus a few well-worn Bibles and journals peeking from tote bags. Early in the night, chants often rise as wordless oh lines, then shift to clear calls like worthy is Your name when a leader lands a familiar refrain.
Wear your faith, sing your part
Between songs, short prayers or a single verse read aloud steers conversation rather than stage banter. Merch leans toward lyric tees, soft hoodies in earth tones, minimalist hats, and totes with subtle references to past conference themes or a
Taya refrain. People tend to give space during quiet moments, then lean in shoulder to shoulder when a chorus returns, creating a rise-and-fall energy that feels considerate. After the last song, small circles often form to finish a prayer or swap church details, and a few fans trade chord charts or set ideas for their own teams. It is a scene that values hospitality, steady volume, and a shared voice over solo spotlights.
Sound over Spectacle: How Passion and Taya Build the Night
Built for voices, not volume
Vocally,
Taya leans into a soft, breathy top end that can jump to a clear belt, while
Passion leaders trade lines to keep the melody within reach of the room. Arrangements favor simple chords with capos high on acoustics for sparkle, keys laying warm pads, and drums using lighter sticks to keep dynamics wide. Expect tempo shifts where a song starts hushed around 70 bpm and swells by the bridge, then drops to allow the crowd to carry the refrain alone.
Little choices, big lift
Guitars often live in E or D to ease singing, and you may hear a half-step drop from album keys so choruses sit comfortably for most voices. They like stitching songs into short medleys, sometimes holding a single note on keys to pivot into a related chorus without breaking focus. Lighting usually tracks the music arc with washes instead of strobe hits, so the ear leads the night while the eyes follow the mood. A subtle but telling touch is the way the drummer cues repeats with a floor-tom pickup, signaling an extra chorus without extra words.
Kindred Echoes: Passion and Taya in the Wider Worship Family
Kindred voices, shared spaces
Fans of
Hillsong-UNITED will connect with the soaring bridges, open chords, and the reverent pauses that let a chorus linger.
Elevation-Worship appeals for its driving rhythms and call-and-response hooks that move a crowd in unison, much like Passion's live builds.
Brooke-Ligertwood draws a similar audience through poetic lyrics and a gentle yet authoritative lead that invites quiet focus. If you enjoy rootsy textures and a storyteller vibe inside worship,
Crowder brings that blend while still landing big singalongs.
Why it resonates across camps
These artists share a scene that values communal melody over vocal showmanship, steady mid-tempo grooves, and lyrics that stay vertical rather than confessional. The overlap also comes from rooms built for participation first, where the band frames space and the voices on the floor finish the song.