Plus: 4 more passwords coming soon.

See A Victory Lap with Elevation Worship
Elevation Worship grew out of Elevation Church in Charlotte, crafting big sing-along songs that still leave space for quiet prayer.
Charlotte roots, arena scale
On this run, expect the band to lead while Steven Furtick frames moments with brief Scripture and encouragement, more host than front man. Likely anchors include Graves Into Gardens, See A Victory, Same God, and a mid-set rise on O Come to the Altar.Songs the room already knows
Crowds skew multigenerational, with church teams, college groups, and families singing in full voice but settling into hush when prayers are offered. A small trivia note: early versions of Do It Again were road-tested in church services before the live recording, which shaped the long bridge build fans know. Another detail: the group often lowers keys a step live so a whole room can sing without strain. You might also hear short Scripture tags or familiar hymn lines slipped into transitions, a nod to how the songs were written for congregations first. These setlist picks and production ideas are educated guesses from prior tours, and the actual night can change song to song.The Elevation Worship Circle: What You See and Hear in the Room
You will see choir tees, simple denim, and clean sneakers alongside a few church merch hoodies bearing lines like Same God or See A Victory.
What people wear and carry
Groups tend to gather in circles before the opener, catching up like a midweek hang, then spread out once the lights dim. Common moments include a swell of voices on the lines people know by heart and an easy hush when a prayer starts or a Scripture is read.Shared rituals, calm energy
Phones come out for a chorus or two, but most pockets stay zipped when the room gets quiet and the band goes gentle. Fans often trade service stories at the merch table, and volunteers compare how their own teams play these songs back home. Expect a few call-and-response shouts led from stage, short amens between lines, and a final chorus reprise that people carry into the hallway. It feels like a traveling church night shaped by a road-tested band more than a star-turn concert, and the tone stays welcoming from door to exit.How Elevation Worship Builds a Wall of Praise
Vocals sit up front, usually a blend of one clear lead and two harmonies that thicken on choruses without getting sugary.
Built for singability
Arrangements lean on crisp drums, pulsing bass, and dotted guitar echoes, with pads filling the edges so the melody carries. Live, the band often trims verses to keep momentum and stretches bridges so the room can respond, a simple structure choice that feels natural.Musical turns that breathe
A tell for longtime fans: the music director counts transitions quietly in-ear, allowing seamless medleys like Do It Again into See A Victory without a hard stop. Steven Furtick usually steps in to frame a lyric or pray, then steps back so the singers and band keep the arc moving. Lighting favors lyric-forward screens and warm washes, bright on the choruses and dim on the prayers, more canvas than spectacle. One subtle trick you might notice is the guitars capoed high while keys cover the low end, leaving plenty of space for the crowd voice to sit in the middle.If You Like Elevation Worship, You Might Also Ride This Wave
Fans of arena-ready worship with communal call-and-response often cross over with Hillsong UNITED, whose soaring hooks and big dynamic drops feel familiar.