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Sony
Sony 881231 Revival In Belfast [Music CD]
★★★★★
Robin Mark's landmark live worship recording captures the raw, communal fire of the Belfast revival with a rare blend of Celtic instrumentation and contemporary praise.
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Overview
Experience Spiritual Renewal with "Revival In Belfast"
Immerse yourself in the passionate worship of Robin Mark and the Christian Fellowship Church with Revival In Belfast. This album captures the powerful blend of traditional instruments and modern worship, creating an uplifting musical experience.
- Artist: Robin Mark
- Location: Belfast, Northern Ireland
- Featured Songs: "All For Jesus," "Lion Of Judah," "Days of Elijah"
- Instrumentation: Uilleann pipes, pennywhistle, multi-national worship band
- Number of Discs: 1
- Label: Sony
Key Features
7472011231
9787472011239
000768140628
Frequently Asked Questions
What makes this recording significant compared to other live worship albums from the same era?
Revival in Belfast captures an actual move of spiritual renewal at Christian Fellowship Church in Belfast during the late 1990s — it's a document of a moment, not a studio recreation. The presence of uilleann pipes and pennywhistle roots the sound in a specific place and tradition that most contemporary worship records lack entirely.
Is "Days of Elijah" on this album the original recording of that song?
Yes — "Days of Elijah," written by Robin Mark, appears here in one of its earliest recorded forms, predating the many covers that followed. Hearing it in this context, among the congregation that first sang it, gives the track a weight that later polished versions don't carry.
How does the Celtic instrumentation affect the listening experience?
The uilleann pipes and pennywhistle aren't decorative — they're woven into the arrangements and give the album a distinctly Irish texture that separates it from American or generic contemporary worship. For listeners who find most praise albums sonically interchangeable, this is genuinely different.
Is the audio quality what you'd expect from a live worship recording of this era?
It's a late-1990s live recording, so expectations should be calibrated accordingly. The room ambience and congregation sound are very present, which adds authenticity but means it won't satisfy listeners expecting studio-clean separation. Sony's release is competently mastered for what it is.
Who is this album best suited for?
Collectors of significant worship recordings, fans of Celtic Christian music, and anyone interested in the source material behind "Days of Elijah" and "Lion of Judah" will find this essential. It also appeals to those who value worship music with a strong sense of place and cultural identity.