Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Holy Forever

2022 song by Chris Tomlin From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Remove ads

"Holy Forever" is a song by American contemporary Christian musician Chris Tomlin. It impacted Christian radio in the United States on March 10, 2023, as the fourth single from Tomlin's fourteenth studio album, Always (2022).[1] Tomlin co-wrote the song with Brian Johnson, Jason Ingram, Jenn Johnson, and Phil Wickham.[2] Jonathan Smith handled the production of the single.

Quick facts Single by Chris Tomlin, from the album Always ...

"Holy Forever" peaked at No. 1 on the US Hot Christian Songs chart published by Billboard.[3] It was nominated for the Grammy Award for Best Contemporary Christian Music Performance/Song at the 2023 Grammy Awards.[4]

Remove ads

Background

On July 15, 2022, Chris Tomlin announced that he would be releasing a new worship project titled Always on September 9, releasing "Holy Forever" as the first promotional single from the album.[5] "Holy Forever" followed the previously released singles "I See You," "Always," and "Yahweh (No One)."[6] Speaking with Christian magazine Worship Leader, Tomlin described the song as "the anchor" of Always.[7][8]

Remove ads

Composition

"Holy Forever" is composed in the key of D♭ with a tempo of 72 beats per minute, and a musical time signature of 4
4
.[9]

Reception

Critical response

Jonathan Andre in his 365 Days of Inspiring Media review spotlighted the track as one of three songs to listen to on Always, opining that "'Holy Forever' is my favourite song from Chris Tomlin’s Always, as this track becomes my favourite Chris Tomlin ballad, ever since 'Jesus' way back in 2016."[10] Timothy Yap of JubileeCast gave a positive review of the album, saying, "Solely focused on God in his glorious splendor surrounded with a soul-stirring chorus, this reminds us of the type of worship mentioned in Revelation 4 and 5."[11] Gerod Bass of Worship Musician magazine wrote a positive review of the song, saying it "touches on the ever faithful theme with its soaring chorus notes and reverent and honest worship."[12]

Accolades

More information Year, Organization ...

Commercial performance

"Holy Forever" debuted at No. 43 on the US Hot Christian Songs chart dated July 30, 2022 as a promotional single.[14] After steadily climbing the charts through streaming and digital sales alone, it was officially released to radio in March 2023.[1] The song would reach the Top 10 after 43 weeks.[15] It ascended to the No. 1 position on the chart dated October 7, 2023, completing a record-breaking 59-week climb to the summit, the longest ascent in the chart's history.[16] It spent four weeks at number one and remained on the Hot Christian Songs chart for a total of 80 weeks, making it Tomlin's longest-charting song.[17] In May 2024, it was certified Gold by the Recording Industry Association of America.

Remove ads

Music videos

The official lyric video of "Holy Forever" was published via Chris Tomlin's YouTube channel on July 14, 2022.[18] A live performance of the song, featuring Brian and Jenn Johnson, was released on his channel on April 28, 2023, which was recorded during his seventh Good Friday Nashville concert in Bridgestone Arena.[19][20]

Cover versions

On June 9th 2023 the German worship band Urban Life Worship released their cover the song in the German language on YouTube.[21]

On October 6, 2023, a cover of "Holy Forever" by American singer CeCe Winans was released on YouTube.[22][23]
On October 18, 2023, a modern choral version of the song, arranged by Jay Rouse, was released on YouTube.[24]

On September 6th, 2024 a modern cover of the song in the Hebrew Language, by Emanuel Roro, was Released on YouTube. [25]

Remove ads

Track listing

More information No., Title ...
Remove ads

Personnel

Summarize
Perspective

Adapted from AllMusic.[27]

  • Jacob Arnold — drums, percussion
  • Adam Ayan — mastering engineer
  • Jonsal Barrientes — choir/chorus
  • Dallan Beck — editing
  • Jesse Brock — mixing assistant
  • Chris Brown — background vocals, choir/chorus
  • Shantay Brown — choir/chorus
  • Daniel Carson — acoustic guitar, choir/chorus, electric guitar
  • Tamera Chipp — choir/chorus
  • Chad Chrisman — A&R
  • Courtlan Clement — electric guitar
  • Nickie Conley — background vocals
  • Elevation Worship — primary artist
  • Enaka Enyong — choir/chorus
  • Jason Eskridge — background vocals
  • Bryan Fowler — acoustic guitar, background vocals, bass, electric guitar, keyboards, producer, programmer, synthesizer programming
  • Sam Gibson — mixing
  • Ben Glover — acoustic guitar, background vocals, choir/chorus, electric guitar, engineer, keyboards, producer, programming
  • Lindsay Glover — choir/chorus
  • Tarik Henry — choir/chorus
  • Mark Hill — bass
  • Tiffany Hudson — choir/chorus
  • Tommy Iceland — choir/chorus
  • Jenn Johnson — background vocals
  • Taylor Johnson — acoustic guitar, electric guitar
  • Graham King — engineer
  • Benji Kurokose — choir/chorus
  • Brandon Lake — primary artist, vocals
  • Paul Mabury — drums
  • Jerry McPherson — electric guitar
  • Matthew Melton — bass
  • Buckley Miller — recording
  • Sean Moffitt — mixing
  • Gordon Mote — piano
  • Brad O'Donnell — A&R
  • Colton Price — editing, programming
  • David Ramirez — programming
  • Sophie Shear — choir/chorus
  • Jonathan Smith — background vocals, Hammond B3, organ, piano, producer, programming
  • Jeff Sojka — background vocals, choir/chorus, drums, electric guitar, engineer, keyboards, producer, programming
  • Isaiah Templeton — choir/chorus
  • Chris Tomlin — choir/chorus, primary artist, vocals
  • Bria Valderama — choir/chorus
  • Doug Weier — mixing
  • Jordan Welch — choir/chorus
Remove ads

Charts

More information Chart (2022-2025), Peak position ...


Certifications

More information Region, Certification ...

Release history

More information Region, Date ...
Remove ads

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads