Resurrection sound: The rise of 'living' gospel music
Standard Entertainment
By
Tania Omusale and Joan Oyiela
| Apr 03, 2026
For years, gospel music followed a familiar path: studio recordings perfected behind closed doors, then video shoots designed to interpret the song. The results were polished, refined, and technically flawless.
But somewhere along the way, something began to shift. Artists started yearning for more than perfection.
They wanted presence.
Today, live recording has taken centre stage, redefining how gospel music is created, experienced, and shared. It is no longer just about producing a song; it is about capturing moments raw, unfiltered, and deeply spiritual.
Kenyan gospel artist Kestin Mbogo embodies this shift. For her, live recording is not a trend but a calling aligned with the true nature of worship.
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“Recording music presents another layer of growth,” she says. “My earliest studio experiences were learning curves, but my heart gravitated towards live worship experiences. Actually, all my songs are live songs. For me, live recording mirrors church worship.”
Her words capture what many artistes are beginning to realise: worship was never meant to be confined to controlled environments. It thrives in spaces where people gather, where voices rise together, where the Spirit moves freely.
For Joanna Neema, the difference is immediate and personal. Live worship transforms music into a shared encounter rather than a performance.
“There is a grace that comes with seeing the people you are ministering to,” she says.
“When they respond, when they sing back, when they are moved, it shifts everything. It stops being about the song and becomes about what God is doing in that moment.”
Unlike studio recordings, live sessions capture everything — the spontaneous prayers, the extended choruses, the emotional pauses, the voices that rise from the crowd. These elements, once considered flaws, are now the very essence of the experience.
Nigerian gospel singer Promise Effiong highlights how this authenticity transcends borders. “One of the most powerful things about live worship is that connection is instant,” he explains.
“You can be in a different country, singing in a different language, but the Spirit unites everyone in that moment. It is beyond culture; it is an encounter.”
For Wilberforce Musyoka, the transition to live recording represents both freedom and purpose.
“Back then, we would record in the studio, then go out to shoot videos. It was limited and time-consuming,” he says. “But now, we are on the altar. You can take your time to minister, to see the people, to feel their response. By the grace of God, this is the right direction.”
His live sessions, often infused with local dialect and cultural rhythms, reflect a deeper connection, not just spiritually, but culturally. They create a worship experience that feels rooted, relatable and real.
Technology has only accelerated this movement. With platforms like YouTube and streaming services, live recordings can now reach global audiences instantly. High-quality production is no longer confined to studios; it can happen in real-time, in the midst of worship. This immediacy allows artistes to share not just music, but moments.
Artists are becoming facilitators of encounters, guiding people into moments of connection with God.