Praise the Lord (All My Soul)
Sean Curran
Sean Curran's "Praise the Lord (All My Soul)" carries the structural DNA of modern hymn-writing — verse and chorus architecture built for congregational participation, with lyrical density that rewards return visits. The production is layered but not overcrowded, acoustic instruments providing foundation for the kind of communal singing the song clearly imagines. Curran's vocal delivery has the earnest clarity of someone more interested in the lyric's meaning than in sonic impressiveness. The title's "all my soul" invocation points toward Psalm 103, and the song honors that tradition by refusing superficial celebration — it catalogs specific attributes of divine character before arriving at praise, so that the praise has theological content rather than mere emotional warmth. The result is worship music that thinks and feels simultaneously, useful both in gathered settings where instruction matters and in private devotional moments when a specific word about God's nature is exactly what is needed.
medium
2020s
warm, communal, layered
North America
Christian/Gospel, Contemporary Worship. Modern Hymn. Reverent, Reflective. Opens with theological inventory of divine attributes, building steadily toward full-hearted praise grounded in doctrinal content rather than emotion alone. energy 4. medium. danceability 2. valence 7. vocals: earnest, clear, sincere, lyric-focused, accessible. production: acoustic guitar, layered instrumentation, restrained, congregational. texture: warm, communal, layered. acousticness 7. era: 2020s. North America. Sunday morning church service or private devotional time when theologically grounded worship is needed.