Top 100 Christian Rock Albums of all time

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This is exhilarating to release and the culmination of almost a year’s work. Hope you like it and only hate us for a brief few seconds until the anger of not seeing your favorite album wears off. ha ha ha…

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The reality is that everyone will hate this list (or at least be angry about some inclusion or omission), but the good news behind this arduous task of whittling down the preliminary list of 500+ that we developed down to a final 100 is that there is a lot of great Christian rock out there. The bad news, of course, is that a lot of these titles are out-of-print and probably a tad difficult to find. Maybe the attention this list brings will help resurrect a title or two. This would be an honor and a great reward for this tough exercise in rock criticism.

While the companion/parallel list we printed in our “sister” publication (Heaven’s Metal Fanzine’s “Top 100 Christian Metal Albums of All Time”) had a simpler and more narrow focus, defining exactly what “Rock” is was a tad more difficult. The ‘90s revitalized and catapulted an ambiguous genre called “indie rock,” which certainly threw a wrench into the far simpler “does it rock or not” litmus test. Lighter, ambient and sometimes atonal experiments in music found their way into the hearts of rockers everywhere and we’ve tried to reflect that in our list assembly, too.

Ultimately, there are five major factors that go into judging an album in this light. One is greatness. Did the album touch the skies, so to speak? Did it achieve greatness? This is both subjective and objective. This is where it’s good to meet and discuss with industry people with either a keen sense of history or a great awareness of current trends (both is even better). We had the help of friends and compatriots like Brian Quincy Newcomb, Chris Hauser, Dr. Tony Shore, as well as some smart and enthusiastic readers who chimed in on Facebook.

Beyond greatness is that personal, entirely subjective factor of “Do I love it? Do I sing along to it?” (or play air instruments). Basically, “Is it one of my favorites?” It would only make sense that your vote for “best” would be equal to or close to “favorite” as well. This criteria is usually what will put an album on the list, and the other four criteria are the kind of factors that will keep an album on this list.

One of the biggest factors is the “classic” factor, which I like to break down to the simple question of, “Will I be listening to this album five years from now? “In the case of some early Jesus Rock albums, like Only Visiting This Planet or So Long Ago The Garden, the lifespan has nearly surpassed 40 years. This is why I rarely give a “5” rating for albums in our Album Reviews section. To me, a “classic” is one of those albums that stands the test of time. It still sounds great long after its shelf-life (which is a pretty sore subject with me and the Christian music industry, who seems to have no appreciation for the classics**). It’s really hard to know in the present how something is going to fare when it falls into the deep past of just four or five years.

Another huge factor is the “historical impact” of an album. Did it put Christian heavy metal on the map? It could be argued, for example, that Stryper’s To Hell With The Devil did that with its multi-Platinum sales and mad success on MTV’s Dial MTV. Did it freak out the establishment big-time? This could be said for early pioneers, like Larry Norman, either of the two Randy’s (Matthews or Stonehill) or Petra. Did it evolve a scene or take it to another level? The Human Sacrifice album by Vengeance Rising was certainly a historical event.

And finally, which (like the others) could stand on its own as possibly the most important factor (though I’d argue it’s not) is popularity. Did it sell over a million copies? How many times? Did crowds flock to see the artist on this particular album’s tour or shortly thereafter? Ideally, the Top Christian Rock Albums of All Time would score at the top in each of these five categories. Conversely, if they failed miserably in any one of these categories, it’d be hard to consider it the best.

So, without further ado, we press on with the list to end all lists. Or – more accurately – the list that started World War III in our scene.

In working on this list, it’s easy to get overwhelmed. The task is enormous. A couple of exercises I’ve taken with my own list, which was hybrid-ized and conjoined with the lists of other industry folks, is to listen to some classic radio. If these albums are going to be called “the best,” then they better stand the test of time. So, to get some perspective, I thought it wise to listen to an Eagles song here, a Tom Petty song there. It’s probably too high of a standard to live up to, but even listening to the Beatles, Led Zeppelin and the Rolling Stones give a good benchmark on what is great and what is not.

** A note about out-of-print albums and how they get there: The notion that the Christian music industry is to blame for this lack of appreciation for history is incomplete. You can’t blame the guys in the suits at the record companies when you and I as an audience are equally at fault. We don’t buy old albums in numbers. Part of that short attention span is the radio and television programming that’s out there. If no one introduces us or educates us on the classics, how are we to know? Not everyone has that friend who takes the time to inform you of Christian rock’s rich history. Magazines and other mediums are guilty, too.

At HM we try to keep a balance of history and current. We know that current is what people want, but we also realize that history is the foundation of what’s current. Our old managing editor, Jason Dodd, stole the quote from somewhere (I think): “A spoonful of sugar helps the medicine go down.” As rock critics we can satisfy our hunger for greatness at the same time we dish out current trends if we have a little of both.

The formula for when an album becomes “out of print” goes something like this: when the amount or cost of warehousing the music (think boxes and boxes of CDs on a shelf somewhere) exceeds the income from sales, it’s marked out-of-print and flushed out of the system. Retailers may get a chance at one final order with big discounts and then it’s off to the “junk dealers,” that buy these items in bulk at pennies on the dollar. “I used to get really bummed out when one of our albums went out of print,” admits T&N’s Brandon Ebel, “but there is an upside to digital” (and that’s keeping these albums alive).

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#1 U2 – The Joshua Tree|Island|1987

“This CD was the turning point for me with U2. This album was so inspiring to the world. It was a universal cry of spirituality and common sense of human feelings. On Joshua Tree Bono continued to inspire me to write honest lyrics, like he did when they first came out in 1980. “I Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking For” helped bring me out of my religious insanity. It was a perfect album in my opinion. The biggest thing I noticed about this CD was after 4 awesome records  there was a new maturity in songwriting. God bless Bono and U2.” —Doug Pinnick (King’s X)

“The Joshua Tree is not only one of the greatest rock albums of all time, but look at how its sound has directly influenced modern worship. The impact of U2’s style on the church of today is unquantifiable!” —Paul Q-Pek (One Bad Pig)

“Joshua Tree is one of my favorite albums of all time.” —Sonny Sandoval (P.O.D.)

It’s only fitting that the top album on this list is also a great candidate (and a good argument) for the top rock album of all time, period – sacred or secular. Given that rock’s roots go straight into the church in the first place, it shouldn’t be much of a surprise that an artist of faith would make some of the best music around, but it’s still a cool thing.

This album took the band from huge to mind-blowing in terms of prominence and historical impact. It starts off with an unforgettable song that both creates tension and brings emotional fulfillment. Like any great blues song, it laments our current conditions as it longs for heaven, where people will not get beat down for living in a certain neighborhood. “Where the Streets Have No Name” has probably the greatest crescendo in rock in what could be the greatest song in rock and roll. It builds with a spiraling tension that just explodes with color – like the transition from black and white to vibrant stage lighting that the band employed for that performance scene in their movie, Rattle and Hum. I think the band learned about the power of a hypnotic, building vibe with the previous album’s showstopper – “Bad.” —Doug Van Pelt

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#2 Payable on Death - Satellite|Atlantic|2001

“The prayer was that God would use (this album) to get it in front of gazillions of kids. He honored the prayers of the saints.” —Noah Bernardo, Sr. (Founder, Rescue Records; father of drummer, Wuv)

“Satellite changed my life.” —Sonny Sandoval

With an album that came out on 9/11, along with a song that soon became a healing balm for a generation (“Alive”), this album had perfect timing … and monster jams. “Boom,” “Set It Off” and “Anything Right” roared with power, while “Youth of the Nation” was chilling and “Thinking About Forever” was just chill.—DV

#3 Stryper - To Hell With The Devil|Enigma|1986

#3 Stryper - To Hell With The Devil|Enigma|1986

“One of the most eye-opening albums of my childhood! Changed the entire music rulebook as we knew it!” —Brad Noah

“One terrific album – great sound, great riffs, solos, hooks – everything a memorable metal album that stands the test of time should be.” —Ted Kirkpatrick

When this album broke, it went multi-platinum, forever raising the ceiling of what heavy Christian music could do. While the ballad “Honestly” might’ve broadened the band’s appeal, the band perfected its pop metal sound with sharp-edged songs like “Calling on You,” “Free” and “Rockin’ The World.” They were giants in those days and their message on “More Than A Man,” the title track and “The Way” were as clear as any Sunday morning preacher. For some odd reason, however, the decision was made that the painting of four angels casting an evil dude into the fire was “objectionable” and a “safer” version was sold into Christian bookstores.—DV

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#4 The Choir - Chase the Kangaroo|Myrth|1988

“Making that record was a turning point for us. I had just opened the studio and we were becoming more confident about our music. The record company thought we were doing demo’s for them, but we decided we were going to make the record without their input. We felt we were on to something special. That record is still one of my favorites.”—Derri Daugherty

This band helped define how great “alternative” Christian rock could be. This album flows from one track to another with refrains from one (“Clouds”) re-appearing in another and referencing a previous album (“The Rifleman”), making the album seem like a warm, yet melancholy journey. “Sad Face” was probably the first great mountain peak the band scaled, which they’d repeat with killer songs like “To Cover You” and “Sentimental Song” on subsequent albums.—DV

#5 Altar Boys - Gut Level Music|Frontline|1986

#5 Altar Boys - Gut Level Music|Frontline|1986

“You Found Me” could be the greatest punk rock love song to God ever written. In true biblical/evangelical fashion, the song turns to the audience and declares, “Let Jesus find you like He found me!”—DV

“A timeless alternative rock classic. Outdoing not just all Christian rock releases, but equal to or better than their secular counterparts The Clash, Bruce Spingsteen & John Cougar Mellencamp. Still on rotation in my music listening regulars.  A strong Christian message played & presented with unprecedented passion and arranged with ageless appeal.—Steve Rowe (Mortification)

#6 The Seventy Sevens - Seventy Sevens|Exit/Island|1987

#6 The Seventy Sevens - Seventy Sevens|Exit/Island|1987

This one remains strongly ensconced on my personal top-ten list. Every song is a gem, every moment just about perfect. So what that the rest of the world missed the boat on this one, the band hit a home run. Intelligent, gutsy, brutally honest and undeniably hopeful, I still listen to it regularly and sing along with every word.—John J. Thompson

“I can’t think of many other records in my collection that are this solid from top to bottom. It also carries a twinge of sadness for me. The songs are melancholy, and there’s also the memory of this project getting far less attention and success than it deserved.”—Chris Hauser (freelance radio promotions)

Mike Roe has told us that the staff at Island was going to push this album hard into the mainstream, but another one of their albums broke big beforehand and this push never happened. That other album? The Joshua Tree (sigh).—DV

#7 King's X - Faith Hope Love|Megaforce|1990

#7 King's X - Faith Hope Love|Megaforce|1990

You’ve heard the term “art rock?” Well, this was art metal, and it was perfect.—DV

“There was some good stuff on that CD, it was our biggest selling album. But it’s like looking at a yearbook for me, I’m just too close to make an evaluation. But I still think ‘I’ll Never Get Tired Of You’ is a great song.”—Doug Pinnick Although they’ve never allowed themselves to be described as a “Christian rock band,” fans on the hard  music side of ccm have universally embraced the progressive power trio that is King’s X, especially the two previous efforts and this early 1990 commercial breakthrough. The disc exhibits the band’s musical dexterity and muscular mastery, mixing funk, soul, hard rock riffs and rich harmonic vocals in a wildly entertaining prog-rock stew, that also managed to garner a “pop” single/MTV hit in “It’s Love.”  Later records would never sound as polished as this Sam Taylor produced effort, but it’s winning songs like “We Are Finding Who We Are,” “Moan Jam” and the title track that kick started King’s X into the mainstream.  – BQN

#8 Stavesacre - Speakeasy|Tooth&Nail|1999

#8 Stavesacre - Speakeasy|Tooth&Nail|1999

“Mark Salomon is probably one of three if not the top lyricist in Tooth & Nail history. An amazing voice and artist. He’s done everything from hip-hop to metal, hardcore and rock. One of the most talented guys I’ve worked with. That’s an amazing record, as well. Some people even think the pinnacle for Stavesacre.—Brandon Ebel (CEO, Tooth & Nail)

#9 mewithoutYou - Brother, Sister|Tooth & Nail|2006

#9 mewithoutYou - Brother, Sister|Tooth & Nail|2006

“There’s another top three lyricist on the label as well, with Aaron. mewithoutYou was a surprise. We sign some bands that have remained extremely small on the label and that was a band, where you didn’t necessarily know where they would go. They basically became a band that has a complete cult following. They got pretty big and are definitely one of the highlights for us as a label in my career putting out their records. Definitely a band with a lot of integrity and vision.—Brandon Ebel

#10 Vengeance Rising - Human Sacrifice|Intense|1989

#10 Vengeance Rising - Human Sacrifice|Intense|1989

You should have seen the Star Song sales reps pre-selling this album at the CBA Int’l convention before this one hit in ‘89. They were giddy yet clueless at the revolutionary prospect. Nothing has really come out before or since this album hit the scene. Awesome riffs played at breakneck speed, but just gnarly, groove-heavy riffs on their own. Tunes like “White Throne” and the title track are without question high water marks of the Christian metal scene. Has only one blemish (probably the worst audio engineering glitch of all time) – a bad vocal edit, which comes in at 2:02 during the song “Burn.”—DV

#11 Switchfoot - The Beautiful Letdown|Sparrow|2003

#11 Switchfoot - The Beautiful Letdown|Sparrow|2003

An excerpt from HM#99 said this album was “perfectly titled … and I’m not talking about the words ‘the’ or ‘beautiful.’…” I guess HM was wrong on that one, huh?—DV

#12 Precious Death - Southpaw|Metro One|1995

#12 Precious Death - Southpaw|Metro One|1995

As inventive as Faith No More was to mainstream metal was this progressive release to the Christian metal scene. Mix Living Colour with Metallica and Cher on lead vocals. “Say what?” Exactly!—DV

#13 Larry Norman - Only Visiting This Planet|Solid Rock|1972

#13 Larry Norman - Only Visiting This Planet|Solid Rock|1972

Let your history search start here with the grandaddy of Christian rock. The first of a killer trilogy, this album features excellent, witty, sharp and poignant lyrics. He’s bold, blunt and street level (see “Why Don’t You Look Into Jesus”).—DV

#14 MUTEMATH - MUTEMATH|Warner Bros.|2006

#14 MUTEMATH - MUTEMATH|Warner Bros.|2006

Cutting edge and even somewhat controversial, this is a landmark release and it simply blew people away with a fresh sound and world class songwriting. This album is so good it sounds like a major UK release.—Dr. Tony Shore

#15 Adam Again - Ten Songs|Broken|1988

#15 Adam Again - Ten Songs|Broken|1988

For their sophomore effort, Gene Eugene took his band to the next level, mixing soul & funk with his edgy alternative rock leanings to come up with a record that is sophisticated and moving.—Brian Quincy Newcomb For their sophomore effort, Gene Eugene took his band to the next level, mixing soul & funk with his edgy alternative rock leanings to come up with a record that is sophisticated and moving.  Greg Lawless’s guitars deliver the raw rock energy that would dominate later records, but it’s the songwriting that excels. “Treehouse” boldly asks that none be excluded, “Who Can Hold Us” reminds us that God never turns away, while the back to back punch of “Eyes Wide Open” and “Every Word I Say” call for a life and faith lived authentically in the real world.  My favorite version ever of “Ain’t No Sunshine.” – BQN

#16 Scatered Few - Sin Disease|Alarna|1990

#16 Scatered Few - Sin Disease|Alarna|1990

One of the best records to ever come out of the ‘punk’ scene. —Caleb Olsen (Boot To Head Records)

#17 Sixpence None The Richer - Sixpence None The Richer|Squint|1997

#17 Sixpence None The Richer - Sixpence None The Richer|Squint|1997

Everything about it – the friendships forged thru trials, the song cycle borne of artistic despair, the covert recording sessions, the extraordinary musicianship, the subsequent birth of Squint, and the album’s eventual worldwide success – still seems like a miracle.—Steve Taylor

#18 Tourniquet - Psycho Surgery|Intense|1992

#18 Tourniquet - Psycho Surgery|Intense|1992

It’s hard to pick between Pathogenic Ocular Dissonance or this one for this list, so we just flipped a medical thesaurus and it opened to Psycho…—DV

#19 Daniel Amos - Doppelganger|Alarma!|1983

#19 Daniel Amos - Doppelganger|Alarma!|1983

I’d spent a couple years stretching my church friends (and radio listeners in Syracuse) with earlier DA, Mark Heard and Rez Band. When Doppleganger hit my desk, I was the one who got stretched.—Chris Hauser

#20 The Prayer Chain - Shawl|Road Dog|1993

#20 The Prayer Chain - Shawl|Road Dog|1993

I think we were all into Jane’s Addiction when we wrote that album. I thought we were really ahead of our time when we finished it, but listening back to it, you can defiantly hear the Seattle influence. —Tim Taber

#21 MxPx - Life in General|Tooth & Nail| 1996

#21 MxPx - Life in General|Tooth & Nail| 1996

Infectious, original, awesome and very musical. “Middlename,” “Chick Magnet,” “Cristalena” and “Move To Bremerton” are all still staples in a great live show.—DV

#22 Zao - Where Blood and Fire Bring Rest|Solid State|1998

#22 Zao - Where Blood and Fire Bring Rest|Solid State|1998

Zao has had an amazing, prolific and brutal career thus far (both musically and personnel-wise), but this one really kicked into that heavy gear that helped define “metal-core.”—DV

#23 Bloodgod - Detonation|Frontline|1987

#23 Bloodgod - Detonation|Frontline|1987

Quite an original metal sound. Unforgettable tracks include the back-to-back “Crucify” and “Messiah,” but evangelistic fervor meets metal in “Self-Destruction” and the ballad “Alone in Suicide.”—DV

#24 Outer Circle - Outer Circle|Tooth & Nail|1998

#24 Outer Circle - Outer Circle|Tooth & Nail|1998

Crucified frontman Mark Salomon tries his hand at old school punk here and knocks one out of the park. Every track rules. “Manifesto” is a rally ‘round the microphone punk anthem.—DV

#25 Creed - Human Clay|Wind-up|1999

#25 Creed - Human Clay|Wind-up|1999

Lotsa people hate on Creed, but they perfected that classic rock formula of quieter verses exploding into huge power choruses better than most bands. I still like these songs. —David Bach (Guardian)

#26 Galactic Cowboy - Galactic Cowboy|DGC|1991

#26 Galactic Cowboy - Galactic Cowboy|DGC|1991

I loved this album. I remember them rehearsing these songs for a demo before they got signed to Geffen. They were such naturals at harmonizing. And with brutal metal underneath. —Doug Pinnick

#27 Lifesavers Underground - Shaded Pail|Frontline|1987

#27 Lifesavers Underground - Shaded Pain|Frontline|1987

This monumental 1988 release from Michael Knott and LSU puts the lie to the idea that Christian music has to be positive. Angry, confused, hurting and worn to a thin hot line, this punk record was about telling the cold hard truth about existence, while we “cling to the faith” (“Tether to Tassel”) that “there is More to Life” than what we see.  – BQN #28 Dashboard Confessionals - The Places You Have Come to Fear the Most|Vagrant|2001

#28 Dashboard Confessional – The Places You Have Come to Fear the Most|Vagrant|2001

As great as Chris Carrabba was with FSF, his leaving to go solo was an awesome decision. Hearing these bleeding-heart songs sung back to him from 1,000 voices in the audience in concert on this tour was a flat-out phenomenon. —DV

#29 Whitecross - Whitecross|Pure Metal|1987

#29 Whitecross - Whitecross|Pure Metal|1987

Listen to this album. It’ll blow your mind. It’s simplistic ‘80s metal to a fault (think Ratt with Jesus-first lyrics), but the shredding lead guitar by Rex Carroll in every fill, nook and cranny is primo.—DV

#30 Fleming & John - Delusions of Grandeur|R.E.X.|1995

#30 Fleming & John - Delusions of Grandeur|R.E.X.|1995

Why this album didn’t change the world is a crime. Fleming McWilliams’ operatic vocal range and hubby John’s adroit songwriting was an eclectic groove alt-rock match made in heaven.—DV

#31 Deliverance - Deliverance|Intense|1989

#31 Deliverance - Deliverance|Intense|1989

“If You Will” into “The Call” is almost as good as metal gets.”—DV This record would forever change and impact me and the Christian metal music scene as we knew it! —Bill Bafford (Roxx Prod.)

#32 Kerry Livgren AD - Time Line|CBS|1984

#32 Kerry Livgren AD - Time Line|CBS|1984

One of my fav albums. Two vocalists dancing over sideways, rhythmic and very electronic beats was a fresh and highwater mark in 1984 for a few ex-members of Kansas that wanted to pen intelligent Christian lyrics to thinking man’s prog rock.—DV

#33 Mortal - Fathom|Intense|1993

#33 Mortal - Fathom|Intense|1993

Sonic brilliance, great hooks and killer riffs made “Alive and Awake,” “Rift,” Godspeed” and “Nepulsultra” stick in your head long after the tracks ended. Could be the most accessible industrial style music ever made by believers. —DV

#34 Demon Hunter - Summer of Darkness|Solid State|2004

#34 Demon Hunter - Summer of Darkness|Solid State|2004

A dynamic mix of the right amount of chaotic riffage, doomy low-end vocals, and singable choruses got this world-class album noticed in the mainstream. —DV

#35 Owl City - Ocean Eyes|Universal Republic|2009

#35 Owl City - Ocean Eyes|Universal Republic|2009

Possibly the musical success story of 2009. Adam Young somehow crafted a dozen electronic songs in his parents’ Minnesota basement that just ooze infectious joy. —DV

#36 Flyleaf - Flyleaf|Octone|2005

#36 Flyleaf - Flyleaf|Octone|2005

Here’s a terrific, inventive and dynamic metal album that was miraculously given time to build an audience and take off over the course of 3-4 years. One listen and you’ll never doubt again if girls can do metal. —DV

#37 Thrice - Vheissu|Island|2005

#37 Thrice - Vheissu|Island|2005

Perhaps this is what U2 might’ve sounded like if they had formed in a post-hardcore Orange County. A creative masterpiece and high mark that the band keeps threatening to top. Scary. —DV

#38 Aunt Bettys - Aunt Bettys|Elektra|1996

#38 Aunt Bettys - Aunt Bettys|Elektra|1996

Maybe we should just blame the marketing and radio promotions departments at Elektra for failing to make the song “Jesus” as memorable as a Nirvana hit. How could they have failed with material this good? —DV

#39 The Crucified - The Pillars of Humanity|Ocean|1992

#39 The Crucified - The Pillars of Humanity|Ocean|1992

I would’ve never started playing drums, which led to me being in NIV & then to starting a label, if it wasn’t for Pillars…—Jason Dunn The Crucified is one of the reasons why I joined and started P.O.D.. Pillars of Humanity was the first “Christian” album I’d ever heard.”—Sonny Sandoval

#40 The Alarm - Strength|IRS|1985

#40 The Alarm - Strength|IRS|1985

The Alarm were one of my favorite bands back in the early ‘80s. I was so blown away by them using Marshall amps with acoustic guitars! They were so spiritual, but not preachy at all. They were an inspiration to me. —Doug Pinnick

#41 Embodyment - The Narrow Scope of Things|Solid State|2000

#41 Embodyment - The Narrow Scope of Things|Solid State|2000

What a change from Embrace the Eternal to this album … and what a killer song in “One Less Addiction.” It was like a new band – an awesome, passionate and emotional new band.—DV

#42 Believer - Sanity Obscure|R.E.X.|1991

#42 Believer - Sanity Obscure|R.E.X.|1991

When Christians make art that blows people away with its creativity, skill and excellence … well, isn’t that the way it’s supposed to be when people are in relation to the Creator? Sanity Obscure – case in point. —DV

#43 Dogwood - Building a Better Me|Tooth & Nail|2000

#43 Dogwood - Building a Better Me|Tooth & Nail|2000

I (originally) signed ‘em, because I loved their heart. The way they connected with the kids was phenomenal. They made kids feel welcome all the time and they were pranksters. I loved that about them. —Noah Bernardo, Sr.

#44 Underoath - They're Only Chasing Safety|Solid State|2004

#44 Underoath - They're Only Chasing Safety|Solid State|2004

I knew this was going to be a special record on hearing the demos. It brings back many fond memories of a great time in my life and marks the peak of my career at T&N. Without a doubt, this was a defining moment for Underoath. —Chad Johnson (Come&Live)

#45 Bride - Snakes in the Playground|Star Song|1992

#45 Bride - Snakes in the Playground|Star Song|1992

This record best captured the apex of their live energy and great songwriting. —David Bach A turning point for the legitimacy of true hard rock in the Christian market (as opposed to overly premeditated/watered-down youth group filler). Snakes… was to Bride what Appetite… was to G ‘n R.—Dez Dickerson

#46 Maylene and the Sons of Disaster - I|Mono vs Stereo|2005

#46 Maylene and the Sons of Disaster - I|Mono vs Stereo|2005

On paper the idea sounds crazy: a hardcore frontman singing lyrics about Ma Barker over a Southern Rock/metal hybrid … but it’s a marvelous thing. The ballad “Just Wanted to Make Mother Proud” could be today’s “Free Bird.”—DV

#47 Lovewar - Soak Your Brain|Pakaderm|1993#47 Lovewar – Soak Your Brain|Pakaderm|1993

Hands down … the most underrated Christian rock band of all time. This record is sick! Tim Bushong is one of the great unsung music geniuses of Christian rock. —David Bach

#48 The Call - Reconciled|Elektra|1986

#48 The Call - Reconciled|Elektra|1986

Rooted in the voice and bass lines of Michael Been, The Call’s “Reconciled” confirmed that inspite of life’s challenges, “I Still Believe (Great Design).” And I find God’s Spirit “Everywhere I Go.” A masterful musical collection of artists, in songs of thoughtful, often biblical imagery, The Call revealed you could write about profoundly spiritual themes in mainstream settings and rock with intentionality, because “we need all the hope that we can get.” – BQN

#49 dc Talk - Jesus Freak|Forefront|1995

#49 dc Talk - Jesus Freak|Forefront|1995

Even though you could find this album’s title track if you mashed “Self Esteem” with “Smells Like Teen Spirit,” it is still a great rally cry for Christian rockers. The album had more than one good song, too. And it (thankfully) found them moving towards rock. —DV

#50 John Mehler - Bow & Arrow|A&S|1982

#50 John Mehler - Bow & Arrow|A&S|1982

Got this record when it came out. Still have it on vinyl! It was ahead of its time musically for Christian music. It sounded secular, which was a no-no in Christendom back then. Times have truly changed, and this record stands the test of time. —Doug Pinnick

#51 Seabird - 'Til We See the Shore|Credential|2008

#51 Seabird - 'Til We See the Shore|Credential|2008

Sounds classic even though it’s only two years old. Organic piano rock with grit, soul and a voice (in Aaron Morgan) that’ll fill a room.—DV

#52 Holy Soldier - Holy Soldier|Myrh|1990

#52 Holy Soldier - Holy Soldier|Myrh|1990

I was the Myrrh Records promotion guy when they got signed. We all had very high hopes for them. They had Stryper’s old manager and ably played all the LA clubs where Poison and Van Halen got their starts. We had a couple #1’s – and the band was the first ever color cover of HM Mag! —Chris Hauser

#53 Pedro the Lion - Control|Jade Tree|2002

#53 Pedro the Lion - Control|Jade Tree|2002

With each album David Bazan was able to break through my defenses, disarm my guards and inject a good dose of truth into my life. Control was one of those records. —Caleb Olsen

#54 Jars of Clay - Jars of Clay|Essential|1995

#54 Jars of Clay - Jars of Clay|Essential|1995

The song “Flood” was one of those surprises that catapulted this band of college friends all over mainstream radio, giving this skilled group of songwriters a healthy career that’s thankfully still going.—DV

#55 Brainchild - Mindwarp|R.E.X.|1994

#55 Brainchild - Mindwarp|R.E.X.|1994

Scott Albert’s an industrial music genius – fusing the power of metal, dance grooves and noise sampling. His second opus was originally released as a side-project called Brainchild, but later re-released as a Circle of Dust album.—DV

#56 Paramore - Riot|Fueled by Raman|2007

#56 Paramore - Riot|Fueled by Raman|2007

This thing is chock full of hits, which weren’t even exhausted on radio, but helped make them Warped Tour darlings. Critics should note that these songs would sound great with a guy singing ‘em and the girl that does belt ‘em out ain’t no slouch, either.—DV

#57 Showbread - Age of Reptiles|Tooth & Nail|2006

#57 Showbread - Age of Reptiles|Tooth & Nail|2006

Shock rock, raw rock and dance rock all came together (with a sense of humor, too) for one great album here.—DV

#58 Anberlin - Cities|Tooth & Nail|2007

#58 Anberlin - Cities|Tooth & Nail|2007

After refining its sound with the fantastic Never Take Friendship Personal, Anberlin was able to top themselves with a great collection of songs (like “Adelaide,” “Godspeed” and “The Unwinding Cable Car”), including the über-epic “Fin.”—DV

#59 Starflyer 59 - Leave Here a Stranger|Tooth & Nail|2001

#59 Starflyer 59 - Leave Here a Stranger|Tooth & Nail|2001

Two of the most talented artists ever to be involved with Christian music come together on this classic release from one of the most underrated bands… Jason Martin’s Starflyer. Leave Here A Stranger was produced by Terry Taylor. They are all good but this record is a shining star in a discography of artistic brilliance. —Dr. Tony Shore

#60 Living Sacrifice - The Hammering Process|Solid State|2000

#60 Living Sacrifice - The Hammering Process|Solid State|2000

Reborn could just as easily be sitting here, but the band expanded its personnel and its sound once again for this album, achieving another brilliant musical breakthrough. —DV

#61 Guardian - Fire and Love|Pakaderm|1991

#61 Guardian - Fire and Love|Pakaderm|1991

This was our sophomore and transition album with new members, label and producers. Still sounds decent after all these years. This album is still the anchor of our live set to this day. —David Bach

#62 441 - Mourning into Dancing|Blue Collar|1986

#62 441 - Mourning into Dancing|Blue Collar|1986

On this, their second album, 441 crystalized that dreamy male vocalist new wave sound (a la Duran Duran, Simple Minds, Paul Young) to perfection, adding heartfelt joy and an innocent worshipfulness that was magic.—DV

#63 Horde - Hellig Usvart|Rowe Productions|1994

#63 Horde - Hellig Usvart|Rowe Productions|1994

Mortification alum Jayson Sherlock adopts the alias of Anonymous and records the album to kick off a Christocentric infiltration of black metal culture. Purported death threats and the mistaken idea that Sherlock meant to lampoon the music’s unrelenting evil follow, but the one-man act’s lone studio album holds up as a righteously furious assault.—Jamie Lee Rake

#64 Family Force 5 - Dance or Die|Tooth & Nail|2008

#64 Family Force 5 - Dance or Die|Tooth & Nail|2008

The word “crunk” might as well have a photo of FF5 next to it in the dictionary. This album could very well be that genre’s best. These 11 songs sure stand up well.—DV

#65 Jerusalem - Warrior|Lion & Lamb|1982

#65 Jerusalem - Warrior|Lion & Lamb|1982

This Swedish hard rock band hit on all cylinders with “Man of the World” and “Constantly Changing,” but were revolutionary with its epic 12-minute “Sodom.”—DV

#66 Lone Justice - Shelter|Geffen|1986

#66 Lone Justice - Shelter|Geffen|1986

Maria McKee remains one of my faves to this day and I keep this album near me at all times. As a teen it was “I Found Love” and “Reflected” that rocked me. As an adult, “Dixie Storms” slows me in my tracks every time I hear it.—John J. Thompson

#67 Petra - Back to the Streets|Star Song|1986

#67 Petra - Back to the Streets|Star Song|1986

After several albums of being “pretty good” musically, this first album with veteran vocalist John Schlitt was flat-out arena rock great. Check out “Shakin’ The House.”—DV

#68 Midnight Oil - Diesel and Dust|Columbia|1988

#68 Midnight Oil - Diesel and Dust|Columbia|1988

Peter Garrett’s intense political concerns about the environment, justice for aboriginals in Australia, and a world gone war-mad gives this breakthrough for Midnight Oil the furious energy of Hebrew prophets like Hosea and Amos. Aggressive, engaged, intense, Garrett leads the band through the hit, “Beds Are Burning,” warns that “your Dream World is just about to end,” and cries out with activist zeal in “Whoah” that “God is by my side.” – BQN

#69 The Violet Burning - Strength|Bluestone|1992

#69 The Violet Burning - Strength|Bluestone|1992

Strength just plain blew us all away. From the Tubbs brothers’ version of the band (precision with passion) to Pritzl’s chemical presence behind the front mic, this was worship music like I had never heard. Graceful, intense, evocative, sensual and soulful, in all the right places. Brilliance.—JJT

#70 Undercover - Balance of Power|Brainstorm Artist International|1990

#70 Undercover - Balance of Power|Brainstorm Artist International|1990

I grew up on the fun punk anthems of Undercover, but Balance of Power marks a high point for the band with a very mature and artistic sound and it’s still my personal favorite from a very amazing band.—Dr. Tony Shore

#71 Matthew Ward - Armed and Dangerous|Live Oak|1986

#71 Matthew Ward - Armed and Dangerous|Live Oak|1986

The one male voice in the pretty, petite trio 2nd Chapter of Acts, you might never guess he could wail like Steve Walsh, but this album did that – with Dann Huff’s guitar shredding all over it, too.—DV

#72 One Bad Pig - Smash|Pure Metal|1989

#72 One Bad Pig - Smash|Pure Metal|1989

Birthed out of Austin’s early ‘80s punk scene, this album captured that spirit with tunes like “Isaiah 6,” “Frat Rats,” “Looney Tune” and “Let’s Be Frank.”—DV

#73 Jeff Johnson - Shadowplay|Ark|1983

#73 Jeff Johnson - Shadowplay|Ark|1983

It’s amazing that music this experimental was ever distributed into the CBA. Take the trippiness of Pink Floyd, Alan Parsons and meld it with deep lyrics inspired by C.S. Lewis, George MacDonald, etc, and you’re in prog rock heaven. Total sonic excellence from the pre-digital era.—DV

#74 Kansas - Vinyl Confessions|Kirshner|1982

#74 Kansas - Vinyl Confessions|Kirshner|1982

When the songwriter behind “Dust in the Wind” found Jesus, it was a big deal to us Christian rockers. This was Kerry’s second post-conversion Kansas album and the first with vocalist John Elefante.—DV

#75 Novella - A Liquid Earth|Star Song|1992

#75 Novella - A Liquid Earth|Star Song|1992

Songs like “Missionary,” “Bad Place” and “Don’t You Run” resonate with a hopeful melodic sweetness and an arena rock thunder a la Journey in their heyday.—DV

#76 Magdallan - Big Bang|Intense|1992

#76 Magdallan - Big Bang|Intense|1992

We were trying to set new standards in Christian rock in hopes to inspire others to do the same. Something bulletproof the world would have a hard time demoting to irrelevancy like they do with most all Christian Music. I pray we did that and am still proud of that album.—Ken Tamplin

#77 Robert Randolph & The Family Band - Live at the Wetlands|Dare|2002

#77 Robert Randolph & The Family Band - Live at the Wetlands|Dare|2002

Robert Randolph and his Family Band introducing us all to the “sacred steel” genre is easily one of the best things to happen with rock guitar in the past decade (or two).—DV

#78 Red Sea - Blood|Rugged|1994

#78 Red Sea - Blood|Rugged|1994

Led Zeppelin. Whitesnake. Red Sea.—DV

#79 Sacred Warrior - Obsessions|Intense|1991

#79 Sacred Warrior - Obsessions|Intense|1991

On its fourth album this power metal band tweaked its Maiden/Queensryche sound more towards the Operation Mindcrime spectrum. In 1991 this was the perfect decision. —DV

#80 Sufjan Stevens - Illinoise|Asthmatic Kitty|2005

#80 Sufjan Stevens - Illinoise|Asthmatic Kitty|2005

In his second of a 50-state project, this prolific songwriter became an overnight critic’s darling. The esoteric excellence of these songs are reason why.—DV

#81 Andy Hunter - Exodus|Nettwerk|2002

#81 Andy Hunter - Exodus|Nettwerk|2002

Hunter’s debut intersects the notion of DJ-led praise & worship with authentically club-banging techno/trance textures for the rare sanctified dance music project to rock listeners for whom the disco is their church. US Christian label patronage would move on, but not before leaving this scintillating classic.—Jamie Lee Rake

#82 Wovenhand - Mosaic|Sounds Familyre|2006

#82 Wovenhand - Mosaic|Sounds Familyre|2006

Any fan of great songwriting and alternative music will love this release. It is simply one of the most original and beautiful albums I’ve ever heard. The instrumentation and melodies will leave you wanting more. The fact that this is an independent release makes it that much more amazing.—Dr. Tony Shore

#83 Vigilantes of Love - Audible Sigh|Compass|2000

#83 Vigilantes of Love - Audible Sigh|Compass|2000

A decade into it, Bill Mallonee’s VoL appeared to find it’s mojo working with producer Buddy Miller, a way to connect his strong poetic lyrics to potent musical settings, aided in no small part by Miller and Kenny Hutson on mandolins and guitars.  Emmylou Harris sings harmony on “Resplendent,” one of the best songs of Mallonee’s canon. “Nothing Like a Train,” “Goes Without Saying” and “Could Be a Whole Lot Worse” make this a prime exhibit of the portent in Mallonee’s literate songwriting.  – BQN

#84 Evanescence - Fallen|Wind-Up|2003

#84 Evanescence - Fallen|Wind-Up|2003

15 Million copies of this album have sold worldwide. Not bad for a band that had sent its independently released Origin demo CD to this magazine two years prior.—DV

#85 Comeback Kid - Turn it Around|Facedown|2003

#85 Comeback Kid - Turn it Around|Facedown|2003

Sometimes the best bands and albums are created as a fun outlet – an experiment based upon musical hunches, passion and a hunger. Such was the wonderful surprise of this first chant-along album by some of these former members of Figure Four.—DV

#86 Project 86 - Drawing Black Lines|BEC|2000

#86 Project 86 - Drawing Black Lines|BEC|2000

With its second album Project 86 punched nu metal in the gut with real metal. The band’s been as consistent as ever with each release, but this one remains a fan favorite and live set staple.—DV

#87 Arkangel - Warrior|Star Song|1980

#87 Arkangel - Warrior|Star Song|1980

This might be the best album in the entire universe. Art/prog rock from 1980. Imagine Jethro Tull, Rush, Kansas and ELP rolled into one. “Warrior” is perhaps the best hippie worship song ever.—DV

#88 Skillet - Comatose|Ardent|2006

#88 Skillet - Comatose|Ardent|2006

After years of being “pretty good for Christian rock” they can now stand toe-to-toe with any mainstream rock band and kill it. “Falling Inside the Black” and “Rebirthing” both soar.—DV

#89 Tonio K - Romeo Unchained|What?|1986

#89 Tonio K - Romeo Unchained|What?|1986

At a point when most of Christian music sounded the same and had to meet certain lyrical requirements, along came artistic genius Tonio K with quirky avant-garde sounds and lyrics that were way too honest and intelligent for the masses.—Dr. Tony Shore

#90 Steve Taylor - I Predict 1990|Myrrh|1987

#90 Steve Taylor - I Predict 1990|Myrrh|1987

There was so much controversy surrounding this album – the cover, the content, the store boycotts, the cancelled Australian tour – that in retrospect, I’m amazed it was ever released.—Steve Taylor

#91 OC Supertones - Supertones Strike Back|BEC|1997

#91 OC Supertones - Supertones Strike Back|BEC|1997

Kings of ska’s third wave? Possibly so. Along with FIF at least able to make a claim towards the crown. Fiesty, fun and fast. Four of these songs made it on their just-released best-of, ReUnite.—DV

#92 Allies - Long Way from Paradise|Dayspring|1989

#92 Allies - Long Way from Paradise|Dayspring|1989

Dayspring Records probably never knew what hit ‘em. These veteran rockers let it all bang out on this blues hard rock opus with greats like “Devil is a Liar,” the title track, “Old Man Down” and “Christian Man.”—DV

#93 - Mad at the World - Mad at the World|Frontline|1987

#93 - Mad at the World - Mad at the World|Frontline|1987

This album stretched the mostly empty boundaries of what was really cool and “edgy” in Christian music at a time when the only other genre doing that was metal.—DV

#94 Iona - Beyond These Shores|Forefront|1993

#94 Iona - Beyond These Shores|Forefront|1993

Don’t say “Enya clone” until you’ve heard this band’s songs. It’s like Dream Theater minus the metal. Progressive yet beautiful and moving. Joanne Hogg’s vocals soar on “Treasure” and “Burning Like Fire.”—DV

#95 Sam Phillips - Martinis & Bikinis|Virgin|1994

#95 Sam Phillips - Martinis & Bikinis|Virgin|1994

The artist fka Leslie Phillips perfected her songcraft on this album, with powerful tunes like “Black Sky” “Baby, I Can’t Please You” “I Need Love” the trippy ballad “Strawberry Road” and the Lennon cover of “Gimme Some Truth.”—DV

#96 Extol - Undeceived|Solid State|2000

#96 Extol - Undeceived|Solid State|2000

Burial introduced us to these Nordic Viking metallers, but Undecieved kicked it up even another notch.—DV

#97 Degarmo & Key - Straight On|Lion & Lamb|1979

#97 Degarmo & Key - Straight On|Lion & Lamb|1979

“Livin’ on the Edge of Dyin’” could’ve been an outtake from Springsteen’s Born to Run album. And “Enchirdion,” “Long Distance Runner” and “Jericho” ain’t no slouches, either.—DV

#98 Jimmy Hotz - Beyond the Crystal Sea|Vision|1980

#98 Jimmy Hotz - Beyond the Crystal Sea|Vision|1980

The guy who produced Arkangel’s album self-released his own solo album around the same time. It’s classic prog rock in the vein of acid rockers like Yes. Lots of atmospheric and space rock keyboards.—DV

#99 Asight Unseen - Circus of Shame|New Breed|1991

#99 Asight Unseen - Circus of Shame|New Breed|1991

From out of nowhere this young band rocked with a veteran confidence and swagger. Influenced from a myriad of sources, like rockabilly, grunge, The Cult, STP, Jane’s Addiction. And how can you go wrong when you write a song called “Jimi Jones Boogie?”—DV

#100 PAX217 - TwoSeventeen|Forefront|2000

#100 PAX217 - TwoSeventeen|Forefront|2000

I would love to say I discovered and signed this band, but one of my A&R guys (Mark Nicholas) scouted them and chased down Howard Benson to produce. “Prism” is still one of the best Christian rock songs ever.—David Bach

© Copyright 2010 HM Magazine. All rights reserved.

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141 Comments

  1. Doug Van Pelt had this to say on July 14, 2010 | Permalink

    I disagree with this list!
    Okay, maybe I’m the only one that does not.
    I do have some regrets, though, like Frail Words Collapse, Atomic Arena.

  2. bianca had this to say on July 14, 2010 | Permalink

    I think spanning the decades of music, that this list certainly took longevity into account; however, I think in the past five years Christian rock has crossed over into many markets and that those artists were overlooked.

    For instance there is Flyleaf who sold a million copies of their debut album, stood on the billboard top 200 for two years and crossed over to multiple markets. Yet they were number 36 on the list.

    The artist like August Burns Red who was artist of the year on AP and selling out arenas, or As I Lay Dying.

    The 2000’s seemed to be overlooked especially the later years. Just because a band is not 100 years does not make them one of the greats.

    However, I stand by U2 being the number one album. Great job Doug, you rock!

  3. Jason Laughinghouse had this to say on July 16, 2010 | Permalink

    I’ll agree with number 1 and 2, Hands down.

    I do however side with Bianca regarding the past 10 years of music have been overlooked. ABR deserves to be on there. Even though Constellations is only a year and 2 days old it is by far their best release and one of the strongest releases of the past year. This cd has shot them into a whole new level.

    I will agree Flyleaf has sold millions of records and crossed into many different markets but i cant justify them being so high.

    Numbers dont lie but i just dont see how Family Force 5’s Dance or Die record made it on here in replace of Business up Front/Party in the Back. After their debut release i felt i couldn’t go anywhere on myspace with out hearing Luv Addict or Earthquake. I feel the only reason Dance or Die sold so well was because of the underground success of FF5’s debut and the anticipation of their follow up release.

    I also dont agree with Owl City one bit but i know DVP is a huge fan so it was expected in my eyes.

  4. Jason Irvin had this to say on July 16, 2010 | Permalink

    I liked the list. Totally agreed with U2 being # 1 & Stavesacre made the Top 10!

  5. joshua clark had this to say on July 16, 2010 | Permalink

    some cool albums in here i recognize & others i don’t like as much.

  6. DLE had this to say on July 16, 2010 | Permalink

    Kudos for having The Alarm’s _Strength_ on the list. Still the best concert I ever saw in person.

    Glad to see _Doppelganger_ in the top 20.

    _Branded_ by Undercover was easily the superior of _Balance of Power_ and warrants a top 25 ranking.

    No Phil Keaggy at all? _Sunday’s Child_ should have been a top 10.

    No Daniel Band, Rez Band, Charlie Peacock, or Mylon LeFevre & Brokenheart? Serious omissions.

    And what about Keith Green? _No Compromise_ may be the top Christian album of all time. Is it a definition of “rock” issue?

    _I Predict 1990_ deserves a higher ranking.

    _Beat the System_ by Petra warranted notice for using solely electronic/synthesizer instruments, plus it was a great album.

  7. Dale Baker had this to say on July 16, 2010 | Permalink

    Great list! And it’s fun to see Sixpence included on it too.

  8. Tim had this to say on July 16, 2010 | Permalink

    It was a huge walk down memory lane. I had to get out some of my albums and cassettes to listen to some of the classics. There were a few I thought should have been on: Brightblur: Massivivid; Atomic Arena: Barren Cross; Rez Band: Between Heaven and Hell are a few of my favorites. I thought Bride’s Snakes in the Playground should have been a lot higher, but overall, the list was relatively accurate.

  9. Joel had this to say on July 16, 2010 | Permalink

    Great job – it can’t be easy to do a list like that, and you can’t make everyone happy. Was reminded of some bands I’d forgotten about (MATW) and happy to see some that I’d thought everyone else had forgotten about (Precious Death)

    My only beef is “This Beautiful Mess” – my favorite album, any genre, of all time – got left off for the more popular self-titled Sixpence album. Sigh.

  10. evilexe had this to say on July 16, 2010 | Permalink

    are you people autistic or something where the (bleep) are the beatles

  11. Jeff had this to say on July 16, 2010 | Permalink

    No “Disciple” on the list?

  12. Melody had this to say on July 16, 2010 | Permalink

    I think that over all the list is pretty good. I wouldn’t have put U2 on the number one spot (although I would have kept them on the list). I think over all there are some great picks. Glad to see Larry Norman! Wish there was some ska (FIF or OC or W’s?) Probably wouldn’t have put Owl City on there but I understand why you put it there. Great job overall (could also use some With Blood Comes Cleansing? Or something like that? I need to look more closely through again.) Great job.

  13. Todd Humphrey had this to say on July 16, 2010 | Permalink

    Doug, Thank you so much. I have been out of the scene for a long,long time. I was not sure where to start in building my library up again with some quality music. Do not have the time like I used to, listening at the stores, or even on line now. Luckily I have most everything listed pre-’93 and strongly agree with most all of those pics. Thanks again! I would have put Donderfliegen on there somewhere.

  14. Daniel had this to say on July 16, 2010 | Permalink

    Although i do not agree with everything on the list and i felt like some bands were left off, it is a very good list. Like you said in the beginning there is no way to make everyone happy and there is always going to be disagreement. Some of the bands are before my time but i can see why they made the list

  15. JN had this to say on July 16, 2010 | Permalink

    Relient K?

    As Cities Burn?

    =(

  16. JN had this to say on July 16, 2010 | Permalink

    Oh, not to say it’s a bad list…it’s a lot of hard work. Nice post. =)

  17. Christian had this to say on July 16, 2010 | Permalink

    My biggest disagreement would have to be DC Talk’s place… Jesus Freak should be much higher. Overall, though, a very good list.

  18. nathan had this to say on July 17, 2010 | Permalink

    We need to have an HM boxing match over the role Owl City will play in our musical future.

    I would have thrown Bless the Martyr on there, and while I would have loved to see ACB or Beloved, I totally understand why they’re not there.

    I feel like if someone’s going to argue for ABR’s spot on the list, then you have to fight for TDWP as well. While I’m not a huge fan of Prada, they’re equally (if not more so) accomplished as ABR is. I wouldn’t mind seeing an HM Top 100 (___)xcore albums list.

  19. Eric Royer had this to say on July 17, 2010 | Permalink

    No way some of the newer bands should be on here when REZ, BARREN CROSS and PETRA were left off!!!!

  20. Dave had this to say on July 17, 2010 | Permalink

    This is just total and utter garbadge. “The Joshua Tree?” Really? Are you freakin kidding me? U2 isn’t even a Christian band! They are UNIVERSALISTS and don’t deserve to be lumped in with Christian Rock.

    How can anyone take this seriously when the forefathers of Christian Rock – Resurrection Band – are left out. Give me a break, HM. You have lost all credibility.

  21. Matt had this to say on July 17, 2010 | Permalink

    A couple huge misses here where is Barren Cross Atomic Arena, REZ band- Hostage, or DMZ, just a couple of artists I can think of right off the bat.

  22. Roger Cook had this to say on July 17, 2010 | Permalink

    Come on how does neal morse not get one of his incredible albums on this list or glass hammer if you dont know these bands you really need to check them out !!!

  23. Nathan had this to say on July 17, 2010 | Permalink

    Mastedon’s ‘It’s a Jungle out there’ should be a top 20

  24. Jim had this to say on July 17, 2010 | Permalink

    Agree with many on the list. Most in fact but shocked to not see Audio Adrenalin, Reliant K, Third Day, Newsboys.

    I am hoping with digital distribution on places iTunes and Amazon we will see more of the older music available.

  25. Chris Hoard had this to say on July 17, 2010 | Permalink

    How in the world does a Top 100 (of all time) contain a group like Family Force Five, yet not even one from Resurrection Band?

  26. Ken Eaves had this to say on July 17, 2010 | Permalink

    Hey Doug, agree with you really, a couple of much better albums would have been there if I’d had the choice……….not bad though.

  27. salty had this to say on July 17, 2010 | Permalink

    While I appreciate the effort, it missed the mark completely for what it was titled.

    Leaving off rez, neon cross, barnabas, messiah prophet, and force3 is just wrong.

    And to put petra out of the top 50 and then to use back to the street as their one entry is just beyond insulting.

    And more recent ommissions like plank eye and relientk are also incomprehensible.

    To list holy soldier and leave off mastedon, david and the giants, ruscha. What were you thinking?

  28. Joel had this to say on July 17, 2010 | Permalink

    Forgot about Tamplin – that self-titled HAS to be a top 100 album.

  29. Matt had this to say on July 17, 2010 | Permalink

    Great list! Glad to see Back to the Street by Petra get its props. Great defining album by them. However, I think it was Beyond Belief that really brought them into a brighter spotlight.

  30. Bordin had this to say on July 17, 2010 | Permalink

    Left out Redolent’s “Infinite Horizon”!

  31. glacierwookie had this to say on July 17, 2010 | Permalink

    hmmm…why would you put a band that blatantly says “We’re actually high on the Christian charts, and I’m like, ‘What the f*** are we even doing there?” on your list?…and leave off Audio Adrenaline (Some Kind of Zombie was amazing!), Newsboys (any of their albums), August Burns Red, As I Lay Dying, Impending Doom (Nailed, Dead, Risen changed my life!), Becoming The Archetype, etc?

    It would have been nice to see an actual Christian band in the #1 slot also, lol.

    P.O.D. are great (and so is Satellite), but not #2 greatest Christian Rock album of all time great!! Good grief! Just because they played them alot on TRL, doesn’t make the album any better than stuff that wasn’t on MTV!!! BOOOO

    Last thing I have to say is…Demon Hunter’s Summer of Darkness is probably their weakest album to date! Tryptich is a masterpiece, and easily one of the top 5 Christian Albums of all time…not just Rock! You missed the mark on that one.

    Thanks for the list…and trying to make it work for everybody, but it just fell short for me because of the bands that were left off, and lots of the ones that were included. Nice try.

  32. Jeff had this to say on July 17, 2010 | Permalink

    Starting with some rants: As much as I enjoyed many aspects of this list – why was there a seemingly over-arching attempt to cowtow to “religious-sounding/acting” bands? If the list is “Christian” rock, why include bands that do not declare themselves to be “Christian” bands?
    I am not afraid to say that U2, Creed and Evanescence do not belong on this list. If they do not declare that they are a “Christian” band, what then is the point of including them? To try to bring relevance or “hipness” to the list? Who cares if that occurs or not?
    Christian rock does not need that. It gets respect because it is good, quality music that can stand with anything else. Thank you.
    Also, where was anything by the Resurrection Band? DeGarmo and Key? Barren Cross? The VAST majority of Petra??? DC Talk’s “Supernatural”? Yet, you included Paramore and Owl City???
    And seriously, #90 on I Predict 1990? WITHOUT question that is a Top 10 album.
    Beyond those listed complaints, there were many intriguing albums listed here. At times, it seemed like someone included their bargain-bin purchases later on the list – A Sight Unseen was absolutely one of the worst sounding albums I have ever purchased; but I give credit for including some out-of-the-ordinary choices. But again, please, stick to Christian acts, ok?
    I feel much better now.

  33. Bill had this to say on July 17, 2010 | Permalink

    No Phil Keaggy??? Sunday’s Child and Crimson and Blues have some classic Keaggy songs and solos. Was surprised that a guitarist of his stature would not have an rock album worthy of a top 100 list.

  34. Stryperfreak had this to say on July 17, 2010 | Permalink

    This list is pretty good, I don’t disagree with the bands on the list, just where they are placed; although U2?? I understand that “Joshua Tree” is a great album, but they nor the album is “Christian”, just spiritual.

    Anyway, DC Talk’s “Jesus Freak” should be a lot higher than #49. Also Petra is a founding father of Christian Rock and they needed to be a littler higher.

    I do agree with Jeff that this is suppose to be a “Christian” Rock list, not a spiritual rock list, a lot of bands on this list are taking up spots from actual Christian rock albums.

  35. John Wood had this to say on July 17, 2010 | Permalink

    First off this would be near an impossible list to comprise, that being said… no Rez Band DMZ or Undercover God Rules or Audio Adrenaline? Only one Stryper album in the top 100? I also loved Rick Cua, Servant, Daniel Band, Sojourner, Barnabus and so many others. Kudo’s to giving Daniel Amos a top nod. This was a truly brave list and glad I didn’t have to do it. Much love and respect, oh also check out the Rock and Roll Worship Circus stuff, truly amazing!!!

  36. Jeff had this to say on July 17, 2010 | Permalink

    No Barren Cross at all?!?!? Owl City, I’d hardly call that rock, IMHO. Evanescence blatanly seperated themselves from the Christian genre and they are on the list…hmm. I’d have to agree that Phil Keaggy, Rez Band should be on the list.

  37. scott had this to say on July 17, 2010 | Permalink

    reading this list, gives more standing as to why I dropped HM. At least a handful of bands don’t belong at all. Just because they have a few spititual songs, in no way makes them a christian band.

    To exclude some who were pioneers and solid believers openly admitting so, to bands who are clearly not is really sad.

    Again in my opinion REZ, Petra and Stryper should have been in the top 10 just for the path they paved. Other forefathers of the christian rock era needed higher and more attention and the fact that they were left out or got bottom of the barral treatment leaves me to believe that this list was based on, not what the people at HM wrote were the criteria, but personal preference. The fact that U2 got #1 baffles my mind. Kings X got #7.

  38. Darryl had this to say on July 17, 2010 | Permalink

    Alot of these bands on the list are not even Christian. U2 is catholic, and don’t spread their message often. POD had one hit on the album. Lots of bands on here say they are not christian at all.

  39. Randy had this to say on July 17, 2010 | Permalink

    Owl City makes a Christian ROCK all-time list yet no Resurrection Band? Madness! Rez’s uncompromising, culturally relevant lyrics on pounding rock songs like Afrikaans get beat out by a bunch of cute fireflies in a guy’s mom’s basement? I don’t get that.

    And no Glass Harp? C’mon, Phil Keaggy was shredding with Christian lyrics in 1972! He’s mellowed out now, but listen to the first Glass Harp album for the earliest in electric guitar-driven Christian rock back when Larry Norman was shocking people while strumming an acoustic.

    Barren Cross’s State of Control absolutely has to be in the Top 20 Christian rock albums. Dump some of the pop and plug in some real rock!

    The first Whitecross album should be replaced by Triumphant Return.

    Otherwise, a pretty good list. Missing Darrell Mansfield’s Get Ready, Pillar’s Where Do We Go From Here and something from Kids In The Way.

  40. Bianca had this to say on July 17, 2010 | Permalink

    @Darryl When did being Catholic not make you a follower of Christ? Which bands as a whole on this list say that they are not Christian?

  41. Shane had this to say on July 17, 2010 | Permalink

    The FACT that 10% of this List IS NOT Christian Rock makes it COMPLETELY invalid.
    Ridiculous doesn’t begin to describe it.

    Start over and do it correctly.

  42. Alex had this to say on July 17, 2010 | Permalink

    WHAT!?

    Im really disappointed in this list…

    Skillet? Flyleaf? Owl City? Evanescence? WHAT!?

    Im glad at least that mewithoutYou, Zao and MXPX were on there. But really?

    Here are 3 that need to be on there:

    Haste The Day-Burning Bridges
    August Burns Red-Constellations
    Norma Jean-Bless The Martyr & Kiss The Child

  43. salty had this to say on July 17, 2010 | Permalink

    @shane,re: “start over and do it correctly” , Exactly!

    And I didn’t mention it earlier but whiteheart freedom deserves to be on the list too, and some of jerusalem’s earlier work.

    I think the reall issue with the list is the title. If you limited it by decade or just said “our favorites” it would be totally legit even with its weaknesses.

    But to say that the criteria includes defining and transitional moments and then to miss so many pioneers, it must be renamed or done over!

  44. Buck had this to say on July 17, 2010 | Permalink

    The band I wanted to see on this list was Mastedon. John Elephante (of Kansas), Dave Amato (of REO Speedwagon) and a long list of studio musicians (including Bob Carlisle of Allies on bgv) put out two of what I consider to be the greatest Christian rock albums of all time in It’s A Jungle Out There and Lofcaudio. They perfectly embodied the arena rock sound of the late ’80s/early ’90s with straight forward lyrics that showed their faith. “Holiest One” and “When It All Comes Down” (from Lofcaudio) lay out what it means to be a follower of Christ. “Right Hand” is one of my favorite songs of all time, from any genre.

  45. Ralph Russo had this to say on July 17, 2010 | Permalink

    I totally agree with those that are stating about U2, Evanescence, Kansas being on this list. I believe a “Christian” band is one that professes their faith and uses their talents for the glory of God. I don’t think bands like this qualify.

    Omission that I see: Rick Cua’s “Wear Your Colors” (which should be in the top 10), Petra’s “Beat the System”, Rez Band, Messiah Prophet, Mylon Lefevbre, Margaret Becker, Idle Cure, Jet, X-Sinner and Russ Taff’s “Medals”,

  46. Andrew had this to say on July 17, 2010 | Permalink

    Wow, there are some big omissions on this list especially no Whiteheart (I believe Tales of Wonder is still the only Christian album to have ever had each single go to #1 on the CCM charts). One of the few groups on this list with multiple Grammy-winning members.

    While it is easy to debate the whole “Christian vs. non-Christian” nature of this list, it was cool to see Embodyment, Extol, Allies, Undercover, Brainchild, Mortal, Undercover, The Crucified and the violet burning listed. All great albums that I am sure will get forgotten over time as people continue trying to convince me that U2 is a Christian band.

  47. Brandon had this to say on July 17, 2010 | Permalink

    Where is Come Now Sleep by As Cities Burn? That’s one of the greatest albums ever made in any genre. Also Bless The Martyr Kiss The Child by Norma Jean should undoubtedly be on there. Good try, but no.

  48. Eatbugs had this to say on July 17, 2010 | Permalink

    In general it’s a good list. A “disclaimers” paragraph would have helped answer questions about defining terms like “Christian” and “rock.”

    The one-album-per-band thing is good when there are so many great bands to choose from (and you still had to leave out many deserving candidates). What I don’t get are the albums by the band you did choose. Why Back to the Street and something universally regarded as superior like Beyond belief? Why the Horde album (which may deserve to be on there anyway) but not Mortification’s Scrolls… album (which everyone I know considers a better extreme metal album)?

    Overall I love the wide variety of style and timeframe of the albums. I disagree with many of the decisions here but I respect almost all of them.

  49. Micah Newby had this to say on July 17, 2010 | Permalink

    Holy Crap!!! How many of those albums did I have back in high school. Major Kudos for putting Novella and Undercover on the list. Both are brilliant bands, as well as Love/War, the Violet Burning, Redsea, One Bad Pig and Bride!!!! HM Nailed it outta the park on this one. One question tho… Die Happy – Intense Live?

  50. Jim Martin had this to say on July 17, 2010 | Permalink

    First, let me say that I know it must have been extremely difficult to compile a list like this, so thanks for such a great effort.

    I agree that some of the bands on this list are not Christian, so I don’t understand why they were included. Also, I wouldn’t classify Owl City, Andy Hunter, or OC Supertones as “rock”.

    I’ve been a huge fan of Christian rock since the early 80’s, so I’m surprised that I’ve never heard of some of the bands on the list.

    Personally, I would have put Holy Soldier and Guardian much higher on the list because I still listen to these CDs even after 20 years. Also, Tourniquet definitely belongs on the list, but instead of “Psycho Surgery”, I would have included “Stop the Bleeding” because this release laid the foundation for modern hard core music. Not sure why Seabird is ranked so high (should this even be on the list?).

    Major omissions: Rage of Angels self-titled release and “Peace Treaty” by X-Sinner (I still listen to these CDs as well); Relient K (either “Mmhmm” or “Five Score and Seven Years Ago”); Barren Cross (”Atomic Arena” or “State of Control”); Falling Up (”Crashings” or “Dawn Escapes”); Daughtry self titled (Chris Daughtry is a Christian, and since Paramore, U2, Creed, and Kings X were included on the list, Daughtry should qualify); and finally, the biggest omission from the list: RED (both of their CDs are in my top 10!)

  51. Marcus had this to say on July 17, 2010 | Permalink

    Where’s Resurrection Band? Awaiting your Reply was a ground breaker and is still a great album by any standard.

  52. Carlos had this to say on July 18, 2010 | Permalink

    Where is Petra’s Beyond Belief, Chevelle’s Point #1 or Wonder What’s Next? Whiteheart’s Tales of Wonder or Freedom? Where is Red or Blindside? NEwsboys Going Public?

  53. gregor southard had this to say on July 18, 2010 | Permalink

    Mostly agree with this list, although, “To Hell With The Devil” should have been number one. DeGarmo and Key’s “D&K” should have been in the top ten. Glad to see Undercover and Tonio K made the list. note I believe Bloodgood’s “Alone In Suicide” was on “Rock In A Hard Place” which should have been on this list.

  54. gregor southard had this to say on July 18, 2010 | Permalink

    After reading others comments: I agree, where’s the Resurrection Band? U2’s members are not Catholic and yes the are Christian. Check out “Yahweh” and “Grace” among many other songs

  55. Richard Wagner had this to say on July 18, 2010 | Permalink

    Thanks for the list Doug…..
    It was great to see certain bands make the list…

    The biggest surprise for me was to not see
    Jet Circus “Step On It” make your list…I know they made your magazine several times (still have them, lol)….

  56. Paul Tjostem had this to say on July 18, 2010 | Permalink

    This is pretty much what I expected to see from HM and Doug. Not that it’s good or bad, but it is just one man’s humble opinion. It’s interesting to compare HM’s list with say that of CCM Magazine’s Top 100. As I looked at the HM list, I was struck by the diversity of music….and the glaring lack of a lot of pioneering artists like Michael W. Smith / Amy Grant…White Heart…Steven Curtis Chapman…Rich Mullins…Steve Camp…Geoff Moore…Mylon LeFevre…and the list could go on and on.

    How is it that these artists are excluded and, say, artists like Iona, The Choir, Larry Norman, are included? And how about other pioneering bands/artists such as Rachel Rachel, Derek Webb, Jennifer Knapp to name a few?

    Like I said earlier, I do appreciate the great diversity of this list….where else could one go from Iona to One Bad Pig to POD to U2 to Skillet to Larry Norman to Kansas…and so on. One thing is sure…there are A LOT of talented Christian musicians out there. Thanks be to God for that!

  57. Ian Baker had this to say on July 19, 2010 | Permalink

    Firstly, I would like to state that even though I don’t agree to this list 100%, I really enjoyed reading through it and seeing some stuff that I haven’t seen for quite a while.

    The only thing I would have changed was taking bands from the last 10 years and giving them recognition for the great music they’ve made (i.e. Relient k, August Burns Reds, Oh Sleeper, and Norma Jean’s “Bless the Martyr Kiss the Child”.)

    Thank you again for taking the time to put together this list! I loved it!

  58. Elisabeth had this to say on July 19, 2010 | Permalink

    I understand it’s hard to make a list like this but I would certainly add BLINDSIDE-Silence.

  59. Jonathan Nexus had this to say on July 19, 2010 | Permalink

    This list is crap!!!

    SO MANY great and influential Christian bands that were bold in their lyrics about an uncompromising belief in Jesus were left off!

    TOO MANY bands that compromised their faith just to achieve acceptance in a secular world.

    Very Disappointed!

  60. david had this to say on July 19, 2010 | Permalink

    what about white heart? not sure how/why Paramore & Dashboard Confessional made the list.

  61. david horn had this to say on July 19, 2010 | Permalink

    what about white heart & 5 iron frenzy? I’m sure there are more. I’m note sure how Paramore & Dashboard Confessional made the list. Jars of Clay should be in top 20.

  62. Loren Sanders had this to say on July 19, 2010 | Permalink

    No Barren Cross, no Petra, no Phil Keaggy, no Narnia, no Electrics?????

    PUH-leeze!

  63. Matt C. had this to say on July 19, 2010 | Permalink

    im very sad to see that Audio Adrenaline was left off this list. “Underdog” and “Lift” were fantastic albums and since they tore up Christian Rock for almost twenty years it seems like they deserve to have one of their albums (preferably “Underdog”) on this list. not just because of who they are, but because this album was a perfect collection of their entire musical style and ability, and it seems like anyone who is into Christian music has the album or knows the songs

  64. Matt Staniz had this to say on July 19, 2010 | Permalink

    Great list, Doug…I always approach these lists ready to argue, but as I went down the list (starting at #1) I kept going “Wow!”. I was particularly impressed with the top 10 respect you gave to alternative music from an era when HM was still “Heaven’s Metal”. I tend to tune out a good bit of Christian music from the past decade, but most of the titles you included I at least am familiar with. mewithoutYou is awesome, for example.

    I’m laughing as I read the comments above. There’s some good cases to be made (Keaggy, Rez, Barren Cross)…but someone actually was looking for Ruscha?! Rachel Rachel?! David and the Giants?! And how many people are going to get angry about Petra being left off the list because simply because they were reading too fast and missed them?

    Great list…thanks. I’m going to use it to do some listening this summer.

  65. Doug Van Pelt had this to say on July 20, 2010 | Permalink

    Great to see so many comments on here!
    THIS is what the list was about: arguing.
    Isn’t it fun?
    As long as we keep it light-hearted and refrain from calling each other empty-headed, then I think we’re good. (Seems like Jesus warned us about that very type of comment, Matthew 5:22)).

    One thing that I’ve noticed with several comments is this: you have not read the “note from the editor” intro to this issue (and list) from the print version. It is located on the Table of Contents page. There is also a sidebar called “HM Mixtape,” which I compiled for certain songs that almost single-handedly got their album on this list. I think of the song “Blood” by Street Angel. I love that song. But the rest of the album? Well, it didn’t stand up to the test of time … in my opinion.

    Keith Green’s “For Him Who Has Ears To Hear” (his debut) deserved to be on this list, I thought. ‘If Elton John is rock, than certainly that first album of Keith’s is rock enough.’ It was on the list for a long time, but got booted from the list. Blame it on PAX217 or Owl City. Take your pick.

    The hate people are bringing towards Owl City is just misguided. Yeah, I love that album, but how can you ignore the impact it’s had? Puh-leeze!!! It is arguably THE success story of 2009. Hello!? That is kind of a big deal, people! That means this album ranked off the charts on the “historical impact” factor.

    Rage of Angels? I love that band and I love “Are You Ready For Thunder,” but as a whole I didn’t feel like the album held up song after song.

    Two more points:

    There will be another list coming soon – “The Top 100 Christian Metal Albums of All Time” – coming out in the pages of Heaven’s Metal fanzine (a sister publication we print in between issues of HM).

    This was an ALBUMS list, NOT a BANDS list. If it were a bands list, my goodness, Rez Band and Darrell Mansfield and Phil Keaggy would certainly be on it. But when you look strictly at the album’s output, song for song, listening from beginning to end, it’s a completely different “light” to judge by. See my point? This kind of thinking kept several artists that are GREAT off this list. This is another reason why the “mixtape” list was put together – to highlight some great artists. Phil Keaggy’s on that list, as is Keith Green. This mixtape list is online here at the site, so search it out…please.

  66. Tuomas Jaakkola had this to say on July 20, 2010 | Permalink

    This is list is made by someone who dosent even know what is christian music and whats not. I run trough many of the artist in at the top and they are not christian music. I think one of the most important things of christian music is its christian view of life and the gospel. I dont say there need to be 20 % of Jesus in every song, but the maker of this list should know better what band is christian and whats not!

  67. jiminy cricket had this to say on July 20, 2010 | Permalink

    In the spirit of fairness- there is none!
    However – I thought the list pretty inclusive of (MHO) a lot of the greats-I was happy I knew most of them..and look forward to visiting the graveyard to try some I hadn’t heard of. THX!

  68. rob shameless had this to say on July 22, 2010 | Permalink

    John Mark Mcmillian did not even make the list and if it was not for the Crucified there would be no pod or alot of the records on here. it should have been in the top 10 for sure

  69. garrett had this to say on July 23, 2010 | Permalink

    ok. the REAL missing albums are all relatively recent ones.

    Define the Great Line – Underoath. Infinitely better than TOCS.

    Thrill Seeker – August Burns Red. 3rd best debut of the 2000s, behind BTA and the Classic Crime.

    Terminate Damnation – Becoming the Archetype. Don’t let the crap they’ve come out with now reflect badly on the best Christian metal album ever to be released.

    That’s my two cents. You could take off Evanescense, Flyleaf, and Owl City. Record sales do not indicate a good album. Look at Lamb of God.

  70. Shawn McLaughlin had this to say on July 24, 2010 | Permalink

    Bono’s mother was Protestant and his father Catholic. When they were married it was quite scandalous because most people in the Republic of Ireland are Catholic (the North is predominantly Protestant) and religion was/is one of the factors that divides them.

    Larry Mullen was raised Catholic. Adam Clayton and The Edge were both raised Protestant. (Edge is of Welsh descent, while Adam is of English descent. Their families moved to Ireland when they were young).

    By the early 80s, Adam Clayton was the only member of the band who was not particularly religious. The other three were involved with a Christian group in Dublin which looked down upon their participation in a rock band. It was protestant and very conservative. This almost broke the band up, until Adam Clayton and manager Paul McGuinness stepped in. Clayton now coyly says that, of course he has the same beliefs as the rest of the band, as 30 years with 3 believers has “rubbed off” on him.

    There ARE biblical themes in many of U2’s songs, including “40,” based on the Bible’s Psalm 40, and “Until the End of the World,” which describes Judas’s suicide after his betrayal of Jesus, amongst others, while “Yaweh”, “Magnificent”, “Gloria” and even “All Because of You” can be easily interpreted as praise songs.

  71. Melody had this to say on July 26, 2010 | Permalink

    I was looking back through the list and did see some ska! :) I just missed it. Yay OC Supertones!
    Also I love that Pax217 made the list. Prism is a GREAT song =]
    By the way… my mom squeaked and grabbed my chin when she saw Daniel Amos made top 20.

  72. willie had this to say on July 26, 2010 | Permalink

    No Strongarm? Aw, come on! “i’ve seen the face of redemption…”

  73. sog had this to say on July 27, 2010 | Permalink

    Really, no Rez band??? c’mon…

  74. Vinnie had this to say on July 27, 2010 | Permalink

    I am a fan of all these bands. If i havent played along side them at festivals like Cornerstone in Chicago or work at bIg festivalS along side them. I DON’T KNOW HOW SWEET COMFORT BANDS PERFECT TIMIMG ALBUM DIDNT MAKE THE LIST. WITH JOHN AND DINO ELEPHANTE PRODUCING THAT. THE SONG WRITING WAS BRILLANT. I AM JUST SAYINGGGGGGGGGGG LOL

  75. Vinnie had this to say on July 27, 2010 | Permalink

    AND i AGREE NO REZ BAND OR DARREL MANSFIELD,.THIER FIRST ALBUMS WERE MASTERPIECES. HHMM WERE IS THE pOINEERS LIKE 2ND SCHAPTER OF ACTS AND THE MAN pHIL kEAGGY. OK, THERE IS SOMETHING BOTHED ABOUT THIS LIST LOL. gOOD TO SEE YOU METIONED Jimi Hotz. and one more, The Danial Band, On Rock. wow, need i day more

  76. David Meherg had this to say on July 28, 2010 | Permalink

    I have heard Lacy’s testimony and you can debate whether you think Flyleaf is a Christian band or not, she is Christian. Now Creed on the other hand takes God’s name in vain on a song on their album, and that to me puts them in the pretender catagory.
    personally, to me the best Christian album i have heard in a long time comes from ex-Korn guitarist, “Head”, Save Me From Myself. There is a big difference between being Christian and making music and being Christian and making Christian music. Alot of your list is the former and not the latter. And the we have the so-called Christians riding the waves. Anyway, listen to a little Red and get a good dose of the latter.

  77. Marcus had this to say on July 29, 2010 | Permalink

    Well Doug, you nailed the top 3. Couldn’t agree more. I’m not as versed in the older music on the list but I have to agree with @Bianca and the others who felt the lack of representation from the past decade. I was very excited to see Brother, Sister make the top 10. Good to see Zao, Bride and Dogwood although they all would’ve been higher on my list.

    AILD’s Frail Words Collapse, Norma Jean’s Bless the Martyr, BTA’s Terminate Damnation, and Mortal Treason’s A Call to Martyrs… I feel all should have been represented here. And Barren Cross’s Atomic Arena was a shocking miss.

    As far as albums to remove for these to take their place, easy. Seabird, Pax217, Andy Hunter, Owl City, Supertones. I actually enjoy all these albums but Seabird and Pax217 aren’t nearly strong enough albums and the latter three aren’t rock, sorry.

    @MattStaniz – I was thinking the same thing. Really… you thought Ruscha and David and the Goliaths would make this list? come on.

  78. Kevin had this to say on July 29, 2010 | Permalink

    Not bad. Though I think P.O.D.’s album “The Fundamental Elements of Southtown” was a better album then “Satellites”. Can’t thank those guys enough for what they did for Christian Rock/Metal! Project 86’s Drawing Black Lines was a great pick(one of the first Christian albums I ever bought), along with Demon Hunter! Here is a list of some bands/albums I thought should be up their…

    Norma Jean – Bless the Martyr, Kiss the Child
    As I Lay Dying – Shadows Are Security
    August Burns Red – Constellations
    Red – End of Silence

  79. Scott had this to say on July 29, 2010 | Permalink

    Agree with lot of the list… its a duanting task so I understand hoe some got left off but there are some big ones missing like Audio Adrenaline, Newsboys, and Relient K.

    As Cities burn, August Burns Red, Five Iron Frenzy are all great but I can see how they didnt make it (even though I think they should).

    Anyways its a pretty good one anyhow, Def Agree with U2. Anyone who Thinks that album is not Christian enough needs to listen to it. It is all about that.

  80. Bryan had this to say on July 29, 2010 | Permalink

    No Fireflight?!?!?!?!?!

  81. Pete had this to say on July 31, 2010 | Permalink

    Surprising what is considered Christian nowadays.

  82. ALEJANDRO had this to say on August 1, 2010 | Permalink

    …U2???????? CRISTIANOS??? JAJJAJA!!!

  83. Ron had this to say on August 1, 2010 | Permalink

    Where is Pillar and Disciple??????????? Pillar’s Fireproof was huge. Disciple’s Back Again was also big.

  84. Ben had this to say on August 2, 2010 | Permalink

    Overall, I love this idea and many of these albums bring back some serious memories!

    With that said, I know you can’t make everyone happy but no Lust Control?

    PS. I agree with some the past commenters..

    A Christian band should have been #1 in the list of Top 100 Christian Rock Bands (I think that if Christian bands can cross over I don’t see why mainstream music can’t cross over into the Christian realm but seriously…)

    Where’s Blindside?

    DC Talk “Jesus Freak” should be much much higher.

    PPS. I love Tourniquet! Good times.

  85. dan had this to say on August 3, 2010 | Permalink

    Jesus Freak 49 and Jars of Clay 54? Really? Two of the most influential Christian albums that may be the reason Christian music is as popular as it is. Automatically discounts everything else on this list for me.

  86. marco had this to say on August 6, 2010 | Permalink

    No Mortification – Scrolls of the Megilloth? That album was very influential! And Believer should have been higher in the list. And what’s a Trance album doing in this chart???

    Where’s Antestor? Where’s Veni Domine (Fall Babylon Fall)? Where’s Callisto? Seventh Angel? You guys forgot the continent of Europe still exists?

  87. Theperson had this to say on August 8, 2010 | Permalink

    Where is Barren Cross? What about Messiah Prophet? What about Tempest Eye Of The Storm? And yes, Rage Of Angels did stand the test of time. Holy Soldier deserved to be higher ranked. U2 shouldn’t count.

  88. Mark had this to say on August 9, 2010 | Permalink

    Too many pseudo-Christian bands on this list. I love U2, POD, and King’s X, but it is a bit of a stretch to include them. My favorite band is Kansas, but they don’t belong on this list either. I know the lines have blurred over the years, but they were pretty well defined for these bands.

    I’ll start with my Kansas/Livgren bias. I feel Audio Visions is a much better post Christianity Kansas album than Vinyl Confessions and Art of the State is the best of the AD albums. Vinyl Confessions is Kansas in transition, and it falls a little flat. Not the best songwriting output from Livgren (most evident in the fact they had to outsource for songwriters to get the single Play the Game Tonight). Time Line was initially the follow-up to Livgren’s solo effort, Seeds of Change and only became AD later in the recording process. It’s a great album, but lacks the cohesiveness and prog rock elements on Art of the State.

    Now for a few of the classics. The exclusion of any Rez album is ridiculous. I am a huge Rez fan and I agree that not all of their albums sparkled from start to finish, but Awaiting Your Reply and Rainbow’s End do exactly that. It’s nice to see a Petra album on the list, but Back to the Streets isn’t even the best album with John Schlitt. That distinction belongs to Beyond Belief. There are some better songs on the Volz era albums, but many of those albums were pretty uneven. I finish up with Phil Keaggy. The Master and the Musician may be the finest guitar album ever, but I can see why it would not be included on this list. It’s not really a “rock album”. What is missing is the Phil Keaggy and Sunday’s Child album.

    Rant complete.

  89. Jeff Jamison had this to say on August 12, 2010 | Permalink

    This list was a great trip down memory lane. The majority of these albums (or cassettes, in my case) were the soundtrack to my 20’s. My wardrobe consisted of band t-shirts, and thanks to Adam Again, Altar Boys, the Choir, One Bad Pig, and Kings X, I had music that both offended the boring around me and challenged me to find my own way spiritually and otherwise. I’m finding it hard to replace my cassettes with either downloads or CD’s as some of my favorites becoming non-existant. And as Doug said, I find many Bands not represented becuase as a whole, some albums had a few great (or just one) songs on them, but not an awesome whole album. I went through 3 tapes of Gut Level Music and 3 of Ten Songs, because I wore the entire tapes out listening to them over and over. Thankfully, I have them on CD now.

  90. Josh had this to say on August 13, 2010 | Permalink

    You have to remember this is the “Top Christian Albums according to Doug” it is a biased list based on his personal tastes. Not that there is anything wrong with having your own perspective or thoughts, but to label it as a “top 100 of all time” is just to self assuming.
    Frankly I disagree with about half of his picks and feel that he selected some of the worse albums possible. In fact some of the albums he did select are a shining beacon of mediocrity that has been inherent in Christian rock for a very long time.
    May I suggest that future list be selected along the following lines, Most Influential or Best Selling, rather than a shot gun effect of what albums one person feels sounds the best in his car while driving to get milk and Doritos.
    No offence Doug, and thanks for reminding me why many of these albums when from my collection to used bin at the local music store.

  91. David had this to say on August 17, 2010 | Permalink

    Steve Scott!!!

    And I like my list better…

    David

  92. DavidS had this to say on August 18, 2010 | Permalink

    Do you yanks think that the best music comes from the states?
    I couldn’t find one proper uk christian album in this list

  93. Jacob Freshour had this to say on August 18, 2010 | Permalink

    Joshua Tree @ #1….hahaha……now that’s funny….top 100 christian albums…Joshua Tree…hahaha

  94. Hammster had this to say on August 19, 2010 | Permalink

    Gotta agree that no Resurrection Band/REZ is a glaring omission. No Keaggy/Glass Harp and no Barren Cross seems unfair also.

    I would say Barnabas should be there, as well as the Sheila Walsh early material. I’m also agreeing that Messiah Prophet should be there, as well as maybe Saint.

    Not sure I’d have Flyleaf and Anberlin on there, but no As I Lay Dying.

    The list is good, but does have it’s problems.

  95. Wayne Anderson had this to say on August 28, 2010 | Permalink

    I did not read all the post`s here but I`d have to say that REZ`s “Civil Rites” record was some of the best song writing of any band at any time period. Glen Kaiser`s voice was as prime as any rock & roll vocalist could have hoped to sound like.
    I also think it`s difficult to put a lot of hard core/metal bands along side the more “classic rock” bands. I say that as a hardcore listener and a musician. It takes much more of a musical ear to create a melody/harmony than to scream over the top of a riff…but that`s another discussion. Maybe two or more separate categories could be made, b/c the term “rock” is so general now a days. Thanks for your hard work for putting all this together! I know anyone would have a hard time putting that list together! God Bless!

  96. Shawn Beaty had this to say on September 5, 2010 | Permalink

    Great list…. I liked “Through Thick and Thin” by Dogwood…. And the Crucified’s Self titled album changed my life…

  97. Shawn Beaty had this to say on September 5, 2010 | Permalink

    I forgot to add N.I.V.? Flesh and Blood should have been in the top 20 at least…

    Tough to do a top 100 that spans 30-40 years…. Well done

  98. David Smith had this to say on September 8, 2010 | Permalink

    I read and understand the five factors, albums as opposed to artists, and the loose definition of “Christian rock” used for this list, and I’m not going to complain about that (except maybe Evanescence, them I’m not so sure about), nor about the placement of albums, I’m not gonna jump into rantings about my PERSONAL opinions or top tens or yada yada…yet I DO still find some things just utterly rediculous: Owl City (it’s not a matter of impact, greatness, etc, there’s just no universe whatsoever in which you can POSSIBLY classify him as “rock.” period. instant disqualification from consideration.), Dance or Die over Business…, including Comatose but not RED (either album, it’s hard to determine which is a better fit) including Demon Hunter but no AILD or Prada (and I’m a bigger DH fan than either of those two personally, but I just don’t see how Summer of Darkness had a biggger impact than Frail Words or Plagues), half of these I’ve never heard of and I realize thats cause I’m a younger guy who didn’t grow up on Christian rock so much and I need to check these out, but frankly, Christian music is reverse from mainstream in that where mainstream has gone downhill most Christian music has PROGRESSED and the more “classic” status albums i believe HAVE been in the last 10-20 years, and thats just the way it is regardless of human tendency to wanna say OLD=CLASSIC. Most the older stuff from what I know is carbon copies of their secular peers with mostly cheesy (or at least unoriginal at best) lyrics, only given props for BEING both Christian and a heavier style priorly considered secular, because it hadn’t been done before. Staples like Anatomy of the Tongue in Cheek and Phenomenon definately deserve to be on here over some of the old stuff next to no one’s heard of and one-hit wonders like PAX217 (even if they were underated)

  99. Hugo had this to say on September 11, 2010 | Permalink

    I would only like to say that making a list like this should be a serious thing and not a joke……… Im still laughing at this list. Some of the commentaries really help here!!!

  100. SHARA had this to say on September 11, 2010 | Permalink

    I THINK THAT’S WHY IT’S SO HARD TO CREATE THESE TYPES OF LISTS; EVERYTHING DEPENDS ON THE PERSONAL OPINIONS OF THE LIST MAKER. I PERSONALLY DID NOT LIKE THE LIST. WAY TOO MUCH 80′S AND U2 BEING NUMBER 1 MADE ME FEEL NAUSEOUS. PERHAPS IT’S JUST MY OWN DISDAIN FOR BONO, BUT I AGREE WITH SOUTH PARK WHEN THEY SAY THAT HE IS THE RECORD… OBVIOUSLY MY TASTES ARE DIFFERENT. I WOULD’VE HAD FIF (BUT I DO REALIZE THAT THEY ARE MORE OF AN ACQUIRED TASTE) NO TFK IS JUST PLAIN WRONG AND WERE THEY JUST TRYING TO BE CUTE WHEN THEY PUT PROJECT 86 AT #86? DISAPPOINTING, BUT, AS I’VE SAID, IT’S ALL ABOUT PERSONAL OPINION.

  101. shay had this to say on September 20, 2010 | Permalink

    DISAGREE TOTALLY!!!!
    This list is full of JUNK mostg of this list contains artist who are so far from the creditbility of being called such(CHRISTIANS). shame on the person that put this list up…… Now- Switchfoot,Sixpence None The Richer, Whitecross, Deliverance, Bride, Bloodgood,Pedra, Ive heard a little,Creed used to be a fav until I hear the cursing on the ablum (shame) Christians should curse Creed! Love D.C. Talk still, Third Day awesome, Skillets cool….. The way I see it if your singing and writing songs about Christ….LIVE IT OUT LOUD…..The album may bring you glory with money…… But living what you sing….. Brings him glory……U GUYz NEED A NEW LIST!!!! Amen

  102. Ian had this to say on September 20, 2010 | Permalink

    ummm, yea so, I think that i would trust the guys opinion who has been neck deep in this scene for 25 years over alot of the people that have commented. I mean yea its Doug’s opinion, but he is kinda a expert.

    I dont like some of the albums he choose, only because I dont like either the particular band/genre. But Im 27, and I havent really been listening to faith-based music intensly for very long.

    For the record, U2 and POD are outspoken about their faith despite their unwillingness to deal in the racket that is the “Christian music scene”. U2 continues to be one of the most influencial bands in the past few decades, and so of course their album made it to the top.

    You go Doug, we can argue about rankings later buddy!

  103. Steve had this to say on September 26, 2010 | Permalink

    What a subjective joke…

  104. Jeff Watkins had this to say on September 26, 2010 | Permalink

    This is a late thought, obviously, but I don’t think “Joshua Tree” qualifies as a ‘Christian’ album. The artists, whether or not believers, did not set out to make a ‘Christian’ album. I would argue that Bob Dylan’s “Slow Train Coming” is more of a ‘Christian’ album, which is what Dylan intended to do. Therefore, “Slow Train Coming” should replace “Joshua Tree,” albeit not at #1.

  105. Mortfan had this to say on September 27, 2010 | Permalink

    Seriously Doug I am sure there was a great deal of work done on this list and for that I say good job. I do disagree with many of those included but not such as to bash the choices. Mostly I just have to say MORTIFICATION!! Christian Metal defined.

  106. Charlie had this to say on September 29, 2010 | Permalink

    Nice list, but I’ve never heard of half the stuff on here. Maybe it’s time I started listening to older music. Anyway, could you guys do another list of, say, the top 100 Christian rock albums since 1994? I think most of HM’s readers know of the Christian rock music that came out since then. That’s when Tooth & Nail started and a year later Jesus Freak and Jars of Clay’s self-titled were released. Those have gotta be two of the best-selling Christian albums of all time.

  107. Charlie had this to say on September 29, 2010 | Permalink

    Also, I would’ve liked to have seen RED’s first album, “End of Silence” in there. It was a real treat seeing PAX 217 though. That’s the album that really got me excited about Christian rock music at a time when I was being influenced by 311 and Incubus.

  108. Chris Cummings had this to say on November 3, 2010 | Permalink

    Some I would have definitely included:
    Poor Old Lu – Sin
    Plankeye – The Spark
    Dryve – Thrifty Mr. Kickstar
    Model Engine – The Lein Years Tradition
    Mortal – Lusis (Kudos for including Fathom)
    Lost Dogs – Gift Horse

    but still a good list overall!

  109. Schuyler Brown had this to say on November 10, 2010 | Permalink

    No Relient K?!? Aslo, where are bands like August Burns Red, or The Devil Wears Prada? It seems like the newer bands were overlooked…:/ Either way, great job on the list, keep on rockin’!

  110. Joel had this to say on November 11, 2010 | Permalink

    Steve Taylor…number 90!?!?? Ridiculous! He should have 3 albums on here easily. And Meltdown didn’t even make the list. Stupid! BNo DC TAlk, at all?! C’mom!

  111. john parks had this to say on November 27, 2010 | Permalink

    I agree with others that Barren Cross, petra, White Heart,as well as other albums from Stryper should have been included over Creed, or should we say Greed

  112. Devin had this to say on December 5, 2010 | Permalink

    How is it that MuteMath is so high up there but Earthsuit aren’t #1?

    Seriously, there isn’t a single album on that list that sounds as good nor is as eclectic as Kaleidoscope Superior.

    Horrible list!

  113. whatthe? had this to say on December 27, 2010 | Permalink

    U2 is not a Christian band

  114. Excronimuss had this to say on January 27, 2011 | Permalink

    Surely Shaded Pail is supposed to be Shaded Pain…

  115. Chuck had this to say on January 27, 2011 | Permalink

    “All time?” Just admit you started at the 80s and cherry-picked a few from before then.

    That said, where’s Plankeye?

    Also Crucified’s self-titled work.

  116. Gabriel had this to say on February 4, 2011 | Permalink

    There’s some really good ones on their like Skillet, P.O.D and Family Force 5! :)

  117. michael pritzl had this to say on February 9, 2011 | Permalink

    at least you could tag the violet burning with the actual band name. VIOLET not VIOLENT

  118. Doug Van Pelt had this to say on February 10, 2011 | Permalink

    What’s cool about this list is a lot of the albums people bring up were definitely in the running. It was hard not to include Plankeye. It was hard to enforce the “duplication entry” rule. Initially, it was going to be albums without any regard if the same artist had shown up time and again. If they had released 100 albums that qualified by and of themselves to be the top 100 albums list, then so be it. But when it got to crunch time, I knew that limiting bands to one album each would open the door for so many great albums that were thus far being left out. It’s funny how we all think we’re right, too. While claiming to be a “definitive” list, no list can achieve that. But, by and large, this list was pure and the 5 factors that kept an album on this list were weighed heavily.
    I can’t believe some of the typo’s. The deal with this project, which I assigned to someone who helped, was that all the tags had to be entered by hand and the albums had to either be cut and pasted from the print version or simply typed in by hand. I’m bummed that at least three typo’s made it this far into the online version, but now they’re fixed.

  119. Phillip had this to say on March 1, 2011 | Permalink

    Wow, I appreciate the effort and the time that must have been spent, but this list is just not accurate to anyone who grew up listening to Christian Rock from the seventies to the end of the century and beyond. It just goes to show how out of touch the industry is now to what was popular then and, most importantly, great music at the time it aired. I guess that’s why it’s never on the radio anymore and the industry pretends that the music doesn’t exist. Here is a real list of top artists that had any real staying power: Petra, Stryper, Mylon Lefevre & Broken Heart, Whiteheart, Whitecross, Stonehill, Norman, Shout, 2nd Chapter of Acts, Deliverance, Bride, 77s(and that’s pushing it), Degarmo and Key, Audio Adrenaline, Third Day, Newsboys, DC Talk, Mastedon, Guardian, Bloodgood. You could make a top 100 out of just these artists and have plenty of works to choose from. There are others as well, but I am not paid to sit around and think of them. Half the bands on this list were never played on any Christian radio station that I’ve ever listened to, and if they were, it was brief. I mean, Mylon & Broken Heart won a Grammy and they didn’t make the list? I think people are trying to rewrite history books or something …

  120. richy had this to say on March 1, 2011 | Permalink

    worst list ever.
    wheres audioadrnaline??
    and what is doing owl city there?? and paramore?
    even though i like family force 5, they dont deserve to be in the list

  121. Zach Lorton had this to say on March 25, 2011 | Permalink

    Steve Taylor’s “Predict” NOT in the top 20? Petra’s “Back to the Street” is acutally IN this list? OWL CITY?? PARAMORE??!?

    I think I’m gonna have a stroke.

  122. Nathan Bailey had this to say on April 4, 2011 | Permalink

    What!?!?!?!
    This list is absurd. Even though I love Sufjan Stevens more than any band on this list, he has no place here. He categorically does not make Christian rock music. He doesn’t even make rock music, and he certainly doesn’t make “Christian” music according to the definition most often applied.
    Here’s what Stevens says, “I suppose my process of making art is driven less by abstractions of faith or politics and more by practical theory: composition and balance and color. On an aesthetic level, faith and art are a dangerous match. Today, they can quickly lead to devotional artifice or didactic crap. This would summarize the Christian publishing world or the Christian music industry. If you are an artist of faith (a Methodist or a Jew), then you have the responsibility to manage the principles of your faith wisely lest they be reduced to stereotype, which is patronizing to the church and to the world, and, perhaps, to God. It’s not so much that faith influences us as it lives in us. In every circumstance (giving a speech or tying my shoes), I am living and moving and being. This absolves me from ever making the embarrassing effort to gratify God (and the church) by imposing religious content on anything I do.”

  123. Alec had this to say on April 9, 2011 | Permalink

    This is a good list but its missing “daniel band”. I have found it very hard in the past few years because i grew up christian (still am) but i have also always had a fondness for classic rock. Any classic music really but daniel band was the band that got me into the christian music. I wont lie it has always been pretty hard to listen to alot of christian music, shine fm only plays the really soft almost sappier than country stuff. I like my guitars and voices with passion, just listen to daniel bands “never gonna die” and you will know exactly what I mean. Plus they are canadian!

  124. Emerson had this to say on April 10, 2011 | Permalink

    Where is ‘world service’ and ‘king of fools’ from deririous?

  125. Joe Vecchio had this to say on April 17, 2011 | Permalink

    Very interesting list that is compiled here, thanks for the article!

  126. Jimmy Reynolds had this to say on April 20, 2011 | Permalink

    Well done. I love reading lists like this.

  127. Jimmy Reynolds had this to say on April 20, 2011 | Permalink

    I made my own list of top CR albums a few years ago, and I’d have to agree on many of the selections:

    http://www.pneumatictire.us/id69.html

  128. David Goodman had this to say on April 20, 2011 | Permalink

    Loved the list, some surprises but over all very good to see where my collection rates I own aprox 50% of the 100.
    Basically the only thing i disagreed on was Petra’s “Back to the streets” rank I felt their greatest was “On Fire” Btts sounds like written for Greg X Volz Dont leave out songs like All Fired up Minefeild counsel of the holy stand in the gap& Hit you where you live???? Come on now. Switch those two albums and the list is perfect!

  129. Laura had this to say on April 27, 2011 | Permalink

    @DavidS I don’t know of many UK Christian bands, enlighten us!

    1. Blindside should have been included

    2. Cities by Anberlin is my favorite CD of all time so I am glad it was included, but it should have been higher on the list

    3. Jesus Freak and Comatose should have been higher as well

    4. Dance or Die for FF5? I agree with @Jason Laughinghouse and a couple others who said Business Up Front should have made the list instead. It was way more influential, innovative and just better

    5. Why are so many people saying Relient K should make the list? I would hardly call that rock. It’s geared at teens who love catchy pop songs. Same for bands like Third Day and Michael W. Smith. Not rock!!! Maybe they could be on a top CCM list (and I’m sure they are) but they are rightfully kept off this list.

    6. I understand why Underoath’s They’re Only Chasing Safety is on here. It was definitely UO’s break-through CD that catapulted them to fame, but if we are looking at strictly musical components, that would certainly be Lost In The Sound of Separation. AP Magazine called it the only perfect CD of 2008 and I think they are absolutely right

    7. I’m glad Showbread was included. They are underrated and deserve to be recognized!

    Yes, this list is personal, but out of all the people to compile a personal list like this, Doug Van Pelt is the one qualified to do it. Good job!

  130. Reijo had this to say on May 14, 2011 | Permalink

    Come on, this is a terrible list! U2’s “Joshua Tree” is a great album but number one? And P.O.D.? It shouldn’t be even in TOP100! Stryper’s “To Hell With the Devil” is the first one which should be there. I didn’t notice classic albums like Petra’s “Beyond Belief”, Daniel Amos’ “Horrendeous Disc”, and Resurrection Band’s “Awaiting Your Reply” there. Still, Larry Norman should have more too… at least “Upon This Rock” and “In Another Land”. Come on, Petra’s “Back to the Street”? That was the worst album Petra made in 80’s! Who has made this list? I should pray for him/her! There are lots of great albums that are not there.

  131. Paul Westacott had this to say on May 19, 2011 | Permalink

    That list is a joke.
    No Resurrection Band are you kidding me?
    Also, the Daniel Band has had some great albums, at least one should make the list, and Randy Stonehill isn’t on this either?
    Only one Petra album and its like the 6th or 7th best one.
    Number one really should be Stryper or Larry Norman.
    What makes things worse is that a bunch of those bands aren’t even “christian”.
    List is poorly done.

  132. bg had this to say on June 9, 2011 | Permalink

    I really enjoyed reading this… but man oh man – this list is just way off. So many over or underrated albums… And so many curiously missing altogether. For example: The Choir – Circle Slide; Whiteheart – Freedom; V.O.L. – Welcome to Struggleville; something by Keith Green.

  133. Hugo Soto Román had this to say on July 2, 2011 | Permalink

    No REZ?? Are you kidding me?

  134. Jay Black had this to say on July 11, 2011 | Permalink

    Forgot how many great albums there were out there that have never been transferred to digital or iTunes. Listened to many of these back in the 80’s. My only question is, where is Resurrection Band? Or even Servant and Daniel Band (being a fellow Canadian and all?) Rez pioneered the genre as did Servant.

  135. Toni Kaelin had this to say on July 13, 2011 | Permalink

    Where is Mortification??? many great albums are missing, and many included were heard once or twice and disappeared long ago in the basement …

  136. charlie had this to say on July 13, 2011 | Permalink

    Thanx for the list-very surprised Slow Train Coming not on here, would put it near the top of the list. IMO Audio A should definitely be on here, agree with other posters that DC Talk and Jars s/b higher up on the list and would also trade Fundamental Elements for Satellite…and no Newsboys? Nevertheless a lot of good food for thought.

  137. Quest M. had this to say on August 3, 2011 | Permalink

    dc Talk’s Jesus Freak should be in the top 5, no questions asked. U2 wasn’t even a “Christian” album, neither were many of the bands on this list. Pillar should be on the list somewhere, at least the Fireproof album.

  138. Brandon had this to say on August 14, 2011 | Permalink

    Honestly, many of these bands I’m just learning about, but I know a good many.

    I think “Jesus Freak” is the most influential Christian album of all time and should be #1.

    Newsboys “Take Me to Your Leader” should be included.

    Five Iron Frenzy is my favorite band of all time, and if the Supertones can make it, then “Our Newest Album Ever” should too.(”Every New Day”, “Handbook for the Sellout”, ect., amazing songs)

    Everyone should check out the album “Triumph in the Eschaton” by Afterimage. Best Christian album I’ve heard in a very long while.

  139. Andy L. had this to say on August 25, 2011 | Permalink

    Well, well, well!

    This brings up why I dislike reviews..MANY of the reasons why is b/c it is the writer’s point of VIEW, their opinion, and their thought on it .. I don’t think music or movies in general should be reviewed. I believe it’s all based on the the viewer’s opinion and their’s only.

    Here are some of the things I agree with in the lists.

    Stryper – To Hell With The Devil

    Sixpence None The Richer –

    Zao – Where Blood and Fire Bring Rest

    Demon Hunter – Summer of Darkness

    dc Talk – Jesus Freak

    Jars of Clay – Jars of Clay

    Evanescence – Fallen

    Skillet – Comatose

    I am a HUGE Living Scarifice fan, I have to tell you, it should of been “Reborn.” That record is so influnetial. You could of threw in Norma Jean’s “Bless the martyr and kiss the child” as well. God bless! :)

  140. sadf had this to say on October 31, 2011 | Permalink

    I’m fairly convinced Relient K’s “MMHMM” should have made the list. :P

  141. migs had this to say on December 3, 2011 | Permalink

    this list is so lame. i’m glad i’ve never subscribed to this magazine. prayer chain’s “mercury” isn’t even on this list and this is one of the best albums ever recorded of any genre. u2 at no 1? my god! that album isn’t technically christian. there’s christian themes, yes, but this isn’t a christian album at all! pod at no 2? what a joke! at least you put starflyer 59 in there somewhere. pedro the lion?? the dude cusses in that album! he even blasphemes! HE’S NOT A CHRISTIAN. he’s denying the faith in that album!!!! what the hell are you guys smoking?

6 Trackbacks

  1. [...] local digital news stations, News 8, just did a segment on HM Magazine and the Top 100 Christian Rock Albums of All Time list. Good times. I love how they put their news segments online once it airs. You can view it [...]

  2. [...] HM Magazine ‘s Top 100 Christian Rock Albums of all time Posted: July 16, 2010 by drivebymedia in music Tags: hm magazine, top 100 albums 0 HM Magazine have released there list of Top 100 Christian Rock Albums of all time see the complete list via  HM. [...]

  3. [...] definitely raise some eyebrows. Fittingly, the big deal of the issue is the long-awaited “Top 100 Christian Rock Albums” list. HM remains one of the best faith-oriented hard music rags out there, covering bands [...]

  4. [...] the Kangaroo (CTK) was also recently listed by Hard Music magazine at number 4 in the list of the Top 100 Christian albums of all time.  CTK features prominently in discussions of this sort because it certainly broke the [...]

  5. [...] Source http://www.hmmagazine.com/2010/07/top-100-christian-rock-albums-of-all-time/ [...]

  6. [...] case you didn’t notice, Matthew’s solo album, Armed And Dangerous, made it on our Top 100 Christian Rock Albums of All Time [...]

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