|
''Mad at the World'' is the first album from Christian rock band Mad at the World. It was significant for being one of the few Christian music albums to feature a synthpop sound. ==History== In 1987 the band, consisting of Roger Rose, his brother Randy (who was only fifteen years old at the time) and their friend Mike Pendleton, released ''Mad at the World.'' The disc was unique in christian music for featuring a synthpop style of dance music heavily influenced by bands like Tears for Fears and especially Depeche Mode.〔 This was at a time when the Christian music scene was dominated by Amy Grant and Stryper was breaking out.〔 Roger's personal taste ran towards the sounds of Ultravox and Depeche Mode, a sound that no Christian band was playing at that time, prompting him to create the band and write the music. He attempted to "avoid church talk and cliche, (resulting) in some fresh, invigorating images."〔 Although not the best-selling album by the band,〔[]〕 it is fondly remembered by many fans. Although Daniel Amos released ''Vox Humana'' in 1983, it featured a more up-beat sound, more guitar and more acoustic drums, so this disc stands as one of the first truly synthpop albums in Christian music. At 49 minutes and 13 seconds, this is the band's longest album. Although Roger has stated that ''Mad at the World'' was the band's first and last disc not recorded entirely at Roger's home studio,〔 the drum tracks for ''Through the Forest'' were recorded at Randy's studio, Rose Studios. This album was reissued in 1999 by KMG Records on a "two-for-one" disc with ''Seasons of Love''. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Mad at the World (album)」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
|