D.M.Z. (Resurrection Band album)

D.M.Z. is the fifth full-length album by American Christian rock band Resurrection Band, released in 1982.[1] It was the band's final release for Light Records.

D.M.Z.
Studio album by
Released1982
Recorded1982
StudioTone Zone Studios, Chicago, Illinois
GenreChristian rock
Length34:02
LabelLight
ProducerResurrection Band
Resurrection Band chronology
Mommy Don't Love Daddy Anymore
(1981)
D.M.Z.
(1982)
Live Bootleg
(1984)

Recording history

The album begins with one of Resurrection Band's most popular songs, "Military Man",. D.M.Z. is a split personality, featuring either hard rock akin to Van Halen, or new wave-influenced mid-tempo numbers.[1] However, long-time Resurrection Band fans consider Stu Heiss' opening 90-second feedback-drenched guitar solo to "White Noise" as one of the best moments in the band's history, and this song proved to be just as popular live.

Lyrically, the album focuses on individual stories of emotional disconnection and spiritual confusion, offering the Savior as the answer to both. For the first time, the band directly addresses the concerns of high-school age listeners in "Area 312" and "The Prisoner", a trend that would continue on future releases. Big social issues addressed on the album focus this time around on war and its destructive effects as well as the un-Christian nature of the military itself, repeated several times in "Military Man", "Babylon" and "White Noise"—hence, the inspiration for the album title.

This album was re-released on CD in 2004 by Retroactive Records.

Track listing

All songs written by Glenn Kaiser unless otherwise noted[2]

  1. "Military Man" (G. Kaiser, Jon Trott, Stu Heiss, Jim Denton) – 3:38
  2. "Reluctance" – 2:11
  3. "Babylon" (G. Kaiser, Trott) – 2:33
  4. "I Need Your Love" – 3:22
  5. "Area 312" (Trott, Wendi Kaiser, Heiss, Denton) – 3:54
  6. "No Alibi" – 4:39
  7. "White Noise" - (Trott, Roy Montroy) – 3:41
  8. "Lonely Hearts" – 3:00
  9. "The Prisoner" – 2:54
  10. "So in Love with You" (G. Kaiser, Trott) – 3:38

Personnel

  • Glenn Kaiser – vocals, guitars
  • Wendi Kaiser – vocals
  • Stu Heiss – guitars, keyboards
  • Jim Denton – fretless bass, synthesizer, background vocals
  • John Herrin – drums
  • Steve Eisen – saxophone
  • Resurrection Band – producer
  • Roger Heiss – engineer
  • Steve Hall – mastering
  • MCA Whitney – mastering location
  • Dick Randall – album cover concept and art
  • Pat Peterson – photography
  • Denise Omernick – photography
  • Linda Dillon – photography
  • JPUSA Graphics – other art and layout

Per album liner notes:[2]

gollark: To some extent I guess you could ship worse/nonexistent versions of some machinery and assemble it there, but a lot would be interdependent so I don't know how much. And you'd probably need somewhat better computers to run something to manage the resulting somewhat more complex system, which means more difficulty.
gollark: Probably at least 3 hard. Usefully extracting the many ores and such you want from things, and then processing them into usable materials probably involves a ton of different processes you have to ship on the space probe. Then you have to convert them into every different part you might need, meaning yet more machinery. And you have to do this with whatever possibly poor quality resources you find, automatically with no human to fix issues, accurately enough to reach whatever tolerances all the stuff needs, and have it stand up to damage on route.
gollark: 3.00005.
gollark: Without GregTech. I haven't used it recently, which is probably for the best.
gollark: If there wasn't that, I probably would have added a thing to isolate power from the main network and just run the storage bits.

References

  1. Powell, Mark Allan (2002). Encyclopedia of Contemporary Christian Music. Peabody, Massachusetts: Hendrickson Publishers. p. 755. ISBN 1-56563-679-1.
  2. D.M.Z liner notes (Media notes).
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