This included alternative, punk, dance, pop, rock, gospel, metal, rap and hip-hop artists.
[6] Frontline carried pop and rock artists such as Crumbächer, Crystal Lewis, Idle Cure, Jon Gibson,[7] Altar Boys, Shout and Rick Elias.
Alarma Records featured alternative music acts like Mad at the World, Jacob's Trouble, The Swirling Eddies and Poor Old Lu.
Frontline Records became an important label in the development of the West Coast Christian alternative music scene.
[10] HM editor Doug Van Pelt would call "the lion's share" of classic hard Christian music.
Even though some new artists were signed (most notably Angie & Debbie Winans, Gary V and Carol Huston), the label spiraled down until it could no longer keep itself afloat, and by the mid-90s closed its doors.
In 2010, Carolyn Killen (executrix of his Estate) sold the Frontline publishing catalog to Meis Music Group.