Their debut CD Modified came out in 1999 on their own Phasechange Recordings label, and was followed by [Digital Flesh] in 2005, containing an interactive, multi-threaded CD-ROM video.
The third Redzone studio album, Abstract Revolution was released on 20 June 2008, and a track was played on BBC Radio 4,[3] on 15 March 2009.
These include Gathering of The Tribes and Venus Smiles, and a series of performances recorded at their 'Atropine' venue in Second Life, collectively known as 'The Atropine Tapes'.
Redzone appeared on BBC Television[4] on 21 June 2013, and were extensively featured in a chapter entitled 'Performing Live in Second Life' in The Oxford Handbook of Music and Virtuality,[5] published in 2016.
The founders of Redzone created The Internet Audio Cyclotron (IAC) in 2015,[6] and used this tool to produce two albums: Noise Ocean in 2015 and Cracked in 2016.