The band's music falls into a number of different categories including ambient, goth, noise, chill out, dark, krautrock and experimental.
[1] A mere 18 months after inception, Failure Of The Grand Design was the band's first full album release in October 2007 on the famed art-rock indie label Burning Shed.
The promotional campaign for We Still Have The Stars saw tracks on the cover CDs of Terrorizer (None More Evil) and Classic Rock Presents Prog (The Moment Has Passed), as well as features in local press and a number of smaller music websites.
[8] The album saw a January 2010 release,[5] and again garnered many favourable reviews; in print Terrorizer hailed that "fans of the Drone Zone will dig this ... a release that takes time to catch, but when it does it's impressive" and Rock-a-Rolla magazine described the album as "classic prog meets ambient meets drone meets industrial ... [Clarity In Darkness] definitely has its moments, strangely stuck in some parallel dimension between the 80s and the avant world of today"; whilst in the online world once again DPRP were enthusiastic, this time with a 10/10 review stating "I can think of no room for improvement from this awesome band",[9] and The Music Fix commented "it does shredding, it does doom, it does prog and it does all of them spectacularly well.
[10] In June 2010, the EP Helipause Prelude was released on the mrs.vee recordings label[5] as a precursor to the forthcoming album Heliopause; on the back of this release the band appeared in the September issue of Classic Rock Presents Prog in the "On The Threshold..." feature, and the EP received a very positive review in the same issue "...if the aggressive, doom-laden title track is the biggest indicator of where The Resonance Association are heading with Heliopause, then rest assured there is little chance of an anti-climax."