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Dig Me Out: 70s & 80s Metal

Metal Church's The Dark: The Album That Got Buried By 1986

April 21, 2026·53 min
Episode Description from the Publisher

You Opened for Metallica. You Got MTV Airplay. So Why Does Nobody Know Your Name?The strange disappearance of Metal Church and The DarkThe Dark earned its place on the turntable the way all our episodes do: through community vote. It pulled 47% of combined Patreon and Substack poll votes, beating out Fastway, early Pantera, and Metallica to claim this week's dig. If you have an album you think deserves a closer listen, suggest it here and let the community decide.You toured with Metallica. You got MTV airplay. You peaked at #92 on the Billboard 200. So how does an album just disappear?Metal Church released The Dark in October 1986, opened for Metallica on tour, and landed Watch the Children Pray in MTV rotation. They had every ingredient for a breakthrough. And yet, most people who love 80s metal have never heard a note of this record.This week Jason, Tim, and Chip work through all eight tracks, argue about whether the second half holds up, and make the case for David Wayne as one of the most underrated vocalists in the genre. They also dig into the band's origins in the Bay Area thrash scene, their move to the Pacific Northwest, Terry Date's early engineering work, and the real (and fictional) connections to Metallica.Highlights: what makes Ton of Bricks the perfect opener (23:00), the Queensrÿche-ish shading in Watch the Children Pray (19:44), the Lars Ulrich rumor and how Vanderhoof debunked it (33:14), and the honest case that the second half sags (35:16).🎧 Listen to the episode at DigMeOutPodcast.comEpisode HighlightsIntro: Scene-setting and poll results context, how The Dark beat Fastway, early Pantera, and Metallica for the community vote0:47: Poll Results: The Dark Wins at 47%: breakdown of the combined Patreon and Substack vote and why the margin surprised the hosts6:08: Band Background: Metal Church origins in San Francisco, relocation to Aberdeen Washington, Vanderhoof as the constant creative force, the Elektra Records signing story12:23: What Works: The Thrash-Meets-NWOBHM Sweet Spot: Jason's overview of the album's tonal range and why the combination of aggression and melody holds up~13:30: Method to Your Madness: the tempo shift, the quiet section, and why this track shows the band's range beyond pure speed~15:00: Start the Fire: the chorus guitar hook and how it holds up as a melodic anchor on the record's strongest side~19:44: Watch the Children Pray: the genuine ballad argument, the half-tempo arrangement, and the Queensrÿche-adjacent shading that makes it an outlier~22:00: Burial at Sea: the driving cadence, the Testament comparison, and why this track closes side one with such momentum~22:30: The Dark: the title track's haunting atmosphere and the creepy quality that justifies the album name~23:00: Ton of Bricks: the case for this two-minute-fifty-five-second opener as the most efficient Metal Church statement on the record29:09: Terry Date Connection: how the engineer of this record went on to shape the sound of Soundgarden's Louder Than Love, Badmotorfinger, and Pantera's Cowboys from Hell33:14: The Lars Ulrich Rumor: Vanderhoof's 2016 debunking of the Shrapnel audition story and the real documented Metal Church/Metallica connection through John Marshall35:16: What Doesn't Work: The Second Half Sag: Psycho, Western Alliance, the reverb-heavy drum sound, and the honest case that the album runs out of ideas before it runs out of songs43:38: The Verdict: where all three hosts land on The Dark after working through every track and its context49:08: Outro: Jay's Operation Rock and Roll 1991 cassette sidebar (Metal Church, Alice in Chains, Judas Priest, Motorhead, Fishbone) and the standard community CTASubscribe & ConnectSubscribe to Dig Me Out at digmeoutpodcast.comJoin the community at dmounion.com for polls, picks, and deeper dives.Have a lost or forgotten album that deserves the spotlight? Suggest it here. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.digmeoutpodcast.com/subscribe

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