Career
Not all of his music was squarely religious. "Don"t Go In the Street" and "Apple Pie" from The Time Has Not Come True featured sometimes humorous, prescient left-leaning social commentary) His music collection is now available in Civil Defense form. They include: "The Best of Ray Repp Volume(s).1 & 2 and Yesterday, Today & Tomorrow", all songs written from 1965–1985.
Christian punk outfit Undercover and Christian rocker Philosophy Keaggy have seen fit to cover Repp"s work on their own discs.
Repp got some mainstream notoriety in 1997 when he sued composer Andrew Lloyd Webber, asserting that Lloyd Webber had plagiarized portions of his "Phantom Song" from his own composition "Till You". Repp ultimately lost the case.