Anyone else frustrated that all Christian music in the past 20ish years seems to sound or feel the same?

I mean, one of my favorite Christian songs, Angel Of Light, is a rock song that's both generally a banger, and is meant to warn about the influence of the massive and complex system the devil has built up to confuse and decieve people, how out of control this has gotten with the advent of the modern era. It's also one of my favorite songs from the 80s in general, and it makes me think...

What went wrong? Why is almost all Christian music so bland and samey these days? I get wanting to stay "pure", but purify some media or idea too much and it loses all identity. And that's the thing, I feel there were a couple songs like this that popularized the "uplifting and joyous" mood, and from there even unbelievers make fun of our music, and IMHO, rightly so. Look at songs from Petra, the band that made Angel Of Light. They took the instrumental and progression styles popular in the era and made a message much deeper than the shallow words of (unfortunately often turning out to be empty) repetitive praise and focus only on the "feel good and positive" in modern Christian music.

Bands like Thousand Foot Crutch and Skillet started to grasp the idea that Preta and other greats of the Christian genre did(as great as their music is in their own right), but it often ends up having it's message lost in the "vibe" of the song and overblown rhythm, I mean look at how popular Monster from Skillet has become. How many of those 470,000,000+ listeners even realize it's supposed to be about struggle with(possibly a serious) sin? That Skillet is even a Christian band? Christian rock has become kind of a meme in its own way for it and other things.

Ironically, the best "pure" Christian music comes from the Hebrew Roots/Messianic Judaism movement. Almost every song I've heard by Messianic Jews is much deeper and more in touch with the messages Christian music SHOULD be telling in worship, though it is of course to be taken with a whole shaker worth of salt as it's message is from a perspective of the Mosaic Law being the way of life even today. Still, they often try to have the songs be far more tradional, reminiscent of old Jewish folk songs. Call me weird, but I find the mix of OT and NT themes often in this genre, having the praise be like OT prophecy and speech but with the revelation of the Messiah having redeemed us rather appealing.

I'm sure others have opinions on this, these are just my honest ones. Feel free to share, if you're so inclined.