Latest Release
- 22 MAR 2024
- 13 Songs
- Queensrÿche: Greatest Hits · 2000
- Operation: Mindcrime (Deluxe Edition) · 1988
- Empire (20th Anniversary Edition) · 1990
- Operation: Mindcrime (Deluxe Edition) · 1988
- Operation: Mindcrime (Bonus Track Version) · 1988
- Empire (20th Anniversary Edition) · 1990
- Operation: Mindcrime (Deluxe Edition) · 1988
- Queensrÿche (Expanded Edition) - EP · 1983
- Operation: Mindcrime (Bonus Track Version) · 1988
- Operation: Mindcrime (Bonus Track Version) · 1988
Essential Albums
- Queensryche hit its career peak when hair metal was also at its commercial apex. Ironic, maybe, considering that 1988’s Operation: Mindcrime is a much less escapist product than those of, say, Poison. A concept album whose storyline takes place in a futuristic dystopia in which music is illegal and “the rich control the government, the media, the law” (“Speak”), the record builds on the ideas of Rush’s 2112 with a marked leftist perspective. Its epic scope is matched by the band’s wide palette, which offers everything from thrash (the cautionary “The Needle Lies”) to the operatic (the 10-minute “Suite Sister Mary”). The album’s expanse found many welcoming listeners, eventually going platinum and setting Queensryche on the path to even bigger success with its followup, Empire. This remastered edition contains two live tracks along with a London concert version of the entire album.
- 2019
- 2023
- 2023
- 2023
- 2023
- 2023
- 2022
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- Feel the precision-tooled power of prog-metal's pioneers.
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About Queensrÿche
Emerging during the ’80s metal boom, Queensrÿche separated themselves from the pack with their progressive licks and conceptual vision—and they’re still at it, more than 30 years later. ∙ Formed in 1981, the band (originally called The Mob) had no lead singer, until they recruited vocalist Geoff Tate and became Queensrÿche, a variant of their song “Queen of the Reich.” ∙ Building momentum with albums The Warning (1984) and Rage for Order (1986), the group broke through with 1988’s Operation: Mindcrime, a Platinum-selling rock opera. ∙ In 1989, Operation: Mindcrime’s “I Don’t Believe in Love” earned a Grammy Award nomination—the first of three that the band would receive in their career. ∙ Queensrÿche reached their commercial peak with 1990’s Empire, which went to No. 7 on the Billboard 200 chart and included the power ballad “Silent Lucidity.” ∙ Seeking to revisit the conceptual world of Operation: Mindcrime, the band released a sequel album in 2006, enlisting metal giant Ronnie James Dio to voice the story’s villain, Dr. X. ∙ After Tate’s departure in 2012—and a brief period when two Queensrÿche lineups were operating simultaneously—the band regrouped with former Crimson Glory frontman Todd La Torre on vocals.
- ORIGIN
- Bellevue, WA, United States
- FORMED
- 2012
- GENRE
- Hard Rock