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Queensryche are acknowledged as
one of the best progressive metal
outfits in the world, being a
source of inspiration to countless
similar bands. They've also been
described as a" techno" (YUK)
metal band on one or two
occasions, although this is
probably meant in a more "
technical" way than anything else!
Their roots go back to Seattle in
the US in the early eighties, when
they evolved out of two bands, The
Mob and The Myth. They struggled
to get a record deal, so much so
that a number of music store
owners actually put up the money
so that they could finance their
first EP. EMI Records, on hearing
the EP, were so impressed with the
band that they offered them a
seven record contract, in addition
to re-releasing the EP, which
contained the excellent track, "
Queen of the Ryche". Their
popularity soared all over the
world, especially in Japan, and
they released some really good
conceptual albums such as "
Operation.. Mindcrime" which, to
this day, have yet to be equalled
by any similar bands. Staunch fans
felt that they'd lost it a bit in
the mid to late nineties, but they
came back with a really good
album, "Y2K'', in 1999.
Queensryche
Queensryche - Before the Storm,
from "Warning", their first
full-length album, released in
1984. We've featured this stunning
Seattle based band on many
occasions on The Dinosaur Days in
the past and they're well
represented in these pages, so we
won't repeat their history again
here. What we will tell you,
however, is that it took them
three years of hard work before
they were signed up by a major
record company. EMI Records
re-released their initial
"self"-financed EP (which was
actually financed by local record
shop employees!) when they
realized the true potential of
this very competent "techno" metal
outfit. This second album followed
and the rest is history
-Queensryche went on to become one
of the best metal bands to come
out of the US, with vocalist Geoff
Tate being acclaimed as one of the
best vocalists around. The other
band members were guitarists Chris
DeGarmo and Michael Wilton,
bassist Eddie Jackson and drummer
Scott Rockenfield, and this
line-up remained together for most
of the band's career, although
Kelly Gray replaced Michael Wilton
for 1999's "Y2K" album.
(If you have more info on this
band, please
e-mail us)

Biography by Stephen Thomas
Erlewine & Greg Prato
Although they were initially
grouped in with the legions of
pop-metal bands that dominated
the American heavy metal scene
of the '80s, Queensrÿche were
one of the most distinctive
bands of the era. Where their
contemporaries built on the
legacy of Van Halen, Aerosmith,
and Kiss, Queensrÿche
constructed a progressive form
of heavy metal that drew equally
from the guitar pyrotechnics of
post-Van Halen metal and '70s
art rock, most notably Pink
Floyd and Queen. After releasing
a handful of ignored albums, the
band began to break into the
mainstream with the acclaimed
1988 album Operation: Mindcrime.
Its follow-up, Empire, was the
group's biggest success, selling
over two million copies due to
the hit single "Silent
Lucidity." Queensrÿche never
sustained that widespread
popularity — like most late-'80s
metal bands, their audience
disappeared after the emergence
of grunge. Nevertheless, they
retained a large cult following
well into the ensuing decades.
Guitarists Chris DeGarmo and
Michael Wilton formed
Queensrÿche in 1981 in the
Seattle, WA, suburb of Bellevue.
Both guitarists had been playing
in heavy metal cover bands and
had decided to form a group that
would play original material.
The duo recruited high-school
friends Geoff Tate (vocals) and
bassist Eddie Jackson (bass), as
well as drummer Scott
Rockenfield. Instead of hitting
the club circuit, the group
rehearsed for two years,
eventually recording and
releasing a four-song demo tape.
The cassette came to the
attention of local record store
owners Kim and Diana Harris, who
offered to manage Queensrÿche.
With the help of the Harrises,
the tape circulated throughout
the Northwest. In May of 1983,
Queensrÿche released the EP
Queen of the Reich on their own
record label, 206 Records. Queen
of the Reich sold 20,000 copies
and, in the process, earned the
band major-label attention. By
the end of the year, the band
signed to EMI, which released an
expanded version of the EP as
the Queensrÿche LP later in the
year; the record peaked at
number 81.
At this stage, Queensrÿche
sounded closer to British metal
bands like Iron Maiden and Judas
Priest. Over the next few years,
the group continued to refine
its sound, opening for hard rock
acts as diverse as Bon Jovi and
Metallica. Their next two albums
— 1984's The Warning and 1986's
Rage for Order — sold
respectably, with the latter
reaching number 47 on the U.S.
charts. Rage for Order also
demonstrated a flowering of
progressive rock influences, an
idea that would reach its
fruition with 1988's Operation:
Mindcrime. Boasting orchestral
arrangements from Michael Kamen,
the album was Queensrÿche's most
ambitious and focused effort to
date, earning both positive
reviews and strong sales.
Operation: Mindcrime stayed on
the American charts for a year,
selling over a million copies
during its run.
Queensrÿche returned in the fall
of 1990 with the equally
ambitious Empire. The album
proved to be their commercial
high watermark, peaking at
number seven on the U.S. charts
and going double platinum in
America; in the U.K., the album
also cracked the Top Ten.
Empire's success was instigated
by the stately art rock ballad
"Silent Lucidity," which
received heavy airplay from MTV
and album rock radio. All the
exposure eventually sent "Silent
Lucidity" to number five on the
U.S. singles charts. Following
the long Empire tour — which
included a spot on the 1991
Monsters of Rock tour —
Queensrÿche released the live
Operation: LIVEcrime in the fall
of 1991. Recorded on the
Operation: Mindcrime tour, the
album replicated the group's
live performance of the rock
opera that comprised their 1988
artistic breakthrough; the
package also included a video
and a thick book.
In the three years following the
release of Operation: LIVEcrime,
the band rested and leisurely
worked on the follow-up to
Empire. Occasionally, they
contributed a song to a
soundtrack, such as "Real World"
for Arnold Schwarzenegger's 1993
movie Last Action Hero.
Queensrÿche finally delivered
their sixth studio album,
Promised Land, in 1994. Though
the heavy metal audience had
changed drastically since
Empire, with many fair-weather
metal fans switching their
allegiance to grunge and
alternative rock, the group
retained a strong following, as
evidenced by Promised Land
debuting at number three on the
U.S. charts. Promised Land would
eventually go platinum and spawn
two album rock hits, "I Am I"
and "Bridge."
With 1997's Hear in the New
Frontier, Queensrÿche stripped
back their sound to the bare
bones, leaving behind the prog
rock influences that made them
distinctive. Although the album
debuted at 19, it received mixed
reviews and quickly fell down
the charts, leading shortly
thereafter to founding guitarist
Chris DeGarmo's exit from the
band. (DeGarmo would soon
resurface as part of former
Alice in Chains' guitarist Jerry
Cantrell's touring band.) Q2k
followed in 1999, as new
guitarist Kelly Gray took
DeGarmo's place. Queensrÿche's
first best-of set, Greatest
Hits, was released in 2000; the
band supported the CD with an
opening slot on one of the
year's hottest metal concert
tickets — Iron Maiden's Brave
New World reunion tour, which
also included former Judas
Priest frontman Rob Halford.
In 2001, the band issued the
double CD and DVD Live
Evolution. Meanwhile, former
member DeGarmo was also gearing
up to form a new band, said to
include former Alice in Chains
drummer Sean Kinney and bassist
Mike Inez; although he appeared
on Jerry Cantrell's Degradation
Trip in 2002, no solo material
was forthcoming. Queensrÿche
finally returned to the studio
and released Tribe in 2003 on
Sanctuary. In 2006, Queensrÿche
released Operation: Mindcrime
II, the long-awaited sequel to
their 1988 conceptual smash.

Scott
Rockenfield
Chris DeGarmo
Eddie Jackson
Geoff Tate
Michael Wilton

Kyuss
Dream Theater
Big Wreck
Fates Warning
Red Rider
Labyrinth
Crimson Glory
Clay People
Morgana Lefay
It Bites
Metallica
Megadeth
Blue Öyster Cult
King's X
Masters of Reality

If you
have any contribution to make to
this band or something to add,
email me - Japie Marais.


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