QueensrĂżche
âQueensrĂżcheâ
Century Media
Tracks: 11
Total Running Time:
35:09
Release Date:
June 25, 2013 (USA/Canada);
June 24, 2013 (Europe)
Our Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
âI donât know. We donât really have a plan right now. Honestly, this has been a really long tour and everybodyâs just kind of burnt out⊠Itâs probably just time to get home and chill and recharge the batteries. And then weâll start talking in a couple of months about âOh, do you wanna do something?â and weâll see what happens.â
~ Geoff Tateâs response to me on November 12, 2011Â after being asked what the near future might hold for QueensrĂżche (click here for full interview)
Of course, what did happen soon after my interview with the now-ousted lead singer has now become the stuff of tabloid fodder and rock and roll infamy. The sordid details â including Tate allegedly spitting on, punching, and perhaps even wielding a knife on his former band mates – will be hashed out in a courtroom sometime later this year when Tate and company battle to see who legally has the right to carry on using the bandâs moniker. Until then, there are actually two QueensrĂżches: in the red corner, thereâs the one comprised of Geoff Tate and a seemingly ever-changing backing band comprised of hired heavy metal heavies and, in the blue corner, thereâs the one that includes the rest of the RĂżcheâs instrumentalists with new front man, Todd La Torre, formerly of Crimson Glory.
Tateâs camp has already released a hastily-produced albumâs worth of new material, âFrequency Unknownâ â or âF.U.â, for short (subtle, eh?) – that has been lambasted by fans and critics alike for doing nothing but tarnishing the already-damaged QueensrĂżche name even further.
The Todd La Torre-led bandâs album sets a markedly different tone from the onset. Rather than responding to Tateâs pugnaciously-titled âFrequency Unknownâ by calling it âSee Tateâs Fallacy Unfoldâ or some such, theyâve simply emblazoned the LPâs jacket with the bandâs iconic âTri-Rycheâ logo and entitled it âQueensrĂżche.â Itâs a perfect choice because this eponymous release finds the group musically reconnecting with its roots, rebuilding its self-identity, and â ultimately – reclaiming a legacy.
âQueensrĂżcheâ is an amazing return to form that (gasp!) actually sounds like a QueensrĂżche album â and producer James âJimboâ Barton, the man behind the mixing desk of the bandâs biggest and best albums, âOperation: Mindcrimeâ, âEmpireâ, and âPromised Landâ, undoubtedly has a lot to do with that. He knows how to blend all of the amazing musicianship at his disposal into an aural atmosphere that is unique and immediately identifiable as QueensrĂżche.
The album opens with the foreboding instrumental âX2â, one that harkens back to the sonic collage that led off 1994âs âPromised Landâ LP. From there, the band launches into a percussive and dual-guitar driven array of songs that firmly plant themselves in the sonic splendor of QR classics like âScreaming in Digitalâ and âBest I Can.â Thereâs no question that La Torreâs dynamic pipes are a major component behind why the songs work as well as they do. Vocally, his delivery is often similar to Tateâs, ranging from low baritone whispers to blistering highs, but heâs much more than just a sound-alike. Heâs often more aggressive than Tate and that seems to have brought the best out of all of the other Tri-Rychers backing him â especially drummer Scott Rockenfield. He hasnât sounded this pumped since the days of the glorious âEmpire.â Indeed, itâs been a long time since weâve heard the âRĂżche fire all thrusters and blast out satisfying crunchers like these.
My only minor complaint is that, after 35 minutes, the disc spins to a halt. Luckily, the album is so good that itâs worth listening to again â something that hasnât been true of a QueensrĂżche release for the better part of a decade. Does the new album have the power or majesty of their 1988 masterpiece âOperation: Mindcrimeâ? No – but thatâs a lot to ask of a band thatâs just undergone a major line-up change and is still in the midst of the biggest rock and roll drama since the Roger Waters / David Gilmour âwhich oneâs Pink?â debacle. But itâs damn good and – perhaps more significantly – itâs now once again possible to imagine QueensrĂżche making a record as good if not better than that seminal album because, like âMindcrimeâsâ protagonist, Nikki, they seem to remember how it started and are no longer dedicated to chaos.
Track list:
1) X2 (1:09)
2) Where Dreams Go to Die (4:26)
3) Spore (3:25)
4) In This Light (3:24)
5) Redemption (4:16)
6) Vindication (3:26)
7) Midnight Lullaby (0:56)
8) A World Without (4:11)
9) Donât Look Back (3:13)
10) Fallout (2:46)
11) Open Road (3:54)