When Queensrÿche formed
as a progressive heavy metal band in 1982 in Bellevue, Washington, the original
band members had no way of knowing that internal strife would develop some 30
years later to where two bands would be touring and recording under the same
name. The original lineup consisted of vocalist Geoff Tate, guitarists Chris
DeGarmo and Michael Wilton,
bassist Eddie Jackson and drummer Scott Rockenfield. The band fired Tate
in 2012 and replaced him with Todd La Torre.
The band fronted by La Torre then and continues to feature Wilton, Jackson and
Rockenfield, as well as guitarist Parker
Lundgren, who joined in 2009. Tate also took the name of the band with him when
he formed a band which presently consists of former Queensrÿche guitarist Kelly Gray, who was in the band from 1998
to 2002, guitarist Robert Sarzo, keyboardist
Randy Gane, bassist Rudy Sarzo and drummer Simon Wright; vocalist Sass Jordan tours and sings on a few
songs with the band as well. Although the band's personnel changed several
times over the years, Queensrÿche recorded 12 studio albums, one EP and several
DVDs before the split. Since the split, both variations of Queensrÿche tour,
performing the full catalogue of Queensrÿche songs, and both bands released
albums in 2013. The Tate version of the band released Frequency Unknown in April 2013 and the La Torre version released Queensrÿche in June 2013.
Geoff Tate's version of Queensrÿche headlined the Gramercy Theatre tonight and performed
17 of the band's better-known songs. Many of the songs harked back to the
progressive compositions like "Operation: Mindcrime" that popularized
the band in the metal and progressive scenes, and others, like "I Don't
Believe in Love" and "Silent Lucidity," recalled the period in
which the band sought a larger pop radio audience. Tate's new band played well,
and was enjoyed by the fans who were hearing the original versions of the songs
in their heads. There were a couple of problems, however. Firstly, Tate's
vocals were fine, but less than stellar; he carried the songs, but was not an
outstanding vocalist. Secondly, the progressive metal genre has, well,
progressed since Operation: Mindcrime
made Queensrÿche a headlining act. Dozens of newer bands have taken complex
metal compositions to far more impressive levels, while Queensrÿche remained
stagnant, nurturing a career on what now seems like primitive progressive music.
Bands like Opeth, Mastodon, Between the Buried and Me, Meshuggah,
Periphery, Protest the Hero, Porcupine
Tree, Anathema and even Animals as Leaders have elevated the
bar from the era of Queensrÿche, Dream
Theater and Tool. Tonight's Queensrÿche
was a snapshot of a bygone era; the performance failed to enter the 21st
century.
Visit Queensrÿche featuring Geoff Tate at www.queensryche.com.

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