News

The first Alive at Five concert in 2025 featuring Queensryche will be at the Corning Preserve Boat Launch due to the weather ...
The current political climate spurred veteran metal band Queensryche to dedicate much of its upcoming tour to material from its 1988 concept album, “Operation: Mindcrime,” and its 2003 studio ...
Queensryche hit up a sold-out Empire Live in Albany on Friday night ... metal and less rooted in the dystopian sci-fi themes and art rock inclinations that helped the group find success, and ...
Wanna see Queensryche’s new video, for the song “Get Started?” Well, unless you own their new album, you’re shit outta luck. You see, in an apparent effort to prove to the world that they don’t ...
Queensryche are moving closer to the release of their Condition Human album. The band just revealed the track listing and album art for their new disc, which is due Oct. 2 via Century Media.
La Torre has been accused of using Geoff Tate's recorded vocals during live performances -- an allegation which La Torre has now officially denied. Tate was fired from Queensryche after a series ...
Queensryche had mastered their songwriting capabilities and were ready to unleash a project without so much of the excess baggage associated with thematic story-telling and those art-rock pretensions.
The second annual Cruise to the Edge will depart Miami on April 7, 2014, for five days and nights of live music and visits ... unique designs with a special art gallery where one-of-a-kind ...
Queensryche has always gone for the grandiose ... the portentous (“everywhere there are people are you’ve got to live with them”), like an actor delivering well-practiced lines.
Wilton and Jackson retain the Queensryche brand, and Tate has the sole right to perform the entire “Operation: Mindcrime” album and its successor “Operation: Mindcrime II” in a live setting.
He appeared on the band’s 1999 Atlantic album “Q2K” and last year’s “Live Evolution” collection. In the early ’80s, Gray played in the band Myth with Queensryche vocalist Geoff Tate.
I've never been a major fan of Queensryche's "thinking man's metal." I find the bulk of the band's work to be kind of cold and clinical—guess I'm just accustomed to a little more hellfire ...