Robert Christgau: Dean of American Rock Critics

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Queensryche

  • Queensryche [EMI America, 1984] D+

Consumer Guide Reviews:

Queensryche [EMI America, 1984]
Heavy metal's excuse for existing is its status as the generic expression of a white-male-adolescent underclass, but these five devotees of "the American work ethic" from an affluent Seattle suburb buy none of that--they're into selling. They woodshedded for two years, avoiding the seamy bar circuit in their pursuit of the rock and roll dream, which is of course a big contract. And when they got it they gave two weeks notice on their day jobs like the second-generation managers they are. What EMI paid for was the operatic tenor of Geoff Tate emoting "fantasy" lyrics over hyped-up new-metal tempos, and if you think the brand name panders to sexism and fascism, you're free to set up picket lines for as long as the First Amendment remains in force. D+

Further Notes:

Everything Rocks and Nothing Ever Dies [1990s]