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Queensryche Tickets

Hard rock band Queensryche still rocks after decades of performing! The metal masters behind hit songs “Bridge,” “I Am I,” and “Silent Lucidity” are tour favorites! Don't miss your chance to see Queensryche perform LIVE! Buy your Queensryche tickets now!
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queensryche at northernlights nn
By puzzled fan?????? from Albany ny on 7/25/2009
Pros:
They were good
Cons:
Too Hot
Best For:
Everyone

Quuensryche was good.How ever after the show they did a meet and greet .My brother was told that they would sign CDs after the show .This was in a small bar.We went and got a CD and got in line.I was looking forward to this as i have been a fan for 20 years and own all CDs and box sets.Well come to find out that you needed a pass to meet them .There was only like 50 people left in the bar .30 of them were on line .So my question is why couldn't everyone get to meet them .When i saw Candlebox at the same bar they did a meet and greet with the bar.Then took the time to sign CDs for all .Quuensryche whats up after we spent the night watching your show in 100 degree heat .We couldn't even get a CD signed? Thought your show was great but think you need to take alittle more time with fans .HINDER,SHINEDOWN ,AND CANDLEBOX have all treated there fans great when playing at Northern lights.Thanks to all bands who do give fans time

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Back in top form!
By CandCRycheFan from Omaha, NE on 4/30/2009
Pros:
Crowd Was In To It, Engaging Stage Presence, Great Encores, Great Lighting, Great Sound, Perfect Set List
Best For:
Adults

The AMERICAN SOLDIER performance at Kansas City was totally awesome. My favorite concert performance of theirs my whole life. Been to six other concerts. Geoff and his daughter sang Home Again together, and it was amazing. Sang Empire and Take Hold of the Flame for the encore. All my favorites played from Rage for Order, American Soldier and Empire except for At 30,000 Feet (my one unfulfilled wish). Other than that, QR was in top form, great interaction with the audience and great set costumes. They had Fratto come out in a desert uniform with the Triryche insignia where his rank his supposed to be and a Triryche tattoo on his left arm colored in with red, white and blue like the American Flag. Solid tribute to American military personnel! Highly recommend fans at all levels to attend this tour, well worth the trip from out of town to be there!

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A lot of fun
By Firebug from Colton,CA on 2/27/2008
Pros:
Crowd Was In To It, Engaging Stage Presence, Great Encores, Great Lighting, Great Sound, Perfect Set List
Best For:
Everyone

It ROCKED!!!!! Best night of my life!!! I didn't want it to end!!!

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Queenryche
By Ryche fan from Houston, TX on 2/17/2008
Pros:
Crowd Was In To It, Great Encores, Great Lighting, Great Sound
Cons:
Stage was too short, Too Hot
Best For:
Everyone

Although Warehouse Live is a clean venue (bathrooms were ALWAYS clean), when you try and pack that many people in, they should have anticipated the fact when they built it that the stage was way too low for people to view in the back. If you were not in the front forget about seeing anything. You had to be on your toes the whole time or lucky to be on someone's shoulders. There was not enough air conditioning even when we arrived before the show ever started. It was a lot better than being outside at Cynthia Woods in Woodlands but boy they could sure improve. I will have to think twice before going back there. It would really be a band I would like to see like Queensryche. I don't see the purpose for armbands though. No one looked at them before you ordered a drink. I am saying this because I have a niece that is 17 and she went to a concert there last year. I don't think they care who gets served alcohol once they have put the wristband on and are inside. The show on the other hand was AWESOME! Sound was incredible and couldn't get any better than what they did. Sure was nice to see a quality band and them put forth so much effort in making the audience happy. EXCELLENT ENCORE!

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Queensryche Biography

Although they were initially grouped with the legions of pop-metal bands that dominated the American heavy metal scene of the '80s, Queensrche were one of the most distinctive bands of the era. Where their contemporaries built on the legacy of Van Halen, Aerosmith, and Kiss, Queensrche 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. Queensrche 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 Queensrche 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 Queensrche. With the help of the Harrises, the tape circulated throughout the Northwest. In May of 1983, Queensrche 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 Queensrche LP later in the year the record peaked at number 81.

At this stage, Queensrche 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 Queensrche'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.

Queensrche 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 -- Queensrche 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. Queensrche 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, Queensrche 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. Queensrche'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 a double CD/DVD package titled Live Evolution. Meanwhile, former member DeGarmo began gearing up to form a new band, which was purported 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 materialized. DeGarmo then rejoined forces with Queensrche for a brief spell, appearing on the band's subsequent album, 2003's Tribe, but never officially joining the lineup. Three years later, Queensrche (sans DeGarmo, who had become a professional charter pilot) released Operation: Mindcrime II, the long-awaited sequel to their 1988 conceptual smash. 2007 saw the dual release of Sign of the Times: The Best of Queensrche and Take Cover, the latter of which featured cover versions of songs by U2, Buffalo Springfield, and Andrew Lloyd Webber. During the following two years, Geoff Tate launched a series of one-on-one interviews with various military vets he then funneled what he'd learned into the band's next project, a concept album about war named American Soldier. Produced by Jason Slater (who had also helmed Operation: Mindcrime II), the album was released in March 2009. After the release of the album, the band set out on the conceptual Queensryche Cabaret tour, mering the bands prog sound with a wild, cabaret aesthetic. The band also went overseas to Iraq to play the music of their American Soldier album for the troops that it was written for. While over there, they found themselves the victims of a bomb attack but came out of the ordeal unscathed. Later that year, Queensryche announced that they were working on new material, and in 2011 released their eleventh studio album, Dedicated to Chaos. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine & Greg Prato, Rovi