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30 of 34 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
last of the essential Queensryche records, October 10, 2003
Between their previous commercial breakthrough in 1990 and the release of this record in 1994, the grunge movement had arrived and taken over. Yet, the band seemed to completely ignore the influences of those other Seattle bands (who probably were signed in part due to the commercial success of Queensryche) and continue along the same lines as 'Empire' (1990), with a bit less of a commercial bent:1. 9:28 AM/I Am I. "I Am I" was the first radio release and, with its middle-eastern inspired guitar riff, serves as an appropo introduction to a record thematically focused on an exploration of the human psyche. 2. Damaged. Appropriately connected inextricably with the previous song, "Damaged" discusses the process of psychotherapy over some stunning guitar work. (A rather unmemorable live version is included at the end as a bonus track.) 3. Out of Mind. After the manic "Damaged", the band goes into an atmospheric musical sequel to "Silent Lucidity" without leaving the lyrical theme of the first two songs. 4. Bridge. No doubt inspired by their own MTV Unplugged appearance and the success of that show, this single is a simple, simple, acoustic ditty (uncharacteristic for Queensyrche) narrating a dialogue between a neglected son and a father seeking redemption. 5. Promised Land. This is certainly the musical magnum opus of the lot, with lyrics and music of epic proportions. 6. Disconnected. The sonic highlight of the record is engined by a groove and some great sounds, making the lyrics (a semi-spoken word dissertation on the narrator's state of mind) someone irrelevant. 7. Lady Jane. Bring on the pianos (previously unheard on Queensryche records) for this melodic "ballad" that could have easily been a single if not for its slightly edgy lyrics. 8. My Global Mind. 9. One More Time. Carrying on in the tradition of such tracks like "Resistance", if there is any filler on this record, it is "My Global Mind" and "One More Time." 10. Someone Else? This is a great piece done with vocals and piano. (NOTE: A lesser full band version is included as a bonus track.) Besides the bonus tracks discussed above, this remaster also includes the quality tune, "The Real World" (studio version and live version), which is musicially quite similar to "Silent Lucidity" (even including Michael Kamen's orchestration) and was only available on the 'Last Action Hero' soundtrack (1993). Reasonable minds will differ, but it is undisputed that the four ESSENTIAL Queensryche records are (in chronological order): 'Rage for Order' (1986), 'Operation: Mindcrime' (1988), 'Empire' (1990), and 'Promised Land' (1994). The releases that came before (debut EP (1983) and 'The Warning' (1984)) and after ('Hear in the Now Frontier' (1997), 'Q2K' (1999), and 'Tribe' (2003)) were, in varying degrees, clearly inferior. Plan your purchases accordingly!
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