Operation: Mindcrime Review
Band | |
---|---|
Album | Operation: Mindcrime |
Type | Album (Studio full-length) |
Released | May 3, 1988 |
Genres | Heavy Metal, Progressive Metal |
Labels | EMI America, Manhattan Records |
Length | 59:17 |
Ranked | #2 for 1988 , #22 all-time |
Album rating : 93.9 / 100
Votes : 100 (8 reviews)
Votes : 100 (8 reviews)
August 17, 2020
I remember… My first expectations of this album, before having heard anything, were that I wouldn’t love it, or at least, not as much as Rage for Order. The reasoning is simple; I loved Rage for Order because despite being an 80’s Prog Metal album, it was built on incredibly emotive songs centering on the passionate vocals of Geoff Tate. The music was awesome, but the song structures were very straightforward and filled with explosive, anthemic choruses, and so it served the mood and the song rather than showing off technical prowess or wankery.
There are two reasons I was afraid this might change on Operation: Mindcrime. Firstly is the fact that it’s much more readily labeled Progressive Metal, while Rage for Order seems to be considered more (un)traditional Heavy Metal with some prog elements, so I was afraid the songs might leave their simple yet catchy structures behind in favor of showing off how good they are. Secondly, I was fairly certain the album was politically based. I don’t dislike political lyrics, but the problem is, I like music that makes me feel something. Political lyrics don’t make me feel anything (other than frustration, either because the message is sadly true, or because it isn’t true at all). I can appreciate sharp political commentary, but I can’t fall in love with it or feel my chest tighten due to it. I feared Queensryche would abandon their emotive cheese in favor of a more educated and sophisticated lyrical direction.
I was so wrong.
YES this album is centered around politics and social issues, and it nails them unabashedly with an unforgiving edge, taking hits at capitalism, religion, the culture of pay offs and the tyranny of the one percent in America. But the album is not politically driven. It is character driven, and that is why it succeeds in terms of both storytelling and delivering powerful, emotive songs. Without spoiling anything major, the album is a very clear conceptual story of a man who becomes disillusioned with American society (highlighting the political and social issues). He ends up joining an underground revolution, experiencing crime, addiction, love, loss, insanity, and making all these things extremely personal (this is how the album holds you and doesn’t let go). Lyrically, it remains incredibly passionate and evocative, a fantastically emotional tale that takes stabs at the big evils but never lets you forget about the individuals and their important experience.
Musically, they sacrificed absolutely nothing. The songs are still very catchy and hell-bent on creating melodies that will kick your ass, make your heart ache, or at the very least ingrain themselves in your head forever. And once again, Geoff Tate’s vocals steal the show. The amount of harmonizing he does with himself here is insane, with just about every song featuring a chorus that could go down on any all time best vocal lines ever laid down. His voice is crystal clear, he enunciates well so following the story is easy, and his range is killer. The production for everything sounds amazing, especially standing out as an 80’s album that hasn’t aged a bit.
Another thing? There are no flaws. Not every song is perfect, but they are never doing anything wrong. Nothing remotely mediocre on this 15 track epic. Even the segues are cool, providing key story bits and often having some killer music to them, which is usually where concept albums can fall apart. One of the greatest albums of all time.
There are two reasons I was afraid this might change on Operation: Mindcrime. Firstly is the fact that it’s much more readily labeled Progressive Metal, while Rage for Order seems to be considered more (un)traditional Heavy Metal with some prog elements, so I was afraid the songs might leave their simple yet catchy structures behind in favor of showing off how good they are. Secondly, I was fairly certain the album was politically based. I don’t dislike political lyrics, but the problem is, I like music that makes me feel something. Political lyrics don’t make me feel anything (other than frustration, either because the message is sadly true, or because it isn’t true at all). I can appreciate sharp political commentary, but I can’t fall in love with it or feel my chest tighten due to it. I feared Queensryche would abandon their emotive cheese in favor of a more educated and sophisticated lyrical direction.
I was so wrong.
YES this album is centered around politics and social issues, and it nails them unabashedly with an unforgiving edge, taking hits at capitalism, religion, the culture of pay offs and the tyranny of the one percent in America. But the album is not politically driven. It is character driven, and that is why it succeeds in terms of both storytelling and delivering powerful, emotive songs. Without spoiling anything major, the album is a very clear conceptual story of a man who becomes disillusioned with American society (highlighting the political and social issues). He ends up joining an underground revolution, experiencing crime, addiction, love, loss, insanity, and making all these things extremely personal (this is how the album holds you and doesn’t let go). Lyrically, it remains incredibly passionate and evocative, a fantastically emotional tale that takes stabs at the big evils but never lets you forget about the individuals and their important experience.
Musically, they sacrificed absolutely nothing. The songs are still very catchy and hell-bent on creating melodies that will kick your ass, make your heart ache, or at the very least ingrain themselves in your head forever. And once again, Geoff Tate’s vocals steal the show. The amount of harmonizing he does with himself here is insane, with just about every song featuring a chorus that could go down on any all time best vocal lines ever laid down. His voice is crystal clear, he enunciates well so following the story is easy, and his range is killer. The production for everything sounds amazing, especially standing out as an 80’s album that hasn’t aged a bit.
Another thing? There are no flaws. Not every song is perfect, but they are never doing anything wrong. Nothing remotely mediocre on this 15 track epic. Even the segues are cool, providing key story bits and often having some killer music to them, which is usually where concept albums can fall apart. One of the greatest albums of all time.
5 likes
Track listing (Songs)
title | rating | votes | video | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1. | I Remember Now | 1:18 | 81.3 | 20 | |
2. | Anarchy-X | 1:27 | 88.1 | 18 | |
3. | Revolution Calling | 4:40 | 96.3 | 20 | Audio |
4. | Operation: Mindcrime | 4:45 | 95.6 | 21 | Audio Music Video |
5. | Speak | 3:43 | 90.6 | 18 | |
6. | Spreading the Disease | 4:07 | 90.9 | 18 | |
7. | The Mission | 5:48 | 95.6 | 19 | Audio |
8. | Suite Sister Mary | 10:40 | 95.9 | 20 | Audio Music Video |
9. | The Needle Lies | 3:09 | 91.5 | 19 | |
10. | Electric Requiem | 1:23 | 83.3 | 17 | |
11. | Breaking the Silence | 4:34 | 91.7 | 17 | |
12. | I Don't Believe in Love | 4:23 | 97.1 | 21 | Audio |
13. | Waiting for 22 | 1:06 | 81 | 17 | |
14. | My Empty Room | 1:32 | 81.3 | 17 | |
15. | Eyes of a Stranger | 6:39 | 98.5 | 21 | Audio Music Video |
Line-up (members)
- Geoff Tate : Vocals, Keyboards, Whistle, Songwriting (tracks 1, 3-6, 8-12, 14, 15)
- Chris Degarmo : Guitars, Guitar Synthesizer, Songwriting (tracks 1, 2, 4, 7, 8, 11-13, 15)
- Michael Wilton : Guitars, Songwriting (tracks 1, 3-6, 9, 14)
- Scott Rockenfield : Drums, Percussion, Keyboards, Songwriting (track 10)
- Eddie Jackson : Bass
10,437 reviews
cover art | Artist | Album review | Reviewer | Rating | Date | Likes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
South of Heaven Review (1988) | 100 | Aug 17, 2020 | 5 | ||||
Hypertrace Review (1988) | 85 | Aug 17, 2020 | 2 | ||||
▶ Operation: Mindcrime Review (1988) | 95 | Aug 17, 2020 | 5 | ||||
Evinta Review (2011) | 55 | Aug 17, 2020 | 1 | ||||
40 | Aug 16, 2020 | 1 | |||||
80 | Aug 16, 2020 | 5 | |||||
Vivid Review (1988) | 70 | Aug 16, 2020 | 1 | ||||
Perpetual Burn Review (1988) | 65 | Aug 16, 2020 | 2 | ||||
90 | Aug 16, 2020 | 3 | |||||
85 | Aug 16, 2020 | 4 | |||||
Leprosy Review (1988) | 90 | Aug 16, 2020 | 4 | ||||
Ancient Dreams Review (1988) | 80 | Aug 16, 2020 | 1 | ||||
Blood Fire Death Review (1988) | 90 | Aug 16, 2020 | 4 | ||||
Live After Death Review (1985) [Live] | 100 | Aug 16, 2020 | 3 | ||||
Port Royal Review (1988) | 85 | Aug 16, 2020 | 3 | ||||
Wings of Rage Review (2020) | 90 | Aug 15, 2020 | 3 | ||||
Heavy Metal Is Back Review (2015) | 80 | Aug 15, 2020 | 1 | ||||
95 | Aug 14, 2020 | 6 | |||||
Live Scenes From New York Review (2001) [Live] | 95 | Aug 13, 2020 | 6 | ||||
무당 Review (1980) | 60 | Aug 12, 2020 | 3 |
▶ Operation: Mindcrime Review (1988)
SilentScream213 95/100
Aug 17, 2020 Likes : 5
I remember… My first expectations of this album, before having heard anything, were that I wouldn’t love it, or at least, not as much as Rage for Order. The reasoning is simple; I loved Rage for Order because despite being an 80’s Prog Metal album, it was built on incredibly emotive songs centering on the passionate vocals of Geoff Tate. The music was awesome, but the son...
Empire Review (1990)
snowbird 96/100
Oct 4, 2009 Likes : 4
오랜만에 리뷰에 손을 댑니다.
엠파이어는 분명 상업적 성공을 위한 노력이 엿보이는 작품이지만
비틀즈의 화이트 앨범 같은 선례를 생각해 봤을 때 그것과 작품성이 필요충분적인
관계를 형성하고 있다고 말하기는 힘듭니다.
비록 다수의 메탈 팬으로부터 '싱글 지향적' '팝적'이라고... Read More
Empire Review (1990)
Eagles 70/100
Nov 9, 2005 Likes : 4
Operation : Mindcrime 앨범으로 시애틀의 반경을 벗어난 미국을 대표하는 지성적 메틀밴드로 거듭난 Queensryche 이다. 전작의 서사적인 씨어터 메틀과는 다르게 본작 Empire은 비교적 멜로딕한 정적인 곡들이 많이 보이는데, 사회파편의 단상들을 수평적으로 나열해 놓은 느낌이다. 대중적으로는 크... Read More
Empire Review (1990)
이준기 90/100
Nov 7, 2014 Likes : 3
퀸스라이크 역사상 가장 대중적인 인기를 많이 얻은 앨범이라고 한다. 그래서 그런지 전작보다는 너무 튀지도 않고 조용조용 무난해 보이는 전개가 특징이기도 한듯 하다. 대중적이니 팬들이 실망했느니를 떠나서 객관적으로 바라보는 입장에서 이 앨범은 괜찮다. 너무 난해하지도, 너무... Read More
Empire Review (1990)
구르는 돌 85/100
Jun 25, 2010 Likes : 3
Queensryche는 음악 변동의 폭이 무척 넓은 밴드 중 하나이다. 이들은 데뷔 했을 때만해도 Power Metal 밴드였다. 그러다가 이들은 컨셉 지향의 Progressive Metal의 도식에 맞춰서 만든 작품이 이들의 대표작 Operation: Mindcrime이었다. 지금도 이 작품은 프로그레시브 메탈을 대표하는 걸작으로 높은 지지... Read More
Empire Review (1990)
Apache 90/100
Mar 23, 2006 Likes : 3
Queensryche의 1988년작 [Operation-Mindcrime] 은 Queensryche에게 어쩌면 족쇄처럼 느껴지는 앨범이 아닐까 하는 생각이 들었다. Queensryche 특유의 컬트적인 매력을 종합하는 동시에 거대한 서사를 구축해 낸 인류 역사상 가장 위대한 메탈 컨셉 앨범, [Operation-Mindcrime]. 이런 거대한 타이틀은 자유로운 영... Read More
rockerman 100/100
Apr 3, 2021 Likes : 2
My 1108th most played album. Queensrÿche - Condition Hüman. The fourteenth studio album was released on October 2, 2015. Peaked at #27 on billboard's top album list, #5 Top Rock Albums chart, amazing for a metal band in the new century! Old school, reinvigorated and back to the roots is what best describes this great new album shooting up fast on my most played list headed fo... Read More
rockerman 100/100
Mar 17, 2021 Likes : 2
My most played album #1065. Queensrÿche - The Verdict. The fifteenth studio album released on March 1, 2019. Amazing sounds just like old school Queensrÿche. No Geoff Tate but Todd La Torre sounds just like him! The music sounds more like early Queensrÿche. Every song is killer! 16 plays in 16 months this is rising fast on my most played list, headed for the top! Only 2 orig... Read More
rockerman 100/100
Mar 3, 2021 Likes : 2
Album of the day # 44. Queensryche - Operation Mindcrime! The best heavy metal rock opera! Killer guitar, Great vocals the band was on for this one! A concept album of cult religion, sex, drugs and murder. What could go wrong? Guitar players magazine #36 best albums of all time. I’m shocked it only sold a million, everybody loved this album! Two hits from the album, "Eyes of ... Read More
Megametal 95/100
Nov 21, 2020 Likes : 2
Queensrÿche s príchodom speváka Todd La Torre -ho chytili druhý dych a prinášajú aj s posledným albumom "The Verdict" kvalitnú porciu Prog. Metal/Rock -ovej muziky. Metal-ové a rock-ové pasáže sú najlepšie, občas však zaexperimentujú aj s inými prvkami. Po hudobnej stránke sú poznávacie prvky jednoznačne počuteľné, a to: nápadité a uvoľnené bicie (... Read More