Operation: Mindcrime (Remastered) [Expanded Edition]

Rate It! Avg: 5.0 (26 ratings)
Operation: Mindcrime (Remastered) [Expanded Edition] album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 17   Total Length: 67:49

Write a Review 2 Member Reviews

Please register before you review a release. Register

user avatar

I remember now

CowCrusher9

Absolute classic. One of the great concept albums. I can't say enough good things about this album. It's dark, true enough; but for me, this was where the Metal hit the road. Pure timeless genius...one of the few.

user avatar

Queensryche at their best

Trainwreck33

Finally, Emusic has RAGE and MINDCRIME in their library. Yeah, Geoff Tate and the boys looked like a basket of fruits back then, but hey, that was the 80s. This is their very best album. Period. Don't get me wrong, I love Empire. But they really found their signature sound with Operation: Mindcrime. They started to emerge as a more sophisticated kind of metal with Rage for Order, but with Mindcrime, they set a new standard for head-banging power tempered with well-developed melodies. Not as polished as Empire, not as rough as Rage. Anybody who doesn't like Operation: Mindcrime doesn't like heavy metal at its best.

Recommended Albums

They Say All Music Guide

Queensrÿche scored their breakthrough success with the ambitious concept album Operation: Mindcrime, which tells the story of a fortune hunter whose disillusionment with Reagan-era American society leads him to join a shadowy plot to assassinate corrupt leaders. For such a detailed story line (there is also a tragic romance thrown in), the band keeps its focus remarkably well, and the music is just as ambitious, featuring a ten-minute track with orchestrations by Michael Kamen. Those experiments don’t tend to work as well as the tighter, more melodic prog metal songs, which are frequently gems, especially the singles “Eyes of a Stranger” and “I Don’t Believe in Love.” Granted, the lyrics and political observations can sometimes be too serious and intellectual for their own good (few bands, metal or otherwise, can make lines like “There’s no raison d’être” work). But despite the occasional flaws, it’s surprising how well Operation: Mindcrime does work, and it’s a testament to Queensrÿche’s creativity and talent that they can pull off a project of this magnitude. [Capitol's 2003 reissue includes 24-bit remastering (which makes this record sound even bigger) and two live bonus tracks (from 1990 and 1994, respectively) of two of the songs from Mindcrime.] – Steve Huey

more »