Queensrÿche – Rage For Order (Album of the Week)

A young metal band with just one album under its belt gets told by the label to “glam it up” a bit. The results were – well, not quite glam by any real measure, at least beyond the band photos.

Queensrÿche – Rage For Order

Released June 27, 1986 via EMI Records

My Favorite Tracks – Screaming In Digital, Neue Regel, I Dream In Infrared

Queensrÿche were in a bit of an odd position by the mid 1980’s – they had arrived as a heavy metal act with progressive and Judas Priest vibes. Even early on the band seemed too intellectual and sophisticated to truly dive into the glam and hair movement that was taking hold of rock music. Instead we got a grab bag of songs, some having to do with love in some darker aspects and others still getting into sci-fi or AI stuff like what they offered on their first efforts.

The band’s line-up was constant all through the ’80’s – Geoff Tate on vocals, Chris DeGarmo and Michael Wilton on guitar, Eddie Jackon on bass and Scott Rockenfield on the drums. This one was produced by Neil Kernon, who helmed the studio console for Hall and Oates’ biggest albums and has gone on to record hundreds of albums with everyone ranging from soft rock to death metal.

The production on here is worth discussing, too – in contrast to the thinner and sterile sound coming from a lot of albums in this time period, Rage For Order has a pretty full sound. It’s bright yet also full, it hits when it needs to and lets the album’s softer songs breathe. It is at times clinical, which was probably a goal since some of these songs are about computers and robots taking everything over. Getting this variety of themes and sounds down into a nice listening experience is a pretty nice accomplishment.

There are 11 tracks here that run for nearly 46 minutes, and the variety takes the listener on quite a journey. There was a deluxe reissue that offered a handful of live and demo bonus tracks, I’ll stick to the original album’s tracklist for today.

Walk In The Shadows

The opener is a pretty nice song that walks a line between being both melodic and heavy. This dark love tale was apparently inspired by vampire stuff like the Anne Rice books. The song is fairly quick and simple but does a good job setting the table for what’s to come.

I Dream In Infrared

Up next is something akin to a power ballad. This one starts out soft and lush, then builds into a really powerful surge through the chorus. It’s the earliest hint of how Queensrÿche would approach a more conventional rock song, something we’d get more of from them in 1990. The lyrics have to do with a relationship that’s clearly lost, the narrator is about to split and has pretty profound thoughts about it. As with a lot of Queensrÿche stuff there could be a deeper or more specific song meaning but I don’t know what it is. No matter, this song is spectacular and one of the band’s crown jewels.

The Whipser

The title is misleading here, this song is plenty loud. It’s got a nice and noisy riff with Geoff Tate visiting several parts of his considerable vocal range, and just the right amount of keyboard accents which Neil Kernon provided. The song’s theme isn’t quite clear, someone is being coerced or persuaded to do something likely not good. It could be vampires or robots, either are a fair guess for this album, I personally vote robots as it’s always a safe bet on early Queensrÿche stuff.

Gonna Get Close To You

Up next is a cover song – this was first done by Canadian artist Lisa Dal Bello, who performed as Dalbello. It is a creepy stalker song, and unlike The Police’s smash hit Every Breath You Take, this song is very, very upfront about being engaged in flat out criminal stalking behavior.

Queensrÿche’s cover is honestly not far removed from the original, though it’s also paired with more instrumentation to fill it out. I go back and forth on whether I’m into this one or not and overall I’m kind of not, but I will admit that they did get the sound right in terms of making it fit the album.

The Killing Words

This is another amped up power ballad. Another high quality track, this is about love going down the tubes again but the people are apparently still together, seems to be a recurring theme here.

Surgical Strike

It’s time to kick up the pace and move on from love to war. This one hearkens back some to the debut album but also still fits with the sound and vibe of this record. This one has a really nice solo then a synth transition back into the song. It’s also over as quick as a surgical strike in a hair over 3 minutes.

Neue Regel

German for “new regime” or something like that, this kicks the pace back down a notch but keeps the power going. There’s quite a bit of use of keyboards and other samples here to help create an epic build to this new order, whatever it may be. There’s a lot here but it’s not overdone, this one works great with all the embellishments.

Chemical Youth (We Are Rebellion)

It’s time to get loud again as this one aggros its way through a long and unwieldy rant about rebellion, politics and technology. I don’t know what the hell they’re talking about here but the song is still pretty good.

London

Another powerful power ballad, this one is about a tryst with someone in the city referenced in the title. A pretty nice song, quite powerful and moving, though also perhaps a notch below some other stuff here.

There’s an interesting reference to November 4th in the opening line – that day was nothing unusual on its own but is just a day removed from “Guy Fawkes Night” or the Gunpowder Treason Day in England. (remember, remember the 5th of November). Nothing in the song indicates any link to that but I thought it was a neat coincidence, especially given the multiple themes of rebellion found through the album.

Screaming In Digital

Up next is an epic foray into the world of sci-fi and AI, though AI isn’t really sci-fi anymore. This song is an absolute scorcher, with dueling vocal parts representing two characters. It’s not totally clear what’s going on here, though at least one of the participants is a machine and I’ve always assumed both are, the “newer” machine is struggling with the concept of only being a machine. It could also be a human being forcefully “induced” into the robot cult or whatever, I don’t know.

This song is an absolute masterpiece. Geoff Tate is on fire here and the song’s militant rhythm gives a machine-like feel to things to further enhance the cyborg or AI concept. The vocal trade-off can be confusing at first, but repeated listens shine a light on what’s going on, and this song should be listened to repeatedly. One of Queensrÿche’s best songs.

I Will Remember

The album ends on a quiet and somber offering that is also lyrically about AI. This explores the concept of machines “stealing each other’s dreams” and the idea of not having private thoughts that can be concealed from a digital police state. It was sci-fi at one point in time, today it’s reality – just think about buying a couch and look at the ads on your phone. But I like this quieter approach to ending the album and the song itself is quite well done.

Rage For Order was not a huge hit out of the gate – it peaked at 85 on the Billboard 200 in the US and had various other lower chart placements around the world. Critics were kind, they liked the music though found some of the lyrical fare dense. This would get a gold certification in the US and Queensrÿche would land coveted opening spots on tours with AC/DC, Ozzy Osbourne, Ratt and Bon Jovi.

Queensrÿche have often defied categorization, for good or bad, and in the early days it was usually a good thing. Rage For Order shares the band’s somewhat elusive qualities – it is a lot of things and touches on a lot of subjects, but overall it was a pretty big step forward. This moved Queensrÿche out of the “Judas Priest meets Rush” comparisons and into establishing their own sound. Their signature guitar tone is here, as are knacks for arrangement and lyrical concept. All of this would mesh just a few years later on their magnum opus. Rage For Order may be a grab bag of sorts, but whatever you grab out of it is pretty damn good.

14 thoughts on “Queensrÿche – Rage For Order (Album of the Week)

  1. I love this album. I love Mindcrime more, but this is a close second. I got this after Mindcrime as I needed more of their stuff after finding that one. They really didn’t sound like anyone else at that time, at least to me they didn’t.

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  2. While Mindcrime is obviously the best overall thing they did, Queensryche is one of those few bands where I at least have to remind myself that that’s the case each time I listen to one of these other classic 80s albums. Rage For Order is definitely on that list.

    My favorite tune here has always been “London”, which I actually often thought might also be an Anne Rice-inspired thing. Just how it strikes me.

    Looking back, this is easily one of the best bands of that time, with a collection of no less than four-straight spectacular albums.

    Thanks for the review – forcing me to RUN to my turntable today and crank this one up again.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. A going theory is that a lot of the songs are vampire-influenced, but the only one I could truly source was the first song. But I spent all of 12 seconds looking so it might be that the other love-type songs are also similarly inspired.

      Don’t run too fast, you might pull something.

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  3. deKe's avatar deKE

    I bought this when it first came out on cassette tape and about a year ago came across it at a Record Fair and quickly snatched it up. Gonna Get Close To You is for me the oddball track on here but hey it was written by a Canuck as you mentioned so I’m good with it. lol
    Great stuff and thanks to you I’m going to spin this one sooner than later….

    Liked by 1 person

  4. As soon as I dropped the needle on this I was hooked. Walk In The Shadows is a great opener.

    Side fact: I didn’t hear this album when it came out. It was around the time when Promised Land came out.

    And I’m 1994, No one was doing music like this anymore so it became a favorite in 1994

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  5. Athanasios Kourkoulos's avatar Athanasios Kourkoulos

    From the moment I listened to Queensrÿche I immediately fell in love with their sound and lyrics. RfO is definitely the album that the unique double guitar signature of DeGarmo and Wilton were crafted and is missed today although Wilton has done with Lundgren a great job to reintegrate it to the newer albums. Take a look in Light Years and Bulletproof and you will hear it.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. You are right – Wilton and Lundgren are doing some of the old stuff right again. And LaTorre is a spectacular singer. I still have a hard time getting into them overall, but they are hitting some of the same beats again, still though doing their own modern thing. But DeGarmo and Wilton were unbeatable, this was some of the most unique music we ever heard.

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