So Tate is out of 'Ryche

2 of its best writers...
Yes. In my opinion, the two best songwriters Queensryche ever had were Tate and DeGarmo.

...and when was the last time they wrote anything worth a shit?
This is essentially the same point I've been making the whole thread. Queensryche hasn't released anything of worth since Promised Land.
 
I look at it like this; How many of us continued to support Queensryche, disc after disc, just hoping that something good was right around the corner? I finally gave up after Q2K but my point is; we continued to purchase shit disc after disc...Whats one more purchase? Todd can obviously sing. I'll give them one disc to prove that they can make it back...at least back to "Promised Land" type material. Do I believe? Not really. Am I gonna give them that chance? Yep
 
Tate in QR = bitching. Tate out of QR = bitching.

Exactly!!!! I really don't get all the bitching....Ask yourself, how can it really be any worse than the horrible garbage of their last cd???? All I heard about after that release is that "Tate needs to go!"..."They need to replace him!"....Now that he's out, all I'm hearing is, "It won't be any better!!".. and "it won't be the same without Tate!"...... Put it this way, Tate obviously can't hit the high notes anymore and part of the magic of Queensryche has always been the vocals. I kow there's only 1 Geoff Tate, but out of all of the Tate clones out there, Todd comes the closest to nailing ALL the vocals!!... I can't remember how long it's been since Tate has avoided the scream at the beginning of "Take Hold of the Flame" but it seems like forever!!! It's going to be nice to hear those songs sung the way they were meant to be sung!!...


Tate has mentioned that he hates the old material, and doesn't even care to listen to his own singing on it... That tells me all I need to know.......

Heck, even generic power metal with Todd on vocals will be miles ahead of the last few QR albums, doesn't that alone make it worth it??? So stop your bitching people!
 
Exactly!!!! I really don't get all the bitching....Ask yourself, how can it really be any worse than the horrible garbage of their last cd???? All I heard about after that release is that "Tate needs to go!"..."They need to replace him!"....Now that he's out, all I'm hearing is, "It won't be any better!!".. and "it won't be the same without Tate!"...... Put it this way, Tate obviously can't hit the high notes anymore and part of the magic of Queensryche has always been the vocals. I kow there's only 1 Geoff Tate, but out of all of the Tate clones out there, Todd comes the closest to nailing ALL the vocals!!... I can't remember how long it's been since Tate has avoided the scream at the beginning of "Take Hold of the Flame" but it seems like forever!!! It's going to be nice to hear those songs sung the way they were meant to be sung!!...


Tate has mentioned that he hates the old material, and doesn't even care to listen to his own singing on it... That tells me all I need to know.......

Heck, even generic power metal with Todd on vocals will be miles ahead of the last few QR albums, doesn't that alone make it worth it??? So stop your bitching people!

Replacing Tate was a given. He just CANNOT perform the old material anymore. He just does not have the voice for it. The problem is does anyone REALLY give a bird fornication about ANY new material coming out of QR? I will bet you that answer is a resounding "NO!". People around here would be just fine paying to see QR perform everything up to and including Empire, with maybe one or two new songs thrown into the mix. That being said, the reality is that the QR brand has been so damaged over the last few years because of bad CD's and Tate's attitude and fading skills that they wound up playing dives like the Highline Ballroom. They might as well have played in Milton's kitchen as compared to where they have played in the past.

Right now it is all about trying to rescue a dying brand. The Tates needed to be jettisoned for this to happen. Is it too late? Only time will tell.
 
Being that Queensryche was my favorite band for a period of time many years ago, I just cannot find anywhere in my entire soul to give two shits about any of this BS that has gone on long enough, its about 10 years to late in my opinion. I will say if Todd comes in and helps Queensryche make some worth wile music again then all the better, if he doesn't and they still suck, then its all for naught and we will have a Quasi Rychean cover band.

Bear
 
Replacing Tate was a given. He just CANNOT perform the old material anymore.
Last year, on Halloween, Queensryche did a one off performance, where they performed Rage for Order in it's entirety. The show was at the Highline Ballroom in NYC, which I had never been to. I guess they don't host a lot of Metal shows. Regardless, the sound was possibly the best I've ever heard in a club... and Tate sounded absolutely fantastic. Did he sound like he did in 1986? No. But then again, no one else, before or since, EVER has.

Geoff may be a complete jackass. I can't say... I've never met the man. And he may not be able to sing like he did in 1987. But the man IS Queensryche. He's the standard by which I judge all other vocalist... and the standard by which all other vocalists fall short. And for me, I have no interest in watching some guy stand where Geoff belongs, and listen to him do his best Geoff Tate impersonation. I would have been much more interested in the forthcoming disc, had they simply called it Rising West. For me, calling it Queensryche, is musical blasphemy.

Being that Queensryche was my favorite band for a period of time many years ago, I just cannot find anywhere in my entire soul to give two shits about any of this BS that has gone on long enough, its about 10 years to late in my opinion.
It's weird. Part of me echos your sentiments, and yet part of me gets sucked into these QR threads every time they pop up.
 
I kind of agree w/ Zod about Tate. The dude may very well be a dick. I've never met the man, so I don't know and it doesn't really matter. But, the guy IS a legendary singer. As Zod stated, NOBODY who tours as consistently as Tate retains their sound from 30 years prior. Not Tate, not Dio, not Dickinson, not Halford, not Alder, not Coverdale...nobody. These people are not programmed robots...they are flesh and blood and flesh breaks down...it's a simple fact of life. He doesn't sound like he did at 20, but at 50+ he has managed to keep his voice in impeccable shape even if a little diminished. Steve Perry, as awesome as he was, was fried after 8 years...Tate has been at this consistently since 1981.

I saw Queensryche 3 times (Empire, Promised Land and Q2K) and all 3 times, Tate was brilliant. He wasn't wailing in the stratosphere ala "Queen Of The Reich" but the songs they played didn't call for that...they called for an intense, emotive performance and he delivered that x1000! He sounded amazing all 3 times. Even on Queensryche's "lesser" albums (post-HITNF) Tate himself still sounded very, very good and he's still, in my mind, one of the premier vocalists in Rock.

As for him being replaced, it happens. Bands survive member changes and, while they may not manage huge success (only AC/DC and Van Halen have managed to pull that off) they can carve out a decent nostalgia career the way Journey, Foreigner, Styx, and others have if they do it right. They'll put out an album or two that relatively nobody will buy, but when they play out, they'll play the "old songs" and keep the people who do decide to spend money to be there happy by doing that. But I won't be one of them. I haven't even bothered to see Ryche w/ Tate since 2000, so I surely won't go see them with LaTorre.
 
Perhaps I'm misinterpreting things, but in many ways, I see the tensions between Tate and the rest of the band similar to the tensions in Styx. Much like Dennis DeYoung, Tate wanted to take the band in different directions, whereas the band (Styx, QR) itself seemed most comfortable when rocking out.

Unfortunately, the band pretty much lost me with their new material with the horribly mediocre Q2K and never got me back. I picked up OM2, but never really got into it, with the exception of a couple of songs (Fear City Slide). However, if the band can still pull off a very good live show, then I might just go back and see them when they next hit town.
 
BIGBANGFREAKOUT.gif

I nearly choked on an almond when I saw this vid. You come across as all business like and every once in a while you post something like this that requires a clean up. :headbang:

That said - Geoff Tate is not the same GT I saw opening for Twisted Sister (You Can't Stop Rock & Roll tour, QR was touring for their EP). Not sure who this guy is now - but maybe QR can have some sort of a revival now. Their last several albums have been unlistenable.

Is it September yet?
Jeff
 
It seems Tate isn't missing any time but securing (and I'm sure this was in the works for some time) distribution and label support:

This is from BM:

GEOFF TATE Signs Solo Deal With INSIDEOUT MUSIC - June 25, 2012
Geoff Tate, the legendary QUEENSRŸCHE frontman and one of the most acclaimed vocalists in the history of hard rock and heavy metal, has signed a worldwide recording contract with InsideOut Music.

"I'm very excited to join forces with InsideOut Music," says Tate of his multi-album deal. "They are very committed to progressive music and care deeply for their artists, working together with them to bring music lovers worldwide some of the most compelling rock music available."

"Obviously, we at the label have been fans of Geoff for a long time," says InsideOut Music founder Thomas Waber. "We are looking forward to working with such a renowned musician. Welcome to the InsideOut Music family!"

Geoff Tate is currently finishing production on his first InsideOut Music release. The album is planned for release this fall, with details to be announced in the coming weeks.

When asked about the sound of his new solo album, Tate told AnthologySD.com, "Well, it's very different from my last one, for sure. It's a new bunch of people I've been working with to write and record it, so that changes things. When you're working with different people, it really changes the record. This one is really hard rock. The last one was really all over the place with different styles of music and everything, but this one really keeps with the hard rock style. It does it in kind of a different way — more of my way or what I would envision. I guess it's experimental in some ways, while in others it's very traditional. What I tried to do was take traditional rock instrumentation and apply it in kind of a different song structure. That's what I would best describe it as. [laughs]"

Tate released his first solo CD in 2002 on Sanctuary Records. Self-titled, the LP was a huge departure from the work he had previously done with QUEENSRŸCHE.

"[Sanctuary weren't really a record company. Sanctuary was a money-making machine and they went out of business very quickly," Tate told Oregon Music News earlier this month. "I'm glad to be done with that actually."

QUEENSRŸCHE members Michael Wilton, Eddie Jackson, Scott Rockenfield and Parker Lundgren announced on June 20 that they were parting ways with Tate and recruiting powerhouse vocalist Todd La Torre of CRIMSON GLORY as his replacement. The new QUEENSRŸCHE lineup has already performed live, having played two successful shows in their home city of Seattle under the name RISING WEST.

Fan-filmed video footage of Tate's June 7 solo performance at Canyon Club in Agoura Hills, California can be seen below.
 
Recent interview with Tate (on RollingStone) here: http://www.rollingstone.com/music/n...ugly-split-backstage-brawl-in-brazil-20120626

And a funny quote about his new album:

"It should be done in August. I just signed with InsideOutMusic. I'm very excited about it. The album is very hard rock. Very metal, very hard rock, very modern . . . and kind of retro in some ways too. I'm combining retro and modern styles. "

So... is it rock or metal? Is it modern or retro? :lol: Yes, he is a nutjob...
 
Tate on "creative differences":

"In the press release they said there were "creative differences." But to have creative differences, you have to have two entities or more offering up creative ideas. And that just wasn't the case. Queensryche has always been my idea..."

So then YOU ARE the reason why QR has sucked for 15 years!!! :lol:
 
Queensryche fans were stunned earlier this month when the news surfaced that the group had fired lead singer Geoff Tate. In an exclusive interview with Rolling Stone, Tate reveals that he was equally stunned to learn that he was being forced out of the group he began playing with three decades ago. "We’ve all known each other for 30 years," he says. "Our kids have all grown up together. We’ve been to barbecues together, and weddings, and divorces, and births of our children. For it to end in such a hostile way, it’s just mind-boggling. I just don’t understand it."
We spoke with Tate about his difficult final days in Queensryche, the business disagreements that drove them apart, their backstage fight in Brazil, the upcoming lawsuit over the name rights and his future plans as a solo artist.
When exactly did the tensions within Queensryche first surface?
Well, with every band there's tensions that arise over time. You've got different personalities all mixed together and there's always that kind of thing going on. We'd never been a band that had lots of tensions. We've had challenges with making records and with personnel changes. When Chris DeGarmo left the band in 1998, it was a pretty big hit for us. But really, this new thing is kind of out of the blue. I wasn't expecting anything like this at all.
How did this new thing begin?
I think it really began around February of this year. It mainly started with a disagreement about economics, about moving our merchandising to a third party. We had control over our own merchandising company for years and years and we ran it ourselves. It's a very successful entity, and the other three guys wanted to take it out of our hands and hand it over to somebody else and pay them more money to operate it, which just seemed liked a ridiculous business idea to me. That's really where the disagreement started.
Where did things go from there?
It forced us into trying to talk sense into them, our manager and myself and our business manager, trying to get them to see this was not a good deal. Why were they so adamant about taking money out of our pockets and handing it to somebody else? Our manager found another company that would do it for considerably less and they ultimately went with that.
How about musically? Were you guys seeing eye-to-eye on the sound of the band at this point?
Well, this is kind of a weird situation too. In the press release they said there were "creative differences." But to have creative differences, you have to have two entities or more offering up creative ideas. And that just wasn't the case. Queensryche has always been my idea, starting from the first record. Queensryche is about albums. It's about concepts and themes, and those concepts were mine. [Laughs] I started out with The Warning, bringing those ideas in for Rage for Order, Operation: Mindcrime . . . all the albums. I write 81% of the music and the lyrics. Of the 144 songs that Queensryche has released, I've written 116 of those.
I am the creative energy in the band, especially since Chris left. When he was in the band it was more of a shared thing between him and I. But once he left, the burden was on me. I don't consider it necessarily a burden. That's what I do. I'm a creative person. I write everyday and I'm constantly coming up with creative ideas. I present them to the other guys and they go, "Yeah, sure, that sounds good to us."
How did they feel about the last album?
Well, you'd have to ask them about that.
Did they ever tell you they weren't happy with it, or with the direction the band was going?
Nope. No. Nothing.
How about the Cabaret tour? Did they like that idea?
Yep. Yep. Everybody signed up for it and we ran out and did a very successful tour with that.
So they never once said to you they were unhappy with anything that you were doing?
No, never.
So in February you started arguing about the merchandise business. How did things go from there? You played some shows after that.
We had quite a few dates on the books. The plan was that we were all going to be doing some side projects and then we were gonna do a handful of Queensryche dates throughout the year. Everybody was going off and doing their own thing this year, and then we were going to regroup in 2013 for a big tour.
I've read lots of accounts about what happened in Brazil in April. The story on the Internet goes that you overheard them plotting to fire you and then you pushed Michael to the floor and pointed a knife at Scott. What actually happened?
Well, you know how the Internet goes . . . The way it went was, we had a gig in Sao Paolo, and before the show we had a meeting in the dressing room. I asked them straight up about the rumors I'd heard about them replacing me. I was definitely concerned about this. What kind of plan was that? Was it serious? What was going on? They said that they weren't planning on replacing me, but they had just fired our manager, our office assistant and one of our guitar techs, who all happened to be my family members.
I asked them, "Why is this happening?" They really couldn't give me a straight answer, or any kind of answer that made any kind of business sense. It seemed like a personal vendetta against me. Anyway, the meeting was short and we went to do the show. I'm getting ready by my station, ready to go on stage, and Scott [Rockenfield] looks at me and he smirks and says, "We just fired your whole family, and you're next." I just lost it. I tried to punch him. I don't think I landed a punch before somebody grabbed me and hauled me to the side. On my way, I managed to shove [Michael] Wilton, and really, that was it. I cooled down and we did the show, and everything went fine.
There was no knife involved?
No. No knife involved. You can't really get knives into foreign countries.
How did they have the ability to fire all those people without your say in the matter?
Well, that's just it. They made up a legal document and sent it to our business manager. It said, "These people are fired." They had worked for us for ten years. It was a completely cold, inhuman thing to do. You don't do that with people. At least you sit them down and say, "Hey, thanks for all the hard work. We're disgruntled and we want to find something else." Something like that. And there was nothing.
Did they at least explain their thinking to you?
No. It's all out of the blue. Just boom.
Do you know why they decided to push you out of the band?
Well, I think it's economically driven, mostly. I'm a 25 percent holder in our companies. I think it's just business in their minds. Cut me out and then split 25 percent and hire some young guy that's gonna work for a weekly wage so they make more money. It's just ridiculous.
You'd think they'd make more money with you in the band. Now they're going to be presumably splitting up a smaller pie
It doesn't may any sense. [Laughs] Neither does taking a very successful merchandising company and giving it over to somebody else and then paying them more money to run it. It's bad business. It's short-sightedness, and it's just ridiculous.
The guys recently formed a side project called Rising West that was entirely devoted to playing material from the first five Queensryche albums. It seems to imply they didn't like the more recent material. But they never actually said to you that they preferred the sound the band had in the Eighties?
Hmmm . . . I looked at that forming of that band as a side project. I was surprised that all four guys went in the same direction. That didn't make such sense to me. That felt like some kind of calculated move, but I can't even speculate what they were thinking. But if they want to do a side project, I'm all about that. I've very supportive of everybody in the band doing side projects.
But this is a side projects devoted to songs that you wrote
Well, that is a little weird. I would think if they were gonna do a side project, they should probably write some new songs and present them as a group, and then play some Queensryche songs too. If they wanna do that, that's cool. But to do only Queensryche material and only material that I wrote . . . I don't know. It's kind of a slap in the face.
Honestly, I'm not angry over this. I'm more hurt by it all. This has been my life's work. It's been 30 years building this name and this image of the band. All the lyrics and the directions of the albums and the concepts, that is all from me. And to have them do what they're doing and kick me out – God, I didn't realize that these guys were those kind of people. It's shocking to me.
In May Queensryche played Rocklahoma and you told the audience that they sucked. What happened there?
Over the last 30 years I've played thousands of shows. Sometimes the audience needs some direction. [Laughs] They need to be kicked in the ass a bit, and the Rocklahoma audience this year was one of those audiences. They needed to be challenged. They needed to get called out. They needed to get fired up.
As a frontman, that's part of my gig. I do that. I am in control of the audience. I'm pushing them. I'm pulling them. I'm riding them at times. That was just me getting the audience fired up. They needed it. They were really a lackadaisical audience that looked really confused. They didn't know what they were supposed to be doing.
How were you able to keep playing shows with the band after the fight in Sao Paulo?
It was difficult. We played the show in Sao Paulo, and then we played the M3 Festival. That went fine. Rocklahoma was fine from a performance standpoint. It was difficult, but as anybody that's ever been in a band knows, the show must go on. You try to do the best you can given what you're working with.
How did they actually tell you that you were fired?
By a legal letter from their attorney to mine.
In your estimation, do they have the legal right to fire you and carry on as Queensryche?
No. They don't.
What's gonna happen now?
Well, we're in a lawsuit right now and it's probably gonna get ugly. I filed a claim a couple of days ago. So it's all going to the legal system now to sort out who is what, and who owns what, and that stuff.
Are they gonna be able to play dates as Queensryche before this is resolved?
Well, they shouldn't. Definitely. It's a situation where, in my opinion, they're doing everything the wrong way. If there was a dispute over who is in the band, or who owns the band name, I think that stuff should all be worked out before they try to book gigs with the name Queensryche.
Are you going to form a new version of Queensryche, and possibly have two competing groups out there?
No. I'm not interested in doing that at the moment.
Just to totally clarify, from your point of view, all the differences in the band were about money? These weren't personal issues and they weren't about the musical direction of the band?
Definitely not about music or the direction of the band, because there's only me that's been pushing that and guiding that. The other guys have very little input in what Queensryche does. They just sort of show up and play shows and collect a paycheck. But two of the guys are going through some personal issues. It's not really my place to comment or talk about. I think those personal issues probably have a lot to do with the way they're acting right now.
It would seem to many that firing the lead singer is sort of a suicide move. When people buy a ticket to a concert they tend to want to hear the original singer.
It doesn’t make any sense at all. It's typical of these guys to have a very short-sighted look on everything. Why on earth would they cancel all remaining Queensryche shows? How are they gonna survive economically? And then, by that action, you’re completely alienating the promoters, who you work with closely to book shows for you. So now the promoter is left holding the bag, and that doesn’t make the promoter want to work with you again. So here they fire everybody in our organization and don’t hire anybody to take care of the business, all the websites, all of our merchandising companies, all that stuff. There’s nobody running it right now. They locked it all up, and there’s nobody running that stuff. Then they fired our publicist, our booking agent, they canceled all the shows, so now they have no income. What are they doing?
It doesn’t make any sense at all. And that’s what’s so difficult to stomach about the whole thing. If they had some sort of grand plan that all made sense, I could understand. [Laughs] And I’m forced to engage in a lawsuit with them now. This is not something I want to do at all. I want to make records and I want to tour and live a creative life. I don’t want to be bogged down in some legal hassle. My God, but they’re forcing me into it. I have no other way to go. I can’t give up my life’s work and walk away from it. These are my ideas, my concepts, my life, that I’m writing about. What are they gonna do – hand it to some kid to sing?
If you win the lawsuit and get the name rights, are you going to hire new musicians and tour again as Queensryche?
Honestly, I don't know yet. It's too early to make any kind of comment like that.
Do you think any sort of reunion at any point in the future is even conceivable?
Again, it's just too early to comment. This is all pretty raw and new.
Tell me about your new solo album. What does it sound like?
It should be done in August. I just signed with InsideOutMusic. I'm very excited about it. The album is very hard rock. Very metal, very hard rock, very modern . . . and kind of retro in some ways too. I'm combining retro and modern styles.
On your solo tour, are you gonna mix solo songs with Queensryche songs?
Yeah, this will be my second solo album. I'll be playing songs from both of my solo albums, and then probably a few Queensryche songs as well.
Are there any misconceptions about this split that you want to clear up?
I don't know what other people think, but with the presentation of of the band I've always tried to do different things – different kinds of records, different influences, bringing those into the writing. And also with the live shows, trying to make them interesting and unique and different, rather than just five guys up there playing songs, I tried to create a theatrical environment for the presentation. And I think people like that. They want to keep seeing that. Without me, that won't happen. I can guarantee that. It won't happen.
 
It's a very well done & eloquent interview. I believe he is indeed telling the truth about the majority of it from his personal perspective. I'm sure there were some dick comments and behavior from both sides during the crash and burn. And for the record, Geoff comes off as a very intelligent person and I rank him among the vocal Gods.

That said, I cannot help but believe there is a lot of bullshit in that interview that covers his ass as well. With his entire family involved in the business operations, there is a huge conflict of interest going on. Perhaps the other guys were willing to pay an additional 5% of the merch just to get control away from his wife (and ultimately Geoff)?

Was the rest of the band lazy over the past 20 years? Maybe. Perhaps they became more and more disillusioned for whatever reasons as time went on and should have got off their ass and done something about it earlier.

If I was the band, I'd let Geoff make any claim he wanted and keep quiet. Let him tell the public that he was indeed responsible as he claims for all the shitty writing since Promised Land. Focus on a truly metal record for a dramatic change. They are not going to keep the fans that stuck around because of Geoff's voice, but they have a shot at getting back all the fans that left because they sucked for so long. Which percentage is larger is the question that I do not have an answer to.