DiscoverDig Me Out: 80s MetalWhat If Queensrÿche Only Made This One Record?
What If Queensrÿche Only Made This One Record?

What If Queensrÿche Only Made This One Record?

Update: 2025-11-22
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Description

Before Operation: Mindcrime, there was this.

Queensrÿche’s 1984 debut The Warning is the album that almost didn’t happen—at least not the way the band intended. While they were touring Japan, EMI executives remixed and completely rearranged their progressive metal masterpiece without permission, burying the band’s weirdest, most ambitious material deeper in the tracklist. But even with corporate interference, The Warning stands as a pivotal moment in metal history: a Seattle band crafting something that sounded like nothing else in 1984, blending Iron Maiden gallops with Genesis-level prog complexity and Jeff Tate’s otherworldly operatic vocals.

In this episode, we break down why this debut matters—not just as a stepping stone to Mindcrime and Empire, but as a document of a band discovering their identity in real time. We debate whether it’s a hidden gem or a rough draft, explore the label drama that reshaped the album’s sequence, and dive into the tracks that reveal Queensrÿche’s DNA: from the Maiden-esque power of “Deliverance” to the robotic sci-fi weirdness of “NM 156.” This is Double-A ball before the majors—you can see the talent, hear the potential, and witness five musicians isolated in Seattle creating something that would change progressive metal forever.

If you love Iron Maiden, Judas Priest, Fates Warning, or Dream Theater, this episode is for you.

Episode Highlights

0:00 – Intro: Poll results and how The Warning won the Metal Union vote

5:23 – Album context: Queensrÿche in 1984—Seattle isolation and the progressive metal blueprint

12:45 – “Deliverance” – The opening track that wasn’t supposed to open the album

18:32 – The EMI remix controversy: How the label rearranged the album while the band toured Japan

24:15 – “NM 156” – The weird, jazzy, robotic prog odyssey that terrified record executives

31:40 – Jeff Tate’s voice at 24: Operatic range, theatrical character work, and why he’s more than just “metal Bruce Dickinson”

38:50 – “Take Hold of the Flame” – The anthem that hints at Operation: Mindcrime

44:20 – Geography matters: Why being in Seattle (not L.A.) saved this band from breaking up

51:10 – “Road to Madness” – Epic ambition or forced prog? Debating the 10-minute closer

58:30 – The verdict: EP, worthy album, or rough draft? The hosts cast their votes

1:03:15 – What comes next: Rage for Order, Mindcrime, and the evolution into metal immortality

Join the Conversation

This album won because you voted for it. Now it’s your turn again—what 80s metal album should we break down next? Head to digmeoutpodcast.com to join the Metal Union, vote on future episodes, access bonus content, and join our private Discord community. Keep the show ad-free and help us dig deeper at dmounion.com.

Subscribe, rate, and review wherever you listen to podcasts. Got a deep cut we need to cover? Drop your suggestions in the comments or hit us up on social media.



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What If Queensrÿche Only Made This One Record?

What If Queensrÿche Only Made This One Record?

J Dziak, Tim Minneci, and Chip Midnight