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On the album art, Dr X resembles Lenin or Castro. In the "Eyes of a Stranger" video they cast a dead-ringer for Charles Manson, suggesting a deep insight into the parallel cult dynamics at play. |
Queensrÿche might have ripped off "Comfortably Numb" with their shameless bid for radio play "Silent Lucidity", but I'd argue they own Pink Floyd's entire discography anyway because their signature album, 1988's audacious concept-driven Operation Mindcrime, mogs The Wall so hard in its sonic rampage through alienation, sex, drugs, guilt and radicalisation that it makes Geoff Tate legally Roger Waters' daddy. We could talk about the stellar sequencing of rapid-fire bangers or the insanely cinematic production, but it's the fact the psychological depth of the character study stays with you as long as the melodies that makes it both a 10 for album and for concept. Queensrÿche understand the process by which their resentful, TV-addled malcontent falls into the nihilism and murder of an antifa-type revolutionary movement, penning fever dream screeds as on point as they are incoherent to reflect his scrambled worldview. Compare and contrast how Nikki slips from jaded loser to fanatic to desperate renegade with the way Waters' Pink becomes a natzee because Waters wants you to know how much he hates le natzees and for not a reason more*.
It's no mistake that Nikki first asserts "Just watch the television/Yeah, you'll see there's something going on", then follows up with "I'm tired of all this bullshit/They keep selling me on TV/About the communist plan". Nikki is one of those super-sleuths we all know who's figured out that Fox News is propaganda but earnestly believes every word out of CNN. It doesn't matter nor occur to him that it's the same little box in his apartment selling him both lines: like Plato's cave-mates, he perceives only symbolic reality. He rejected his old conviction that "only America's way was right" and now rants and seethes about everything that he imagines is American in character, like a borderline engaged in splitting. He reveals the stark gulf between libtard self-delusion and actual character with lines like "Educate the masses/We'll burn the White House down".
I'm not even exaggerating when I say that Nikki is as well-observed and developed a protagonist as something out of Dostoevsky: the addictive personality that craves the needle and the dopamine rush from the confirmation of his delusional beliefs is both a plot point and a timeless, devastating metaphor. Nikki sneers at politicians and evangelists caught up in sex scandals but pitifully orbits a prostitute. His abjection feeds his narcissistic fantasies, with characteristic lack of insight: "Religion is to blame/I'm the new Messiah". He's a ticking time bomb and the perfect useful idiot for Dr X's scheme. But it's not just the lyrics that paint such a stark picture of this unhappy soul: there's a strange pseudo-harmonic effect at play between the plaintive angst of Tate's tormented vocals and the squealing guitar tone that buries any "oh, that's dated" brushoff of the classic metal operatic vocal style and guitar tuning; imagine a death or numetal band sounding half as raw with twice as rough production. That's right, you can't; retvrn.
*Waters now wants to stop the genocide in Gaza. Hey asshole, maybe you shouldn't have made ziolatrous agitprop for the boomer truth regime facilitating it? Food for thought, had you the palate.