1984's The Warning proved to be a holding pattern for Seattle's Queensrÿche, offering quality classic metal with lyrics tending to the mystical and occult. The band would soon embark on a massive creative growth spurt, but they seem to be treading water on tracks like "En Force," "Sanctuary," and the pedestrian title cut. Bright spots include the technology nightmare portrayed on "N M 156" and the nine-minute epic "Roads to Madness," where singer Geoff Tate demonstrates all of his incredible range. The album's high point comes with the anthemic "Take Hold of the Flame," which became a monster smash worldwide, especially in Japan. [The 2003 reissue features remastered sound and three bonus tracks, two of them live.] ~ Eduardo Rivadavia, All Music Guide
And look at the recordings Pandora consider to be similar, really, these are similar? How are they similar? Because they were all sheathed in cardboard... Sometime I wonder if the "critic" even listens to a product in its entirety. TREADING WATER? BRIGHT SPOTS? N M 156 is interesting but...Nevermind,I shouldn't have read this. Who is Eduardo Rivadavia anyway?