
My appreciation for Queensryche has grown exceptionally over the past decade or so, with wife/photographer Brooke Striewski having covered two of their shows together over the years (the first one actually being one of the very first concerts we ever went to together back in 2013 while we were still just dating), and even interviewing former frontman Geoff Tate for Rewind It Magazine back in 2021.
Yet something always felt like it was still missing to us, having heard the songs live, but without that original voice on top of them (and no offense to current Queensryche vocalist Todd La Torre, who is an admirable singer in his own right). That finally changed this past leap day, Thursday February 29 at the Peabody Auditorium, where Tate was headlining with his solo band, and former Whitesnake guitarist Adrian Vandenberg and his band Vandenberg as the opening act.
I’m not quite sure who I was more excited to see at the offset honestly, but the minute Vandenberg hit the stage, I was instantly glad we had made it to this show (Whitesnake is another act that has unfortunately alluded me for years now, though I have caught several other members of the band elsewhere over the years, including former guitarist Warren DeMartini of Ratt, and the band’s current guitarist Joel Hoekstra while with Night Ranger).

Former Whitesnake guitarist Adrian Vandenberg “kicked” things off at the Peabody Auditorium in Daytona Beach, FL last Thursday, February 29.
They did not disappoint one bit, either. After an intro that included both part of a Beethoven piece of music and the theme from Jaws, the group (which also currently includes former Candlemass vocalist/Swedish singer Mats Leven at front and center) launched into high gear with “Hit the Ground Running.”
An onslaught of both Whitesnake classics and Vandenberg numbers then followed in the form of “Fool For Your Loving,” “1982,” “Give Me All Your Love,” “Freight Train,” “Sailing Ships,” “Judgment Day,” “Crying in the Rain,” “Burning Heart,” and “Still of the Night” before ending things on the highest of notes possible with the timeless 1987 Whitesnake hit, “Here I Go Again.”

One-time Candlemass frontman Mats Leven on stage with Vandenberg last Thursday evening.
Finally, things came full circle once ex-Queensryche frontman, the unmistakable Geoff Tate took the stage as the main event, opening strong with the classic “Empire,” though I could’ve thought of at least a dozen other tracks I would’ve rather heard in place of both follow-ups “Desert Dance” and “I Am I” (not to knock ’em too much, though). Thankfully, “The Thin Line,” “Operation: Mindcrime,” and “Breaking the Silence” helped push things further back in the right direction.
As soon as the opening notes of the guitar intro to “I Don’t Believe in Love” took effect, the crowd was fully invested once more. But the next number from Queensryche’s debut album The Warning, would’ve been much more welcomed had it been a slightly better track from said album instead of “NM156” (for instance, the track “Warning” itself – a much more solid effort – though I must admit I’m a tad bias).

Guitarist Dario Parente (left) and Geoff Tate performing at the Peabody in Daytona on 2/29/24.
A couple of songs from 1986’s stellar Rage For Order album followed in the form of “Screaming in Digital” and “Walk in the Shadows” (the latter one of my personal favorites), before “Another Rainy Night (Without You),” “Jet City Woman,” and the 1990 power ballad/Queensryche swan swong “Silent Lucidity’ seemingly closed things out for the night.
But the band were not quite done just yet, as Tate and company soon returned to the stage for a cover of Pink Flyod’s “Welcome to the Machine,” followed by a couple of older classics in the form of “Take Hold of the Flame” and “Queen of the Reich” officially closing out the night. All in all, the evening was the perfect double-dose of old school rock and metal that we – and if I had to guess, everyone else in attendance that night – needed.

Geoff Tate and band on stage in Daytona Beach, FL last Thursday, February 29.
