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Muse are an alternative rock band from Teignmouth, England, United Kingdom. The band consists of Matthew Bellamy on lead vocals, piano, keyboard and guitar, Chris Wolstenholme on backing vocals and bass guitar, and Dominic Howard on drums and percussion. They have been friends since their formation in early 1994 and changed band names a number of times (such as Gothic Plague, Fixed Penalty, and Rocket Baby Dolls) before adopting the name Muse. Check our available Muse concert ticket inventory and get your tickets here at ConcertBank now. Sign up for an email alert to be notified the moment we have tickets!


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Avg. Customer Rating:
5.0 (based on 9 reviews)

Remember when used to play distorted riffs? Remember when Muse would infuse classical influences into their alternative sound instead of using bombastic classical sections as a crutch to make their songs sound as "epic" as possible? Remember when Matthew Bellamy used to be the best part about Muse rather than the worst? Remember when he would compose songs combining various influences naturally instead of writing songs based entirely around any half-ass idea that pops in his head...
- www.sputnikmusic.com
Having just recently seen Muse for the first time on their The 2nd Law Tour at Rod Laver and experiencing their sheer musical force live, this album will not disappoint those who have witnessed their greatness, and it will also please those who are yet to see them. Recorded live in Rome at Stadium Olympico in a one-take, all-or-nothing style is really a testament to their musicality to perform their incredibly well crafted and difficult tunes...
- www.beat.com.au
Once, I argued with a friend who was the greater muse behind Muse, Queen or Pink Floyd? They, a Muse diehard sat firmly in the camp of Pink Floyd, whilst I being a casual to consistent fan of the band, suggested they were more indebted to Queen. For a band that presents their eccentricities and diverse soundscapes on a scale bordering sensory overload, Muse has personally never got weird enough to echo anything as strange and isolated as The Wall, or as genre defining as Dark Side of the Moon...
- www.theaureview.com
They're a strange child, Muse. Since they were, well, New Born, listening to each album has been like visiting a distant nephew, wondering what new trick they would regale their guests with this time. From the promising but flawed indie-rock of Showbiz, they learned to crawl and finally walk unaided with 2006's stupendous Black Holes And Revelations. But the problem with learning to walk is that having developed the skill, its application is usually somewhat unfocused and aimless...
- www.musicomh.com
I know some people who have never heard music from Muse, have never seen Muse in concert, and have never done anything besides decline the experience because they assume from someone else's dismissal of the band that they know what they're all aboot. Yes, aboot. Those people are the same people that lump bands into categories based on individual songs. As if one song is an acceptable delineator of what one fucking band sounds like, on the hole, in the hole, completely in and on the hole bro...
- www.syffal.com
I've personally never really cared for Muse, either in regards to their bombastic arrangements or to singer Matt Bellamy's endlessly histrionic wailings. And it's not that the band's fusion of Queen, Radiohead, electronica, and classical music is particularly off-putting, but rather that their albums, especially 2003's Absolution (considered by many to be their best) grow exhausting in their attempt to keep the emotional intensity at a fever pitch throughout...
- absolutepunk.net
I have never really understood Muse. Like The Beatles, Queen and Red Hot Chili Peppers, they seem to have created a following which is universal and unwavering, but from which I have always felt excluded. The love they invoke is confusing to me because I have never understood why I cannot be as attracted to the music as others seem to be; slavering over the latest release and professing their undying love...
- www.musicreview.co.za
There's a certain difficulty in writing a Muse review: trash them and you risk incurring the wrath of their fans for invoking those same tired (but still entirely pertinent) Queen references; praise them and you'll be shot down by anyone who has ever sat through one of their records sober. The good news about new album The 2nd Law is that the band has expanded the pool of artists from whom they shamelessly steal ideas...
- www.undertheradarmag.com
Release Date: October 2nd, 2012 English trio Muse is one of those bands that people seem to love or hate, and there's no gray area; I was always impartial to them because I had never given them a proper listen. Well, out on a whim, I purchased their sixth studio album The 2nd Law. I must say, it's quite an interesting record. It's not what I expected, and that's a good thing, as well as a bad thing. I had heard this was a concept record, and that leads me to my first problem with it...
- absolutepunk.net
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