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Direct Link To This Post Topic: Dream Theater: Prog innovators or merely imitators
    Posted: June 09 2014 at 10:43







Dream Theater: Innovators or imitators? When I think of Prog rock I think of bands on a quest to constantly break conventions and move music forward. As much as I enjoy some of the output from Dream Theater, I see them (like some other later day prog artists) as bands that wear their influences so proudly on their sleeves that they  produce music that can only move sideways. So are Dream Theater innovators or merely imatators?










Edited by SteveG - June 10 2014 at 10:24
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 09 2014 at 11:45
If they were innovators, what did they innovate? But, if they were imitators, who did they imitate? Those are the questions.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 09 2014 at 12:29
Well at some point it seems all bands efforts move sideways when they get in a rut.....IMO right now DT are in a rut, for sure the last two albums are nothing ground breaking from an innovation view. When I think about their early albums like Scenes, SDoIT, Awake those were some pretty innovative albums and a lot of new prog/rock/metal bands acknowledge them as innovators.

Imitators, not sure as most bands do imitate the bands they get inspiration from, maybe not flown blown imitation but there are bits and pcs mixed in usually. With DT you can hear Rush, Yes, Genesis, PF, Metallica, Iron Maiden......but DT sounds like DT at least to me.

The key to me for DT is will they get out of this rut and create some new music to get excited about, in prog years they are not that old to learn something new or actually create a great album again. Portnoy is the only one who since the breakup has actually made some pretty good music albeit as a session drummer on some, but still, his work with Morse, Transatlantic and Winery Dogs is pretty damn good.

All this IMO


Edited by Catcher10 - June 09 2014 at 12:34
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 09 2014 at 12:35
This reviewer at RateYourMusic really, really hates 'em.

On Images and Words....

Originally posted by Mister_Blonde Mister_Blonde wrote:

liked this when I was fifteen, on the general grounds that I was a dipsh*t teenager anyway. But this does have a few songs I still rather like, for nostalgic reasons. But it's not that good of an album, mostly because - as is the norm for this band - Dream Theater's softer moments are basically sh*t. It's because they're the most f**king obvious and sentimental schlock ever. Surrounded is like a sh*tty lifetime movie turned into a ballad. It's the worst and i'm one of those dumbf**ks who's suffered through Metropolis II multiple times.

But hey Pull Me Under is still a cool song! I mean it rides its hooks for f**king ever but at least it has some life and energy to it. It's a memorable song and the outro is legitimately boss as f**k. But what marrs the rest is what's been their bread and butter since forever - a ton of flashy soloing to cover up the fact that their songwriting has always been predictable verse-chorus. By which I really mean, verse-chorus-verse-chorus-extended f**king soloing that doesn't tie back into the rest appropriately, etc.

I've beaten the point into the ground a lot over the years, but Dream Theater really are exactly that compared to basically any of their prog rock influences. But still, there's actually some okay riffs/melodies on here. It's mediocre stuff, but hey, at least it feels like it f**king ends at some point unlike Metropolis II. I guess that's something.


On Metropolis Pt. 2...

Originally posted by Mister_Blonde Mister_Blonde wrote:

Everything that is horrible about progressive metal rolled up into one giant sh*tfest of an album. I almost want to call it the Tales of Topographic Oceans of metal music, but that's not even fair because Yes at least came up with like one or two okay moments? This is awful on every level, not even in a way where it's kinda funny. Everything about it is horrifically overwrought, from the ham-handed balladic sections to the 'look am we're so proggy admire these multi minute solos'

The difference between the best prog rock and even prog metal bands, and Dream Theater, is that the former actually knew how to use technique in a way that worked in the context of their composition. DT didn't, and to be boot they're arguably more formulaic than any of the prog or metal bands they're influenced by. Just putrid.


On Train of Thought...

Originally posted by Mister_Blonde Mister_Blonde wrote:

This album is 'dark' in about the same way a Lifetime special is dark.

Seriously, this album trying be all HEAVY, SONNNNNN is f**king hilarious. It's impossible to buy it because most of these riffs are just complete trash. It's a bunch of bad chugging, and what's more it's punchless on top of it. Inspired by 80's Metallica, you say? HA! Anyway, the rest of this is pretty standard Dream Theater, IE really bland and formulaic songs with a bunch of irritating soloing in the middle of these songs. No, they're not bad because they're solos, they're bad because they're not much more than an excuse to show off chops instead of being meaningfully integrated into the songs.  This band's worst sin is how f**king formulaic and predictable most of their songs are - which, by the way, is the exact opposite of what a the majority of the prog rock bands they were inspired by were.

I'd despise prog too if this band was all I knew of it
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 09 2014 at 13:37
I hope those ridiculous "reviews" were posted for humor, as I don't really see the relevance here.........one uneducated listeners opinion is about as good as any other I suppose.

However, as to the question at hand.........my personal opinion, since I first heard Images and Words in the mid-90's is that they were mostly imitators.  Some Rush riffs and drumming, some Pink Floyd atmosphere, some 70's fusion type instrumental workouts, 80's big hair band vocals, all mashed together with the "innovation" of metal distortion and double bass drumming.

On the other hand, nobody had really done that up to that point (though it could be argued that Metallica created far more interesting "progressive metal" music, back in the 80's, than DT ever came up with later on).

I don't think you can really overstate how important DT was (and maybe still is) to modern prog, though.  A lot of people on this site, and that I've met at prog festivals over the years, were turned onto prog rock via DT.  So whether or not they are originals or imitators (like most bands, I think they are somewhere in between), they certainly have had popularity and exposure well beyond the vast majority of most modern prog bands.  Regardless of my personal opinion of them, they must have done something right.


Edited by infandous - June 09 2014 at 13:38
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 09 2014 at 13:37
Originally posted by Mirror Image Mirror Image wrote:

If they were innovators, what did they innovate? But, if they were imitators, who did they imitate? Those are the questions.
If this is a philosophical question then I'll have to consult my wife. Every day she keeps telling me how smart she is! But seriously, for an example of DT's imitation, I think back to the opening track from the second disc of the Six Degrees album titled Overture. If I remember correctly, it started off with a Moody Blues style Day's Of Future Passed album orchestral piece, morphed into short loud bass/drum/guitar section, resumed with synthesized strings that resembled the Eldorado overture from ELO before Petrucci caps off the song with one of his best Brian May impersonations. Stunningly beautiful piece but hardly original sounding in style. Right now I can't think of anything original by them but the day's not over yet.

Edited by SteveG - June 09 2014 at 19:48
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 09 2014 at 13:49
Originally posted by infandous infandous wrote:



I hope those ridiculous "reviews" were posted for humor, as I don't really see the relevance here.........one uneducated listeners opinion is about as good as any other I suppose.However, as to the question at hand.........my personal opinion, since I first heard Images and Words in the mid-90's is that they were mostly imitators.  Some Rush riffs and drumming, some Pink Floyd atmosphere, some 70's fusion type instrumental workouts, 80's big hair band vocals, all mashed together with the "innovation" of metal distortion and double bass drumming.On the other hand, nobody had really done that up to that point (though it could be argued that Metallica created far more interesting "progressive metal" music, back in the 80's, than DT ever came up with later on).I don't think you can really overstate how important DT was (and maybe still is) to modern prog, though.  A lot of people on this site, and that I've met at prog festivals over the years, were turned onto prog rock via DT.  So whether or not they are originals or imitators (like most bands, I think they are somewhere in between), they certainly have had popularity and exposure well beyond the vast majority of most modern prog bands.  Regardless of my personal opinion of them, they must have done something right.



I would like to think that the answer to most arguments lies somewhere in the middle and your response was very insightful. The reason I asked the question in the first place was because after reading so many responses from members to the "What does progressive mean to you?" post, I was curious as to why so many prog bands and fans stay in their comfort zone, for lack of a better term. Thanks again for your response.

Edited by SteveG - June 09 2014 at 14:04
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 09 2014 at 13:57
Maybe DT was a band that push the progressive side of the metal to the edge by mixing the symphonic side of Yes, the hard rock and metal side of Rush and Metallica. I don't think they create the genre, but they find a great balance between musicianship and emotion in their songs. However, lately, the band is starting to repeat a bit too much the same formula. So to answer the question, mot totally innovator and not totally imitator.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 09 2014 at 14:02
Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

I would like to think that the answer to most arguments is somewhere in the middle and your response was very insightful. The reason I asked the question in the first place was because after reading so many responses from members to the "What does progressive mean to you?" post, I was curious as to why so many prog bands and fans stay in their comfort zone, for lack of a better term. Thanks again for your response.



No problem, glad I could help.  As to "comfort zone".............I think the vast majority of music listeners (heck, musicians as well) always stay in theirs.  Prog rock is supposed to be different, but I think it's the rare exception where that is true.  Usually, after a certain age, most people have formed their views on most subjects, and are highly unlikely to change them barring some dramatic event that forces a change.

I notice people often get flac on here for not recognizing the brilliance of certain pop artists and mainstream music, while others seem to think that anything ever remotely conventionally melodic is too safe and "easy".   People have comfort zones because people need to have stability in their lives, which seems to become more important the older one gets.  This is not an absolute of course, as there are many exceptions (which tend to stand out and be noticed more because they are exceptions), but in general, everybody has a comfort zone.



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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 09 2014 at 14:14
Originally posted by infandous infandous wrote:


Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

I would like to think that the answer to most arguments is somewhere in the middle and your response was very insightful. The reason I asked the question in the first place was because after reading so many responses from members to the "What does progressive mean to you?" post, I was curious as to why so many prog bands and fans stay in their comfort zone, for lack of a better term. Thanks again for your response.
No problem, glad I could help.  As to "comfort zone".............I think the vast majority of music listeners (heck, musicians as well) always stay in theirs.  Prog rock is supposed to be different, but I think it's the rare exception where that is true.  Usually, after a certain age, most people have formed their views on most subjects, and are highly unlikely to change them barring some dramatic event that forces a change.I notice people often get flac on here for not recognizing the brilliance of certain pop artists and mainstream music, while others seem to think that anything ever remotely conventionally melodic is too safe and "easy".   People have comfort zones because people need to have stability in their lives, which seems to become more important the older one gets.  This is not an absolute of course, as there are many exceptions (which tend to stand out and be noticed more because they are exceptions), but in general, everybody has a comfort zone.
Yes, I'm one of those always looking for a way to invent a better musical mousetrap but your words about people's need for a "comfort zone" are wisdom indeed.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 09 2014 at 14:14
I'm not terribly into DT myself, but it seems like while they're important for either introducing prog rock fans to metal or vice versa - lots of people in either camp dislike them as either "prog for metalheads who are afraid of prog" or "metal for prog-rock fans who are afraid of metal".

The only other band I can think of who seems to draw similar reactions the same extent are probably Opeth.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 09 2014 at 15:36
Originally posted by Catcher10 Catcher10 wrote:

Well at some point it seems all bands efforts move sideways when they get in a rut.....IMO right now DT are in a rut, for sure the last two albums are nothing ground breaking from an innovation view. When I think about their early albums like Scenes, SDoIT, Awake those were some pretty innovative albums and a lot of new prog/rock/metal bands acknowledge them as innovators.

Imitators, not sure as most bands do imitate the bands they get inspiration from, maybe not flown blown imitation but there are bits and pcs mixed in usually. With DT you can hear Rush, Yes, Genesis, PF, Metallica, Iron Maiden......but DT sounds like DT at least to me.

The key to me for DT is will they get out of this rut and create some new music to get excited about, in prog years they are not that old to learn something new or actually create a great album again. Portnoy is the only one who since the breakup has actually made some pretty good music albeit as a session drummer on some, but still, his work with Morse, Transatlantic and Winery Dogs is pretty damn good.

All this IMO
Your comments about Rush influences are dead on, but this band's sound was never immediately identifable to me. Perhaps if they a had a more distinctive vocalist. My father used to be able to recognise Geddy after just one syllable.(Perhaps because he hated his voice!) Not knocking La Brie, but his voice just doesn't stand out.


Edited by SteveG - June 09 2014 at 18:37
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 09 2014 at 15:37
Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

Originally posted by Mirror Image Mirror Image wrote:

If they were innovators, what did they innovate? But, if they were imitators, who did they imitate? Those are the questions.
If this is a philosophical question then I'll have to consult my wife. Every day she keeps telling me how smart she is! But seriously, for an example of DT's imitation, I think back to the opening track from the second disc of the Six Degrees album titled Overture. If I remember correctly, it started off with a Moody Blues style Day's Of Future Passed album orchestral piece, morphed into short loud bass/drum/guitar section, resumed with synthesized strings that resembled the Eldorado overture from ELO before Petrucci caps off the song with one of his best Brian May impersonations. Stunningly beautiful piece but hardly original. Right now I can't think of anything original by them but the day's not over yet.


Well it is original DT music, maybe you are using the word original in a different way. I am sure nobody on this site has in-depth knowledge to say that when they recorded Overture DT were copying The Moody Blues, ELO and Queen, or even if they got inspiration from those bands in that one pc of music.

Not every pc of music any band creates has to be innovative or imitated.

This thread is going all over the place, or it can it seems. In the title of this post you can insert pretty much any band name

(nsert Band Name): Prog innovators or merely imitators
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 09 2014 at 15:54
Originally posted by Catcher10 Catcher10 wrote:

Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

Originally posted by Mirror Image Mirror Image wrote:

If they were innovators, what did they innovate? But, if they were imitators, who did they imitate? Those are the questions.
If this is a philosophical question then I'll have to consult my wife. Every day she keeps telling me how smart she is! But seriously, for an example of DT's imitation, I think back to the opening track from the second disc of the Six Degrees album titled Overture. If I remember correctly, it started off with a Moody Blues style Day's Of Future Passed album orchestral piece, morphed into short loud bass/drum/guitar section, resumed with synthesized strings that resembled the Eldorado overture from ELO before Petrucci caps off the song with one of his best Brian May impersonations. Stunningly beautiful piece but hardly original. Right now I can't think of anything original by them but the day's not over yet.


Well it is original DT music, maybe you are using the word original in a different way. I am sure nobody on this site has in-depth knowledge to say that when they recorded Overture DT were copying The Moody Blues, ELO and Queen, or even if they got inspiration from those bands in that one pc of music.

Not every pc of music any band creates has to be innovative or imitated.

This thread is going all over the place, or it can it seems. In the title of this post you can insert pretty much any band name

  • (nsert Band Name): Prog innovators or merely imitators
Correct.  I shoud have said that the peice was beautiful but completely derivative. I agree that not every pc of music should be innovative but a majority of it should. You seem to know what I'm on about so using your (insert Band Name) here suggestion would indeed introduce many wandering threads. BTW, saying that a PC of music is in the style of someone else's music is not copying, it is only imitating the style of the music. Big difference.                                                                                         


Edited by SteveG - June 09 2014 at 16:41
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 09 2014 at 16:40
Well one synonym for imitate is copy. Now introducing the word style, well many many bands have the same style.
Do I think Overture could be in the same style as Moody Blues, Queen or ELO pcs...sure why not.

A lot of DT songs have that symphonic/orchestral style, feel to them like Overture, Octavarium heck even In the Presence of Enemies has that style...but I don't think it is an imitation or copy.

But again, that's just me...
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 09 2014 at 16:52
^I was using copy as in a reproduction of music note per musical note but as a synonym, well, you got me there. Bowdown

Edited by SteveG - June 09 2014 at 16:57
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 09 2014 at 17:26
Its good we worked things out
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 09 2014 at 19:19
It's a bit of both.  One thing you have to understand is metal dudes think there is no other music like metal on the planet.  Yeah, everything else, be it rock, jazz, classical, funk whatever is grossly inferior.  Therefore, for everything rock does, there has to be a metal equivalent because that is what metalheads are going to listen to.  (And by the way, I refer here to a certain kind of metalhead.  Not all metalheads, including self, are like that).  They don't want Zappa or Sparks, they want Faith No More or Freak Kitchen which is basically the metal equivalent of those bands/artists.  Likewise, they don't want Rush or Yes.  They want a metal equivalent of these bands.  That is the gap that Dream Theater filled in the 90s.  Since there had been no out and out metal band before (Deep Purple/Rainbow don't count, I mean metal influenced by Iron Maiden/Metallica) that relied so much on complex keyboard-guitar interplay, there was a certain freshness to their sound at that time.  Fates Warning was already doing something somewhat on those lines but they were a lot tighter and relied less on long interludes.  DT by incorporating long interludes evoked prog rock a lot more.  In fairness to them, Petrucci's guitarwork was also more inspired at that time and showed more than just flashes of originality.  But after a while, as it happens with so many bands, DT became a formula to endlessly regurgitate for the satisfaction of fans and the 'dream' part of the name receded in relevance.  I mean, it's more like they are dreaming they are still in the 90s, still just released Images & Words.  They aren't really dreaming up anything fresh.  And again, that is hard and a lot of bands that lasted that long got stuck in a rut so there's no reason why DT should be singled out for criticism on that count.

Edited by rogerthat - June 09 2014 at 19:21
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 09 2014 at 19:33
Another point is they have a tendency to rely on some cliched modes of developing songs.  E.g  The way Surrounded opens with some cheesy singing over piano and moves on to a fairly hard rocking section but over rather 'happy' chords is very 80s.  That is also pretty typical of metal.  The 80s defined metal's horizons for a very long time and that is probably still the case to an extent so 80s modes of songwriting are very popular in metal.  Ballads HAVE to follow the power ballad pattern; there's no room for vulnerability, longing or tenderness as those are not very 'metal' qualities.  You'd notice that while Petrucci is immensely talented, a lot of his solos follow the patterns that many 80s metal/hard rock guitarists favoured.  Because if he tried to play like Hackett or Rothery, the fans wouldn't like it.  LaBrie's overwrought singing also relates to this, though I wonder if he can indeed sing any other way, given how he renders even classics like Time.  According to ex-Fates Warning vocalist Jon Arch, when he auditioned for Dream Theater, they tried to get him to sing in a way he didn't enjoy LOL because that's what they wanted.  They knew their audience well from the start and stuck to the winning formula.  What I am saying is that is why you may be left with the feeling they don't have a particularly identifiable sound because it evokes 80s a lot.

Edited by rogerthat - June 09 2014 at 19:33
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 09 2014 at 21:17
Originally posted by infandous infandous wrote:



I hope those ridiculous "reviews" were posted for humor, as I don't really see the relevance here.........one uneducated listeners opinion is about as good as any other I suppose.However, as to the question at hand.........my personal opinion, since I first heard Images and Words in the mid-90's is that they were mostly imitators.  Some Rush riffs and drumming, some Pink Floyd atmosphere, some 70's fusion type instrumental workouts, 80's big hair band vocals, all mashed together with the "innovation" of metal distortion and double bass drumming.On the other hand, nobody had really done that up to that point (though it could be argued that Metallica created far more interesting "progressive metal" music, back in the 80's, than DT ever came up with later on).I don't think you can really overstate how important DT was (and maybe still is) to modern prog, though.  A lot of people on this site, and that I've met at prog festivals over the years, were turned onto prog rock via DT.  So whether or not they are originals or imitators (like most bands, I think they are somewhere in between), they certainly have had popularity and exposure well beyond the vast majority of most modern prog bands.  Regardless of my personal opinion of them, they must have done something right.





I'm not sure I'd agree that Metallica ever went truly progressive. Perhaps they just got close, but no more. Besides, I find most of their songs rather tedious (though there are indeed some songs from them I really love), while I do have loads of songs from DT that I really love a lot.
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