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Topic ClosedWhat does Dream Theater need ?

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heyitsthatguy View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 20 2008 at 12:33
pfff pansies

saying Dream Theater's technicality is too unemotional

listen to Behold...the Arctopus


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Visitor13 View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 20 2008 at 03:51
Whatever they need, they're not going to get it.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 20 2008 at 02:49
Originally posted by wolfvaga wolfvaga wrote:

They are great musicians, there's nothing to complain about that... Especially the rhytm section, John Myung and Mike Portnoy. John Petrucci is fine too, with good guitar solos... But together they sound like... tehnicans and nothing more. There's a luck of soul. A drop, but luck. I think that they don't give all of themselves to their music and that's their mayor problem...
 
What is emotional to one, may not be to another, lets face it. I like both DT and Tool, but what makes Tool emotive certainly isn't the same as to what makes DT emotive music. And what I seem to find, is that on average, people that like to play or aspire to play technical music on their instruments themselves, tend to understand how being technical can equal emotion just as much as playing slowly and 'soulfully', which of course, DT are more than capable of both.
I can understand if someone thinks DT is too virtuosic for their tastes, but I think it's important to at least appreciate how it can still be very emotive to other people.
And as for whether DT are truly passionate or not, I doubt they if they weren't passionate about what they do they would bother to practice and give up as much of their time for music as they do.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 19 2008 at 12:17
Originally posted by heyitsthatguy heyitsthatguy wrote:

I was talking about the odd dichotomy here that everyone complains that Dream Theater is constantly talked about
and then they create threads like this
that are pages and pages long
and wonder why the buzz won't die down
 
Oh I hear you on that one. But DT threads are like a horrific accident you drive by. Body parts and blood all over the place. You hate to look, loathe to see it, but you just have too.
 
 
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 19 2008 at 12:13
Originally posted by StyLaZyn StyLaZyn wrote:

Originally posted by heyitsthatguy heyitsthatguy wrote:

FOR GOD'S SAKE THEY'RE A BAND
STOP OVERANALYZING EVERYTHING
STOP IT
STOP
IT
STOP
IT
STOP
STOP

YOU'RE ONLY ADDING FUEL TO A ONCE DYING FIRE THERE IS NO REASON FOR THIS DISCUSSION WHATSOEVER
STOP
STOP
STOP
STOP
STOOOOOOOOOOOOP
YOU'RE PICKING A SCAB HERE THAT DOESN'T NEED TO BE PICKED
 
So....DT is like a scab? Wink
LOL

I was talking about the odd dichotomy here that everyone complains that Dream Theater is constantly talked about
and then they create threads like this
that are pages and pages long
and wonder why the buzz won't die down


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laplace View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 19 2008 at 12:12
DT need iodine
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 19 2008 at 12:12
Originally posted by heyitsthatguy heyitsthatguy wrote:

FOR GOD'S SAKE THEY'RE A BAND
STOP OVERANALYZING EVERYTHING
STOP IT
STOP
IT
STOP
IT
STOP
STOP

YOU'RE ONLY ADDING FUEL TO A ONCE DYING FIRE THERE IS NO REASON FOR THIS DISCUSSION WHATSOEVER
STOP
STOP
STOP
STOP
STOOOOOOOOOOOOP
YOU'RE PICKING A SCAB HERE THAT DOESN'T NEED TO BE PICKED
 
So....DT is like a scab? Wink
LOL
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heyitsthatguy View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 19 2008 at 12:09
FOR GOD'S SAKE THEY'RE A BAND
STOP OVERANALYZING EVERYTHING
STOP IT
STOP
IT
STOP
IT
STOP
STOP

YOU'RE ONLY ADDING FUEL TO A ONCE DYING FIRE THERE IS NO REASON FOR THIS DISCUSSION WHATSOEVER
STOP
STOP
STOP
STOP
STOOOOOOOOOOOOP
YOU'RE PICKING A SCAB HERE THAT DOESN'T NEED TO BE PICKED


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 19 2008 at 12:03
They are great musicians, there's nothing to complain about that... Especially the rhytm section, John Myung and Mike Portnoy. John Petrucci is fine too, with good guitar solos... But together they sound like... tehnicans and nothing more. There's a luck of soul. A drop, but luck. I think that they don't give all of themselves to their music and that's their mayor problem...
Lupus in fabula :)
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 19 2008 at 06:26
Cert gets a clappy for liking Fantomas, Spastic Ink and Zorn Clap

And another one for disliking McLaughlin's playing in Mahavishnu Clap
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 19 2008 at 06:22
Originally posted by sircosick sircosick wrote:



Now, I ask you: I personally dislike DT but I consider them, anyway, a prog band, in the sense that they are complex (more than symphonic prog? Arguably), they have that epicosity (or epicness?) thing and, in general, there is a permanent use of odd time signatures and countless beat changes..... Then, what does make you state the abscense of prog in DT?
 
I won't go over all the bits and pieces that arose from comments that were, indeed designed to stir up a little discussion - I will even overlook TheT's comments about "idiotic" or somesuch Angry.
 
 
This is the very bit I'm interested in - how people hear DT's music as "complex", and this post partially answers it.
 
In my view, "odd" time signatures are not complex in themselves - I quite often find myself writing riffs in 11/4, for example, as it's a very comfortable sig to write in. Often I extend this to 21/4 (usually 3 bars of 5 and one of 6), as that creates a jazzy undertone, and again, is very comfortable to play.
 
"Odd" time sigs do not, by themselves, constitute Prog Rock - I can think of several pop songs in time sigs that are not 2/3 or 4/4, such as "Golden Brown" by the Stranglers, "Turn it On Again" by Genesis - the latter, particularly, could be considered a grey area, as Genesis used to be a Prog band. However, the song itself does not sound Prog - and that's kind of the point.
 
Somewhere along the line, the MUSIC should sound Prog - or progressive, if you will.
 
The underlying structuring of the two DT albums I have reviewed (discounting the Metallica cover album) is so derivative of Metallica's structuring - on the micro level, such as the individual riffs as well as the macro - the overall song structure (on the whole, basic intro/verse/chorus with extended/multiple instrumental sections) that I see Metallica as the more progressive of the two bands.
 
This is nothing to do with preference.
 
The addition of keyboards would be a welcome departure, were it not for the fact that the keyboards are largely used as an additional guitar - bolstering out the rhythm section and providing similar style solo passages.
 
 
I know it gets DT fans riled, and most will simply accuse me of hating them (which I don't) - but it's still a question that I have yet to find an answer to.
 
I think the main problem is that many fans are young, inexperienced musicians, who view anything difficult to play as being complex - which I suppose is kind of reasonable in a way. However, technically challenging does not necessarily equate to complex. It is difficult to play any music fast, but anyone can do it with practice. Once you've mastered the speed thing, it's not hard to learn definite rules, such as notes of a scale, beats to a bar, etc - again, practice is all it takes.
 
 
To me, Prog is not about "symphonic" or any other categorisation that I, for one, do not recognise. As an aside, "Symphonic" Prog is not symphonic. There is nothing in it that even vaguely resembles a symphony. It's not just Prog Metal I "pick on" - it's the whole notion system that seems to be developing of wishing to sub-categorise and pigeon-hole music (which is like trying to herd cats).
 
 
Progressive music since its inception in the world of Jazz in the late 1950s has been about combining the two skills of composition and improvisation. This is easily demonstrable in the most iconic Prog bands, less so in Prog bands that are widely held to be "second division" and not at all in bands that are not Prog - so this view of Prog, limited though it is, does hold water.
 
 
Let's think of some examples;
 
1. "The Musical Box" - 100% Prog, by this definition.
2. "Oh Yeah" (Can) - feels more like improv, but you just know it was designed that way - Prog,
3. "Easy Livin" (Uriah Heep) - quite obviously a rock song with no improv. Can't really call it a composition either - anyone who's ever tried to write a rock song will recognise the structure - and be extremely jealous that they didn't write such a great song Wink
 
 
It's all in the structure. Elements and details (like time sigs) don't really count - imagine if Beethoven (or anyone classically trained) tried to write rock music. Think of Sky... how often do the trained musicians just "get it wrong". Most have the improv trained right out of them.
 
You cannot teach someone how to improvise like Miles or Hendrix, just as you cannot teach anyone how to compose like Beethoven or Bach (both of whom were prolific and noted improvisers). There are rules you can learn on how to compose in their styles - but yet again, rules only need time to learn. They are not hard in themselves.
 
It is easy to hear the difference between someone who composes following the rules, someone who makes up their own rules, and someone who demonstrates that they understand the rules so well that they re-write the book.
 
 
Bear in mind, though, that Prog isn't just about these two things - it's obviously more than that, as several hundred "What is Prog?" threads have proven. However, the more Prog you hear, the more you realise that the "most interesting" stuff does indeed centre around this combination. Prog Metal is something else - but I have heard some that follows this line, and have enjoyed it more, specifically because of that. Examples = Fantomas, Spastic Ink, John Zorn.
 
When I listen to Prog, I want surprises. Could be just me, but I don't mind being a demanding listener. Impressive technical details and virtuosic firework displays are great - but quickly lose their shine when you realise that it is all like a particularly delicious sauce poured over a somewhat plain - or in some cases, unappetising meal.
 
It's kind of the opposite to what I get from the Mahavishnu - a particularly sumptuous spread of fine musical delicacies - with cold, thin and lumpy gravy made from cabbage water (waits for onrush of displeasure from McGlaughlin fans...)
 
 
I think it's nearly lunch time... Embarrassed


Edited by Certif1ed - February 19 2008 at 06:23
The important thing is not to stop questioning.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 19 2008 at 04:01
Originally posted by stonebeard stonebeard wrote:

Honestly...

1. Humor (and not coming from honky-tonk carnival keyboard crap)
2. More diverse drumming.
3. Let go of the 12-step recovery thing, Portnoy. Yeesh.
4. Get off RoadRunner records. Gah.
5. Have the covers of your albums be not like Systematic Chaos.
6. Accentuate your songs with metal, because "The Dark Eternal Night" was totally not where you should be going.
 
I personally really like the 12 step AA songs, and Portnoy only has 3 steps to go anyway.
For the drumming to be more diverse also depends somewhat on what Myung, and a lesser extent, Petrucci are doing. I personally don't believe it's particularly musically to just 'spruce up' the drum work for the sake of doing it, it has to have musical purpose IMO.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 16 2008 at 18:03
Originally posted by crimson87 crimson87 wrote:

they need to retire , plus some blood in their veins


Why should they retire?and the blood??


Edited by burritounit - February 16 2008 at 18:03
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 16 2008 at 13:48
Originally posted by EnglishAssassin EnglishAssassin wrote:


I'm not Peter. It's just one of those little things that annoys me to an unreasonable extent.




Same here
.

Edited by ProgBagel - February 16 2008 at 13:49
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 16 2008 at 13:30
I think they need to have people just leave 'em alone and let them keep doing what they're doing. Prog isn't exactly in the greatest shape right now, so if these guys can introduce new fans to prog, I say keep spreadin' the gospel, fellas.

They're probably doing more than all of us combined, so leave them alone.

E
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 16 2008 at 13:18
they need to retire , plus some blood in their veins
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 15 2008 at 16:24
Originally posted by HughesJB4 HughesJB4 wrote:

Originally posted by oroboross oroboross wrote:

Dream Theater has one thing going for them above every other progrock/metal band.  They have done it all without the support of radio.  During the '70s radio was the greatest supporter of progrock.  That has not been the case since the '80s to present.  DT has continued to write original complex music since the late '80s that appeals to very large amount of people around the world for one reason, they write music for their fans and not for the reasons almost every other band writes, for the bucks and charts.  Even Fates Warning who have been around longer than any other progmetal band has not had the success that DT has.  Why?  Talent.  As great as Fates is DT has gone beyond where Fates went and took progmetal to the place progrock was during it's heyday. DT needs nothing but to keep writing for their fans and ignore everybody who thinks they know what DT needs.
 
I agree with most of those points, but where do we draw the fine line as to what is 'writing for the fans' and 'writing for themselves'? Dream Theater has fans that have a more narrow view of what they should sound like, while some like me, want to see them expand as much as possible. Albums like ToT, seriously divided many fans, because I think that album was written for themselves first and foremost. To many people it didn't fall within the expected DT sound,  not 'classic DT' enough. But for the rest of us, it still had many recognisable elements of their sound, but we loved ToT, because it showed us a side of DT we had not heard before, and IMO still continued to expand upon what they had done prior to ToT.
I tend not to expect too much of a particular sound from DT, because I know they are capable of doing something different each time. I'm no fan boy, I've never been in love with everything they did (as I mentioned in an earlier post, Octavarium was not exactly a favourite of mine), but I will always believe they will have some creative steam left to release.
 
I don't have expectations when it comes to music, that way I don't get dissapointed if they don't live up to my expectations.  Writing for themselves?  Any band that writes for themselves cannot possibly have the success that DT has had for over 20 years.  "Classic DT"?  If a band doesn't progress it stagnates and DT is nothing like Boston.  I have about 30 progmetal bands I like and none of them are as talented or productive as DT. 


Edited by oroboross - February 15 2008 at 16:25
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 14 2008 at 21:32
these guys need a good arse kicking
oh wait I like every single one of their albums to some degree or another
nvm


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 14 2008 at 21:31
Originally posted by stonebeard stonebeard wrote:

Honestly...

1. Humor (and not coming from honky-tonk carnival keyboard crap)
2. More diverse drumming.
3. Let go of the 12-step recovery thing, Portnoy. Yeesh.
4. Get off RoadRunner records. Gah.
5. Have the covers of your albums be not like Systematic Chaos.
6. Accentuate your songs with metal, because "The Dark Eternal Night" was totally not where you should be going.


More songs with reference to drinking beers.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 14 2008 at 21:30
Originally posted by The T The T wrote:

Originally posted by StyLaZyn StyLaZyn wrote:

Originally posted by ProgBagel ProgBagel wrote:

Less fanboys.


LOL

Five clappies for you!
ClapClapClapClapClap
Clap


 
And also less hateboys! Who have no better way to waste their time than going to threads for fanboys!! ClapClapClapClapClapClapClapClap


Now now, I don't hate DT. I have all their CDs except the last one. But it is so much fun to pick on fanboys.  Wink
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