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Topic ClosedIs Mike Portnoy ruining Dream Theater?

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LiquidEternity View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 21 2010 at 15:45
This problem that plagues Dream Theater is more or less the exact one that is plaguing 97% of metal these days. Lots of fans and bands view metal as an end in itself. The heaviness. The fast drums. All that kind of stuff. Bands take old hits and perform "metal versions." And fans eat this up. I like metal plenty, don't get me wrong. But there is no reason to accuse Dream Theater of having a stagnant sound when all their peers are fairly motionless too. Opeth has moved around a bit, but in the grand scheme of things not much at all. Meshuggah has not yet written two songs that don't sound identical to each other and to the other parts of the songs. Pain of Salvation decided to drop the idea of metal in itself, and they have received gallons of hate and spite since (and I haven't even heard their latest one yet, but I understand it's not metal in the slightest). Symphony X is a joke of repetition, despite their talent and strong melodic hooks. Ayreon is historically samey throughout.

The list goes on. And it's not a problem just for metal to stagnate, but it's a trend I've noticed. Maybe I've just gotten bored of the genre somewhat, but I am largely unimpressed with everything metal I hear these days. And whoever suggested Porcupine Tree as a solution for bands with flagging inspiration... clearly hasn't heard The Incident.

Heck, even Devin Townsend, one of my favorite artists period, is fairly redundant from album to album. Nobody's all that exempt.

So blaming Portnoy is kinda missing the point. I don't know why he brings out such hate in people. Really, I'm not that into Dream Theater's music any longer, but the man's attitude and interest in both his band and his fans is admirable.


Edited by LiquidEternity - May 21 2010 at 15:47
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 21 2010 at 15:46
Originally posted by jampa17 jampa17 wrote:

Until now you are the only one worthy to answer to... so... let's see... if they want to explore different sounds like Muse or Evanescence then they are stealing, if they do the same old 90's prog metal, then they are not proggressing...? can you please define yourself...?
I will define myself: I'm not one of those who value music simply (or mostly) by their "progressiveness". I like prog, my favourite sub-genre is symphonic although I like much of other prog including quite some prog metal.
 
I will never complain that "if they do the same old 90's metal, then they are not progressing". I prefer a new album from a style I like than something totally new and groundbreaking which leaves me cold. I guess that even rap was "progressive" the first time it was ever made, but I can assure you that I would not have liked it even then.
 
I love I&W, Awake, A Change of Seasons, Metropolis Pt2 and Six Degrees (mostly disc 2), and several other assorted stuff. Octavarium (the song) and The Count of Tuscany are not bad songs but they are far from the masterpieces some people claim them to be. DT clearly "built" them skillfully and cleverly in order for their prog-oriented fans to consider them masterpieces, but they are not.
I would like to hear again stuff comparable to Under a Glass Moon, Learning to Live, 6:00, Erotomania, Overture 1928, Beyond this life, Home, About to crash, Loosing Time / Grand Finale etc.
But I do not mean simply "in that style". I mean "with that soul, originality and inspiration".
 
 
  
 
 
 
 


Edited by Gerinski - May 21 2010 at 16:22
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 21 2010 at 15:59
Originally posted by Babak RP Babak RP wrote:

Before I start, I should say that I've been a huge Dream Theater fan up to Systematic Chaos. But what now? What has happened to the favourite band of hunderd thousands of people around the world?

So, let me ask you ... people are not allowed to change and do their own music and art ... because a fan doesn't like it? Or thinks that Mike is running the show?
 
I think you have the wrong DT!
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 21 2010 at 16:19
I would want to think that they are really doing the music they really want to do right now. Then if I like it more or less it's my problem.
 
But for some strange reason I have a feeling as if this was not the case, as if they are making the music in a very cerebral and studied way, intentionally built to please as much a wide spectrum of fans as possible within their existing fanbase and maybe trying to pick up a few new ones (that is, trying to range from real metal to prog to "modern-commercial metal" and everything in between, and if possible trying to have also a song that can work decently as a single), instead of letting their talents fly freely.
It's just an impression and I can be wrong.
 
Having said that, I admire Mike Portnoy for being such a hardworking musician (and amazing drummer, no question about that !)
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 21 2010 at 16:21
Originally posted by LiquidEternity LiquidEternity wrote:

Meshuggah has not yet written two songs that don't sound identical to each other and to the other parts of the songs. 

*yawn*
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 21 2010 at 16:34
Originally posted by Gerinski Gerinski wrote:

I would want to think that they are really doing the music they really want to do right now. Then if I like it more or less it's my problem.
 
But for some strange reason I have a feeling as if this was not the case, as if they are making the music in a very cerebral and studied way, intentionally built to please as much a wide spectrum of fans as possible within their existing fanbase and maybe trying to pick up a few new ones (that is, trying to range from real metal to prog to "modern-commercial metal" and everything in between, and if possible trying to have also a song that can work decently as a single), instead of letting their talents fly freely.
It's just an impression and I can be wrong.
 
Having said that, I admire Mike Portnoy for being such a hardworking musician (and amazing drummer, no question about that !)
I suspect that they chose to be a metal band, because that is what they enjoyed growing up and it is what they enjoy playing.  I suppose that they "stuck to the script" by playing some long songs, some short songs, some heavy songs, some light songs, etc... 
 
I'm not really sure what people expect from them.  They are a guitarist, bassist, keyboardist, drummer, and a vocalist.  Yes, they snuck a violin or cello in on some of their earlier albums, but they aren't cello or violin players.  Only so many sounds come out of those 4 instruments.  (granted keyboards can come up with lots and lots of sounds LOL).  I suppose that they tried to progress by adding growls Dead, and yes from that standpoint Portnoy is ruining Dream Theater. Angry  I guess that I just don't get what Dream Theater is supposed to do to appeal to everyone.  Sound like Henry Cow.  News flash people they aren't Henry Cow.  Should Labrie start singing and chanting in Kobaian.  Would that make them more appealing?  Really!!!!   I seriously get that people don't like them but what I don't get is what you are truly expecting from them that would make them better for you.  Should they play and sound like Meshuggah??? Blech!!!  Or is it just a case of expecting them to come up with something that is totally new, innovative, and earth shattering that you don't even know what it is, but when it happens you will know it?   
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 21 2010 at 16:47
Originally posted by LiquidEternity LiquidEternity wrote:

This problem that plagues Dream Theater is more or less the exact one that is plaguing 97% of metal these days. Lots of fans and bands view metal as an end in itself. The heaviness. The fast drums. All that kind of stuff. Bands take old hits and perform "metal versions." And fans eat this up. I like metal plenty, don't get me wrong. But there is no reason to accuse Dream Theater of having a stagnant sound when all their peers are fairly motionless too. Opeth has moved around a bit, but in the grand scheme of things not much at all. Meshuggah has not yet written two songs that don't sound identical to each other and to the other parts of the songs. Pain of Salvation decided to drop the idea of metal in itself, and they have received gallons of hate and spite since (and I haven't even heard their latest one yet, but I understand it's not metal in the slightest). Symphony X is a joke of repetition, despite their talent and strong melodic hooks. Ayreon is historically samey throughout.

The list goes on. And it's not a problem just for metal to stagnate, but it's a trend I've noticed. Maybe I've just gotten bored of the genre somewhat, but I am largely unimpressed with everything metal I hear these days. And whoever suggested Porcupine Tree as a solution for bands with flagging inspiration... clearly hasn't heard The Incident.

Heck, even Devin Townsend, one of my favorite artists period, is fairly redundant from album to album. Nobody's all that exempt.

So blaming Portnoy is kinda missing the point. I don't know why he brings out such hate in people. Really, I'm not that into Dream Theater's music any longer, but the man's attitude and interest in both his band and his fans is admirable.
I definitely have heard and own The Incident, thank you.  I think that what Porcupine Tree are doing, in terms of creativity and originality, vastly outreach DT's grasp of what true musical evolution is.  Besides, it was meant as more of a joke, and I'm sorry that you took it so seriously.  I just don't think Dream Theater as a whole know what they're really doing, and I believe Porcupine Tree does have a good sense of direction and evolution...  my two cents. Stern Smile

Edited by ptkc123 - May 21 2010 at 16:48
    
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 21 2010 at 16:49

First off, I like The Incident.  Second off, you will be hard press to find too many people in the forum that will agree with you on your assessment of The Incident.  Most forum members seems to dislike The Incident as much, if not more than Black Clouds and Silver Linings.  Shouldn't detract from your liking The Incident, but I am just saying.  (Trust me I've seen enough snipes at both bands to last me a thousand lifetimes).

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 21 2010 at 17:02
Originally posted by rushfan4 rushfan4 wrote:

First off, I like The Incident.  Second off, you will be hard press to find too many people in the forum that will agree with you on your assessment of The Incident.  Most forum members seems to dislike The Incident as much, if not more than Black Clouds and Silver Linings.  Shouldn't detract from your liking The Incident, but I am just saying.  (Trust me I've seen enough snipes at both bands to last me a thousand lifetimes).

I didn't say that I liked The Incident, though I do like it, I was just stating that I believe Porcupine Tree have a better sense of direction and non-stagnation vs. Dream Theater, even if The Incident wasn't their best album; I believe it shows great musical transition and I think their next album will be much greater than The Incident.  I'm glad to hear that you enjoy The Incident!     ;  )
    
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 21 2010 at 17:12
Originally posted by rushfan4 rushfan4 wrote:

I suspect that they chose to be a metal band, because that is what they enjoyed growing up and it is what they enjoy playing.  I suppose that they "stuck to the script" by playing some long songs, some short songs, some heavy songs, some light songs, etc... 
Sure they are a metal band, and I do like them doing metal, I do not expect DT making a Supper's Ready. But the many covers they have played should give us a hint of what lays in their hearts together with their beloved metal: Kansas, Queen, Pink Floyd, The Dixie Dregs, Marillion, Rush... clearly they have (or had) a spot for classic prog too (to avoid misunderstandings I will repeat, surely not the prog in the style of early Genesis or Harmonium, but they liked good prog anyway), and yet they do not really show it in their own songs in their newest albums. Octavarium or The Count of Tuscany may be long songs, but that's not the point I am making.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 21 2010 at 17:12
Dream Theater is still alive and well, and the genius of Mike Portnoy would never "ruin" DT.

Just another DT bashing thread.... Unhappy

Check out my YouTube channel! http://www.youtube.com/user/demiseoftime
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 21 2010 at 17:14
Whoa, settle down a wee bit. I was being ornery with the Incident comment. It's a fine album. Just compared to its predecessors, kinda lame. And in truth, that's kinda what Dream Theater is doing, too. Good albums, but ones that are less than those before them.

Honestly, neither Dream Theater nor Porcupine Tree are particularly evolutionary or progressive. PT's moved through a few styles throughout the years, yes, but having seen the dark side of artists like Zappa make pretty much everything else look stagnant. And that might be my issue in and of itself. Frankly, the idea of looking for continued progression is a disheartening pipe dream. No band, at least not any band that lives past twenty years, really goes anywhere new on a consistent basis. You'll be hard-pressed to find a half dozen bands today that have significantly evolved and modified from release to release over four albums.

And sorry, Jlocke. Not trying to be redundant about Meshuggah. I had three of theirs for a while before I just gave up and sold them. Unless you are really into rhythm or pure anger, there's not much to recommend the band. I'm not picking on an easy target, just a well-known one.

The bands that sit at the forefront, the "popular prog" ones if you will, are by nature less radical and less innovative--though King Crimson could possibly be an exception. Most of them (Dream Theater, Genesis, Yes, Porcupine Tree, Pink Floyd, ELP, IQ, etc.) stick to one specific sound, with some evolution but little revolution. Is that bad? No. Just wondering if some of you are holding Dream Theater to a ridiculously higher standard (let's be honest, I am) than you hold other bands. The answer is simple: if you are looking for bands that constantly reinvent themselves, push boundaries, that kind of thing, don't go looking for today's or yesterday's most popular acts. Look for the no-namers, or at least less famous ones. Even among the prog world, the milk that can be easiest to agree on is the most popular.

Of course, I don't expect anyone to care. At least my last post got some replies, which is refreshing.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 21 2010 at 17:27

Nothing to do with this thread but now that we are talking about DT:

Can somebody enlighten me why in PA's discography of DT "A Change of Seasons" appears in the section of "Official singles, EP's, Fan Club & Promo".
I thought it was a normal album release?  ok half of it are covers but so what?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 21 2010 at 17:29
It's officially an EP.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 21 2010 at 17:29
Originally posted by LiquidEternity LiquidEternity wrote:



And sorry, Jlocke. Not trying to be redundant about Meshuggah. I had three of theirs for a while before I just gave up and sold them. Unless you are really into rhythm or pure anger, there's not much to recommend the band. I'm not picking on an easy target, just a well-known one.


It's more like this: I hear nothing BUT variety in Meshuggah's music, but the intricacy is so subtle at times that it's not always easy to detect. Unless you're willing to truly LISTEN to them, you're not gonna get it, but to say that they basically make the same song over and over again is not only 100% incorrect, it is also insulting to those of us who really like their music. 

Some people only listen to music for the melodic aspects, while others are really drawn to the rhythmic aspects. I like both, and Meshuggah is certainly NOT a melodic band, but the rhythms and all the subtleties involved in that ensure that they aren't repetitive, either. If you think they are, you're simply not listening. 

You're a good guy, and I mean nothing by this. Just some healthy debate. Wink
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 21 2010 at 17:37
Yeah. Okay, I was harsh on them earlier. And admittedly, they are slightly fun to pick on.

I owned Catch 33, Destroy Erase Improve, and I for around a year. Listened to them each a bunch. I liked a few parts of Catch 33. But basically I was just listening in the hopes that something would click, unlock in them. But they just felt like overly intentional rhythmic technicality and exaggerated anger, and neither of those are really me. I like some tech metal stuff, but that never worked. And honestly, when ObZen came out, I listened to some of their stuff that I could stream. It was nothing remotely surprising. What it seems to me that Meshuggah has done is find this little niche of music that they can do really well, and they're exploring it very carefully and creatively. Within the space of what they are, they are creative and evolutionary. But in the grand scheme of music... they are one thing and one thing only.

They are just one of those bands that sound very static and dry unless you stare really closely at them for a long period of time. And maybe only if you're a drummer in the first place.


Edited by LiquidEternity - May 21 2010 at 17:38
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 21 2010 at 17:43
Originally posted by ptkc123 ptkc123 wrote:

Originally posted by rushfan4 rushfan4 wrote:

First off, I like The Incident.  Second off, you will be hard press to find too many people in the forum that will agree with you on your assessment of The Incident.  Most forum members seems to dislike The Incident as much, if not more than Black Clouds and Silver Linings.  Shouldn't detract from your liking The Incident, but I am just saying.  (Trust me I've seen enough snipes at both bands to last me a thousand lifetimes).

I didn't say that I liked The Incident, though I do like it, I was just stating that I believe Porcupine Tree have a better sense of direction and non-stagnation vs. Dream Theater, even if The Incident wasn't their best album; I believe it shows great musical transition and I think their next album will be much greater than The Incident.  I'm glad to hear that you enjoy The Incident!     ;  )
 
Look dude... I know you mention it as a joke, so I honesty ignore the comment, but someone hit it again and just let me tell you that The Incident is a plain boring kind of conceptual album... I wonder why there's always someone talking good about PT in every single thread we have hear... we are talking about a Prog Metal band and you mention a space rock band...? I mean, if don't want that people pick up against PT, isn't better to stay to the focus of the discussion...? an Alternative Rock band with long arrangements, for me that's all about PT and there's nothing further... but I don't care and I won't bash them just because they are boring to me... just I won't mention them... I don't care... enough to say I don't care if Steven Wilson is ruin PT or not... is his band and he can do whatever he likes with it...
 
Portnoy is the same, and I as a fan have a lot of extra material thanks to him... he dedicates himself to give more to the fans... if you like it or not... is your problem...
 
and don't try to attack me because I don't like PT... just move on and stay to the focus of the thread... OK..?
Change the program inside... Stay in silence is a crime.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 21 2010 at 17:54
it's incredible how a Newbie open a thread and everybody fall out with the same old DT discussion.WinkLOL




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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 21 2010 at 17:55
Originally posted by jampa17 jampa17 wrote:

Originally posted by ptkc123 ptkc123 wrote:

Originally posted by rushfan4 rushfan4 wrote:

First off, I like The Incident.  Second off, you will be hard press to find too many people in the forum that will agree with you on your assessment of The Incident.  Most forum members seems to dislike The Incident as much, if not more than Black Clouds and Silver Linings.  Shouldn't detract from your liking The Incident, but I am just saying.  (Trust me I've seen enough snipes at both bands to last me a thousand lifetimes).

I didn't say that I liked The Incident, though I do like it, I was just stating that I believe Porcupine Tree have a better sense of direction and non-stagnation vs. Dream Theater, even if The Incident wasn't their best album; I believe it shows great musical transition and I think their next album will be much greater than The Incident.  I'm glad to hear that you enjoy The Incident!     ;  )
 
Look dude... I know you mention it as a joke, so I honesty ignore the comment, but someone hit it again and just let me tell you that The Incident is a plain boring kind of conceptual album... I wonder why there's always someone talking good about PT in every single thread we have hear... we are talking about a Prog Metal band and you mention a space rock band...? I mean, if don't want that people pick up against PT, isn't better to stay to the focus of the discussion...? an Alternative Rock band with long arrangements, for me that's all about PT and there's nothing further... but I don't care and I won't bash them just because they are boring to me... just I won't mention them... I don't care... enough to say I don't care if Steven Wilson is ruin PT or not... is his band and he can do whatever he likes with it...
 
Portnoy is the same, and I as a fan have a lot of extra material thanks to him... he dedicates himself to give more to the fans... if you like it or not... is your problem...
 
and don't try to attack me because I don't like PT... just move on and stay to the focus of the thread... OK..?
 
Hey Jampa17 i went away a couple of months and you have more post than i and are a brand new prog reviewer.
 
CongratClapClapClap




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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 21 2010 at 17:55
OH... Albert... didn't see you in month... again... in a DT thread... how a surprise..!!! LOL
 
Edit: thanks man... things changes with time and patience... nice to seeya man...


Edited by jampa17 - May 21 2010 at 17:57
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