Black Clouds & Silver Linings (Special Edition)
Dream Theater
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| Name | Artist | Time | Price | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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1 |
A Nightmare to Remember | Dream Theater | 16:12 | Album Only | View In iTunes |
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2 |
A Rite of Passage | Dream Theater | 8:36 | $1.29 | View In iTunes |
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3 |
Wither | Dream Theater | 5:25 | $1.29 | View In iTunes |
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4 |
The Shattered Fortress | Dream Theater | 12:49 | Album Only | View In iTunes |
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5 |
The Best of Times | Dream Theater | 13:07 | Album Only | View In iTunes |
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6 |
The Count of Tuscany | Dream Theater | 19:17 | Album Only | View In iTunes |
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7 |
Stargazer | Dream Theater | 8:10 | $1.29 | View In iTunes |
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8 |
Tenement Funster / Flick of the Wrist / Lily of the Valley | Dream Theater | 8:17 | $1.29 | View In iTunes |
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9 |
Odyssey | Dream Theater | 7:59 | $1.29 | View In iTunes |
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10 |
Take Your Fingers from My Hair | Dream Theater | 8:18 | $1.29 | View In iTunes |
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11 |
Larks Tongues In Aspic Pt. 2 | Dream Theater | 6:30 | $1.29 | View In iTunes |
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12 |
To Tame a Land | Dream Theater | 7:15 | $1.29 | View In iTunes |
| Total: 12 Songs |
Album Review
After finally running out their 13-year, seven-plus album deal with a poisonously indifferent Atlantic Records via 2005's workmanlike Octavarium, progressive metal standard bearers Dream Theater took advantage of their well earned free agent status to enjoy a heated courtship from several interested labels, before eventually settling on the artistically simpatico Roadrunner. But, ironically, Dream Theater's first album for the label that heavy metal built, 2007's Systematic Chaos, was relatively accessible by the group's standards, complementing every epic and complex composition with a comparatively concise and hooky song, thus leaving it to its 2009 successor, Black Clouds & Silver Linings, to really flex the band's progressive metal muscles to their maximum girth. And in fact, Dream Theater's tenth long-player is about as dense and challenging as any album in their daunting discography (and certainly the darkest of spirit since 2003's Train of Thought), by emphasizing not only the virtuoso members' ever stupefying musicianship, but also their most aggressive and thoroughly metallic songwriting tendencies. Sixteen-minute opener "A Nightmare to Remember" and its half-as-long follow-up, "A Rite of Passage" (later edited further for release as the album's first single), quickly establish this agenda via frequently thrash-paced staccato riffing, some of John Petrucci's most blistering guitar solos ever, and the return of drummer Mike Portnoy's syncopated growls (no doubt inspired by his pal Mikael Åkerfeldt of Opeth), providing contrast for singer James LaBrie's soaring melodic elegance. Third track "Whither" — a tender ballad and mere babe at five minutes in length — is this album's only concession to commerce (and one of Dream Theater's better stabs at the form it is, too); but after that it's right back to prog rock in excelsis, via the final chapter in the band's "AA Saga," "The Shattered Fortress," which references songs from previous albums such as "The Glass Prison" and "The Root of All Evil," in emulation of the "Conceptual Continuity Clues" method favored by one of Portnoy's heroes, Frank Zappa. Only two, not surprisingly massive song suites remain now, and interestingly, both pay evident tribute to Rush! First up, "The Best of Times" boasts an extremely Alex Lifeson-like lead guitar motif and verse chords that were clearly evolved from "The Spirit of Radio," later showcasing the most versatile and classically steeped performance on this record by keyboard wizard Jordan Rudess. Second, the revealingly named "The Count of Tuscany" (surely a thinly veiled allusion to the Rush's famed instrumental, "La Villa Strangiato") catches Portnoy in the act of outright Neil Peart worship, colluding with Petrucci on their own version of "Xanadu" before leading their bandmates into another heady prog-metal magnum opus brimming with more ideas, notes, and time changes over 19 minutes than most bands bother with over a ten album career. That last bit sound at all familiar? That's because, at the end of the day, one must admit that Black Clouds & Silver Linings, for all its abundantly positive qualities and minor but clear distinctions from prior efforts, is still an archetypal Dream Theater album; one that's unlikely to broaden their audience all that much, but is conversely guaranteed to thrill their hardcore converts with its renewed devotion to the most exigent and stimulating facets of the band's chosen musical domain. [A special edition was also released.]
Customer Reviews
ive been a DT fan for 25 years and blah blah blah....
First off, I wanna say that BCSL is a pretty solid release for Dream Theater considering that Systematic Chaos wasnt exactly on par with some of their other work. Another thing I wanted to address was all these reviewers who give the same ol' DT claim that theyve been "fans" of the band since they first started in New York 20 thousand years ago. News flash, no one freakin cares how long youve been fan, does it give you some kind of special powers that new comers only dream of having? Give me break, just because youve been a fan for so long simply means you have ears and can use them....big deal, so does everyone else except for a deaf dude. "This album will never be as good as I&W or awake *cry* *cry* cry*..." Thats your opinion, dont steer people away from a solid release when youre mad that they didnt put another pull me under on the album....to be honest, all their stuff from Images and Awake sounds practically the same anyways, only the newer stuff is heavier, so go cry in a corner. "Their lyrics are horrible, they have no thought ..WHINE", lyrics for pull me under..."This world is spinning around me, the whole world is spinning without me..." oh yea I can see how they have really dropped the ball on having great meaning in their lyrics..... As for the album itself, its a solid 70 minutes of music, may not be the greatest DT ever, but its definately good. Having more of a grand concept this time around rather than having s**t all over the place like Systematic Chaos. Each member sounds great on this album, Jordan Rudess, a guy thats hard to get used to has some great sounds on this album. Petrucci is Petrucci, his solos are decent but nothing special, same goes for his chuga chuga riffs in almost every song. Portnoy kinda let up a bit but it fits the album better that way when hes hitting only 15 different drums rather than 15 KITS worth of drums, if that made any sense at all. JMX the bass man seems a little dulled out in this album, but w/e hes the bass player, not much to cry about. James Labrie has some pretty good sounds on this album as well, his vocals in nightmare to remember, wither, and count of tuscany were pretty good. Nightmare to Remember: solid opener, definatley a stronger song on the album, amazing middle section before the instrument break(which I think was completely uneeded, but thats DT for you) 7/10 Rite of Passage: Nice and catchy, a way a release single should sound, and keeping with traditional DT rockin. 9/10 Wither: the most underated song on the album, short but very beautiful...james and jp have great harmonies on this song. 9/10 The Shattered Fortress: too many people whine that it sounds like all the other AA songs, well no s**t dumbasses, its the closing song to his suite. The riffs were all but together very nicely in this song, revisiting some of my favorite DT songs. 9/10 The Best of Times: my heart goes out to your family for the loss of your father, but this song just doesnt seem to do it for me, i usually skip it to get to the last one...maybe you should stick it after wither....shattered fortress is hard to follow. 6/10 The Count of Tuscany: Kind of a cheesy song lyrically, but what band on RR records doesnt have Cheesy lyrics? Cheesy anything for that matter cough cough, dragonforce, cough cough slipknot.....cough cough everything else......very good song instrumentally, and james sings the cheese with greatness which makes it that much better. 8/10 If youre pretty new to dream theater and would like to try something new, this album would be a decent one to start at. For all the hardcore DT fans its a no brainer must have, and for the people who claim they were there the day mike portnoy was born (joke joke), give this album a chance, because that douche bag kevin moore is gone doesnt mean that theyre lyrics suffer....he wrote pull me under btw....the song with the most thought provoking lyrics ever..haha. so if you like DT buy this album, simple as that. plus if you get the bonus disc you get all those great cover tunes which is an extra hour of music. for all you "fans" who hate DT since rudess joined the band.....consider this review my digital middle finger stuck right in your fat face.
i had it since saturday!
well, i preordered the 3cd set (who still plays vinyl anyway?) and i fully expected it to land in my mailbox by the end of this week. LO! to my exciting delight it came yesterday, saturday the 20th :D and to think on friday afternoon i was wondering why i never seem to be one of the lucky ones to get anything early. so here it is...nightmare is just dark and heavy as can be. totally awesome and very well thought out musically, both in the chord structure and in the song structure, and not to mention the choices of effects on guitars and keys. perhaps it even hints at under a glass moon, which is about driving in the rain. rite of passage we all know by now, so no comments except that i guess they really dont like the new pres and his cohorts in the senate and house. wither is also great, and there is some really lyrical guitar stuff. shattered fortress is the final (i would guess) installment of the aa theme from portnoy, and it is certainly the most solid piece on the album. it musically rehashes tons of their stuff dating back many albums, including stuff that is not so obviously part of the aa entity. it really brings the whole installment full circle and sums it up in a most awesome fashion. the best of time is a gorgeous piece of music, and it is an ode not only to mp's father, but to all father/son relationships. it hints to take away my pain as well in the opening guitar passage. count of tuscany is one of their epic songs that i accustomed to since they first started playing change of seasons over 20 years ago! but lyrically i am not so sure what they are aiming at beyond a hannibal lecter theme. the album as a whole is VERY loud and i had to turn down the speakers. but as a whole it is light years beyond systematic chaos. everything is so well thought out and kevin shirley even returned for some production, which is also outstanding. jp and mp have both returned to musicality, rather than just shredding (toft, anyone?), and they really made a return to their darker writing style of the kevin moore days. alot of stuff really falls into place here, and even though any albm by any band has its disappointments, i am just very impressed with the whole album.
Anything DT ever Does as a whole group is a God Sent.
Is there any band out there that even remotely could be compared to DT?
Biography
Formed: 1986 in New York, NY
Genre: Rock
Years Active: '80s, '90s, '00s, '10s
Top Albums and Songs By Dream Theater
| Name | Album | Time | Price | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
1 |
Panic Attack | Octavarium | 7:16 | $1.29 | View In iTunes |
|
2 |
Pull Me Under | Images and Words | 8:12 | $1.29 | View In iTunes |
|
3 |
These Walls | Octavarium | 6:59 | $0.99 | View In iTunes |
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4 |
As I Am | Train of Thought | 7:47 | $0.99 | View In iTunes |
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5 |
Pull Me Under (2007 Remix) | Greatest Hit (...and 21 Other Pretty Cool Songs) [Remastered] | 8:13 | $1.29 | View In iTunes |
|
6 |
Forsaken | Systematic Chaos | 5:35 | $1.29 | View In iTunes |
|
7 |
Constant Motion | Systematic Chaos | 6:55 | $1.29 | View In iTunes |
|
8 |
Pull Me Under (Live) | Live At Budokan | 8:38 | $1.29 | View In iTunes |
|
9 |
The Dark Eternal Night | Systematic Chaos | 8:51 | $1.29 | View In iTunes |
|
10 |
The Root of All Evil | Octavarium | 8:07 | $0.99 | View In iTunes |

- $16.99
- Genres: Rock, Music, Metal, Prog-Rock/Art Rock
- Released: Jun 19, 2009
- ℗ 2008, 2009 The All Blacks B.V. Issued under license to Roadrunner Records from The All Blacks B.V. Roadrunner Records is a registered trademark of The All Blacks B.V.













