Systematic Chaos
Dream Theater
- Style
- Progressive Metal
- Label
- Roadrunner Records
- Year
- 2007
- Reviewed by
- Aleksie
/ 100
Killing songs: In The Presence Of Enemies - Part I, Forsaken, Constant Motion, Dark Eternal Night, Repentance & Prophets Of War
As a music lover that a couple of years back worshipped Dream Theater
with great passion and a couple of years less back lost a great deal of that passion
from a bit of a ”burn out”, my approach to Systematic Chaos
was mainly quite a sizeable interest. Not that I’ve ever thought the bands
album to have been less-then-good. Mostly they have been stellar. But during the
musical period when my player was filled with funk and death metal, proggy wizardy
of the likes of Dream Theater took a backseat.
That said, Systematic Chaos, along with my return to digging prog
bands en masse and the magnificent Score-DVD, have rejuvenated my interest
in the group. This album has all the things you would expect from the band:
excellent production, mind-boggling musicianship, looong songs, and then some.
In The Presence Of Enemies – Part I hits the record into high
gear with mean business. The guitar and drums descend in unison and the off-timed
beats take control. The omnipotent widdling is present along with well-crafted
melodies and crazed tempo shifts. Right away though, one will feel the muscle
in the guitar riffs. I don’t know if this is a result of John Petrucci’s
actual physical beefcaking (his physique seems to be almost Stallonesque, really
just a few pounds down from Kane Roberts’ 1980s frame) or simply the overall
aggressive feeling that Mike Portnoy said they wanted for this album, but it
works damn well. I’d say the bands riffing hasn’t been this powerful
since Scenes From A Memory.
Speaking of Portnoy, it is a given that the drumming is super-flashy as well
throughout the record. Whose time am I wasting here by stating the obvious?
All of these guys perform on massive skill levels. Constant natural 20s, if
we are to get super-nerdy here with D&D-terminology. Although James LaBrie
confuses me slightly on this album. Considering how nearly perfect his singing
is on the Radio City Music Hall –recording, he is holding it a bit back
on this album. I think he doesn’t utilize his dramatic highs as much as
he could, but it could be a conscious decision. He pulls off the vocals very
well, but seems to hold himself back. Portnoy and Petrucci have raised the amount
of their backing vocals, which is fine by me. Their more subdued voices compliment
LaBrie's soaring vocals well.
I just love that pounding opening to Dark Eternal Night. Or the Panteraesque
ending with the slow, groovy riffing. Damn, makes me want to pick up a guitar
and start playing. Also, must give love for that saloon-piano interlude which
Jordan Rudess seems to seriously enjoy as this isn’t the first time he
has included those in DT’s songs. The several race-like
solo spots that he scorches with Petrucci will most likely tire many, but I
can handle them easily and even enjoy most of the finger-twisters this time
around.
Ballads are here as well. Repentance is a very sweet acoustically
driven, mellow piece, with ominous spoken parts running on top of brooding atmospheres.
That is Porcupine Tree’s Steve Wilson singing the intro,
right? Sounds so much like him. The Ministry Of Lost Souls is a much
more epic and grandiose piece that adds heavier parts in the mix. This good,
for the entire 15 minutes of the song would have been much flatter if it had
been kept mellow all the way.
Current events are tackled in Prophets Of War, which is a driving,
futuristically rocking track that reminds me of Ayreon. The
whole album is closed with the 16-minute mammoth, In The Presence Of Enemies
– Part II. It packages the dark, heavy, grand and mellow elements
that have been utilized throughout the record in one song, with fist-raising
gang shouts to boot.
Fans that have always worshipped the stages Dream Theater
has played on should lose none of their admiration as a result of Systematic
Chaos. Using myself as an example, it can also awaken interests that have
been dusting up with time, or even ones that have never before been there. An
outstanding record.