Octavarium

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For the Roman Catholic liturgical sense of the word, see Octavarium Romanum.
Octavarium
Octavarium cover
Studio album by Dream Theater
Released June 7, 2005
Recorded November 2004 - February 25, 2005 at The Hit Factory in New York City
Genre Progressive Metal
Length 75:55
Label Atlantic Records
Producer(s) John Petrucci and Mike Portnoy
Professional reviews
Dream Theater chronology
Live at Budokan
(2004)
Octavarium
(2005)
Score
(2006)


Octavarium is the eighth full-length Dream Theater studio album, released on June 7, 2005 (see 2005 in music).

It holds the distinction of being the last album ever recorded at The Hit Factory in New York City. After the Dream Theater sessions ended on Friday night, the lights were turned off and the doors to the studio were locked forever – ending an era in the music industry [1].

Contents

[edit] Track listing

  1. "The Root of All Evil" – 8:25 (music by Dream Theater, lyrics by Portnoy)
    • VI. Ready
    • VII. Remove
  2. "The Answer Lies Within" – 5:33 (Dream Theater, Petrucci)
  3. "These Walls" – 7:36 (Dream Theater, Petrucci)
  4. "I Walk Beside You" – 4:29 (Dream Theater, Petrucci)
  5. "Panic Attack" – 8:13 (Dream Theater, Petrucci)
  6. "Never Enough" – 6:46 (Dream Theater, Portnoy)
  7. "Sacrificed Sons" – 10:42 (Dream Theater, LaBrie)
  8. "Octavarium" – 24:00 (Dream Theater, LaBrie/Petrucci/Portnoy)
    • I. Someone Like Him (Lyrics by Petrucci)
    • II. Medicate (Awakening) (LaBrie)
    • III. Full Circle (Portnoy)
    • IV. Intervals (Portnoy)
    • V. Razor's Edge (Petrucci)

[edit] Credits

[edit] Band

[edit] Other

  • Strings arranged and conducted by Jamshied Sharifi
  • Jill Dell'Abate - Orchestral Contractor
  • Orchestra on Sacrificed Sons and Octavarium
    • Concert Master
      • Elena Barere
    • Violins
      • Katharine Fong
      • Ann Lehmann
      • Katherine Livolsi-Stern
      • Laura McGinniss
      • Catherine Ro
      • Ricky Sortomme
      • Yuri Vodovoz
    • Violas
      • Vincent Lionti
      • Karen Dreyfus
    • Celli
      • Richard Locker
      • Jeanne LeBlanc
    • Flutes
      • Pamela Sklar
    • French Horns
      • Joe Anderer
      • Stewart Rose
  • String Quartet on The Answer Lies Within
    • Elena Barere - First Violin
    • Carol Webb - Second Violin
    • Vincent Lionti - Viola
    • Richard Locker - Cello

[edit] Chart performance


[edit] Relation Among Songs

Many of the songs have endings which begin the next song, such as Never Enough into Sacrificed Sons.

[edit] Speculation on the title

Due to its unusual name, many Dream Theater fans speculated on what they believe to be the meaning of the album's title.

At first the band was going to name the album just Octave. But when prog rock band Spock's Beard released their (also eighth) album Octane earlier in 2005, Dream Theater decided to differentiate its name a bit more from that.

Some thought that the title referred to Octavarium Romanum, which was a book of Catholic liturgy referring to a period known as the Octave. There is also a similarity to the musical Octave: Root, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th, 6th, 7th, Octave - and the title of the first track is "The Root of All Evil". Others theorized that the title came from Latin words meaning "Various Eight", since it has eight tracks and the band has said that the eight songs on the record are all of different styles. However, this is incorrect Latin; the Latin word for eight is "octo," not "octa," and "varium" is singular when it would need to be plural. This theory may have come from the fact that Octavarium is the band's eighth album, since "octavus" is Latin for "eighth".

Yet another interpretation was that the "-arium" suffix is used to denote a place where something is held, in this case musical octaves. This turns out to be the closest to the truth, when the lyrics from the title track ("Trapped inside this Octavarium") are considered, creating a portmanteau from the words octave and aquarium.

It is also interesting to note that Octavarium follows a pattern started in Dream Theater's 6th studio album, Six Degrees Of Inner Turbulence, which had 6 songs and the word six in the title. The next CD, Train of Thought, contained 7 tracks, and Octavarium follows both of these apparent "trends" with 8 songs and a title related to the number eight.

Every song of the album is in a different minor key, starting with F, then G, A, B, C, D, E, and returning to F. This is evident by the treble clef staves in the liner notes.

Many fans have made observations about the recurrances of 5s and 8s in the album art, possibly a reference to the Golden ratio, very common in art throughout history and in Nature itself. The name Octavarium itself has 5 syllables, while connotating 8. The use of 5s and 8s stems from the number of natural notes (white keys on a piano) and black keys (sharp/flat notes) in an octave. It may also refer to the number of members in the band from its inception in 1985 to 2005, Octavarium being the band's 8th studio album, and the subsequent "Score" being their fifth live album.

Several of the blatant 5 and 8 references in the album are:

  1. On the cover, there is a Newton's Cradle with eight pendulums, five of which have birds in between them, and the birds are arranged in the same pattern as black piano keys. (The black birds represent flats and sharps and the balls of the pendulum represent the natural notes.)
  2. On the spine of the album there are piano keys in an octave.
  3. The dominoes in the booklet add up to five and eight.
  4. The octopus in the booklet has eight legs and there are five fish around it.
  5. The stop sign in the booklet has eight sides.
  6. In the booklet, the star (which has five "legs") is inside of an octagon (which has eight sides) also the scale of the star and octagon is – 5:8.
  7. In the booklet, the spider has eight legs and is inside an octagon which has eight sides and five "layers." Also, the maze itself has eight doorways amongst the layers, and eight walls that form "dead ends".
  8. The booklet itself has eight pages.
  9. There is a billiards eight-ball on the space behind where the CD is.
  10. The eighth song has five parts.

Also, the star in the octagon has musical keys written around it that go in a circle of fifths. This is ignoring the fact that the band didn't actually create the cover art. Hugh Syme, who is known for creating art for music of the genre, conceived of and made the artwork for this album, rather than Dream Theater.

The Newton's Cradle on the cover and the musical hooks connecting all the songs together lyrically and melodically have also given rise to the theory that the entire album is intended to be a concept album portraying continuity.

An in-depth analysis of the entire album can be found here.

[edit] Pre-release and hoax samples

As is the case with many highly anticipated albums, there have been several hoaxes perpetrated in the lead up to the album's release.

The first hoax occurred when 90 seconds of music advertised as a sample of the song "Panic Attack" was released through various music related message boards, but many Dream Theater fans questioned its authenticity as it wasn't released through any official Dream Theater channels. Because the band has made a point not to release any advance material of their albums in the past (even going so far as to not release promotional copies to radio stations), it was suspected by most that the sample was in fact not from the forthcoming album. These suspicions proved correct when the music was correctly identified as "Ripples in Time" by the band Chrome Shift.

A sample, described as a "premix" of the track "Octavarium", also circulated in file sharing networks since late March. The sample is purely instrumental and 12:25 long. It was later found to be the track "Saint Vitus' Dance" by the Spanish band Acid Rain. Acid Rain is the name of a song by Liquid Tension Experiment, an instrumental project consisting of Dream Theater members Portnoy, Petrucci and Rudess, with Tony Levin on the bass. Incidentally, that piece was an entry into Dream Theater's "Stream Of Consciousness songwriting contest" in which fans could enter their cover versions of the instrumental from 2003's Train of Thought — before having heard a single note of the album.

Another set of samples, apparently leaked by a source close to the band sometime before May 11, consists of several audio fragments, one for each song (except "I Walk Beside You"). Drummer Mike Portnoy acknowledged the authenticity of these samples on his internet forum, but they were not sanctioned by the band as official.

The only audible difference in the official pre-release and the public release is the outro of the title track, Octavarium. In the pre-release, the song ends with the flute soloist repeating the "Medicate Me" melody line, while the public release ends with the album's intro electronica. This change was made to correspond with the "full circle" theme, hence the album ends as it started.

[edit] Pre-release leaking

For approximately three months prior to Octavarium's release, James LaBrie's solo album Elements of Persuasion was distributed as Octavarium in many file-sharing circles. Due to the fact that LaBrie's distinctive voice can be heard on both albums, many people were unable to tell that it was in fact a different band, and it continued to be distributed as a genuine Dream Theater release until a week or so before the official release date of the album. MTV Brazil played a song from this album on air as if it was a genuine Octavarium track.

At that time a version of the actual album found its way onto the Internet, but it was slightly different to the final product released to stores; the ending to the track "Octavarium" was slightly modified from a lonely flute playing to the starting piano note. On an XM radio show interview with Eddie Trunk, Portnoy revealed that only approximately ten people were given a copy of that version of the album: the five band members, Portnoy's father Howard Portnoy, and a handful of people at Atlantic Records.

[edit] Panic Attack sound clip

Mike Portnoy provided a sound clip of "Panic Attack" to Gigantour website 4 weeks before the release of "Octavarium".
A detailed description of each of the songs on the album can be found here[2]

Dream Theater
James LaBrie | John Myung | John Petrucci | Mike Portnoy | Jordan Rudess
Chris Collins | Charlie Dominici | Kevin Moore | Derek Sherinian
Discography
Albums and extended plays: When Dream and Day Unite | Images and Words | Awake | A Change of Seasons | Falling into Infinity | Scenes from a Memory | Six Degrees of Inner Turbulence | Train of Thought | Octavarium
Live albums: Live at the Marquee | Once in a LIVEtime | Live Scenes from New York | Live at Budokan | Score
Videos and DVDs: Images and Words: Live in Tokyo | 5 Years in a Livetime | Metropolis 2000: Scenes from New York | Live at Budokan | Score
Songs: Pull Me Under | Another Day | A Mind Beside Itself | The Glass Prison | Stream of Consciousness | Instrumedley
Related articles
Jelly Jam | Liquid Tension Experiment | MullMuzzler | Nightmare Cinema | OSI | Platypus | Transatlantic | True Symphonic Rockestra | YtseJam Records
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[edit] External links