E’ uscito! Comprato e ascoltato! Fantastico! Dopo un primo ascolto credo che sia uno tra i più belli! Ho raccolto un pò di info sui pezzi da Wikipedia! Ci sono tanti collegamenti a video girati in occasione della registrazione dell’album. Altre info su www.dreamtheater.net
In the Presence of Enemies
It has been split up into two parts at the nine-minute mark, with the first part becoming the opening track of the album, and the second part, the closing track.
The first 5 minutes and fifteen seconds of this song are an overture, with James LaBrie not coming in until the first track is around halfway done.
Parts of the song being written, under the working title “Pumpkin King”, were shown on the 6:00 video Mike Portnoy had distributed December 25th, 2006.
Forsaken
The song is the shortest off of the release, and a soundclip of it was released in a Systematic Chaos promo video.
Constant Motion
Mike Portnoy, the band’s drummer, has announced that the single will be accompanied by a music video.
The band hasn’t released a single since “Through Her Eyes” from Metropolis Pt. 2: Scenes from a Memory in 1999, and similarly hasn’t produced a music video since “Hollow Years” from Falling into Infinity in 1997, citing disinterest and lack of rotation on music channels for the latter.
The Dark Eternal Night
The lyrics to this song were written by John Petrucci. According to him, this song is “about a monster, that from long, long ago, a pharaoh that comes and haunts a town”. On April 28th, 2007, an unmixed, rough version of this song leaked onto the internet.
Petrucci uses a seven-string guitar on this track, as can be seen on the EPK video for the album. John Myung uses a 5 string bass, which appears to be a Musicman, as opposed to his 6 string JM-2 Yamaha signature bass. The bass performance is notable for the use of popped tritones in the verse and a pick near the end of the song, of which both techniques are atypical for Dream Theater. The song features verses with heavily distorted vocals and the EPK video shows both James LaBrie and Mike Portnoy contributing vocals. There is also a short break in the song where Jordan Rudess provides a small solo that reciprocates the sound of vaudeville style piano. The song also features short blastbeats, and the instrumental section eventually escalates into an, for Dream Theater, unusually fast double bass drum staccato part.
A In-Studio video was released on May 11th, 2007, which documents the recording of this song. It is available here. The video features John Myung comically collapsing after completing his performance.
Repentance
This song was written by Mike Portnoy and is part of his Alcoholics Anonymous suite about the twelve steps of the Alcoholics Anonymous program. The suite began on the band’s sixth album, Six Degrees of Inner Turbulence, though “The Mirror” from the album Awake is considered by fans to be a “prequel” of sorts to the AA Suite. “Repentance” includes steps eight and nine. Unlike the other three previous songs in the suite, “Repentance” is a ballad.
Prophets of War
On January 26th, 2007, Mike Portnoy recruited 50 Dream Theater fans to come into the studio and record chants for this song. A video was released on April 20th, 2007, which included the intro and outro to the track, along with the recording of the fifty fans that were there. The video can be viewed at this location.
This is the only song on the album not to contain a guitar solo.
The Ministry Of Lost Souls
A small sample of it was featured in the Electronic Press Kit that the band released on April 27, 2007. It is one of the longer songs off of Systematic Chaos.
This song features lyrical themes that seem to revolve around death, romance, and possibly religion. It contains a climactic ending and very powerful dual vocal tracks by James LaBrie. The song is meant to sound symphonic.
