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Roadrunner Records

Dream Theater

  • Latest Album

Wither [Digital EP]

Format: Digital EP
Release Date: 09.15.2009
  • Discography

Wiki Bio Official Biography

Dream Theater’s knack for balancing the epic and the intimate has been a constant throughout the band’s lengthy evolution.  The group first came together in 1985, when Petrucci, Portnoy and bassist John Myung were students at Boston’s Berklee School of Music.  Initially known as Majesty, the nascent combo quickly gained a reputation in the grassroots metal underground, with their cassette The Majesty Demos becoming a sought-after item in the metal community.


Dream Theater made a mainstream splash with their 1992 sophomore album Images And Words, which spawned the MTV-fueled hit “Pull Me Under.”  The band then began a long association with Atlantic/East West, achieving substantial success with the albums Images and Words, Awake, Falling into Infinity, Metropolis Pt. 2: Scenes from a Memory, Six Degrees of Inner Turbulence, Train of Thought and Octavarium.  The group's skill and versatility expanded with the crucial additions of lead vocalist James LaBrie in 1991 and keyboardist Jordan Rudess in 1999.


Dream Theater’s individualistic approach often put the band at odds with the methods of the major-label world.  But their dynamic recorded output and exciting, surprise-filled live shows nonetheless earned the group a large and uncommonly loyal worldwide audience.


“Being on a major label never really felt like the right place for us, but they kept renewing our contract because our fan base was strong enough to justify it,” Portnoy says.  “They tried to get us onto the radio, and tried to promote us through all of the traditional means, but we always felt like a round peg in a square hole.”


With 2007’s acclaimed Systematic Chaos, Dream Theater moved to the more hospitable environment of Roadrunner Records.  The move yielded immediate results, with Systematic Chaos becoming the band’s highest-charting album to date.  The album’s release coincided with the publication of Lifting Shadows, an authorized biography recounting Dream Theater’s first twenty years.


“Once we came to Roadrunner, it really felt like home,” Portnoy states.  “I think they understand how to deal with a band like us, and they trust us to give us the space to do what we do.”


Dream Theater may well be the ultimate cult band, receiving relatively little mainstream exposure yet continuing to make music on their own terms while maintaining a large international fan following, whose devotion is anything but casual.


“We’re probably the only band that can fill Radio City Music Hall in New York or Wembley Arena in London or the Budokan in Tokyo and still not be a household name,” Portnoy notes.  “But in some ways, that’s worked in our favor, because we’ve never had to worry about being overexposed or being a flash in the pan.  Dream Theater fans are amongst the most hardcore, lifelong fans you’ll ever see.  We have fans who follow us around on tour and rework their lives around our tour schedule, and now they’re bringing their kids to the shows.” 


“It definitely takes a certain attention span to be a Dream Theater fan,” Petrucci points out.  “The fact that we use unusual arrangements and longer song lengths to develop ideas and tell a story can scare people off, because it’s not party music that you can just put on in the background.  But the people who get it are passionate about it.  I think they appreciate that we never phone it in, and they know that they can expect something interesting from us.”


“Being a Dream Theater fan is a commitment, but I think that you get out of it what you put into it,” adds Portnoy, who oversees the archival official-bootleg and fan-club releases that the band regularly makes available to fans through the band’s YtseJam label.  “Not everybody is willing to take the journey, but I think that if you’re willing to invest the time, it’s gonna be that much more fulfilling.  And the reward for us is having these fans that have really stuck by us and helped to sustain us.”


Dream Theater’s restless creativity extends to their high-energy live shows, which have become more ambitious and diverse, as the band’s career has progressed.  One distinctive aspect of Dream Theater’s concerts is their ever-changing set list, which Portnoy oversees to ensure that no two shows are alike.


The band’s fans have also enthusiastically supported a variety of adventurous side projects featuring Dream Theater members, including Liquid Tension Experiment, Explorers Club, MullMuzzler, OSI, Platypus, The Jelly Jam, Transatlantic and True Symphonic Rockestra.  But it's Dream Theater that commands the lion’s share of the five musicians’ attentions, and their longstanding creative rapport has never been more riveting than on Black Clouds & Silver Linings


“We're in an amazing situation now, where we have complete creative freedom,” Portnoy concludes.  “We can make any kind of record we want, and know that fans and our label will support it.  We’re basically making records for ourselves and our fans, and not having to worry about what anyone else thinks.  It’s taken 24 years to earn that, but now that we have, it’s a great place to be.”


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Free Music

"A Rite of Passage"

Download Track
Mike Portnoy on Zebra Cover
Black Clouds & Silver Linings
Mike Portnoy On "Odyssey"
Black Clouds & Silver Linings
Mike Portnoy On The Queen Medley
Black Clouds & Silver Linings
Mike Portnoy On "Stargazer" Cover
Black Clouds & Silver Linings
A Rite of Passage
Black Clouds & Silver Linings
Forsaken Live
Chaos In Motion
A Rite of Passage
Black Clouds & Silver Linings
Constant Motion
Systematic Chaos