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. According to the DVD Documentary in Score, John Petrucci considered this album to be the band's best work to that point.
SongsOctavarium follows a pattern started in Dream Theater's sixth studio album, Six Degrees of Inner Turbulence, which had six songs (and also the word "six" in the title). The next album, Train of Thought, was the band's seventh studio album and contained 7 tracks. Octavarium, the band's eighth studio album, has eight songs (and a title related to the number eight). The pattern was discontinued with the band's ninth studio album, Systematic Chaos, which has only eight tracks (two of which are separate parts to the same song, "In the Presence of Enemies"). 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. Also, between some pairs of songs, a transition, represented in the CD as negative time preceding the second song of the pair, is made in the corresponding accidental key related to the pair in question. For instance, the synth solo following "Panic Attack" (in the key of C minor) is placed as negative time preceding "Never Enough" (in the key of D minor) and is in the key of C# minor. "Panic Attack" is featured as a playable song in Rock Band 2.1 Golden RatioThe album contains a number of references and allusions to the golden ratio and Fibonacci sequence, in particular the use of the numbers 5 and 8 in both the album art and the songs themselves. For example, the name Octavarium itself has 5 syllables but alludes to the number 8. The use of 5s and 8s in a musical context is fairly natural since an octave on a piano keyboard contains eight white keys (the natural notes) and five black keys (the sharps/flats). Unrelated to the album is the fact that Dream Theater is a five-member band which has had eight total members since changing its name from Majesty. Other uses of 5s and 8s in connection with the album are as follows:
Speculation on the titleDue to its unusual name, many Dream Theater fans speculated on what they believe to be the meaning of the album's title.citation needed 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 (i.e. planetarium, aquarium,, etc.), in this case musical octaves. This seems to be the closest to the truth, when the lyrics from the title track Octavarium, "Trapped inside this Octavarium," are considered, creating a portmanteau from the words octave and -arium. Pre-release leakingFor approximately three months prior to Octavarium's release, James LaBrie's solo album Elements of Persuasion was distributed as Octavarium in many file-sharing circlescitation needed. Because LaBrie's 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 approximately a week before the official release date of the album. At that time a version of the actual album found its way onto the Internet, but it was slightly different from the final product released to stores; the ending to the track "Octavarium" was slightly modified from a lonely flute playing to the starting piano note10. 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.10 Panic Attack sound clipMike Portnoy provided a sound clip of "Panic Attack" to Gigantour website 4 weeks before the release of Octavarium. Track listing
Chart performance
Personnel
Additional personnel
ReferencesExternal links
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