Octavarium (song)
"Octavarium" is a song by progressive metal/rock band Dream Theater, from the album of the same name.
The song starts with Jordan Rudess using his Haken Continuum Fingerboard and his lap steel guitar, drawing references from Pink Floyd's "Shine On You Crazy Diamond", Tangerine Dream, Marty Friedman's Scenes, and Queen's "Bijou". Octavarium also pays homage to progressive rock bands such as Pink Floyd by having a runtime of 24 minutes and exploring many complex rhythmic and melodic ideas. Dream Theater also uses a sixteen piece orchestra in this song, and throughout the rest of the album of the same name. This gives the album an orchestral feel that is fairly common within the progressive rock genre.
Movements
Octavarium has five parts, and starts out an octave higher than The Root Of All Evil, though in the same key.I. Someone Like Him
- 0:00 - 8:47
- Lyrics by John Petrucci
EP "A Change of Seasons" heavily.
He succeeds in living an extraordinary life, but reflects upon it, and ends up wishing he had become an ordinary person, 'Someone like Him'. This is also in line with the 'Full Circle' theme of Octavarium: "this story ends where it began".
Another theory about this section is that it talks about John Petrucci's music career, first admiring his idols but not wanting to become a complete rip off, and eventually changing his mind and realizing what he wanted all along, to write progressive rock.
In the live performances of the complete version of Octavarium, John Petrucci uses his custom-made "Blue Sparkle" twelve-string/six-string double-neck guitar for this section of the song. Other songs he uses this particular guitar on are the live performances of Six Degrees Of Inner Turbulence's "Solitary Shell", "Regression" from and some songs from The Astonishing.
II. Medicate (Awakening)
- 8:48 - 13:49
- Lyrics by James LaBrie
Again, this also reflects the theme of 'Everything ends where it began.'
III. Full Circle
- 13:50 - 18:27
- Lyrics by Mike Portnoy
- Isn't This Where We Came In? – Pink Floyd's The Wall
- "Sailing on the Seven Seas" – Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark
- "Seize the Day" – Theme of the album, A Change of Seasons and a calque of the Latin phrase, Carpe Diem, which is also the third movement of the album's title track
- "Day Tripper" – The Beatles
- Per diem – Latin phrase and business term meaning "each day"
- "Jack the Ripper" – Morrissey
- "Tim "Ripper" Owens – ex-Judas Priest and Iced Earth singer
- Owen Wilson – actor
- Wilson Phillips – band
- "Supper's Ready" – Genesis
- "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds" – The Beatles
- "Diamond Dave" – David Lee Roth's nickname and a song from his 2003 album of the same name
- Dave’s Not Here – Famous line from Cheech and Chong's self-titled album
- "Here I Come to Save the Day" – Mighty Mouse theme song and refrain
- Day for Night – Spock's Beard
- Nightmare Cinema – Dream Theater's band name when their players swap instruments
- "The Cinema Show" – Genesis
- "Show Me The Way" – Styx
- "Get Back" – The Beatles
- Home Again – Pink Floyd's "Breathe "
- "Flying off the Handle" – Peter Blegvad, King Strut
- "Handle with Care" – Traveling Wilburys
- "Careful with That Axe, Eugene" – Pink Floyd
- "Gene Gene the Dance Machine" – The Gong Show
- "Machine Messiah" – Yes
- "Light My Fire" – The Doors
- "Pinhead " – The Ramones
- "Hey Hey, My My" – Neil Young
- "My Generation" – The Who
- Home Again – Pink Floyd's "Breathe "
IV. Intervals
- 18:28 - 19:51
- Lyrics by Mike Portnoy
- Mike Portnoy says "Root"
- * "Take all of me" plays in the background
- Mike Portnoy says "Second"
- * "Don't let the day go by" plays in the background
- Mike Portnoy says "Third"
- * A clip from These Walls plays in the background
- Mike Portnoy says "Fourth"
- * "I walk beside you" plays in the background
- Mike Portnoy says "Fifth"
- * "Hysteria" plays in the background
- Mike Portnoy says "Sixth"
- * "What would you say" plays in the background
- Mike Portnoy says "Seventh"
- * A clip from Sacrificed Sons plays in the background
- Mike Portnoy says "Octave"
- * "Side effects appear" plays in the background
Root | Our deadly sins fill his mortal wrath Remove all obstacles from our path | Fifth | Tortured insanity, a smothering hell Try to escape but to no avail | |
The Root of All Evil | Our deadly sins fill his mortal wrath Remove all obstacles from our path | Panic Attack | Tortured insanity, a smothering hell Try to escape but to no avail | |
Second | Asking questions, search for clues The answer's been right in front of you | Sixth | The calls of admirers who claim they adore Drain all your lifeblood while begging for more | |
The Answer Lies Within | Asking questions, search for clues The answer's been right in front of you | Never Enough | The calls of admirers who claim they adore Drain all your lifeblood while begging for more | |
Third | Try to break through, long to connect Fall on deaf ears with failed muted breath | Seventh | Innocent victims of merciless crimes Fall prey to some madmen's impulsive designs | |
These Walls | Try to break through, long to connect Fall on deaf ears with failed muted breath | Sacrificed Sons | Innocent victims of merciless crimes Fall prey to some madmen's impulsive designs | |
Fourth | Loyalty, trust, faith and desire Carries love through each darkest fire | Octave | Step after step, we try controlling our fate When we finally start living it's become too late | |
I Walk Beside You | Loyalty, trust, faith and desire Carries love through each darkest fire | Octavarium | Step after step, we try controlling our fate When we finally start living it's become too late |
To finish the Octave, LaBrie repeats the line "Trapped inside this Octavarium", meaning that the speaker is trapped in the Octavarium's full circle, which begins and ends the same. To enunciate the intensity of this statement, LaBrie screams the line, straining his voice more than he had done for over a decade. By the time the song reaches the fourth repeat of the line, his voice has reached as high as G5, the highest note heard on a Dream Theater studio song from vocals, beating the famous F# in "Learning to Live". During live performances, LaBrie usually sings the first three lines with the same notes, then jumps to the note on the last two syllables of the word "Octavarium", sometimes going as high as A5, holding the note and doing trills downwards on the last.
V. Razor's Edge
- 19:52 - 24:00
- Lyrics by John Petrucci
This movement also serves as the capstone for the song and the album which shares its name, being the fifth movement in the eighth song on the album. In this way, it continues the 5:8 theme. When performed live as part of "Schmedley Wilcox" on Chaos in Motion, Mike Portnoy adds in additional vocal emphasis to portions of this movement.
Also the name of the section is a reference to the Iron Maiden Song "The Evil That Men Do". Another way in which this part ties into the cyclical nature of the album is that it is part five of Octavarium. The first song on the album, The Root of All Evil, begins with part six.
This movements lyrics also references Rush's Progressive epic Hemispheres, by mirroring the "Perfect Sphere Theme".
Hemispheres - "...With the heart and mind united in a single perfect sphere."
Octavarium - "A Perfect Sphere, colliding with our fate..."
Also, the first movement and the last movement were written by the same person, again referring to the theme "Everything ends where it began"
Personnel
- James LaBrie - lead vocals
- John Petrucci - guitar
- John Myung - bass
- Jordan Rudess - keyboards, continuum, lap steel
- Mike Portnoy - drums, backing vocals