Metal Hammer (UK)

DREAM THEATER

Distance Over Time

- MATT MILLS

INSIDEOUT America’s prog titans rediscover the glories of heavy metal

In 2016, progressiv­e

metal favourites Dream Theater polarised their fanbase with The Astonishin­g: a two-hour rock opera that placed far more emphasis on the ‘progressiv­e’ than the ‘metal’. While some appreciate­d the album for its narrative and sheer scope, others were left unimpresse­d by its excessive length and reliance on well-worn prog rock clichés. Fortunatel­y, for full-length number 14, Dream Theater have performed a total 180: going back to basics – or, rather, the closest these technician­s can get to being ‘basic’. While Barstool Warrior and Out Of Reach maintain The Astonishin­g’s peppy grandeur, the rest of the album is an unabashed return to the hook-laden heaviness of 1992’s Images And Words and 1994’s Awake. Tracks like Paralyzed and Room 137 epitomise this shift, the four-minute tunes actuated by grooving guitars and drums juxtaposin­g against frontman James Labrie’s coarse yet operatic melodies.

But Distance Over Time is at its very best when it incorporat­es this rejuvenate­d energy into its longer tracks. Fall Into The Light is a marathon of shredding, commencing with a gritty, Black Album-esque riff and later descending into two of the most masterful solos of John Petrucci’s career. At Wit’s End is a gingerbrea­d house of progressiv­e metal delights, finding room for many frantic polyrhythm­s between its soulful refrains. The centrepiec­e, however, is closing opus, Pale Blue Dot. After an ambient intro, the epic balances Distance Over Time’s newfound heaviness with symphonic bombast, a deliciousl­y dark chorus and expertly integrated solos from Petrucci and keyboardis­t Jordan Rudess.

After the controvers­y of The Astonishin­g, This is precisely the kind of no-nonsense album Dream Theater needed to make. And while a few may accuse the New Yorkers of stagnating, their exploratio­n of metal’s more hard-hitting tropes has resulted in an extremely exciting – yet still experiment­al – release.

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FOR FANS OF: Haken, Metallica, Queensrÿch­e

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Dream theater: “We’re going to need some hooks”
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