AlexS
Nomad
I'm the flip side of you; not the most well versed in Dream Theater, but I can answer why QR got tagged with the "prog" category.
One big reason is that they did a big concept album, which is a prog hallmark. But a bigger reason (or reasons) is that they used a lot of chord voicings, scales, harmonies, sounds, time signatures, and lyrical themes that were outside the bounds of what a lot of their contemporaries were doing (which was mostly blues- and minor-scale based).
Not on every song, and not so much on the first EP (which was pretty solid, but firmly in the minor-scale / Dungeons & Dragons lyrics mode - the CD release bonus track "Prophecy" was recorded during the Rage for Order sessions); but I can give a few examples from their early albums:
On Warning:
[*] Edit: yes, synths were used in some 70s metal and hard rock - Sabbath, Zeppelin, Rush, and Hawkwind, for example. Even Deep Purple, if you consider a Hammond organ a kind of mechanical synthesizer, which it is. But only here and there in early-80s metal - "Mr. Crowley" and "Rainbow in the Dark" are the only examples I can think of off the top of my head. Maiden even had a tag line on the Piece of Mind liner notes - "No keyboards or ulterior motives."
One big reason is that they did a big concept album, which is a prog hallmark. But a bigger reason (or reasons) is that they used a lot of chord voicings, scales, harmonies, sounds, time signatures, and lyrical themes that were outside the bounds of what a lot of their contemporaries were doing (which was mostly blues- and minor-scale based).
Not on every song, and not so much on the first EP (which was pretty solid, but firmly in the minor-scale / Dungeons & Dragons lyrics mode - the CD release bonus track "Prophecy" was recorded during the Rage for Order sessions); but I can give a few examples from their early albums:
On Warning:
- NM 156 - futuristic sound effects, tricky time signatures pretty much everywhere in the song except the chorus, parallel harmonies on the guitar lead (which can "go outside the scale" and sound dissonant at times compared to diatonic harmonies like Iron Maiden or Thin Lizzy uses), cyber-dystopian lyrics;
- Deliverance - another tricky time signature on the main riff;
- Take Hold of the Flame - add2 and sus2 chord voicings on the main riff, not common in metal at the time;
- Roads to Madness - very long song with multiple sections that "progress" through different moods like a symphonic work; weird time signatures (I think I once counted that slow part with the background chanting as being either in 13s or 17s, I can't remember which).
- Gonna Get Close to You - actually a cover of an obscure Canadian female artist who reminds me a bit of a cross between Kate Bush and Tori Amos. But QR made this one of the hardest-edged and spookiest synth-based songs I ever heard before Trent Reznor got his job as a studio janitor. Synths in metal? Not very common before 1986 when QR, Maiden, and Priest all broke the barrier and made them semi-acceptable.(*) I'll put a checkbox in the prog column for that move.
- Screaming In Digital - another creepy existential cyber-horror song with weird time signatures, sound effects, sus2 chords (DeGarmo loved these), and lots of synths.
- Neue Regel - More cyber-dystopia, sound effects, nonstandard chord voicings, synths, etc.
[*] Edit: yes, synths were used in some 70s metal and hard rock - Sabbath, Zeppelin, Rush, and Hawkwind, for example. Even Deep Purple, if you consider a Hammond organ a kind of mechanical synthesizer, which it is. But only here and there in early-80s metal - "Mr. Crowley" and "Rainbow in the Dark" are the only examples I can think of off the top of my head. Maiden even had a tag line on the Piece of Mind liner notes - "No keyboards or ulterior motives."
I'm not the most well versed in the works of Queensryche, but I've been wondering why exactly they always used to be compared to Dream Theater.
Maybe I haven't heard enough of or the right songs from their catalogue, but Queensryche sounds to me like they should be considered more Traditional Metal, like Maiden and Priest, instead of progressive metal like DT.
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