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Train of Thought

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (52 ratings)
Train of Thought album cover
01
As I Am
7:48
$0.99
02
This Dying Soul
11:24
03
Endless Sacrifice
11:23
04
Honor Thy Father
10:13
05
Vacant
2:57
$0.99
06
Stream Of Consciousness
11:16
07
In The Name Of God
14:15
Album Information

Total Tracks: 7   Total Length: 69:16

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Train wreck of 32nd notes

Replicon

As a long time fan, I just don't get the high ratings on this one. Let's leave out for a sec the worst 5 minutes of DT's excellent ouevre namely the wank fest at the end of "This Dying Soul." The album is full of meaningless 32nd note wanking that is the ProgMetal equivalent of free jazz. What else… Oh yes, LaBrie try to sing low-end metal, he sounds like a little nasally kid, plus several lame Metallica vocal imitations. Gack!! You'll buy it anyway.

user avatar

Extra Crunchy!!

Margaritakinglives

This is typical DT fare...leaning a bit on the heavy side. Lots of nice big crunchy guitar riffs. Definitely fits in the progressive metal category, more towards the metal side, but it works. Great price too!

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They Say All Music Guide

Three years after Six Degrees of Inner Turbulence, it’s great to hear that Dream Theater hadn’t lost their überheavy edge. John Petrucci, Mike Portnoy, Jordan Rudess, and bassist John Myung effectively peeled back the pretentious excesses of Six Degrees, turned them in on themselves, and came up with a leaner, meaner but no less ambitious outing. The centerpiece track, despite the fact that it is second on the disc, is “This Dying Soul: IV. Reflections of Reality (Revisited).” A tome about alcoholism and recovery, it’s strident riff opens out onto vast sonic panoramas where pianos and rhythm section offer Petrucci the space he needs to take his guitar playing into overdrive. Also, lyrically this is an evolutionary track on the set; it opens doors for the rest of the narratives here. Whereas the opener, “As I Am,” is an anthem of resistance and independence, from “This Dying Soul” onward, themes of acceptance, surrender, and willingness become the M.O. for transcendent transformation. Struggles with the past, new encounters, and near despair are common themes, as on the brilliantly textured and detailed “Train of Though.” Note the beautiful interplay between the guitars and keyboards on “Endless Sacrifice,” the insane drums and buzz saw attack on the intro to “Honor Thy Father,” or the brilliant play on the intro to “Seasons of Whither” in the intro to “In the Name of God,” before the almighty riffing takes it into crunchland with a deep, poignant reflection on spiritual and religious hypocrisy. This is hard, heavy progressive metal at its very best lyrically and musically. – Thom Jurek

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