A Mind Beside Itself
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| "A Mind Beside Itself" | ||
|---|---|---|
| Song by Dream Theater | ||
| From the album Awake | ||
| Album released | October 4 1994 | |
| Recorded | 1994 | |
| Genre | Progressive metal | |
| Song Length | 20:28 | |
| Record label | EastWest | |
| Producer(s) | John Purdell and Duane Baron | |
| Track Number(s) | 4,5,6 | |
The first part, Erotomania, is an instrumental which bridges the musical space between ambience and heavy metal. It also carries certain musical themes from the rest of the song. In fact, it has been claimed that the entire song is an amalgamation of previous Dream Theater works, and the legendary screaming organ hook and verse are almost identical to a section of the epic "A Change of Seasons". The term Erotomania is a psychological condition where the sufferer has an unshakable belief that someone else is secretly in love with them.
Part two, Voices, seems to suggest that schizophrenia might be enhanced by blind religious devotion, as it is apparently written through the eyes of a schizophrenic who believes that angels and demons are speaking to him. The music suggests that the character is experiencing extreme distress, which suggests that perhaps he is at least partly aware that the voices are only a figment of his disorder.
Many consider the third part, "The Silent Man", to be a separate entity from the rest. Musically it represents a sharp shift from Voices into an almost folk rock territory. The lyrics are also much simpler, and the song follows a traditional verse-chorus structure. It does, however, connect to the theme, and seems to suggest that the fate described in Voices can be avoided if we support each other in our faith. As per the usual Dream Theater formula, the clearest statement of the song's meaning is found here, at the end. The Silent Man is also believed by some to be drawn from The Arabian Nights stories. The lines "A question well served, is silence like a fever Or a voice never heard, or a message with no receiver?" are direct from the prologue. Equally the lines "I could sail by on the winds of silence" are lifted word for word from The Tale of Sinbad. "The Silent Man" was released as a single in 1994.
Dream Theater
|
| James LaBrie | John Myung | John Petrucci | Mike Portnoy | Jordan Rudess |
| Chris Collins | Charlie Dominici | Kevin Moore | Derek Sherinian |
| Discography |
|---|
| Albums and extended plays: When Dream and Day Unite | Images and Words | Awake | A Change of Seasons | Falling into Infinity | Scenes from a Memory | Six Degrees of Inner Turbulence | Train of Thought | Octavarium |
| Live albums: Live at the Marquee | Once in a LIVEtime | Live Scenes from New York | Live at Budokan | SCORE |
| Videos and DVDs: ' | 5 Years in a Livetime | ' | Live at Budokan | SCORE |
| Songs: Pull Me Under | Another Day | A Mind Beside Itself | The Glass Prison |
| Related articles |
| Jelly Jam | Liquid Tension Experiment | MullMuzzler | OSI | Platypus | Transatlantic | YtseJam Records |
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