Progressive metal icons Dream Theater are back with another killer vinyl box set release. After the success of 2024’s ‘Lost Not Forgotten Archives: The Studio Albums 1992–1999’ (Vol. I), the band is turning the page to the next era with Vol. II – a stunning eight-LP box set that dives deep into their early-2000s catalog.

Available exclusively via rhino.com in North America and select Warner Music Group stores globally, this limited edition set (just 2,500 copies worldwide!) includes four of Dream Theater’s most pivotal albums:
- Six Degrees of Inner Turbulence (2002)
- Train of Thought (2003)
- Octavarium (2005)
- Systematic Chaos (2007)
If you’re a collector, a diehard fan, or someone looking to explore one of the most ambitious runs in modern prog metal, this box set is your golden ticket.

What’s Inside Vol. II ?
This box set captures Dream Theater during a period of bold experimentation and sonic refinement. Starting with 2002’s Six Degrees of Inner Turbulence, the band pushes boundaries right out of the gate. The 42-minute title suite isn’t just a song – it’s an immersive journey that embodies everything progressive music stands for.
That album also introduces us to one of Mike Portnoy’s most personal creative expressions: the Twelve-Step Suite, tackling his battle with addiction. It all begins with “The Glass Prison,” which lays the thematic and musical foundation that threads across these four albums.
From there, we roll into 2003’s Train of Thought, where Dream Theater cranks the heaviness to eleven. This is their most straight-up metal record – no frills, just chunky riffs, thunderous drums, and fierce lyricism. It continues the Twelve-Step Suite with “This Dying Soul,” keeping the momentum (and emotion) alive.
Next up? Octavarium (2005). This fan-favorite is a bit of a curveball – more melodic, deeply conceptual, and, frankly, breathtaking. The 24-minute title track pays tribute to the band’s prog rock roots, channeling influences from Genesis to Yes while showcasing their own unique voice. Oh, and it charted everywhere – Top 5 in Sweden, Finland, and Italy, and Top 10 in Germany, Japan, and Norway. Not bad for a band that never chases trends.
The final piece of this collection is 2007’s Systematic Chaos, their debut with Roadrunner Records. It’s the heaviest, darkest, and most cinematic release of the bunch, featuring sprawling compositions, 7-string guitar madness, and stories that sound like they belong in a dystopian novel. It peaked at #19 on the Billboard 200—still their highest-charting U.S. album.

Portnoy Is Back – and So Is the Tour
2025 has already been huge for Dream Theater. The band recently wrapped up the North American leg of their 40th Anniversary tour, dubbed “An Evening With Dream Theater.” It was the first time in over a decade that drummer Mike Portnoy shared the stage again with James LaBrie, John Petrucci, Jordan Rudess, and John Myung. The tour kicked off in Philly on February 7 and wrapped up in NYC on March 22 – an emotional full-circle moment for fans and band alike.
Oh, and let’s not forget their brand-new studio album, Parasomnia, released on the same day the tour began. Produced by Petrucci, engineered by James “Jimmy T” Meslin, and mixed by the legendary Andy Sneap, it’s the first album with Portnoy since 2009’s Black Clouds & Silver Linings. The artwork? That’s classic Hugh Syme – surreal, bold, and instantly recognizable.