Showing posts with label Jannick Gers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jannick Gers. Show all posts

11.01.2020

Iron Maiden: The Bruce Years, pt. 3


Bryan:  Bruce rejoined the band in 2000, which is when I rejoined Maiden fandom. I didn’t plan it that way. I was working at that frame shop I mentioned last time around, and my boss and I discovered that a) we had a lot of 80s metal fandom in common and that b) we both had spent the 90s listening to just about every other genre of music. As I did with Stephen King and comic books and other things I blog about nowadays, I mostly took the 90s off from everything I loved in the 80s and had the unanticipated pleasure of rediscovering later. With Maiden, that year was 2000 with the release of their reunion album
 Brave New World, arguably the greatest reunion album in heavy metal history. Seeing them on my birthday that year remains my all-time favorite (non-Shatner) concert experience. 

And now, please join my buddy Marshall and I as we revisit the last (so far) five albums of our first and forever favorite band. Lotsa Maiden comin’ atcha, starting now.



(2000)

The Wicker Man

Marshall: 4/5  Real Maiden is back! Real Maiden is back! This is a great album opener. I love the energy. The only thing I don't like is the monotonous guitar riff during the chorus. I also don't like the ending, "whoa oh oh oh, whoa oh oh oh"

Bryan: 4.75/5  Not only do the lyrics only relate to the film in one couplet of the last verse, they don't make a whole lot of sense altogether, particularly in the bridge. ("Say goodbye to gravity, and say goodbye to death!" being a personal favorite example. Uhhh.... what?) But of course this matters very little. What a triumphant welcome back for Bruce/ all Maiden fans, especially the ones who caught this tour. The final "whoah-oh-oh-WHOAH!" chants, when the lights came up and the whole band came forward on stage, brought the crowd to a roar in a way I'll never forget. Which is exactly why they write those "whoah-oh-whoah-OH!" sections. A deluge of pure Maiden metal. Something special beyond the sum of its individual parts going on in this song. 

Ghost of the Navigator

Bryan: 5/5  Every time I hear this song I like it more. (Why is the title singular but delivery in-song plural? Shrugs.) 

Marshall: 4/5  I love the way this song starts. It slowly builds into that bad ass guitar strumming during the verse. This is one of the most Maiden-sounding songs since Seventh Son.

Brave New World

Bryan: 5/5  That is true of this one as well. It's tough to really capture my impressions of this and "Navigators" without sounding like Chris Farley. Such perfect utilization-of-Maiden going on in these songs. What a gift to the world BNW was and is!

Marshall: 3/5  A good song, but a slight step down from Ghost of the Navigator. The verses are so cool, but then the chorus feels like a let down. The guitar solo toward the end is masterful.

Bryan: I love the lead-in to the chorus, though, that “you are planned/ you are damned” part. I know I harp on this a lot, but this song is the exception to my rule of songs about books/ movies, i.e. you can actually tell what the source material is or is about from listening to the lyrics of this. 

Blood Brothers

Marshall: 3/5  After the disaster that was Virtual XI, I think Harris stepped back on the songwriting. But ever since then, I've been looking for signs of their return to the bad old days, and I always see hints of it on the one Harris-penned tune on each album. They're almost always mind-numbingly repetitive ("We're blood brothers" is repeated 20 times). That said, this was a serious step up from Virtual XI. I don't like the choppiness of the verses, but I do like the guitar melody at the beginning and runs through the song, and the new guitar melody that is introduced halfway.

Bryan: 3.5/5  He actually has a co-writing credit on every track on this album, doesn’t he? I think there’s more of Harris’ fingerprints on these songs than you think. I also have a much higher tolerance for the band’s repetitive qualities. That said, this isn’t a real favorite. 

MarshallWell, Harris is the leader of the band, so of course his influence is everywhere. He's the inventor and consultant of the Maiden Formula, so of course he has songwriting credits on most songs. But, unlike the bad old days of Virtual XI, he stepped back considerably and only gets one song where he is the primary or sole songwriter, and it is always the worst, most repetitive song on the album.

BryanI don't find this to be the case for me personally, but such is the nature of horse races, as they say. 

The Mercenary

Marshall: 3/5 Here we go again with the "The [person]" songs. This album has so many of them that I can't tell them apart. "The Ghost of the Navigator," "The Mercenary," "The Fallen Angel," "The Nomad". The latter three sort of blend together in my mind. But this is a good song, very upbeat.

Bryan: 3.25/5  I agree with that last sentence. Personally, it amuses me that Maiden had all these job description songs. I tend to group those ("The Assassin", "The Mercenary," etc. Jason Statham should star in a movie series based on all of them) together, not just the ones that start with “The.” The funny thing about this one is it’s the album’s get-in-and-get-the-job-done-and-get-out songs, yet it feels twice as long as it needs to be. Also, the "The (occupation)" songs are supposed to start side two, not end side one! Which if I was marking such things begins with:

Dream of Mirrors

Bryan: 5/5  I can totally see how this would have been batted around during the Virtual XI sessions, and I'm so happy they waited for Bruce. Had this appeared under Blaze's tenure it would simply not be the same song. The switch-to-fast-break part of this song is one of my favorite Maiden things ever, and it's totally all Bruce. "Lost! In a dream of mirrors - lost! In a paradox!" (Oh the drama! I love this crap so much. 

Marshall: 4/5  Here's another one that really feels like classic Maiden. My favorite thing about this song is the vocals during the first chorus. This song goes in a few different directions. I like how this song builds up to the point that it's going ape shit. It's a nine minute song, so they can really take their time getting there, unlike "The Educated Fool", which is 10 minutes of screaming the same thing over and over.

Fallen Angel

Marshall: 2/5  This one’s okay.

Bryan: 4.5/5  Here’s another one I’m glad they waited for Bruce for. In some ways this is my favorite track on the album. But I think that's because prior to hearing it my friend and I had been cracking up at all the "I am the chosen one" sentiments in Maiden. It was with this friend (aforementioned job at the frame shop) I rediscovered Maiden and with whom I saw them on my birthday. We both couldn't believe it when we heard it, especially the one at the end; it was so conspicuous, almost like they heard us.

The Nomad

Bryan: 5/5  Here’s another job description for you! Although this one is, I suppose, more of a lifestyle. What great riffs and design throughout this one. The switch in chorus delivery, too, always thrills me. This makes a fine counterpoint to Sting's "Desert Rose." It would have made a hell of an extended music video.

Marshall: 3/5  I like the instrumental intro. After that, the first half is very plodding and choppy, but then halfway it has a quiet break and builds slowly from there, which is very cool.

Bryan:  I love that part! The summer I moved to Chicago I recorded this dirge-y sounding thing on my friend’s 4-track and totally ripped off some of this metal section for it – it just fit so well, my apologies, lads, couldn’t help myself. They played everything up to "Fallen Angel" when I saw them but stopped short of this and the next two, damn it. 

Out of the Silent Planet

Bryan: 4.5/5  Never read this book. I love the chorus. This one's grown on me over the years. I have a fellow Maiden friend who thinks this is one of their career top five tracks. I don't like the intro, but everything from there is pretty much stand and applaud for me. 

Marshall: 4/5  I like the energy of this song, and I love the chorus so much. My favorite part is when he sings "The killing fields, the grinding wheels, crushed by equilibrium." 

Bryan: Mine, too! I am high-fiving you over the internet.

The Thin Line Between Love and Hate

Bryan:  I gave this 4/5 originally but damn it all, (and I alluded to this in my original notes to you) I just cannot. It’s a 5 star song.

Marshall: 5/5  I love everything about this song, the instrumentation is incredible, but I especially love the vocals. When I first heard this song, it really struck me just how much I missed Dickinson singing for Maiden. I knew I missed it, but this song really showed me how Iron Maiden vocals are supposed to sound. Then, five minutes in, it gets even better, everything drops down and we just get that sweet, sweet guitar melody and Bruce wailing the chorus. It's so good that they kept the part at the end where Nicko says, "ah, fucking pisser!" Such a good way to end the reunion album.

Bryan:  What a kickass Side B. That "My soul will fly… FOR-EVE-RRR!!" section is every bit as shameless as the "FREEDOM!" bit from "The Clansman" and every bit as appreciated. (And even cooler, you ask me.) Some awkward lyrics ("we're right to put the blame on society, these things" which sounds like how the old French-Canadians in the northern Rhode Island of my childhood would talk, "throw me down the stairs my shoes" etc.) but they're pretty good, overall. 

Final Thoughts

Bryan: Total 45.5 Avg. 4.55 This album is such a gift. In the same way I can take it as a personal insult when a franchise is ruined, I take it as a personal favor when one is not just resurrected but enshrined in the stars for eternity the way this one is. I needed to hear this in 2000 and on every listen since. I remain in Maiden's debt!

Marshall: Total 35 avg 3.5  I had given up on Iron Maiden after Virtual XI and treated Bruce Dickinson's solo work as the new de facto Maiden. It had two out of the five members of Maiden, so it was almost as much Maiden as Maiden was. So when I heard that those two members were joining Maiden again, I was ecstatic. It felt like this thing I loved had split in half, and I had to enjoy them separately, but I was about to get the whole thing back. And three guitarists! That just seemed so quintessential Maiden. Do everything BIGGER! Plus, they were bringing back Derek Riggs to draw Eddie, and the album art was gorgeous. I felt like the happiest music geek on the planet. I bought it the second it came out and listened to it over and over. I had Brave New World posters and computer wallpaper at work.

Bryan: I am high-fiving you again! Next up:


(2003)


Holy moley that cover... So, so awful. (This is Bryan writing this part, but Marshall agrees with me via other correspondence.)

Wildest Dreams

Marshall: 4/5 Short and simple album opener. My favorite part is the last chorus, with the guitar playing in the background.

Bryan: 3/5 Not bad, not great. 

Rainmaker

Bryan: 2.25/5 Ditto.

Marshall: 4/5  I really like the opening guitar riff. It is such a cool transition from Wildest Dreams!

No More Lies

Marshall: 1/5  Here we go, the Harris tune on the album, and as per usual the most repetitive song. They repeat “no more lies” 27 times. This really sounds like a Virtual XI song. I do love the guitar solo though.

Bryan: 3.25/5  I can handle the repetition of the chorus, but Harris is very repetitive with his music motifs and that gets more boring for me. I like the bridge and chorus here, very metal-emo. And then the neo-celtic guitar vaunting, for good measure. (He kind of disappears into this in the twenty-first century. I guess he and Ritchie Blackmore were swallowed by the mists of their isle’s musical past.)  It feels like a casserole of familiar Maiden-isms, just missing the “whoah oh oh!”s somewhere. Still, I like it.


Just throwing this pic in here. Maiden's still at it. Or will be again, post-Covid, God willing.


Montsegur 

Bryan: 3.75/5  My favorite from the album, I think. 

Marshall:  3/5  Feels a little rushed, and I don't the guitar playing the same melody as the vocals during the verse, but otherwise a pretty good song.

Dance of Death

Bryan: 3.5/5  Another casserole, and another one I don't mind. "They had ascended from Hell!" and then the leprechaun-metal after that always makes me happy. 

Marshall: 2/5 Unimaginative/recycled intro riff and stupid lyrics. Especially "and I danced and I pranced and I sat with them!" It goes in a kind of cool direction at the three minute mark. Then they speed up more toward the end, and Bruce trying to sing through that feels awkward and rushed.

Gates of Tomorrow

Bryan: 2/5 Meh.

Marshall: 2/5  I really don't like when the guitar plays the same melody in unison behind the vocals during the verse. They do this on a few songs, and it's especially egregious on this song. Otherwise, this song feels generic and bland.

Bryan: Right? A little of that melody/guitar alignment goes a long way. Too much and it’s ruined.

New Frontier

Marshall: 3/5 I like this one.

Bryan: 2.25/5  I do like the "is it worth the risk of war of God and man?" bit. 

Paschendale

Marshall: 3/5  I love that guitar intro! And I love the change they do near the three minute mark.

Bryan: 2.75/5  I like the idea of this song more than the actual song I think. Some cool bits, needlessly long. Much like its subject matter.

Face in the Sand 

Bryan: 3.25/5  Not perfect but I like it. That double bass drum attack works okay here. I don't always like a double bass drum effect.

Marshall: 3/5 I like this song.

Age of Innocence

Marshall: 3/5  This one, too. 

Bryan: 2.25/5  Bruce can sing anything, but this one’s fairly forgettable for me.  

Journeyman

Marshall: 4/5  A ballad?? Wow, I've never seen them go this acoustic before. This is a beautiful song with an awesome chorus.

Bryan: 2.25/5  The boys channeling both Lesley Gore and Slade. An odd but admirable combo.

Final Thoughts

Bryan: Total 30.5 Avg 2.77  And so begins the casserole era of Maiden, for my money. And they earned it. All these songs are too long. 

Marshall: Total 33 Avg 3  What you call the casserole era, I call the generic era. It starts off good and has its moments, but it's all starting to feel a bit scripted at this point. A let down after Brave New World, though some of it has grown on me over the years. I was worried after I heard this album, that they might be slipping back into Virtual XI mediocrity. If the next album was a step down, then I knew that they were starting to reach the end. So was both excited and worried about the next album:


(2006)


Different World

Marshall: 2/5  Quick, unremarkable song to start the album out. The vocals in the chorus seems too low for Bruce. It's like a reversal of what usually happens: verse is a lower register, then bring thing up for the chorus.

Bryan: 2/5  A different world indeed. That bridge is very un-Maiden like until Bruce wails out the chorus. The drums sound off.  IIRC this was recorded live in the studio for the most part, and I'm not sure that approach worked.

These Colors Don’t Run

Bryan: 2/5  Some of the music agrees with me, but it seems stitched together.

Marshall: 3/5  I like the drums and vocals on this song the most. I also like the intro guitar part.

Brighter than a Thousand Suns

Marshall: 4/5  Here we go! The album is really starting to get good at this point. This song is as good as any on Brave New World. When I first heard this song, I remember this was when I started deciding I really like this album more than Dance of Death.

Bryan: 3/5  I forgot about this tune. This sounds a lot better to me than it did on previous listens, but I can't quite agree it's as good as anything on Brave New World. It'd have made a good b-side to a BNW track, though.

The Pilgrim

Marshall: 3/5 I'm really starting to notice at this point how unusual this album is in its tendency for the singing for verses to be higher, and the chorus is really low, definitely lower than where Bruce usually sings. They did this on "Different World", and they do it again here. Anyway, pretty good song, despite its unusual vocals.

Bryan: 2/5  I’m surprised you didn’t bring up the title. That’s a good observation though about the vocals and where Bruce is on his register.

MarshallOh great, just as I finally forgot about their annoying song naming habit, you have to go and remind me of it! Seriously though, this didn't bother me as much for some reason.

The Longest Day

Bryan: 2.5/5  When it's building at the beginning, it sounds like it could've went somewhere, a different direction or something. Some of the solo/ arpeggio stuff is cool, and the chorus, but I'm not really enamored of the other sections.

Marshall: 4/5  I LOVE how this song builds. They return to that later too. Otherwise, it's a good song. Good chorus, excellent instrumental break in the middle.

Out of the Shadows

Bryan: 2/5  Meh.

Marshall: 3/5  I like it.


The Reincarnation of Benjamin Breeg

Marshall: 3/5  I love how this song starts.

Bryan: 2/5  It's kind of adorable that the band was so taken by the idea of the fake-media-tie-in that was all the rage back then. (In retrospect, sort of with Ed Hunter, as well; they hooked on to the CD-ROM format just as it was dying.) This one's okay, it's all a bit overwrought. 

For the Greater Good of God

Bryan: 1.5/5  Back to meh. And way too long, to boot.

Marshall: 2/5  Okay, here's the dreaded Harris song. I knew this was coming when I got this album, and I was braced for it. It delivered about what I expected. Better than "No More Lies", but not as good as "Blood Brothers". The lyrics are dumb. I don't like the choppiness. They repeat "Please tell me what life is" 24 times and "For the greater good of God" 16. Ugh. I like the instrumental break in the middle though.

The Legacy

Marshall: 4/5  This is a pretty cool song. I always like the songs that build. I like the guitar strums that first place gently, and then later the same guitar strums are done with heavy distortion. The vocals on this song are really cool. And of course, they end the song with that same bad ass strumming. Perfect way to end the album!

Bryan: 1/5 Not sure what to make of this one. I respect the attempt, I guess, but none of it lands with me and the main refrain is a direct lift from something I can’t put my finger on. Way too long. Boring. 



Final Thoughts

Marshall: Total 31 Avg 3.1  I'm shocked to see how my scores on this compared to Dance of Death! They're only a tad higher on average than Dance of Death, and yet I like this album a lot more. I see now that I actually quite like the songs on Dance of Death, but as an album, this one seems to hang together better. When I want to hear latter-era Maiden, I usually reach for either this or Brave New World, almost never Dance of Death. This album renewed my faith in Maiden, but they were starting to sound generic. My hope for the next album was that they would change their sound/formula a bit.

Bryan: Total 19.5 Avg 1.95  It’s possible it’ll grow on me. I never give up on Maiden albums, really – part of me will always be down to throw ‘em on and say okay, maybe this time it’ll click. But so far it hasn’t happened to me with this one. I like this one even less, scorewise, than Virtual XI, so my scores surprise me a little as well. 


(2010)

Now that's a cover! (By Melvyn Grant, Maiden's other great cover artist; I should've mentioned him before now, sorry. I assume interested parties are clicking the hyperlinks provided to avail themselves of all that kind of info.)

Satelite 15… The Final Frontier 

Marshall: 2/5  After A Matter of Life and Death, I felt like Maiden had vindicated themselves that they wouldn't descend into Virtual XI mediocrity and were safe to start experimenting again. The intro to this sounds very different from anything they've done before, and I loved it. I was praying the whole album would be something new and fresh. But then the main part of this song comes in and it sounds exactly like A Matter of Life and Death, so my hopes were dashed. That's what this song really represents for me. It's a good song, just formulaic. The only formula they broke with this is that this is not the short, simple album-opener they've done ever since Virtual XI. I want to give this song three stars. It got demoted to 2 because they repeat the chorus 20 times, which has long ago become my biggest pet peeve of latter-day Maiden.

Bryan: 1.5/5  There's some interesting stuff in the intro, but it could have been edited down to a more sensible length. It doesn't fit too well with the song that follows, which is kinda blah. 

El Dorado

Marshall: 4/5  Here we go! This is a little different. Great riff, great vocals during the verse. Best song on the album.

Bryan: 2.5/5  I don't hate the riff. I don't hate the bridge. I don't hate the solo sections. But none of it ever really adds up to a kickass song for me. 

Mother of Mercy

Marshall: 2/5  This is a pretty good song, if not for the chorus. Screaming "mother of mercy, angel of pain" or whatever a bunch of times, in notes that are clearly out of Bruce's range these days, kind of ruins this song for me.

Bryan: 3/5  This one has grown on me. I actually forgot about it for awhile, but hearing it again a couple of times for this listenthrough, it gestures, at least, in the direction of Maiden greatness. Kind of strained on the vocals, though. 

Coming Home

Bryan: 1.5/5  Boring.

Marshall: 3/5  This song does not wow me, but it is a solid song, and I enjoy listening to it. It gets a little repetitive at the end. What comes to mind when I hear this song is a memory I have of returning to my new home in the middle night after a trying ordeal. I looked out the window as the sun was rising and we approached the airport, and I saw the landscape of home. I'll always remember that feeling of coming home I had at that moment, and think of it every time I hear this song.

Bryan: I’d definitely put it at 3 stars or higher if I had a similar association. 

The Alchemist

Bryan: 2.25/5  Another profession song! I hope Jason Statham is ready for this one, they threw him a curveball. (I love this damn joke!) Although it seems they wanted to name it "Strange Alchemy" but for some reason named it "The Alchemist." Not bad but nothing new here.

Marshall: 3/5  This is a good song, maybe a little better than Coming Home, but it feels generic. This is largely due to its name, the dreaded "The" song. They all blend into each other in my mind, and this song has two of them. This song would be so much more memorable if they went with Strange Alchemy.

Isle of Avalon

Bryan: 3.25/5  This one is a lot better than I remember but could've used a little something-something. Still, deserves to be remembered and I forgot it, so I apologize to the great 'Ed in the sky. 

Marshall: 3/5  Another good song that feels generic. I too forget a lot of the songs on this album. It's not because they're bad songs. They just don't blow our minds like they used to so long ago. These albums are perfectly decent, just missing any wow factor.

Starblind

Marshall: 2/5  The music is perfectly fine, but this song is a little tiring to listen to, partly because I just heard several songs that sound basically the same. But this song is extra painful because most of it is out of Bruce's range. So instead of enjoying the song, I spend a lot of it cringing at Bruce constantly straining to hit notes.

Bryan: 3.5/5 Sheesh, here's another one that's got more going on than I recalled. None of this is any danger of becoming my favorite Maiden, but there's more life on this album than I remembered. 3.5 might even be too low. This one will make my post-project dishwashing mixes for sure.

The Talisman

Bryan: 2/5  Little too troubadour-y for me then it breaks into a JV version of "Ghost of the Navigator." 

Marshall: 2/5  Okay, here we go with another "The" song. For all my bitching about how generic this album feels, this song has a very unique, if a tad cutesy, intro. But then, as usual, right back into the formula after that. You're right, it does sound like "Ghost of the Navigator." I didn't notice that before, but not it's impossible to miss. Bruce strains his voice a lot on this song again too. Painful.

The Man Who Would be King

Marshall: 4/5  My second favorite song on the album. I love how it starts and ends the most. I really like the changes in this song. That's what really makes this song stand out. No vocal straining on this song, which is a relief after the past several songs.

Bryan: 3.5/5  One of my favorite Kipling stories, and I've got a lot of versions of it (several movie versions, an audiobook, the original prose, plenty of old-time-radio recording) so it amuses me to have an Iron Maiden entry in the collection. Of course, this being a Maiden song about an extant work, one might not pin down the source material from the lyrics alone. Some of the drumming aside (Nicko feels almost like Keith Moon on this one) the music's fairly tight on this. Better - wait for it - than remembered.  

It's probably based on the movie, now that I think about it. I always picture Steve Harris watching late-night reruns and bringing the song in to the studio the next day. Anyway, R.I.P. Sean Connery, while we're here.

When the Wind Blows

Marshall: 3/5  Here's the dreaded Harris song of the album, this time the album finisher. And 11 minutes, so it looks like he's going for the epic album finisher like he used to do until the late 90's. Already I'm rolling my eyes at the vocal melody in unison with the guitar melody. That's a formula Harris has loved for decades now, and I've always cringed at it. The story and lyrics are stupid. But, what is this, no repetitive chorus?? Well, that's refreshing. I haven't seen Harris pull that off for 15 years. Still, I'm all set to give this 2 stars until about halfway through the song, and it really starts getting good.

Bryan: 2.75/5  Is this the first Maiden song where there's a wind sound effect? Am I missing an obvious one? I think the vocal melody in the chorus is used on X Factor somewhere. But the whole thing follows the whole neo-celtic chord progression Harris et al. defaulted to in the 90s, so the melody grows from that one supposes. Not bad but kinda meh.  I like the second part of the song better than the first. 

Final Thoughts

Marshall: Total 28 Avg. 2.8  There are a few great tracks on this album, but by this point, the band needs some new tricks up their sleeve. This album is exhausting to listen to, and I never thought I'd say this, but they need a new singer. Nothing against Bruce, he's got an amazing voice, but he's just getting old and can't hit those notes like he used to.

Bryan: Total 25.75 Avg 2.58  It’d be cool if they did what Journey did and get some young guy who can sing all the songs perfectly. Bruce’s vocal ability is still better than most, but he’s only human after all. This album was a pleasant surprise to revisit. A few more listens, and I might come around on some of these even more. 


(2015)


If Eternity Should Fail

Marshall: 4/5  The best song on the album. It's a pretty good song to begin with, but gets even better half way through. 

Bryan: 2.25/5  Not bad. I like the general gist of the lyrics. The chorus could be better. The stuff at the end - I mean, it's hard to criticize stuff like this; if you're into it, you're into it. It's not really for me.

Marshall: Yes, the ending is silly. The album is all downhill from here.

Speed of Light

Bryan: 3/5  I kind of love the chorus/ end. It's too bad they didn't do this one back on Somewhere in Time.

Marshall: 3/5  I like the instruments on this song. The driving guitar riff and the drums especially. It's a good song, but I don't like it as much as the first track.

The Great Unknown

Bryan: 2.5/5  I need to research this album a bit. The ending is cool, here. 

Marshall: 2/5  Trying to listen to Bruce strain to hit all these notes is exhausting. It would be a good song with a different singer.

The Red and the Black

Marshall: 2/5 Here's the dreaded Harris song of the album. Does the guitar have nothing to do but play the same exact melody as the vocals? Can't Harris come up with a better chorus than "whoa oh oh oh"? The only reason I bother giving this 2 stars is because I like the instrumental sections in the middle.

Bryan: 3.25/5  Guitar-vaunting! Bass galloping! "Whoah-oh-oh-oh!"ing! It's like a song written by a Maiden consultant service. I remember hearing this on someone's satellite metal show in 2015 but can't think of how that would have happened; satellite radio is incongruent with anything I was doing in 2015. (Fake memory or cross-timeline echo? The Maiden-della effect.) I went up to the score I did only on account of the ending section which is textbook headbanging, but I wish they hadn't broke back into the whoah-oh-oh-ohs. I say this as someone who rolls his eyes at any criticism of "whoah-oh-oh"s. The soccer chants are an unextractable part of Maiden. But they're used a little blandly here.

When the River Runs Deep

Bryan: 2.25/5  Not bad.

Marshall: 2/5  I'm usually tuned out by the time this song comes on.

The Book of Souls

Bryan: 3.5/5  Nice little Grieg-y riff on this one. This is one of those raw meat for Maiden songs whose egalitarianism I admire. It reminds me a little of "Dance of Death" in that regard. 

Marshall: 2/5  Nice intro and ending. But then it sounds like every other mediocre song on this album. I'm so sick of the guitar melody tracking the vocals, and of Bruce straining to hit high notes.

Death or Glory

Bryan: 1.5/5 Meh. (Is he singing "God like a monkey?") 

Marshall: 2/5 No, it's "climb like a monkey." I saw them live after this album, and Bruce put on a monkey mask and motioned like he was climbing. It was silly. Speaking of which, at the live show, I really saw how far downhill Bruce's voice had gone. Sometimes it was painful to watch.

Bryan: Yeah it is. I feel kind of bad harping on it, but it’s unfortunately impossible not to notice. I’m glad that the last time I saw them (Worcester, MA, 2003) his voice was still in good shape. (He berated someone in the front row for blowing marijuana smoke up at him. “I’m trying to have a high energy heavy metal show here....” Kind of funny in retrospect. Imagine being that fan! Front row and called out by Bruce.)


Shadows of the Valley

Marshall: 2/5  It’s okay.

Bryan: 2.25/5  The "Into the valley of death" part and directly before it are pleasant enough. The "oh-oh-oh"s are gratuitous. Normally I'll about the "oh-oh-oh"s but this makes two songs on this one where I'd have cut them. 

Tears of a Clown

Bryan: 1.5/5  It was too much to hope for a Pagliacci-inspired tale, but Bruce would've killed the famous bit. Steve wrote this ode to Robin Williams instead, which is a nice sentiment, I guess, and I feel kind of bad marking it so low. But I don't like it very much. 

Marshall: 2/5 Steve didn't write this one. Like most latter day Maiden, this is a Smith tune, collaborating with Harris. But yes, it is an ode to Robin Williams. It's a little sad. And repetitive.

Bryan:  You and Bruce can argue about this one. Harris is credited as songwriter at the wiki as well. I’m not saying Bruce and Wikipedia aren’t mistaken, only that your work is cut out for you with internet citations.

Marshall: I'll defer to Bruce. From the construction, it just does not strike me as a song in which Harris is the main songwriter, so I doubt I'll ever think of it that way. 

The Man of Sorrows

Marshall: 3/5  This song is noticeably better than most of the album. All the things that annoy me are absent in this song. I like the ending a lot. Otherwise, this song doesn't wow me.

Bryan: 1.5/5  I don't know if the lyrics are Steve or Dave but it sounds like Steve, which is kind of sad. He sounds like he's writing X-Factor-era lyrics. Moreover, though, why name this song that when Bruce has a solo song named the same thing? Doesn’t that create needless confusion? Or is Harris that committed to repetition? (That one was for you!)

Empire of the Clouds

Bryan: 3.75/5 Well here we are, Maiden's longest song. If it ends up being the album closer on Maiden's last studio album, how cool is it that it's this offbeat (for them) epic, so sincerely put together by Bruce? I'll be 100% honest and say I admire this more than love it, personally, but I love that it exists and that Maiden chose this note to (possibly) go out on. 

Marshall: 3/5  Is this another epic album finisher? They hadn't done that since the 90's. But I don't really think of this that way, because all the songs on this album are too long too, so this doesn't stand out like they did in the past. And this song just feels so disparate and stitched together. This used to be my favorite song on the album, but it got old fast. All the annoying things about this album--the instruments playing in unison with the vocals, and Bruce straining to hit notes--are present in this song. But I gotta say, I really love that piano intro, as well as several other parts of this song. So, three stars it is.

Final Thoughts

Bryan: Total 27.25 avg. 2.48  I'm surprised at the highs of this album. Listening to it for this project was the only the 2nd (and 3rd) time I ever listened to this one. There will be more, and that makes me happy. 

Marshall: Total 27 avg 2.45  This was their worst album since Virtual XI. After A Matter of Life and Death, I hoped they'd tweak their formula a bit and was disappointed. Surely by this album they would change things up a bit, but they doubled down, and just did their formula even bigger. I don't hate this album though, like I kind of do Virtual XI. It's just exhausting, long, and usually pretty boring, so I rarely listen to it.


~

Bryan: And that’s it. We might circle back and do the live albums and/or the solo and peripheral discography one of these days. Thanks for doing these with me, Marshall, you brought some cogent fury to this project as I suspected and hoped you would. Care to send us all on our way with some wrap-up thoughts?

Marshall: I lump together most of their albums by twos, as that was their general pattern. Two albums, then a change. So, Iron Maiden & Killers, Piece of Mind & Number of the Beast, Powerslave & Live After Death (Powerslave kind of stands on its own, but Live After Death is its appropriate companion), Somewhere in Time & Seventh Son, No Prayer For the Dying & Fear of the Dark, The X Factor & Virtual XI. After that, the pattern seems to break, and all the following albums sort of blend together for me. The band is really aging now, recycling their formula a lot, and soon there will be a final Iron Maiden album, which makes me sad. On the other hand, part of me thinks they should have stopped at A Matter of Life and Death. That was sufficient to recover from Virtual XI, but not so far that they started sounding tired. I hope they go out with a bang!

Bryan: Amen to that. And here's the final rankings - thanks for reading, folks!

Marshall:

Virtual XI  2.13
Book of Souls  2.45
The Final Frontier  2.8
No Prayer for the Dying  2.9
(tie) Iron Maiden  / Dance of Death  3
A Matter of Life and Death  3.1
Somewhere in Time  3.12
Killers  3.18
Number of the Beast  3.22
The X Factor  3.36
(tie) Fear of the Dark / Brave New World  3.5
Piece of Mind  3.56
Seventh Son of a Seventh Son  3.6
Powerslave  4.62

Bryan:

A Matter of Life and Death  1.95
No Prayer for the Dying   2.15
Virtual XI  2.19
Fear of the Dark  2.31
Book of Souls  2.48
The Final Frontier  2.58
The X-Factor  2.68
Dance of Death  2.77
Killers  3.8
Iron Maiden  4.03
Seventh Son of a Seventh Son  4.15
Number of the Beast  4.39
Somewhere in Time   4.4
Brave New World   4.55
Piece of Mind  4.61
Powerslave   4.75


Rod Smallwood, manager
Derek Riggs, premier cover artist.

Martin Birch, producer (of their best stuff)

Steve with friend in IMFC kit.

10.30.2020

Iron Maiden: The Blaze Years

And by Blaze Years, we mean Blaze Bayley, the English singer who replaced Bruce Dickinson in the mid-to-late-90s. And by "we" I mean myself and my friend and fellow metal-maniac Marshall Mason, with whom I've been journeying through the Maiden discography. See here, here, and here for previous installments. Without further ado:

(1995)

I forgot to mention: Blaze was formerly the singer of Wolfsbane. I sort of remember Wolfsbane from back in the day, but not too well. This was apparently their biggest hit. 


More on Blaze’s non-Maiden stuff later. 

Side One:

The Sign of the Cross

Marshall: 4/5  The chanting at the beginning is mesmerizing. It really lets you know, "we're going to be doing something a bit different from now on." This was the first time I heard Blaze sing, and I was disappointed because I really hoped they would find someone even better than Bruce, but who was I kidding. 

Bryan: 3.5/5  Not bad. Becomes something more epic in Bruce's hands. I never tire of telling this story: when I saw Maiden on my birthday in 2000, they set a cross on fire during this song (although it was simulated, not an actual cross-burning, and it was more that they blew one up, not set it ablaze) and then played "The Clansman." That was a fun one to explain to the uninitiated forever after. Probably get me cancelled just relaying it here. Anyway, this song suffers from the album's main problem, which is the opposite of most metal production after a certain point in the 90s (the loudness wars) - the sound mix is just way too murky/ uneven. 

Marshall:  I also thought it was weird that they put the epic Harris album ender as the very first song. It was too different for me to really appreciate at first, but now I really love this song.

Lord of the Flies

Marshall: 4/5  Not as good as Sign of the Cross, but I love it so much that I cannot in good conscience give it a 3. I guess that's why you use decimals! I've grown to really like what Blaze does on this song.

Bryan:  Me, too, and yes, the decimals come in handy. Originally I gave this a 2.75/5 and wrote “Not bad, that ‘Saint and Sinners…’ chorus gets stuck in my head. I’ve been singing it ever since, which led me to a few more spins and bumping it up to 3.25/5.


Man on the Edge

Bryan: 3.75/5  "Nothing is fair/ just you look arooooooouuuuunnnnd…!" I love that the chorus is the name of the movie, but the name of the song is something else. Who can figure out what Harris is thinking with this stuff. This one has problems, but I can't pretend I don't kind of love it. A bouncy rhythm, some good soloes.

Marshall: 3/5  I like how upbeat this song, and enjoy the song generally. I don't like the lyrics or the chorus. Repeating two words over and over does not a chorus make.

Bryan:  We've discussed the line "Once he built missiles, a nation's defense / now he can't even give birthday presents" - one of my favorite awkward-Maiden-lines examples. Man! I think of that literally every time I buy a birthday present, seriously. Falling Down is not a good movie, but it must exist for this song to exist so therefore I must champion it.

Fortunes of War

Marshall: 4/5  After the fast pace of the last song, I really like how this song opens. This is around the point in the album that the listener discovers this is a much darker record than anything they've ever done before, in case the album cover wasn't a dead giveaway of that fact. Man, the lyrics of this song are intense, and Blaze's deep voice suits these lyrics really well. I really like the guitar melody and guitar solos in this song.

Bryan: 2/5  I used to like this one a lot more than I do now, but it brings back memories. More McBiography: that frame shop job I had in 2000 where I bought the BNW cassette was also where my first nine or ten listenings of this album occurred. This one more than others reminds me of that job and the Rhode Island Mall, just the association. I can taste the Sbarro's, hear the whoosh of the air compressor and staple gun, smell the plastic frames and hot glue. These impressions are stronger to me than the actual song. Some good little bass licks here and there, some insight into Harris in the lyrics, but overall, meh. 

Look for the Truth

Bryan: 2.5/5  Important to Harris, for sure, but outside the "oh-ohhh-oh-ohhhh!" part, not much here for me. 

Marshall: 5/5  My favorite song on the album. I love how it opens. My favorite part is the chorus. Holy cow does Blaze nail the chorus! "Look for the truth, deepest cut of all from you!" It's rare that I give any Maiden song 5 stars that repeats "oh oh oh" over and over, but here we are. This song is BAD ASS.

The Aftermath

Bryan: 1.5/5  Plodding. Except the fast  break at the end.

Marshall: 3/5  My favorite part is "I'm just a soldier!" followed by a guitar solo that is just off the hook.

Judgment of Heaven

Marshall: 3/5  I don't like the lyrics. The song is decent.

Bryan: 2/5  Why are these songs so goddamn LONG?

Blood on the World’s Hands

Bryan: 2/5  Adolescent lyrics. No doubt from the heart, just not very interesting. It's easy to picture Bruce singing the last few choruses to a packed arena with all the lights going. 

Marshall: 3/5  The best part of this song is that cool bass intro. By repeating "blood on the world's hands" over and over, this song is a preview of Virtual XI.

The Edge of Darkness

Marshall: 3/5 I like the vocals on this song. I really like how Blaze sings "every minute I get weaker" and "what I wanted was a mission"

Bryan: 3/5  Steve really needed a hug on this album. Thankfully he got one. (I would’ve if I’d been there, Steve!) That "I understand why THE GENIUS MUST DIIIIEEE!" always gets a laugh from me, though. I can relate. That line stays with you. Just as a life philosophy.

2:00 am

Bryan: 3.25/5  This is the most successfully realized depression song of the album, I think. The lyrics have weight, the music sketches out the mood. It’s stuck with me over the years.

Marshall: 3/5  The music and singing are pretty good. Lyrics are pretty weak.

Bryan: From the heart, though. 

The Unbeliever

Marshall: 3/5  I felt like they were trying too hard on this song to be clever with time signatures and time changes. It sounds difficult to write and perform, which makes it awkward to listen to. The first time the band does the chorus, the guitar comes in just slightly before the drums, and that's always driven me crazy. They probably went through a lot of takes to get this thing recorded. Pretty good song though.

Bryan: 2.75/5  Agreed on the time signatures. I used to like this one more than I do now. Boring end to an unfortunately boring album. I appreciate the revelation and emotional rawness of this and the last song, but can't say they ever land on any Maiden mixes I make. 

Final Thoughts

Bryan: Total 29.5 (Avg. 2.68) I want it to have aged better than it has. 

Marshall: Total 37 (avg. 3.36)  I don't think Blaze's singing works with Iron Maiden's songwriting. Some of it felt like it was written with Blaze's singing style in mind, and those parts work. They were very ambitious on this album, tried changing too much of their formula all at once, hence the name of the album. A lot of people hate this album, but it has seriously grown on me over the years. It's actually one of my favorite Maiden albums now, but I don't listen to it when I'm in the mood for Iron Maiden. I listen to it when I'm in the mood for The X Factor.

Bryan: That’s a good way to put it. It's like Killers in that regard. Kind of interesting non-Bruce symmetry, there. 


(1988)

Futureal

Bryan: 3/5  This song isn't so bad, but it's not great. The riff for the verses sounds better in "The Wicker Man." Kinda repetitive.

Marshall: 3/5  I like the energy of this song. The guitar riff is cool but a little bland. I remember how hopeful I was that this album would improve upon The X Factor, and when I first heard this song, I was like, "not bad. Let's see where this goes." Now this song is notable only for how much of a disappointment I'm in for.

The Angel and the Gambler

Bryan: 1/5  I don't get this one at all. Boring riff, boring melody, boring everything. 

Marshall: 1/5  This is not very good the begin with, but then it launches into "don't you think I'm a savior" exactly 66 times for 10 minutes. This was when I started realizing what had just happened. Iron Maiden is done. They'd been going downhill ever since Seventh Son, and this was the final nail in the coffin.



Lightning Strikes Twice 

Bryan: I’ll stick with Dokken, thanks. 1.5/5

Marshall: 1/5 I can't stand this song. I REALLY can't stand the chorus.

Bryan:  That chorus/ descending riff is kind of so dumb you have to salute it. But this isn't Kiss, where such things amuse more than annoy me.

The Clansman

Marshall: 3/5  I'm getting so tired of Maiden songs that start with "the" and stupid choruses like "I am the clansman." Aside from that, this is a pretty good song.

Bryan: 3.75/5  Well... this one is undeniably fun. I mean, you take the broadsword of energy that is Braveheart and throw it in the Maiden Cuisinart; what could go wrong? It's shameless, and I remain shocked they wanted to have a single where a bunch of white kids could be guaranteed to be chanting the chorus in unison, probably saluting the stage. But this appeals to me, too - Maiden was never one to shy away from using a term (correctly, of course) on account of any delicate sensibilities or concern for optics. (Still: I can easily picture someone ignorant of Braveheart - or perhaps seeing it only as Mel Gibson signaling of some kind - trying to cancel this one.) It's a little odd to me, actually, that Blaze didn't make the song more of his signature tune. He does a decent job singing it, but then you hear Bruce sing it, and it's like oh right, obviously THAT is the right way to do this. All the weirder that this is apparently sampled by Brandy

When Two Worlds Collide

Bryan: 1/5  Lazy.

Marshall: 2/5  Saying "When two worlds collide" over and over in between great guitar solos earns this song 2 stars. Not impressed.



The Educated Fool

Marshall: 2/5  Saying "Time will go, and I will follow" over and over in between great guitar solos earns this song 2 stars. Not impressed.

Bryan: 2/5 Meh.

Don’t Look to the Eyes of a Stranger

Bryan: 2.25/5 Has its moments but meh. Queensryche kinda owns "Eyes of a Stranger" the way Metallica owns "For whom the bell tolls," i.e. sure it's a stock phrase but come on, it's already one band's thing. 

Marshall: 1/5  Don't look to/through is repeated 83 times. Then, as if they know they're being insufferable jerks, they have this weird "DON'T LOOK TO THE EYES OF A STRANGER!" one more time really fast right at the very end.

Como Estais Amigos

Marshall: 4/5  After that onslaught of awfulness I was just subjected to, this is a surprisingly good song. The intro and chorus are beautiful, and the guitar solo is excellent.

Bryan: 3/5  I don't hate this song. Kind of an odd title for these sentiments, though? I do heat an "Amigos" near the end. 

Final Thoughts

Bryan: Total 17.5 (avg 2.19) I feel bad for Blaze going out on such a stinker. I had that Ed Hunter CD-rom, which apparently they were focusing on during the making of this album, but either it didn't work or my laptop in 2004 was incompatible. I've still never played it. I'd like to think this album sounds the way it does because they were distracted by the effort of becoming videogame entrepreneurs. But I don't know if I can.

Marshall: Total 17 (Avg. 2.13) I can't stand this album. By the time I was done listening to it the first time, I said, "yeah, I'm done with Maiden." It was tragic and heartbreaking, but at least I had Dickinson's solo stuff to tide me over. I sold my CD and didn't look back until few years ago, I went and bought it again because I missed it. I knew I would rarely listen to it, but I didn't care. It was part of the catalog and I wanted it.

Bryan: Before we go, Marshall has some nice things to say about at least one of Blaze’s post-Maiden solo records. 

Marshall: Out of curiosity and not a small amount of masochism, I listened to one of Blaze Bayley's post-Maiden solo albums, called Promise and Terror. I was expecting to hate it. Not only did I not hate it, I loved it right away. Honestly, it kind of blew me away. Never in a million years did I expect it to become one of my favorite albums, but here we are. I love every single song on this album. It doesn't sound like Iron Maiden at all, which I realized over time is why it is so good. See, Blaze's deep voice just didn't suit Maiden's sound. He also needed more input in the songwriting in order to take best advantage of his singing style. It was really necessary for me to hear Blaze on his own before I could truly understand why he didn't fit in Maiden.

Bryan: I’m at present unfamiliar, but that first song explodes out the speaker and sounds pretty awesome to me.

Here's where the rankings stand so far.

Bryan:

No Prayer for the Dying  2.15
Virtual XI 2.19
Fear of the Dark  2.31
The X-Factor 2.68
Killers  3.8
Iron Maiden  4.03
Seventh Son of a Seventh Son  4.15
Number of the Beast  4.39
Somewhere in Time  4.4
Piece of Mind  4.61
Powerslave  4.75

Marshall:

Virtual XI 2.13
No Prayer for the Dying  2.9
Iron Maiden  3
Somewhere in Time  3.12
Killers  3.18
Number of the Beast  3.22
The X Factor 3.36
Fear of the Dark  3.5
Piece of Mind  3.56
Seventh Son of a Seventh Son  3.6
Powerslave  4.62

~
We’ll be back for one last go-round to cover the band’s twenty-first century output. 

Insert poster for the Virtual XI vinyl. (Note for non-English-sports-fans: the eleven, here, is a pun on the band's eleventh album as well as a side's "starting eleven," i.e. any team's best players. It's tough to make out the names of the non-Maiden players in the attached, but they were all members of England's 1998 World Cup team.