Friday, April 12, 2013

Iron Maiden - Somewhere in Time (1986)

Now it is time for some classic Heavy Metal. Iron Maiden are one of the most important, definitive metal bands on the market - having the solid, melodic stylings and intricate guitar work. They were one of the most important bands to rise from the NWOBHM movement. This is one of their classic albums, being the sixth they released and one of the only ones I own on CD, not cassette. Mine is the 1998 digitally remastered version, which includes full length videos, band biographies and a photo gallery, plus "much more" alledgedly. We'll check that out after we listen to it!

 The packaging has an 80s sci-fi feel to it - with Eddie as a cyborg, roaming a city, gun in hand. He's all sinew and metal. The font is that classic digital one that mimics an LCD screen. On the back of the booklet, the band parade across and you can see that the city seems changed from what it once was and something floats in the air - a satellite, perhaps? Whilst behind a pyramid crackles with lightning. The wee cartoon band are very cute. And the names of the places pertain to tracks on the album and other Iron Maiden songs/influences - including "Bradbury Towers", "Aces High Bar", "Herbert Ails", "Ancient Mariner Seafood Restaurant" (and the TARDIS!). Inside the booklet there are loads of pictures - of the band, of Eddie and the lyrics, each on a star spangled background with a band member posing beside them. They look so young!

Iron Maiden are awesome and immortal. Let our aural dissection begin!

The immense, slow chords open "Somewhere in Time" galloping into the traditional Maiden rhythms - catchy, solid.

The awesome strumming and early rifts of "Wasted Year" are unmistakable. A good, solid metal piece, with a soaring chorus and inspirational edge to the rhythms. This is despite the negative connotations to the lyrics - which are about the exhaustion of touring, homesickness and alienation. The anthemic chorus suggests that you should move on, see a way further to a brighter future.

The next track, "Sea of Madness" is a surging maelstrom of drama. The guitars chug along like the relentless waves, pounding the shores. The vocals are like an albatross riding the waves.
"... like the eagle and the dove, fly so high on wings above..."
"Heaven Can Wait" is another catchy piece with plentiful synthesizers and great melodies. Repetitive chorus, but decent message. It falls into a galloping, sing-a-long rhythm where you can just image Bruce strutting across the stage, coaxing the audience to join him in the chanting. Then another musical shift into a faster, slightly desperate pace before we fall back into the anthemic chorus.
This song is completely different from Gamma Ray's track with the same name, apart from the line:
"... Heaven can wait til another day..."
A solid, racing song "The Loneliness of a Long distance Runner" has the sort of beat that you could use to pace yourself - if you wanted to run both fast and long too. Pounding drums, galloping guitars. Soaring solos. This is a song of energy and endurance, with a touch of solitude.

"Stranger in a Strange Land" has a heavier, more ominous sound. It seems to be about a young man, alone and lost, who died in the snow and had his body preserved for the future to find. The guitar solo is melancholic, moody, evoking vistas of endless skies and glaciers - a land unrelenting in its isolation and inhospitably.

Achingly slow chords open the next track, haunting, before we are bowled down by a charge of drums and guitars. Have we been here before? Not quite, but this is still "De Ja Vu". Dickinson's voice has dropped to a snarl before rising into his more typical not-quite-screams. Short, fast.

Slower, building into an epic we have the saga of "Alexander the Great". With typical slow baseline, the echoing intro rhythms and the light strumming of guitars as they build and build in complexity. Surging in comes the heavier guitar, an increase in pace and bass.

Iron Maiden are one of the most accessible metal bands I've found, with their catchy, repetitive choruses and solid rhythms, they are destined for stadium immortality and noone who has seen them live can resist their charms. They are professionals, polished and have a sound that is distinctly their own. For this album I shall give a rating of 8/10.

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