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Fear of the Dark [ECD] by Iron Maiden (CD, Jan-2006, Metal-Is) 
Fear of the Dark [ECD] by Iron Maiden (CD, Jan-2006, Metal-Is)

 
Fear of the Dark [ECD] by Iron Maiden (CD, Jan-2006, Metal-Is)

Artist: Iron Maiden
Release Date: Jan 2006
Format: CD
Record Label: Metal-Is
Genre: Heavy Metal
UPC: 696998603721
Product ID: EPID3286446
Description: This is an Enhanced CD which contains regular audio tracks and multimedia computer files. The Enhanced portion includes music videos for "Be Quick Or Be Dead" and "From Here To Eternity." Iron Maiden: Bruce Dickinson (vocals); Dave Murra...
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  Fear Of The Dark [ECD]
Review created: 08/05/06
by:
2 of 5 people found this review helpful.

Track listing
1. Be Quick Or Be Dead
2. From Here To Eternity
3. Afraid To Shoot Strangers
4. Fear Is The Key
5. Childhood's End
6. Wasting Love
7. Fugitive, The
8. Chains Of Misery
9. Apparition, The
10. Judas Be My Guide
11. Weekend Warrior
12. Fear Of The Dark


Details
Producer: Martin Birch, Steve Harris
Distributor: Ryko Distribution
Recording type: Studio
Recording mode: Stereo
SPAR Code: n/a


Album notes
This is an Enhanced CD which contains regular audio tracks and multimedia computer files. The Enhanced portion includes music videos for "Be Quick Or Be Dead" and "From Here To Eternity."
Iron Maiden: Bruce Dickinson (vocals); Dave Murray, Janick Gers (guitar); Steve Harris (bass); Nicko McBrain (drums).
Additional personnel: Michael Kenney (keyboards).
Recorded at Barnyard Studios, Essex, United Kingdom.
This is an Enhanced CD, which contains both regular audio tracks and multimedia computer files.
Although alternative rock was burning up the charts in 1992, longtime metallist outfit Iron Maiden admirably stuck to its guns with FEAR OF THE DARK. This effort follows in the path of 1990's NO PRAYER FOR THE DYING, as Maiden again sticks to more simple compositions, avoiding the more ambitious songwriting tendencies that marked the group's late-'80s work. The album-opening "Be Quick or Be Dead" recalls the work of such younger speed metal bands as Megadeth, while "From Here to Eternity" is one of Maiden's few forays into tales of sex and sin, a la Guns N' Roses. Unfortunately, Singer Bruce Dickinson quit the band after the ensuing tour (although he and guitarist Adrian Smith would return for a reunion in 1999).


Review ID: 10000000001518913
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  Why I Like This Cd?
Review created: 05/09/08

Why i like this cd? Well it has a lot of good songs, my favorite is Fear Of The Dark. But it has alot of other good songs too, definitely a cd for Iron Maiden fans.


Review ID: 10000000007097821
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  Hugely disappointing ninth studio album
Review created: 01/07/06
by:
0 of 1 people found this review helpful.

1990s 'No Prayer for the Dying' introduced Janick Gers on guitar after the disappointing departure of Adrian Smith. Gers is a great rhythm guitarist and he brought a renewed vitality and urgency to the band, but his solos sometimes leave much to be desired. In 'No Prayer ...' cracks in Maiden's metal armour began to appear, with the emphasis apparently on reclaiming the raw energy of very early material at the expense, seemingly, of well crafted melodic metal songs.
So I had apprehension about the release of this album which was immediately dispelled with the release of the single 'Be Quick or Be Dead', a rampant 200+bpm song with a stunning opening riff, Bruce Dickinson berating the 'fatcats'. Constant touring had taken its toll on his ullulating air raid siren-like voice, and the vocal register of old was replaced by a venom spitting growl which (on this track at least) seemed just as effective. Which only made the disappointment with the album release more accentuated.
The production on the album has more in common with 'Piece of Mind' than 'No Prayer for the Dying'(thankfully), but after the opening blast of 'Be Quick or Be Dead' things go pear shaped. 'From Here to Eternity' is a song about motorbikes and women, a subject best left for the likes of Meat Loaf. And at a time when Maiden singles in the UK were guaranteed to go straight into the top ten (usually the top five), tellingly the subsequent release of this track as a single from the album didn't even make the top twenty. 'Afraid to Shoot Strangers' is a seven minute epic about the anxiety facing a soldier about to fight in the first Gulf War. It starts slowly and builds into a fast burner, but lyrically and musically just doesn't cut it when compared to the likes of 'Hallowed be thy Name', 'Powerslave' and 'Heaven Can Wait'. Subsequent tracks see the band trying out some slightly different approaches - the balladlike 'Wasting Love', the sparse sounding 'Childhood's End', the stop-start rhythm of 'The Apparition' and the anti football (soccer) hooliganism lyrics of 'Weekend Warrior'(which sounds more like Bruce Dickinson's solo material than Maiden) - none of which pack the punch of earlier material. This, combined with the fact that 'Fear is the Key', 'Judas be my Guide' and most especially 'The Fugitive' sound unconsciously self-parodying result in this album sounding almost desperate. Given that Bruce Dickinson left, not unacrimoniously, less than a year after the release of this album, it's entirely possible that internal band dynamics had some impact on the songwriting.
And after all that the band manage to pull out an ace right at the end with the title track. 'Fear of the Dark', after its brooding start, breaks into a fast paced classic with a riff that has a nodding acquaintance with 'Die With Your Boots On' and some excellently crafted melodic guitar parts (although live renditions on 'A Real Live One', 'Rock in Rio' and 'Death on the Road' seem to work better - this really is a classic live track).
At sixty minutes long, this was Iron Maiden's longest studio album to date -and it feels like it.


Review ID: 10000000000136925
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