In the prosperous constellation of diadems of the Iron Maiden Universe, for the enthusiast, it is ever so difficult to isolate a star, so rich is their musical heritage. Icon of the NWOBHM, with very few stumbles, constantly blooming with creativity each decade, enriching album after album, tour after tour their choreographic/musical repertoire, the band has successfully established itself at the pinnacle of every heavy-laden celestial sphere.

And so, in such a dazzling scenario, choosing one album over another is anything but a vain choice; the musical identity articulated in the sequence of compositions has progressively modulated the Iron Maiden's SELF through silent maturation marked by the developments of their creativity.

One of the most important moments in this lustrous cursus honorum took place in the second half of the '80s; it was the Annus Domini 1986 and the tumultuous audiences that had crowned the glories of that milestone named Live After Death, were eager for the new life Eddie would assume after the Egyptian opulence of Powerslave. A new age, stemming from an ultra-millennial historical traversal, thus arrived like a whirlwind in record stores on September 29, 1986; from the refined archaisms of Egyptian spirits to the disintegrating multifaceted media presence of an alternative future, Eddie, emulating a cyborg killer, reinterprets his previous eras with the futurist flair punctuated by the polychromaticity of crystalline compositions.

And so, who knows what astonishment may have disoriented the dawn enthusiasm of the listener when the intro of Cauth Somewhere in Time literally shattered the linear sounds of that fil rouge of the previous 5 platters; softly sudden, the appearance of never-before-seen instrumentation like guitar, bass synth hexaphonic pickups, and other avant-garde technical finds, stormed into the metal world, coloring it with the muffled tones of keyboardist infusions.

Framed this way, it might sound like pure blasphemy, yet here the smoothing breeze had the merit of being an intelligent sound expedient: a pure added value that delicately enveloped both the arrangements in general and the care of the lyrics.

The imprinting, as mentioned, shines with the complex Caught Somewhere in Time: a recurring moment where Steve Harris hardly conceals his unconscious prog vein, entangling in a thicket of colorful riffs and syncopated time changes. The result is almost a silent intuitive flash for the future creativity of Tool. Following this electronic/progressive beginning comes a dyad highlighting the perhaps never fully optimized executive/compositional virtues of Adrian Smith. The first one, Wasted Years, apparently eyeing the metal hit parade trend, actually represents a rare example of sublime linear creativity: retracing in the lyrics the titanic efforts of the just-ended World Slavery Tour, with its riffs the guitar soul of Iron Maiden captures the listener's mind into universes of parallel sublimity. The narrative then continues with Sea of Madness, the second bastion attributable to Smith's creativity; in some respects, it complements the discourse initiated with the opening track, disarticulating into an amorphous rhythmic structure. Carried by a brilliant wall of sound with a dreamy flavor, synthesized guitars sketch another marvelous example of prog concentrated within the canonical 5-minute time frame.

The duration, however, returns to expand along with the song form in the subsequent tracks: Heaven Can Wait, in certain ways, emulating in its lyrics what the Bassist had already stated with Hallowed Be thy Name, reveals itself as a track with complex yet sumptuous executive lines. Undoubtedly, it is one of the album's peaks; particularly noteworthy is Dickinson's versatile voice, a cadence of osculating wind here personalizes with rare nonchalance the complexity of rare technical metric performability.

And it is precisely the executive factor that fills the listener’s emotions with jolts with the correspondence resumed at the beginning of side B. A slow ascending phrasing introduces us to “The Loneliness of the Long-Distance Runner”; mirroring in its complexity level “Caught Somewhere in Time,” the track disentangles into a frantic rhythm drafting skillfully cadenced rhythmic progressions by McBrain's millimeter-precise drumming. Despite being substantially snubbed by a part of critics and fans, the following “Stranger in a Strange Land” deserves absolute consideration, a historical account of the unfortunate fate of a scientific expedition lost in the polar ice of which only a few survivors (among whom inspired the idea to Smith) could recount: a pure illusory journey painted with atmospheres as roaring as dreamy. Even more expressively compared to “Sea of Madness,” here the sounds convince with a stylistic refinement of rare quality, and even here as in the aforementioned track, it is the beautiful median guitar break that imposes melodically rare suggestive imagistic moments.

Following is the only moment attributable to the signature (jointly with Harris) of Dave Murray: Déjà Vu. Again, a mellifluous incipit flows into a track, though less complex than the album’s average, yet absolutely in line with the spirit pervading it. Indeed, here perhaps more than elsewhere, it is the lyrics that set the tone, embedding between the lines concepts much less abstract than a superficial listener might think (“Ever had a conversation that you realize you’ve had before, isn’t it strange? ‘Cause you know you’ve heard it before.”).

And it's always on the latent yet so recurring footsteps of that unconscious prog that the most epic majesty unlocks its own epilogue. A martial progression with a grave tone introduces the musical apologia of the most illustrious Macedonian commander. Despite the song's lyrics being nothing but a survey of historical facts about Alexander the Great, Alexander the Great reflects the grandeur of its title in its physiognomy and over its more than 8 and a half minutes duration, it carries forward a sonic prose of rare majesty. In the long instrumental phrases forming its backbone, the song's soul unleashes a chameleon pathos particularly evocative of the ancient glory of the Hero celebrated.

Such splendor represents the ideal finish for an album that, along with its successor, reaches the thresholds of perfection. A true gem set within a treasure of jewels that for many years unjustly overshadowed its splendor.

Beyond the horizons of those who insist on viewing this work as a superfluous contamination of commercial sounds, it can instead be answered that it is precisely their deliberate infusion that renders it one of the most intense pieces in the discography of one of the queens of Metal.

Tracklist Lyrics Samples and Videos

01   Caught Somewhere in Time (07:25)

If you had the time to lose,
An open mind and time to choose,
Would you care to take a look,
Or can you read me like a book?

Time is always on my side,
Time is always on my side.

Can I tempt you, come with me,
Be Devil may care, fulfill your dream,
If I said I'd take you there,
Would you go, would you be scared?

Time is always on my side,
Time is always on my side.

Don't be afraid, you're safe with me,
Safe as any soul can be ... honestly,
Just let yourself go.

Caught somewhere in time
Caught somewhere in time
Caught somewhere in time ... oh oh

Like a wolf in sheep's clothing,
You try to hide your deepest sins,
Of all the things that you've done wrong,
And I know where you belong.

Time is always on my side,
Time is always on my side.

Make you an offer you can't refuse,
You've only got your soul to lose...
Eternally...Just let yourself go!

Caught somewhere in time
Caught somewhere in time
Caught now in two minds!

02   Wasted Years (05:07)

From the coast of gold, across the seven seas
I'm travellin' on, far and wide
But now it seems, I'm just a stranger to myself
And all the things I sometimes do, it isn't me but someone else

I close my eyes, and think of home
Another city goes by, in the night
Ain't it funny how it is, you never miss it 'til it's gone away
And my heart is lying there and will be 'til my dying day

Chorus:
So understand
Don't waste your time always searching for those wasted years
Face up... make your stand
And realise you're living in the golden years

Too much time on my hands, I got you on my mind
Can't ease this pain, so easily
When you can't find the words to say, it's hard to make it through another day
And it makes me wanna cry, and throw my hands up to the sky

[Repeat chorus x 2]

Face up... make your stand
And realise you're living in the golden years

03   Sea of Madness (05:41)

04   Heaven Can Wait (07:21)

Can't understand what is happening to me,
This isn't real, this is only a dream,
But I never have felt, no I never have felt this way before,
I'm looking down on my body below,
I lie asleep in the midst of a dream,
Is it now could it be that the angel of death has come for me?
I can't believe that really my time has come,
I don't feel ready, there's so much left undone,
And it's my soul and I'm not gonna let it get away.

Chorus:
Heaven can wait,
Heaven can wait,
Heaven can wait,
Heaven can wait til another day.

[Repeat chorus]

I have a lust for the Earth below
And Hell itself is my only foe,
'Cause I've no fear of dying,
I'll go when I'm good and ready,
I snatch a glimpse of the light's eternal rays,
I see a tunnel, I stand amazed,
At all of the people standing there in front of me,
Into the paths of rightness I'll be led,
Is this the place where the living join the dead?
I wish I knew this was only just a nightmare.

[Chorus *2]

Take my hand, I'll lead you to the promised land,
Take my hand, I'll give you immortality,
Eternal youth, I'll take you to the other side,
To see the truth, the path for you is decided.

Oh Oh * lots.

My body tingles, I feel so strange,
I feel so tired, I feel so drained,
And I'm wondering if I'll ever be the same again,
Is this in limbo or in Heaven or Hell?
Maybe I'm going down there as well,
I can't accept my soul will drift forever.
I feel myself floating back down to Earth,
So could this be the hour of my rebirth?
Or have I died or will I wake from dreaming?

[Chorus]

05   The Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner (06:31)

(Harris)

Tough of the track,
With the wind,
And the rain that's beating down on your back.
Your heart's beating loud
And goes on getting louder
And goes on even more till the sound
Is ringing in your head,
With every step you tread,
And every breath you take,
Determination makes
You run,
Never stop,
Gotta win, gotta run till you drop,
Keep the pace,
Hold the race,
Your mind is getting clearer,
You're over halfway there but the miles
Just never seem to end
As if you're in a dream,
Not getting anywhere.
It seems so futile.

Chorus:
Run, on and on,
Run, on and on,
The loneliness of the long distance runner.

I've got to keep running the course,
I've got to keep running and win at all costs,
I've got to keep going, be strong,
Must be so determined and push myself on.

Run over stiles, across fields,
Turn to look at who's on your heels,
Way ahead of the field,
The line is getting nearer but do
You want the glory that goes,
You reach the final stretch,
Ideals are just a trace,
You feel like throwing the race,
It's all so futile.

Chorus:
Run, on and on,
Run, on and on,
The loneliness of the long distance runner.

06   Stranger in a Strange Land (05:44)

07   Deja-Vu (04:56)

(Murray/Harris)

When you see familiar faces,
But you don't remember where they're from,
Could you be wrong?
When you've been particular places,
That you know you've never been before,
Can you be sure?
'Cause you know this has happened before,
And you know that this moment in time is for real,
And you know when you feel Deja vu.

Chorus:
Feel like I've been here before,
Feel like I've been here before.

Ever had a conversation,
That you realise you've had before,
Isn't it strange?
Have you ever talked to someone,
And you feel you know what's coming next?
It feels pre-arranged.
'Cause you know that you've heard it before,
And you feel that this moment in time is surreal,
'Cause you know when you feel deja-vu.

08   Alexander the Great (08:35)

Loading comments  slowly

Other reviews

By velvetunderground

 Iron is like a sea, an ocean of sounds, of shivers, and the swimmer has no choice but to dive in and swim, swim, swim...

 Alexander The Great, (just to name one)... a hard rock, dark, (grotesque) a crystal-clear tunnel, horrid... (fortunately pieces like this exist in music, in history, in life)


By MetallAro

 The album offers many and original experimentations, starting from the introduction of background keyboards.

 I sing, or rather shout the chorus at the top of my lungs, while my parents worriedly call 911.


By juve in B

 'Wasted Years' washes away any bitterness: a masterpiece written in collaboration by Adrian Smith.

 'Alexander the Great' ... the best song on the album, unfortunately never played live.


By Kirk89

 It’s like living in this futuristic world, and one has the sensation of not being able to get out.

 Each label you see, even the most insignificant ones, makes you invent an event of history that has nothing to do with it or that has not yet occurred.


By pepozzo

 The first track 'Caught Somewhere in Time' catapults us into a futuristic universe with keyboards and synthesized guitars.

 'Wasted Years' is a concentrate of emotions, with choruses wonderfully sung by a Dickinson in top form.