Iron Maiden
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Iron Maiden

Original price was: £19.00.Current price is: £5.70.

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There may be no better place to hear how both punk and prog rock informed the New Wave of British Heavy Metal than Iron Maidens self-titled debut. Often overlooked and overshadowed by the glorious Bruce Dickinson years, its easy to forget that Iron Maiden was itself a game-changer when it appeared on the scene in 1980. That year also saw important albums from Motörhead, Saxon, and Angel Witch, but Iron Maiden vaulted its creators to the head of the NWOBHM pack, reaching the U.K. Top Five and establishing them as an outfit with the talent to build on Judas Priests late-70s innovations. On the one hand, Maiden was clearly drawing from elements of punk rock the raw D.I.Y. production, the revved-up velocities, and the vocals of rough-and-ready growler Paul DiAnno, who looked and sounded not like a metal god, but rather a short-haired street tough. On the other hand, Maiden had all the creative ambition of a prog rock band. Compositionally, even their shortest and most straightforward songs featured abrupt changes in tempo and feel. Their musicianship was already light years beyond punk, with complicated instrumental passages between guitarists Dave Murray and Dennis Stratton and bassist Steve Harris. When Murray and Stratton harmonize their leads, they outdo even Priests legendary tandem in terms of pure speed. The lyrics have similarly high-flying aspirations, spinning first-person stories and character sketches with a flair for the seedy and the grotesque. Add it all up, and Iron Maiden performs the neat trick of reconciling two genres seemingly antithetical to one another, using post-Priest heavy metal as the meeting ground. The seven-minute Phantom of the Opera is a landmark, the bands earliest progressive epic and still among its best; with its ambitious fusion of musical styles, its multi-sectioned construction, and the literary retelling of the lyrics, it seemed to encapsulate all the promise of both the band and the NWOBHM. Two of the simpler, punkier rockers, Running Free and Sanctuary (the latter left off the U.K. version but added to subsequent reissues), made the lower reaches of the British singles charts. The flasher tale Prowler, one of the bands more enduring numbers, is in the same vein, but ups the instrumental complexity, while the title track still remains a concert staple. Elsewhere, the band offers the first of many instrumentals with Transylvania, introduces the recurring title character of Charlotte the Harlot, and reimagines Judas Priests Beyond the Realms of Death with the ballad Remember Tomorrow, which starts out soft but closes with a speed-freak guitar section. Perhaps the only hint of a misstep comes on the more restrained ballad Strange World, the only song from this album that was never re-recorded in a live or alternate version by the Dickinson lineup. Nonetheless, the whole project explodes with energy and ideas, and while the band would certainly go on to refine much of whats here (including the cover painting of mascot Eddie), Iron Maiden would still rank as a landmark even if the Dickinson years had never happened. ~ Steve Huey

Parlophone Records will follow the 2012/13 IRON MAIDEN vinyl picture disc reissues of the first eight Iron Maiden albums, which spanned the 1980s, with brand new pressings of the albums in heavyweight 180g black vinyl.

In conjunction with these premium album releases, a strictly limited one-off run of the 7 singles from each respective album will be made available. These highly collectable black vinyl singles will be cut from the original analogue master tapes. Released in replica artwork packaging, they are sure to become a must-have item for fans, collectors and anyone who missed out first time round.

The albums will also be cut from the original analogue master tapes and packaged in identical artwork to the initial 1980s releases. As a bonus, the first batch of album releases (Iron Maiden/Killers/The Number Of The Beast) will also be made available in a Collectors Box sized to house all 8 albums. This package will be a strictly limited edition and available while stocks last.

The release of these high quality, black vinyl records offers optimum choice to fans who would like to own a piece of Maidens authentic 1980s vinyl sound, or for those simply wanting to rediscover this much loved, iconic format. Coupled with the end of the Maiden England World Tour which began in North America in 2012 and finished last month at Knebworth Parks Sonisphere Festival, this now completes Maidens 1980s touring and catalogue reissues cycle, so the band are free to focus on their dynamic future plans.

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