Iron Maiden (album) explained

Iron Maiden
Type:studio
Artist:Iron Maiden
Cover:Iron Maiden (album) cover.jpg
Border:yes
Released:[1]
Recorded:December 1979[2]
Studio:Kingsway (London)
Genre:Heavy metal
Length:37:39
Label:EMI
Producer:Wil Malone
Chronology:Iron Maiden studio albums
Next Title:Killers
Next Year:1981

Iron Maiden is the debut studio album by English heavy metal band Iron Maiden, released on 14 April 1980 by EMI Records in the UK and Harvest and Capitol Records in the US. The North American version included the song "Sanctuary", released in the UK as a non-album single. In 1998, along with the rest of the band's pre-1995 releases, Iron Maiden was remastered with "Sanctuary" added in all territories. However, 2014 vinyl reissues, 2015 digital releases and 2018 CD reissues use the original track listing across the globe. It is the band's only album to feature guitarist Dennis Stratton.

Although Iron Maiden have since criticised the quality of the album's production, the release was met with critical and commercial success, peaking at number four on the UK Albums Chart and helping the band achieve prominence in mainland Europe.

Background

This is the band's only album produced by Wil Malone (credited as Will Malone), whom Iron Maiden have since claimed lacked interest in the project and effectively left them to produce most of the album themselves, which, according to bassist Steve Harris, was completed in just 13 days.[3] Recording took place at Kingsway Studios, west London in January 1980, with the band taking time out from the 1980 Metal for Muthas Tour to complete the final mixes at Morgan Studios, northwest London in February. Before the sessions with Malone, the band made two attempts in December 1979 with two different producers while still a four-piece. Guy Edwards, the first, was dismissed as the band were unhappy with the "muddy" quality in his production, while Andy Scott was also dismissed after insisting Harris play his bass with a pick rather than his fingers. After these efforts, the band decided not to dismiss Malone as Harris described that they could "bypass him and [go] to the engineer". The group criticised the quality of the production, although many fans still preferred the raw quality of the sound recording.[3] [4] Although AllMusic stated that this style was "clearly drawing from elements of punk rock",[5] Harris stated that the band despised everything about punk.[6]

This was also the only studio album with guitarist Dennis Stratton, who, having been brought in as a last-minute placement, was dismissed due to "musical differences" after the band's European tour in support of Kiss. Suspicions were first raised during Iron Maidens recording, when Stratton added Wishbone Ash-esque harmony guitars and backing vocals reminiscent of Queen to "Phantom of the Opera", of which the rest of the band immediately disapproved and had removed. Although Stratton stated that he was not "trying to push the band in a new direction", Harris commented that it "really pointed up the difference between Den and us", after which he began to notice that "Dennis was so much more into playing stuff like "Strange World" than he was "Iron Maiden" or "Prowler", because it was more slow, melodic ... when he was soloing on one of the heavier songs, it wasn't with quite the same passion".[7]

The 1998 remastered album differs from the original with the addition of the song "Sanctuary", which had then been released only as a single in the UK in May 1980, although it did also appear in the later US version of Iron Maiden, which was issued in August 1980.[8] The track originally appeared on the Metal for Muthas compilation, but was re-recorded during the Iron Maiden sessions. The re-release also features a different cover; a digital recreation by original artist Derek Riggs, with a portion of the original artwork instead being used on the disc itself.

The band undertook the Iron Maiden Tour in support of the album, during which they played their first concerts in mainland Europe, where they were surprised to discover how successful Iron Maiden had been outside the UK. Steve Harris commented, "The prestige of doing so well in the UK had turned into a sort of word-of-mouth thing, and we'd turn up in places like Leiden, in Holland, places we'd never even heard of, and they'd have these massive banners waiting for us with 'Iron Maiden Go Over The Top' written on them and all this. It was unreal."

Songs

"Running Free" was released as a single on 8 February 1980, reaching No. 34 in the UK Singles Chart. The band also performed the song on the UK TV show Top of the Pops, refusing the usual tradition for artists to mime and thus becoming the first group to perform live on the show since The Who in 1972. Vocalist Paul Di'Anno, who wrote the song's lyrics, describes it as "a very autobiographical song, though of course I've never spent the night in an LA jail. It's about being 16 and, like it says, just running wild and running free. It comes from my days as a skinhead." According to Classic Rock and Metal Hammer contributor Dave Ling, writing in the Metal for Muthas CD re-issue liner notes, "Sanctuary" was originally penned by guitarist Rob Angelo, a member of Iron Maiden in 1977, who was paid £300 for the song's rights.[9] The "Sanctuary" single was released on 7 June 1980 and charted at No. 29, with the censored cover of Eddie, the band's mascot, standing over Margaret Thatcher's body earning the band publicity in the British press. Managers Rod Smallwood and Andy Taylor's management company would be named after the song.[10]

Although "Strange World" is credited solely to Harris, Paul Day, the band's original vocalist from 1975 to 1976, asserted that he also contributed to the song.[11] "Charlotte the Harlot", their only song to have been written by Dave Murray alone, is the first of four Iron Maiden tracks about the fictional prostitute "Charlotte", although Murray states it was "based on a true story". The 7-minute "Phantom of the Opera" is one of Harris's favourites and is still performed live relatively frequently. With many mood and time-changes, Harris marks it as "the first song I'd written that was a bit more proggy".[3] "Transylvania" is an instrumental piece composed by Harris, which was later covered by Iced Earth on the album Horror Show.[12]

Of all the album's songs, "Phantom of the Opera", "Running Free", "Sanctuary" and "Iron Maiden" are the most frequently played in the band's concert tours, with the last being played at every show since the band's inception and signalling the arrival of Eddie onstage. All of the album's songs, excluding "Strange World", have been re-recorded with Bruce Dickinson on vocals, either on live albums, studio B-Sides or both.[5] "Strange World" and "Transylvania" were the only songs not played on the "Eddie Rips Up the World Tour", 2005.

Four songs ("Prowler", "Remember Tomorrow", "Running Free" and "Iron Maiden") were covered for the 2008 tribute album released by Kerrang! magazine,[13] and an acoustic reinterpretation of "Prowler" was included in 2012's Across The Seventh Sea by the acoustic Iron Maiden tribute project Maiden uniteD.[14] Metallica drummer Lars Ulrich affirmed that "Remember Tomorrow" was "basically the blueprint for songs like Fade To Black and Welcome Home (Sanitarium), and some of the more epic ballady type of songs that Metallica had done later".[15]

Reception

On its release, the album received immediate critical acclaim. Geoff Barton, in Sounds, hailed it as "Heavy metal for the '80s, its blinding speed and rampant ferocity making most plastic heavy rock tracks from the '60s and '70s sound sloth-like and funeral-dirgey by comparison". Iron Maiden spent an initial fifteen weeks on the UK chart, and a further two when it was reissued on EMI's budget subsidiary Fame in 1985.[16]

The album has continued to receive praise from reviewers. AllMusic proclaims that it "would still rank as a landmark even if the Dickinson years had never happened" and says there was "no better place to hear how both punk and prog rock informed the new wave of British heavy metal".[5] Sputnikmusic describes it as "one of the top debut albums in the world of heavy metal", containing "the raw, aggressive power [that] defines the early years of the band".

Iron Maiden is one of the band's two albums listed in Robert Dimery's 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die (The Number of the Beast is the other).[17] In 2017, it was ranked 13th on Rolling Stone list of "100 Greatest Metal Albums of All Time".[18]

Track listing

Personnel

Production and performance credits are adapted from the album liner notes.[19] [20] [21]

Iron Maiden

Technical personnel

Literature

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 41 Years Ago: Iron Maiden Released Their Influential Debut. Loudwire. 15 February 2022.
  2. Iron Maiden Remastered . . 2018 . liner notes . Parlophone.
  3. Iron Maiden: Maiden Voyage. Guitar World. 7 March 2011 . 1 June 2011.
  4. 23 November 2004. . DVD. Sony.
  5. Web site: Iron Maiden - Iron Maiden. AllMusic. Steve. Huey. 22 June 2011.
  6. New Wave of British Heavy Metal . . Dunn, McFadyen (creators, directors) . . 10 December 2011.
  7. Web site: Music Legends. Paul Di'Anno Interview. 6 May 2013. 22 November 2012. Saulnier. Jason.
  8. Book: Daniels . Neil . Neil Daniels . Iron Maiden: The Ultimate Illustrated History . 1 . Voyageur Press . 25 May 2012 . 196 . 978-0760342213.
  9. Book: Ling . Dave . Metal for Muthas . Metal for Muthas . Liner Notes . January 2001 . London.
  10. News: Iron Maiden manager comments on split from Sanctuary . 10 October 2011 . 4 November 2006 . Blabbermouth.net.
  11. Web site: Paul Day: My History in Brief . 10 October 2011 . . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20111023231145/http://paulmarioday.com/biography.html . 23 October 2011.
  12. Web site: Sputnikmusic review: Iced Earth- Horror Show . Sputnikmusic. Mike. Stagno. 7 August 2006. 10 October 2011.
  13. Web site: Kerrang! The making of Maiden Heaven . Kerrang. 13 January 2011 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20130501010936/http://www.kerrang.com/blog/2008/07/the_making_of_maiden_heaven.html . 1 May 2013 .
  14. Web site: Maiden United – Across The Seventh Sea Tracklisting, Cover Artwork Revealed. Brave Words & Bloody Knuckles. 17 January 2013. 29 June 2012.
  15. Web site: Metallica cover Iron Maiden, "pull it off admirably". musicradar.com. 10 July 2008. 29 July 2023.
  16. [British Hit Singles & Albums|The Guinness Book of British Hit Albums]
  17. Book: Lydon, Michael (preface). 1001 albums you must hear before you die. Cassell Illustrated. London. 978-1844036240. Updated. Dimery, Robert. 19 November 2012. 15 October 2008. registration.
  18. Begrand. Adrien. 100 Greatest Metal Albums of All Time. Rolling Stone. 22 June 2017. 21 June 2017. 24 June 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20170624025337/http://www.rollingstone.com/music/lists/the-100-greatest-metal-albums-of-all-time-w486923/anthrax-among-the-living-1987-w486946. dead.
  19. Iron Maiden Fame CD . . 1987 . .
  20. Iron Maiden Remastered . . 1998 . .
  21. Iron Maiden . . 14 April 1980 . .
  22. Web site: Le Détail des Albums de chaque Artiste – I . Infodisc.fr . fr . 9 June 2012 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20141022124902/http://infodisc.fr/Album_I.php . 22 October 2014 . Select Iron Maiden from the menu, then press OK.