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Iron Maiden - Seventh Son Of A Seventh Son CD (album) cover

SEVENTH SON OF A SEVENTH SON

Iron Maiden

 

Prog Related

4.19 | 911 ratings

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Hector Enrique
Prog Reviewer
4 stars The use of synthesised guitars and bass on "Somewhere in Time" generated controversy regarding the sonic limits that heavy metal sympathisers were willing to accept, but once again Iron Maiden decided that experimentation was a necessary fuel for their creative process, and with the release of "Seventh Son of a Seventh Son" (1988), their seventh album, they took their proposal along those paths, developing a conceptual work that incorporated new sonic layers from the keyboards.

From the surrealist cover where a disintegrated Eddie from the waist down holds an encapsulated baby (or something like that.... ) in an aseptic and icy setting, "Seventh Son of a Seventh Son" thematically recreates the eternal dispute between Good and Evil with the seer and chosen 'Alvin Maker' as the protagonist, starting from his birth and the course of his life, fighting against evil powers and his own inner demons in a story inspired by the fantasy novel "Seventh Son" (1987) by the American playwright Orson Scott Card.

And even though the tone and power of the guitars drop a few decibels in "Seventh Son of a Seventh Son", the band does not renounce to them in songs of great effect like "Can I Play with Madness" and its catchy chorus, the energetic "The Evil That Men Do", or the galloping "The Clairvoyant", intertwining them with songs of greater structural complexity like "Moonchild" and its initial acoustic guitars and meandering keyboards decorating the flowing instrumental base, "Infinity Dreams" with Bruce Dickinson's powerful vocal register and stupendous middle section, and what is surely one of Iron Maiden's greatest intersections with progressive rock, "Seventh Son of a Seventh Son", a mixture of guitar riffs and solos from the Dave Murray/Adrian Smith tandem, middle sections and shifting time signatures from Steve Harris' incredible bass and Nicko McBrian's percussion, and atmospheric synthesizers. Finally, "Only the Good Die Young' rounds off the conceptual character of the album with the same acoustic sonorities of its beginning.

"Seventh Son of a Seventh Son" was the pinnacle of the Englishmen's experimentation, and moved the band's central axis a few degrees, not to get out of their seminal genre, but to extend its limits.

Excellent.

4/4.5 stars

Hector Enrique | 4/5 |

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