This is a different structure, with drama in the middle. In a lot of ways it does remind me of Wild Wind, but emotive rather than bleak in its conclusion.Yes, it's not explosive...
People always expect tragedy to be huge, explosive and loud. I'm happy that this time it's not.OK. An 18 minute Maiden song with a subject matter of a giant air ship catching fire on air and crashing doesn't have an explosive part. That's a huge lost opportunity if I ever heard one.
It's a lament. You're not supposed to celebrate the death of something beautiful. You're supposed to mourn.OK. An 18 minute Maiden song with a subject matter of a giant air ship catching fire on air and crashing doesn't have an explosive part. That's a huge lost opportunity if I ever heard one.
It's a lament. You're not supposed to celebrate the death of something beautiful. You're supposed to mourn.
Yeah, but that's Iron Maiden doing a heavy metal song. This isn't. Disaster ballads are a very specific type of music, almost a folkish thing. That sort of fiery conflagration would be far out of place on this track.It'd be not a celebration but a musical depiction of it. Just like the crescendos on The Longest Day aren't celebrating death on the beech.