cybermodo
Prowler
This came frome some "National Review Online"...
I had to post that quote cause it realy makes a point!
I went into MAIDEN 2 years ago, when I was 30 years old! Back in the eightees (end of it) I was a teenager who based his musical impressions on RAMONES, BAD RELIGION, NO FX, punk in general... I was no fan of metal, precisely because of that gloom, morbid and depressive attitude they represented, and specialy the covers and whole iconography of the movement looked to me as a commercial crap for brainwashed kids. (sorry for this, that was long time ago)
Yes, I heard few songs from Maiden back then ("Aces High", for instance) and it blew me away, but seeing covers and having a glance on a show where some stupid monster doll is jumping around the scene ... it looked SOOOO JUVENILE and brainless...
The covers of the albums (specialy during 80's) were done in such a kitsch fassion, as stated in a post above! Come on, I mean, it made me look on Maiden as just another music industry garbage!!!
Centuries later I start listening to MAIDEN. Song by song, growing on me, caughting me like that torture instrument, entering every part of my brain ... music is blowing me away, I donno what is happening to me. At the age of 30!!!
I started to think - well, I'm sure their lyrics are crap, if music is superb.
My god, when I started to read the lyrics and started to think, I was blown away again... (I mean, I used to read classics, Dostoyevsky, Chekov, Balsac, Poe, Goethe...)... Lyrics were in many cases pure poetry, and with years it was getting much better, deeper, with multiple meanings and endlessly rewarding the more I analysed them...
What is happening here???
Then I saw Rock In Rio DVD...
Then I gathered everything I could get my hands onto...
Then I saw them in Belgrade 2 months ago!!!
And now I am totaly puzzled. These guys became one big part of my life, and I am asking WHO IS TO BLAME for not letting me know how great this stuff is?
I mean, Derek Riggs became better and better with time, but still!!! Why producers decided to hide such briliant artists behind cheap comic horror-book covers??? And stupid clothes (let's face it)
At least I am happy to know there are many nice stuff in life still waiting for me, popping out when you least expect them! Why life hide perls beneath the crap?
UP THE IRONS!
John J. Miller
September 15, 2004, 6:15 a.m.
Powerslave!
My favorite heavy-metal album.
A heavy-metal band named after a medieval torture device sounds like a ready-made joke. But I've always had a soft spot for Iron Maiden. And it was 20 years ago today (to borrow a phrase) that Iron Maiden released its best album. I am referring, of course, to Powerslave.
When I was in the 9th grade, I listened to Powerslave so much I wore out the cassette. There was a lot to love: The crunching rhythms, the wailing guitars, the smart lyrics.
Smart lyrics? Bet you weren't expecting that. A quick scan of Iron Maiden's album covers doesn't reveal many signs of intelligent life. Just about all of them feature a frizzy-haired zombie named Eddie, who looks like the artistic creation of a 16-year-old burnout with some inborn talent but little training and no sense of direction. The term "juvenilia" leaps to mind. And the titles don't help, either: Two of the band's first three albums are called Killers and The Number of the Beast. The crude appeals to dread and deviltry are a couple of the biggest heavy-metal clichés going. Everything about Iron Maiden appears patently ridiculous, at least on the surface.
It would be wrong to say that Iron Maiden was ill served by this packaging. After all, the band has experienced real commercial success in its native Britain, here in the United States, and around the world. A recent item on the group's website notes that Iron Maiden just sold its 500,000th album in Finland. That's not bad for a country of only five million people. (Can one in ten Finns possibly be wrong?)
In the loud and fast genre of heavy metal, Iron Maiden's music is tough to beat. Listening to the band for the first time after many years — I more or less had stopped by 1987 — I hear lots of strong riffs and melodies as well as impressive levels of musicianship. I don't play the guitar, but I've strummed one before and taking in a Maiden solo now makes me tip my hat to the guy who spent a lot of lonely hours perfecting his craft...
I had to post that quote cause it realy makes a point!
I went into MAIDEN 2 years ago, when I was 30 years old! Back in the eightees (end of it) I was a teenager who based his musical impressions on RAMONES, BAD RELIGION, NO FX, punk in general... I was no fan of metal, precisely because of that gloom, morbid and depressive attitude they represented, and specialy the covers and whole iconography of the movement looked to me as a commercial crap for brainwashed kids. (sorry for this, that was long time ago)
Yes, I heard few songs from Maiden back then ("Aces High", for instance) and it blew me away, but seeing covers and having a glance on a show where some stupid monster doll is jumping around the scene ... it looked SOOOO JUVENILE and brainless...
The covers of the albums (specialy during 80's) were done in such a kitsch fassion, as stated in a post above! Come on, I mean, it made me look on Maiden as just another music industry garbage!!!
Centuries later I start listening to MAIDEN. Song by song, growing on me, caughting me like that torture instrument, entering every part of my brain ... music is blowing me away, I donno what is happening to me. At the age of 30!!!
I started to think - well, I'm sure their lyrics are crap, if music is superb.
My god, when I started to read the lyrics and started to think, I was blown away again... (I mean, I used to read classics, Dostoyevsky, Chekov, Balsac, Poe, Goethe...)... Lyrics were in many cases pure poetry, and with years it was getting much better, deeper, with multiple meanings and endlessly rewarding the more I analysed them...
What is happening here???
Then I saw Rock In Rio DVD...

Then I gathered everything I could get my hands onto...
Then I saw them in Belgrade 2 months ago!!!
And now I am totaly puzzled. These guys became one big part of my life, and I am asking WHO IS TO BLAME for not letting me know how great this stuff is?
I mean, Derek Riggs became better and better with time, but still!!! Why producers decided to hide such briliant artists behind cheap comic horror-book covers??? And stupid clothes (let's face it)

At least I am happy to know there are many nice stuff in life still waiting for me, popping out when you least expect them! Why life hide perls beneath the crap?
UP THE IRONS!