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Iron Maiden

Fear of the Dark

  • AMG Review of Fear of the Dark

    Amg
    Greg Prato
    All Music Guide

    While 1992's Fear of the Dark was definitely more of a return to form for Iron Maiden, it still wasn't quite on par with their exceptional work from the '80s. Easily an improvement over 1990's lackluster No Prayer for the Dying (both musically and sonically), the album debuted on the U.K. charts at number one. The opening "Be Quick or Be Dead" proved Maiden could easily hold their own with younger hrash metal bands, "From Here to Eternity" contained lyrics that seem better fitted for Mötley Crüe, while the expected epic album-closing title track would become a concert staple (all three tracks were released as U.K. singles). While Maiden records of the past would contain an album's worth of first-rate material, Fear of the Dark is again weighed down with too many drab compositions -- "Childhood's End," "Chains of Misery," "Judas Be My Guide," and more. The serene "Wasting Love" proves to be one of Maiden's better allads of the '90s, while the rockers "Fear Is the Key" and "Afraid to Shoot Strangers" are also standouts. Fear of the Dark would be singer Bruce Dickinson's final studio album with the band (until their late-'90s reunion), as he publicly voiced that he felt the band had run its course.

OLD SCHOOL METAL
about 1 year ago

A Throw back to all you older metal heads out there ->get a friggin life you hippy,metal is the new way to get trippy,bare foot, patchouli, face paint, and tie-dyedreplaced with black combat boots, odor of refer and black eyes,we ain't in kansas no more toto, we're lost,we'll get to the Black sabbath show no matter the cost,suck on these old wrinkly balls and fu#*$%@ enjoy,I'm just a twisted ch...

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