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Somewhere In Time

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Note:This is not Iron Maiden's official myspace.
In 1986, SOMEWHERE IN TIME became the sixth album released by Iron Maiden.
The entire tracklist includes:
1.Caught Somewhere in Time
2.Wasted Years
3.Sea of Madness
4.Heaven Can Wait
5.The Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner
6.Stranger in the Strange Land
7.Deja Vu
8.Alexander the Great
Released at probably the highest point of Maiden's popularity, Somewhere In Time has a quite different feel than the previous albums. It represents a change of direction for the band, which was beginning to explore different sounds and styles. Perhaps the most immediately noticeable difference is the addition of guitar and bass synths. The synth sound is not overpowering, compared to Judas Priest's 'Turbo' for instance, and in most cases it is more of a background filler.
Many fans have mixed feelings about the addition of the synths. The effect doesn't seem to hurt the songs, but it doesn't seem to make them better than they would have been without it. Faith No More comes to mind as a band that based its entire sound on the unique combination of synthesizer and metal guitar, with brilliant results. But Maiden had already carved a different niche, so why fix something that isn't broken? Still, one has to respect an artist's right to experiment and innovate.
Although it is not a concept album, Somewhere In Time has a bit of a futuristic theme, which begins with the album cover. It is by far the most complex and detailed of Maiden's album covers, reminiscent of the sci-fi masterpiece Blade Runner, and contains almost 40 references to other Maiden songs and trivia.
I've read people on the net who consider this to be Maiden's best album, but to me it isn't quite as good as the previous three. Still, this is a very good album, containing some classic material.
There had been a two-year gap between the release in 1986 of Somewhere In Time and its illustrious predecessor, Powerslave. Two years in which the band had stretched themselves to near breaking point on the 13-month World Slavery Tour – out of which came the stunning live double album, Live After Death, in 1985 – and though the personnel remained intact, it was a very different Iron Maiden that now greeted us. Older, wiser, less willing to please and more eager than ever to put what they had to say down exactly how they wanted, Somewhere In Time, Maiden's sixth studio album, was to be their most blisteringly uncompromising offering yet.
It was also their most expensive. The most famous heavy rock band in the world at this point, for the first time in their career Maiden could now afford to lavish both time and money on making exactly the kind of album they wanted to make.
"In the past, we'd always been working to a really tight deadline," explains bassist Steve Harris. "It was nothing but tour-album-tour for the first five years we were together. This time, we'd actually taken some time off before going into the studios, so we had a lot of new material to choose from. But once we actually began recording, I suppose, we went a bit crazy."
Recording began, once again, at Compass Point Studios, in Nassau, early in 1986, where all the basic bass and drum tracks were recorded. Then, at guitarist Adrian Smith's insistence, the band flew to Wisseloord Studios, in Hilversum, Holland, where all the guitar parts and lead vocals were recorded. That done, Steve and producer Martin Birch took the finished tapes to New York, where they finally mixed them at Electric Lady Studios.
"It was mad," smiles Adrian now. "But we were so determined to make sure absolutely every little thing was right about the album, and we'd never been given the chance to spend any real time on anything before, so we just went for it!" Technically, Somewhere In Time would also be Maiden's most ambitious recording yet. Steve, Adrian and fellow guitarist Dave Murray had all begun experimenting with the latest generation of guitar-synthesisers that had then just come on the market.
"We'd always been a bit anti-keyboards," say Dave. "I don't know why, I think it was just a young band thing of wanting to sound really aggressive all the time. But these new guitar-synths came along – Adrian was the one who turned us on to them – and suddenly you could make all these sounds that normally you would only have been able to get with a keyboard. Now we could do it all on guitars."
The introduction of the new guitar-synths certainly brought a sweeping, new texture to the quintessential Maiden sound. Only where the keyboard-synths of old tender to lover-sweeten the sound, Maiden's icy guitar-synths darkened the brew to new and even deeper shades of blackness, adding an even more panoramic quality to an already epic maelstrom of vicious guitars, bossy drums and screaming vocals.
But if Somewhere In Time was Maiden's most expensive album to make, it was also their most successful. It reached No. 2, when it was released in Britain, in October 1986, which was by now par for the course for the band in their homeland. "I think it was Madonna that kept us from going to No. 1 that time," jokes Steve. But in America, where it also raced into the Top 10 within weeks of release, it sold more than two million copies – the first Maiden album to go Double-Platinum and a personal best for the band that still stands today.
Most memorable of all, however, Somewhere In Time also came with one of Maiden's best album sleeves ever: the ubiquitous Eddie shedding his mummy's bandages to return as a cross between the bad Arnie of The Terminator I and something from Captain Kirk's worst nightmare. The scene: some strange hybrid world where the Ruskin Arms (the East London pub where Maiden played in their early days), the Long Beach Arena (where they recorded Live After Death) and several other places and names from Maiden's past, present and presumed future have seemingly been transported to the set from Blade Runner – all presided over, of course, by Eddie the laser-wielding time-cop.
Weird, it is. But then, with tracks like 'Wasted Years', 'Heaven Can Wait', 'Deja-Vu', 'The Loneliness Of The Long Distance Runner' and the breathless, rampaging track from which the album would take its title, 'Caught Somewhere In Time' – the whole concept behind the new Maiden album was, of course, one of time. Space and time and how to survive it if you can.
That said, as Steve ruefully admits now, "Somewhere In Time wasn't really supposed to be a proper concept album, as such. It was more an accident than anything that so many of the new tracks we came up with seemed to have a sort of recurring theme. But then, I suppose if you think about what we'd just been through, after a year on the road with the World Slavery Tour, I suppose it's only natural that some of that experience should come sort of leaking out into the songs for the next album."
Of the eight tracks, four would be sterling Steve Harris compositions – 'Caught Somewhere In Time', the thought-provoking seven-minute-plus album-opener; 'Heaven Can Wait', another seven-minute-plus epic that would become such a favourite with the fans – for its football-terrace sing-along middle-section – that it remains to this day one of the highlights of the Maiden live show; 'The Loneliness Of The Long Distance Runner', taken from the early Sixties black-and-white British movie of the same name, but which might as easily have been called 'The Loneliness Of The Long Distance Rock Tour'; and the colossal album-closer, 'Alexander The Great (356–323 BC)', which is to this album what 'Rime Of The Ancient Mariner' had been to Powerslave – the most grandiose and over-the-top moment on an album towering with such glories.
Steve also had a hand in 'Deja-Vu', a top-drawer Maiden rocker with yet more overtones of time distortion and reality-bending that Dave had come up with a killer riff for. But, unusually, it was the three tracks which Steve didn't write this time that, with hindsight, perhaps came to define the Somewhere In Time album most accurately in the memory: 'Wasted Years', a marvellous choice as first single and the most commercial-sounding track they had recorded since their very first single, the jaunty Running Free, six years before; 'Sea Of Madness', a paranoiac piece of guitar static that eventually kicks in to another huge, full-spectrum chorus; and 'Stranger In A Strange Land', the jagged, rhythmically schizoid second single from the album, its title (though not its story line) inspired by the classic Robert A. Heinlein novel from the Sixties. Musically, all three tracks were subtle departures for the band. Not only were their new guitar-synths very much in evidence but, more significantly, all three had been written on his own by Adrian.
Up until then, Adrian had always relied on singer Bruce Dickinson to add the lyrics and much of the direction to his music. Now, for the first time, Adrian was coming into the studio with finished songs. Indeed, if you look closely at the writing credits on Somewhere In Time, you will see that Bruce's name, for once, does not appear anywhere. It wasn't that Bruce hadn't written any songs for the new album, the fact is, truth to tell, the band simply didn't rate them highly enough this time for inclusion.
But then, as Bruce says now, "If I'd had my way, Somewhere In Time would have sounded very different." The singer had actually envisaged Maiden making a more acoustic-based album. But as Steve says, "Bruce just wasn't himself at the time. We didn't realise it at first, but he was probably more burnt out than anyone at the end of the World Slavery Tour. It wasn't just that the songs Bruce brought in were acoustic, I wasn't against having maybe one acoustic number, maybe. The truth is, we just didn't think the songs were strong enough." It was a blow to his pride but it was something, as a good pro, Bruce quickly learned to live with as the recording of the album began to take shape. As Bruce is the first to acknowledge: "The stuff Adrian was coming in with was brilliant."
Adrian himself says now that it was merely a coincidence that he began writing fully-formed songs on his own. "It wasn't that I didn't see myself writing with Bruce again. That was never the idea. It was just that with the little lay-off, I'd had time to finish things on my own. When the rest of the band got excited about some of them and wanted to put them on the album, I was just really happy."
So were their fans, who now flocked to Maiden's shows around the world in their millions. Mindful of the ill-effects on the band of their previous lengthy sojour on the road, the Somewhere On Tour world tour of 1986–87 was never going to be as long as its record-breaking predecessor. It was, however, Maiden's most successful tour ever, and wherever the band went in the world now – from lantern-lit arenas of Tokyo to the open-air stadiums of America, back home to the fish-and-chip shop ambience of the British theatres – there was no rock band bigger or better known than the one they called The Maiden. So far up the top of the tree they could practically blow away the clouds, the question was: where did they go from here?
Only 'time' would tell...

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Member Since: 9/1/2006
Band Website: Info. taken from: http://www.maidenfans.com/imc/
Band Members: Bruce Dickinson-Vocals
Steve Harris-Bass & Bass Synth
Dave Murray-Guitar & Guitar Synth
Adrian Smith-Guitar
Nicko McBrain-Drums
Influences: Black Sabbath, Deep Purple, Judas Priest.


Sounds Like: METAL
Record Label: EMI
Type of Label: Indie

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