Product Details
A Matter of Life and Death

A Matter of Life and Death
Iron Maiden

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Product Description

Iron Maiden return with their fourteenth studio album, 'A Matter Of Life And Death'. Produced by regular collaborator Kevin Shirley (Aerosmith, The Black Crowes) in London, the album was recorded in a completely live state. At over 70 minutes long, 'A Matter Of Life And Death' truly is an album of epic proportions and shows the work of a rock outfit who aremasters of evolution and innovation.

Track Listing

  1. Different World
  2. These Colours Don't Run
  3. Brighter Than A Thousand Suns
  4. Pilgrim
  5. Longest Day
  6. Out Of The Shadows
  7. Reincarnation Of Benjamin Breeg
  8. For The Greater Good Of God
  9. Lord Of Light
  10. Legacy

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #6919 in Music
  • Released on: 2006-08-28
  • Number of discs: 1

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.co.uk Review
A Matter of Life and Death is Iron Maiden's fourteenth studio album, in a career that has spanned three decades. And yet, after all this time, Iron Maiden continue to improve, whilst most of their peers flounder. Simply put, A Matter of Life and Death is more than just a great Iron Maiden album; it's a great metal album. It revisits a theme that's familiar territory for the band, and rather boldly, devotes an entire album to it. A Matter of Life and Death is a concept album about war, and the closest thing to a prog album that the London-based metallers have yet created. And, at their age and at this point in their career, it's a step that just makes sense, adding a level of seriousness and dignity to a band that could have easily disappeared into Spinal Tap-style silliness. Instead, the six members of Iron Maiden sound rejuvenated, playing better than ever on tracks like "These Colours Don't Run", which starts out like an army recruiting anthem before revealing it's true nature as an anti-war song, and the nine-minute plus epics "For the Greater Good of God" and "The Legacy". Iron Maiden have enjoyed a creative rennaissance in recent years, but it's hard to imagine how they'll improve upon A Matter of Life and Death. --Ted Kord