Review by MartinDavey87 for Iron Maiden - No Prayer for the Dying (1990) Review by MartinDavey87 for Iron Maiden - No Prayer for the Dying (1990)

MartinDavey87 MartinDavey87 / January 28, 2025 / 0

Iron Maiden’s eighth studio album, 1990’s ‘No Prayer For the Dying’, takes the band into the 90’s scratching and clawing against shifting trends and fashions. Following on from what is arguably one of their most popular releases, ‘Seventh Son of a Seventh Son’, the band step away from dabbling in prog territory, and go back to more standard heavy metal. Yeah, the early 90’s weren’t great for metal bands, but Maiden sure weren’t going down without a fight!

It should be noted that by this point, vocalist Bruce Dickinson was not enjoying Maiden as much as he use to, and guitarist Adrian Smith had left the band prior to this, to be replaced by Janick Gers. I’m not really sure how much bearing this has on the writing though, as, personnel issues aside, this is still a very typical Iron Maiden album, and fans of the band will know what to expect.

The production and song-writing is pretty much the same as before. The guitar playing is fantastic as always, and Steve Harris’ formidable galloping style gives the album an almost palpable energy. However, having gone back to their more traditional metal sound, the songs themselves are of varying quality. While there are some absolutely fantastic tracks, there’s a fair few filler ones too.

But the good tracks? Damn, these are excellent! ‘Holy Smoke’, ‘No Prayer For the Dying’, album closer ‘Mother Russia’ and arguably one of the bands best tracks, with an exceptional vocal performance by Dickinson, ‘Bring Your Daughter… to the Slaughter’, are all reasons why, despite Maiden’s (and metals) waning popularity at the time, this is still a solid album, and a worthy addition to any collection.


Comments (0)