Review by UnhinderedbyTalent for Iron Maiden - Seventh Son of a Seventh Son (1988)
By the time we get to Maiden’s 1988 offering we find the last decent album from them. Things certainly sound a little more commercial with the success of “Can I Play With Madness” obvious after it burrowed its way into the brains of the majority of the hard rock and metal community with its seemingly unforgettable chorus and staggeringly cheap looking yet effective video. All over “Seventh Son....” there are hooks, catchy chorus lines and infectious leads.
Despite all the memorability here things just feel a little too polished, a tad over-accessible almost. By the time we get to the next record after this, the same fault could be found only this time the songwriting on “Seventh Son....” was still strong enough to make the accessibility more forgivable.
The mesmerising “Moonchild” kicks things off in fine style. Instantly sticking in your ear holes it sets the tone well for the album as a whole. “Infinite Dreams” then slowly builds into a capable structure, well paced and well placed also in the track listing. The two anthems that follow in the aforementioned “Can I Play With Madness” and “The Evil That Men Do” are the familiar core of the record, the tracks that everyone knows. The title track follows and further adds to this momentum.
The first 5 tracks are almost flawless making as strong a start-to-middle section as you could hope to find on most bands discographies. Unfortunately over the final three tracks the quality does take a hit, albeit the memorability factor remains. As a result the record does feel more than a little front-heavy. There’s no denying it was their last great record but it could have been even greater.