Iron Maiden has never been a band that worried about three-minute radio singles, and as a result, most of Brave New World consists of sprawling, epic works, with only three of the songs coming in under the five-minute mark. On Brave New World, the band pick up where they'd left off on 1988's Seventh Son Of A Seventh Son, which is considered by most to be the last truly essential album of Dickinson's original tenure. ![]() When Brave New World finally hit the streets, though, the fans were pleased to hear an album not only surpassed those less than stellar records but completely erased the tepid-at-best (I'm being generous there!) Blaze Bayley era. Maiden's last few studio records with Bruce at the helm (1990's No Prayer For The Dying and 1992's Fear Of The Dark) had sounded tired compared to their '80s classics. Though Brave New World enjoys a fair share of worship nowadays, it must be noted that fans were not much more than cautiously optimistic about it prior to its release.
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