Iron Maiden
From Here to Eternity: The Best of 1990-2010

Yup! Another Iron Maiden compilation that follows up to 2008’s Somewhere Back in Time – The Best of: 1980-1989. While I’m typically not a huge fan of compilations, for those that missed Iron Maiden‘s reunion and Bruce Dickinson era part deux, as well as a couple of Blaze Bayley -era numbers―slyly delivered as live songs, so Dickinson sings them―From Here to Eternity: The Best of 1990-2010 is actually a pretty nice encapsulation of Maiden‘s return.

The two disc’s highlights are the best tracks from the band’s last four efforts, with the best of the material culling from Brave New World. Not surprisingly, considering the context, even the sub par albums like Fear of the Dark, No Prayer for the Dying―and my personal hell―The Final Frontier are all featured. As was already mentioned, Blaze Bayley gets completely thrown out of the picture as the songs “The Clansman”, “Man on the Edge” and “Sign of the Cross” (from Virtual XI and The X Factor) are all sung by Dickinson. A shame and a questionable attempt to whitewash history. Poor guy. “Tail Gunner”, a live version of “Fear of the Dark”, “Be Quick or be Dead”, “Bring Your Daughter to the Slaughter” and “Holy Smoke” comprise the rest of the 1990-1999 era.

Essentially though, From Here to Eternity: The Best of 1990-2010 is a cliff notes of the band’s much ballyhooed reunion with Dickinson from 2000 and on. They’ve done a good job of selecting the standouts from those albums. From Brave New World you get “The Wickerman”, personal fave “Blood Brothers” and the title track “Brave New World”. From Dance of Death you get that album’s clear winner “Paschendale” as well as “Rainmaker”, “No More Lies” and “Dance of Death”. A Matter of Life and Death is represented by “Different World (lame choice in my opinion), “The Reincarnation of Benjamin Breeg”, and by the excellent duo of “For the Greater Good of God” and “These Colors Don’t Run”.

I’m not sure about the need for any tracks from 2010’s The Final Frontier ―”Coming Home”, “El Dorado” and “When the Wild Wind Blows”―not because I personally didn’t care for the album, but because  it only came out a year ago. Guess they wanted a nice set of numbers; 1990-2010. Anyway. Here they are, trying to force it upon us one more time.  At least they included “El Dorado”, but they missed a chance to put “The Alchemist” on here instead of one of those two other wandering, aimless tracks.

That being said, From Here to Eternity: The Best of 1990-2010 does what compilations are meant to do, ie. take all the best stuff and put it on one handy release. For the most part it’s a successful feature and one of the few worthwhile Iron Maiden compilations the band has churned out over the years. But as with any compilation, most real fans will already have the source material and this is merely doubling up on most, if not all the tracks.

However, maybe I have reason to sell my copy on The Final Frontier now…

 

[Visit the band's website]
Written by Erik T
July 7th, 2011

Comments

  1. Commented by: gabaghoul

    Holy Smoke? Coming Home? No More Lies? Anything from a Matter of Life and Death? Bad…

    However I’d like to hear the Bruce-fronted versions of the Blaze-era tracks. Blaze was weaksauce but I thought the songwriting on X-Factor/Virtual XI was by far the guiltier culprit.

    btw if you edit out about 3-4 minutes of Where the Wild Wind Blows it’s actually a damn fine Maiden track.


  2. Commented by: Ace_Barker

    Fear Of The Dark – “SUBPAR”?? You must be on dope son.


  3. Commented by: Biff Tannen

    I don’t think ‘Coming Home’ is wandering, aimless track. I love Dickinson’s vocals on that song, regardless of the somewhat silly lyrics.

    ‘Where the Wild Wind Blows’ is the worst track on that album , I think. That one is certainly aimless. Gaba is right about cutting 4 minutes off it, though. If we did that with most of the newer Maiden track, they would be instant classics. We just need to get Steve Harris to knock it off with the 2 minute acoustic/bass intros and 2 minute acoustic/bass outros.


  4. Commented by: Biff Tannen

    I will be buying the LP version of this, though, on the strength of the cover art alone!


  5. Commented by: Dimaension X

    It really is surprising how bad Blaze was with Maiden. His voice just did not fit AT ALL. Yet his solo albums are fantastic modern metal. Weird.

    Dickenson just IS the voice of Maiden.


  6. Commented by: DK777

    Are there fans who’ve not bought anything from Brave New World to Final Frontier??? I can’t imagine… and that’s why I find these new versions of greatest hits collections puzzling (and a bit lame).

    And don’t buy the LP for the artwork: the most recent issue (or the one before it) of Metal Hammer has the artwork as a BIG poster inside. Admittedly, it’s folded, but if you just want a good version of that picture, there it is.


  7. Commented by: Juan Pinto

    Ace Barker, I’m with you… there’s no way in Hell Fear Of The Dark is a subpar album.


  8. Commented by: gabaghoul

    Eh it’s better than Dance of Death and Matter of Life and Death (not to mention the two Blaze albums) but it’s still overlong, with a lot of dull filler. First and last tracks are excellent though. Why Maiden never did anything else as pissed off as Be Quick or Be Dead again is a mystery…


  9. Commented by: X

    Who the fuck listens to this irrelevant, weak band of grandpas anymore ??? Jesus fuckin christ.. TFF sucked hairy donkey balls and people need to stfu about how awesome Maiden’s albums from 20 years ago are!! Enough with the nostalgia juice already !!


  10. Commented by: gabaghoul

    Uhhh make that 30 years ago, math whiz.


  11. Commented by: faust

    No douchebag.. I was referring to the last point in time when they released an album worth giving a dong about viz. Brave New World.


  12. Commented by: faust

    What.The.Fuck?????????????????????????


  13. Commented by: Gabaghoul

    Then your math is still shit, that album came out in the early 00s.


  14. Commented by: faust

    My apologies Gaba.. this is the REAL Faust and I have no idea whats going on. I don’t know who posted the “X” comment and the first “faust” comment but it ain’t me !!

    PS : Maiden rules, compilations are kinda lame, Brave New World was released in 2000.


  15. Commented by: Gabaghoul

    Lol sorry I was wondering why you were being a dick :)


Leave a Reply

Privacy notice: When you submit a comment, your creditentials, message and IP address will be logged. A cookie will also be created on your browser with your chosen name and email, so that you do not need to type them again to post a new comment. All post and details will also go through an automatic spam check via Akismet's servers and need to be manually approved (so don't wonder about the delay). We purge our logs from your meta-data at frequent intervals.

  • A La Carte - Born To Entertain
  • Mörk Gryning - Fasornas Tid
  • Yoth Iria - Blazing Inferno
  • Suidakra - Darkanakrad
  • Chaos Invocation - Wherever We Roam....
  • Ad Vitam Infernal - Le ballet des anges
  • Thy Catafalque - XII: A gyönyörű álmok ezután jönnek (Twelve: The Beautiful Dreams Are Yet to Come)
  • Aara - Eiger
  • Mammoth Grinder - Undying Spectral Resonance EP
  • Wretched Fate - Incineration of the Pious EP
  • Kaivs - After the Flesh
  • Witnesses - Joy
  • Mythbegotten - Tales from the Unseelie Court
  • Worm Shepherd - Hunger
  • Chained to the Dead - Only Hunger Remains EP