Artist: Iron Maiden
Album: A Matter Of Life And Death
Genre: Rock
Release Date: 2006/2015
Audio Format:: FLAC (tracks) 24 bit, 96 kHz
Duration: 01:12:03
Total Tracks: 10
Total Size: 1,53 GB
Tracklist:
01. Iron Maiden – Different World (04:18)
02. Iron Maiden – These Colours Don’t Run (06:52)
03. Iron Maiden – Brighter Than A Thousand Suns (08:46)
04. Iron Maiden – The Pilgrim (05:07)
05. Iron Maiden – The Longest Day (07:48)
06. Iron Maiden – Out Of The Shadows (05:36)
07. Iron Maiden – The Reincarnation Of Benjamin Breeg (07:22)
08. Iron Maiden – For The Greater Good Of God (09:25)
09. Iron Maiden – Lord Of Light (07:24)
10. Iron Maiden – The Legacy (09:22)
Download:
https://xubster.com/59rmp1g9ztis/Ir0nMaidenAMatter0fLifeAndDeath20069624.part2.rar.html
2003’s Dance of Death marked the triumphant return of old-school Iron Maiden. Gone were the murky, over-produced set pieces that clogged 2000’s Brave New World and in their place fell blistering slabs of Piece of Mind-era metal. That trend continues with their 14th full-length album, Matter of Life and Death, a more elaborate and meandering experience than Dance of Death, but a rewarding one for fans willing to indulge the group’s occasional excess. At over 70 minutes, Matter of Life and Death is closer to 1988’s woefully underrated Seventh Son of a Seventh Son than it is to Piece of Mind, but with far less keyboard tickling. Recorded live in the studio, epics like “Reincarnation of Benjamin Breeg,” “Brighter Than a Thousand Suns,” and the brutal “Longest Day” — the whole record is a loosely-knit song cycle with war at its core — exhume prog rock complexity and discipline yet manage to bristle with the kind of small-club intensity usually reserved for acts half their age. At just over four minutes, opener “Different World” — a near twin of Dance of Death’s “Wildest Dreams” — is the only cut that screams single, but it’s also the most misplaced. On a record that positions beloved avatar Eddy on top of a tank with a machine gun leading a weary troop of skeletal soldiers to their doom, any act of brevity, no matter how expertly crafted, sticks out like a saxophone solo. –James Christopher Monger