The Chemical Wedding

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The Chemical Wedding album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 13   Total Length: 71:52

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No tattooed Millionaire

elysianfield

I personally own over 2,500 albums/cds, and this album ranks, easily, in the top 10 Metal albums of all time. Guitars and voice are a lot of ebb and flow, melodic ballad to thundering grind. Lyrics are masterfully written. If you ever bypassed picking up this album or Accident of Birth because of Bruce's Tattooed Millionaire reputation, then give him another try. You will be glad you did.

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fffing joke

renrag

Once again not available in my conutry

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They Say All Music Guide

Like its consistently excellent (and slightly superior) predecessor, Accident of Birth, Bruce Dickinson’s fifth solo effort, The Chemical Wedding, continued to provide a welcome sanctuary (blatant reference intended) for disgruntled Iron Maiden fans, suffering through the all-too-long mediocrity of the Blaze Bayley era. By avoiding the experimental pitfalls of prior solo outings to fully embrace his metallic origins, Dickinson — the solo artist — is at his creative peak on these two records. The importance of co-songwriter, producer, and guitarist Roy Z’s guidance in this revival cannot be overstated, and reuniting with fellow Maiden alum Adrian Smith wasn’t a bad idea either. Muscular anthems such as “King in Crimson,” “Killing Floor,” and the title track manage to deliver with aggression, confidence, and, most importantly, a modern metal aesthetic sorely missing in Iron Maiden’s efforts of the time. The album’s second half does dip in quality somewhat, but a storming parting shot of “Machine Men” (a classic Dickinson-Smith collaboration if there ever was one) and “The Alchemist” (which revisits the title track’s main theme in Seventh Son fashion) offer a worthy finale to this very impressive album. [The album was reissued in 2005 with three bonus tracks.] – Eduardo Rivadavia

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