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  1. Artists

Iron Maiden: a gruesome history of graphic artwork

News
By Tom Porter published 22 July 2010

Eddie The Head, Derek Riggs, hidden messages and The Final Frontier

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Iron Maiden: a gruesome history of graphic artwork

Iron Maiden: a gruesome history of graphic artwork

Heavy metal’s identity is rooted almost as deeply in its imagery as the music itself, and British pioneers Iron Maiden were (and some band members still are) proud exponents of the long hair, ripped-denim, spandex and leather uniform of the '80s. Maiden’s image, however, is all the more enduring - and somewhat remarkably for a heavy metal band, endearing - thanks to the most famous band mascot of all time, Eddie The Head.

Originally designed by Derek Riggs, adopted by the band, and brought to life as a blood-drooling mask at the back of the stage; Eddie’s been a perennial, zombie-like fixture at almost every gig, and on almost every Maiden release since 1980’s debut single, Running Free.

As you’ll see from the following celebration of Iron Maiden’s gloriously gruesome, benchmark-setting artwork, Eddie has evolved along with the band and their musical direction. From lobotomised street-prowling urchin to Satan-battling, time-travelling cyborg - Ed’s 30-year coming of age has been a painful yet compelling journey.

So, on the eve of Maiden’s 15th studio album release The Final Frontier, join us as we relive the band’s impressively graphic back catalogue. All the quotes from Derek Riggs come courtesy of his excellent online portfolio (a veritable hive of insights from the designer himself), while massive props must go to top fan sites Maiden World and Iron Maiden Wallpaper for sharing all the hidden messages and hi-res artwork you could wish for. Go visit them now.

STOP PRESS (i): Check out our exhaustive track-by-track review of Iron Maiden's new album, The Final Frontier. It's a genuine shocker.

STOP PRESS (ii): Eddie shredders should check out the latest issue of Metal Hammer with its brilliant 3D cover for the release of The Final Frontier. Check out an exclusive preview here.

First up: a shadow-obscured Eddie makes his debut

Page 1 of 70
Page 1 of 70
Running Free

Running Free

Maiden’s first single, and the first official glimpse of Eddie The Head - albeit with a shadow-obscured face (they didn’t want to blow their mascot unveiling load until the album release).

Also note the graffiti on the back wall - a nod to influences Led Zeppelin, Judas Priest, AC/DC and Scorpions - and the word ‘Hammers’ in honour of the band’s beloved West Ham United Football Club.

Page 2 of 70
Page 2 of 70
Iron Maiden

Iron Maiden

Hello, Eddie!

Here’s Derek Riggs on completing the first album cover: “When I finished this I sat back and thought ‘that is going to make me rich and famous’ - so I didn't get rich but I got moderately famous, so one half out of two ain't bad I suppose."

Live performances of self-titled album track, Iron Maiden, still often mark the entrance of the band’s mascot onstage.

Page 3 of 70
Page 3 of 70
Sanctuary

Sanctuary

By the band’s request, here’s Eddie stabbing an image of the Prime Minister of the time and the original ‘Iron Lady’, Margaret Thatcher. Early copies of the infamous single don’t feature the eye-covering black box.

Page 4 of 70
Page 4 of 70
Women In Uniform

Women In Uniform

Pay-back time for the Iron Lady!

Here Riggs draws Thatcher waiting for Eddie holding a submachine gun. If that wasn’t controversial enough, Ed's somehow managed to pull a nurse and a school girl. Nice.

Page 5 of 70
Page 5 of 70
Killers

Killers

The block of flats in the background is based on Riggs’ UK home at the time: Etchingham Court, Etchingham Park Road, Finchley, North London, N4.

The flat are still there, although the artist isn't - Riggs now resides in California.

Page 6 of 70
Page 6 of 70
Twilight Zone

Twilight Zone

The picture of Eddie on top of the dresser says “To Charlotte…” - a reference to the character from Maiden’s debut album and the woman sitting above, Charlotte The Harlot.

Charlotte later appears on the Somewhere In Time cover, and the tracks 22 Acacia Avenue, Hooks In You (although not mentioned by name) and From Here To Eternity.

Page 7 of 70
Page 7 of 70
Purgatory

Purgatory

Riggs’ original artwork for Purgatory was deemed too complex for a single and it later surfaced as the cover of The Number Of The Beast album.

This second attempt features the artist’s first in a series of three devil-themed single covers. According to Riggs, the devil’s “golden earring is biker code for some kind of sexual activity.” Strewth.

Page 8 of 70
Page 8 of 70
Maiden Japan

Maiden Japan

Unaware of band politics at the time, Riggs’ first attempt at this live EP’s cover (a play on Deep Purple’s Made In Japan) featured a soon-to-be-replaced Paul DiAnno. Erm…

After burning 250,000 copies, Maiden management commissioned this replacement at short notice.

Page 9 of 70
Page 9 of 70
Run To The Hills

Run To The Hills

Back to the devil-themed trio! Riggs had already designed the battle scene before a record was assigned to it.

Note: As Run To The Hills is “a single about cowboys and Indians that Bruce wrote”, Eddie was given a tomahawk.

Page 10 of 70
Page 10 of 70
The Number Of The Beast

The Number Of The Beast

Despite the fact that most of Maiden's songs were inspired by literature and film, at this point the band were being accused of Satanism - the accompanying Beast On The Road Tour was particularly blighted by protesters in the US.

This depiction of Eddie controlling the devil with puppet strings probably didn’t help change opinion - although if you look closely, you can see that the devil is actually controlling a smaller version of Eddie.

According to Riggs it took “two days and nights without sleep” to complete.

Page 11 of 70
Page 11 of 70
The Number Of The Beast

The Number Of The Beast

Riggs’ final devil portrayal in the series - Eddie is victorious. Apparently the devil was supposed to look like Salvador Dali but Riggs “couldn’t get any good pictures [to copy] in time.”

Page 12 of 70
Page 12 of 70
Flight Of Icarus

Flight Of Icarus

The song Flight Of Icarus is loosely based on the ancient Greek myth - Icarus flies too close to the sun, melts his wax-bound wings and falls to his death.

The artwork is a more humourous affair which shows Eddie killing Icarus with a flamethrower. Riggs’ depiction of a dying Icarus resembles William Rimmer’s Evening: Fall Of Day - the same figure adopted by Led Zeppelin who disbanded three years earlier.

The little cube in the distance above Icarus is Eddie’s cell from the next sleeve…

Page 13 of 70
Page 13 of 70
Piece Of Mind

Piece Of Mind

Included in the liner notes to Maiden’s fourth album is a slightly altered passage from the Book Of Revelation (chapter 4, verse 21): “And God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes; and there shall be no more Death. Neither sorrow, nor crying. Neither shall there be any more brain; for the former things are passed away." The actual text reads: "neither shall there be any more pain."

The change is probably a reference to the album’s name and to further annoy the ‘Satanic’ accusers. Plus Eddie’s been lobotomised on the cover - the bolt in his head would (mostly) remain in Maiden artwork from this point onwards.

Page 14 of 70
Page 14 of 70
The Trooper

The Trooper

The Trooper is a song about the Battle Of Balaclava in 1854 - hence this depiction of Eddie stalking the trenches with cutlass and Union Jack.

“I think this is popular because it has a lot of red and blue in it,” writes Riggs. “The other covers don't have much red. I resist using red just for the sake of it (can you put more blood in it Derek... whinge... whinge).”

Page 15 of 70
Page 15 of 70
2 Minutes To Midnight

2 Minutes To Midnight

2 Minutes To Midnight is a song about the Doomsday Clock and the closest that clock has ever been to midnight (an atomic war - Doomsday) when the US and Soviet Union tested H-bombs within nine months of each other.

Meanwhile on the sleeve, nuclear fallout is obviously not an issue for Eddie, who has a front row seat…

Page 16 of 70
Page 16 of 70
Powerslave

Powerslave

Instantly recognisable because of its ancient Egyptian-theme, the legendary Powerslave cover features Eddie as the shrine, and hidden messages ‘Bollokz’ and ‘What a load of crap’ on the left and right hand side of the pyramid respectively.

Trivia time: There’s also a Mickey Mouse hieroglyph in the bottom left corner…

Page 17 of 70
Page 17 of 70
Aces High

Aces High

A song about a British RAF pilot during the Battle Of Britain (1940) - the first battle fought entirely in the air.

Eddie effortlessly takes to the cockpit to fight the German Luftwaffe for the artwork, the idea for which Riggs borrowed "from a comic cover - Sgt. Rock I think - sometime in the 1960s."

A live version of Running Free was Maiden’s next single release on 13 September. However, the artwork is a photo of the band performing onstage, not a graphic image so it won't be appearing in our gruesome graphic gallery!

Oh, okay. Completists can download it here.

Page 18 of 70
Page 18 of 70
Live After Death

Live After Death

Eddie returns to his pre-Number Of The Beast long-haired days for this live album cover.

The gravestone he is rising from reads “Edward T H-“ with the remainder of his full name obscured. Another grave nearby reads “Here lies Derek Riggs.”

Look closely and you’ll see some mushrooms at the bottom right. Over to derek… “They were growing all over London at the time because some hippies had seeded all the public parks with magic mushroom spores.”

Page 19 of 70
Page 19 of 70
Run To The Hills (Live)

Run To The Hills (Live)

The second version of 1982’s Run To The Hills (with a live version of Phantom Of The Opera on the b-side, fact fans) and the first of two live cuts of the song to be released as a single.

Eddie’s playing an organ on a hill top pulling his mask off to reveal that he’s not actually the Phantom Of The Opera - surprise!

Page 20 of 70
Page 20 of 70
Wasted Years

Wasted Years

Kicking off Riggs’ science fiction-themed artwork surrounding each Somewhere In Time release, the Wasted Years cover shows a spaceship-flying Eddie’s point of view as he chases Doctor Who’s Tardis.

Riggs wasn’t particularly proud of his work.

"The title Wasted Years turns anything into a negative, for example, if you put five guys playing guitars on the front it looks like they have been wasting their time… see what I mean?

"So basically we were fucked! This was the best and only idea I could come up with that would even remotely work within the constraints that we had to work with.”

Page 21 of 70
Page 21 of 70
Somewhere In Time

Somewhere In Time

This iconic Terminator/Blade Runner-esque cover - hello The Final Frontier - is full of hidden messages and references to past Maiden songs and band-related people and places.

Props then to the mighty Maiden World for pointing them all out: there’s a Tardis; West Ham are beating Arsenal 7-3 (unlikely); the clock reads 23:58 (2 Minutes To Midnight); and there’s the Ruskin Arms, The Rainbow Bar and Marquee Club (old haunts from earlier band days), to name but a few.

There’s also a backwards message behind Eddie’s right leg that reads: “This is a very boring painting.”

Clearly, Mr Riggs, it isn’t.

Page 22 of 70
Page 22 of 70
Stranger In A Strange Land

Stranger In A Strange Land

Looks like Eddie’s just wandered into the Mos Eisley cantina for a Clint Eastwood fancy dress party…

A fitting setting for Maiden’s second and final single from Somewhere In Time, then. According to Riggs: “the hairy guy on the left is someone I used to know. His name was Ron.”

Hello Ron.

Page 23 of 70
Page 23 of 70
Can I Play With Madness

Can I Play With Madness

The first single from Seventh Son Of A Seventh Son sees a return to just Eddie The Head because Riggs was “getting a bit sick of painting him” and “was thinking of quitting from Maiden because they were getting increasingly difficult to work with.”

“I cut Eddie up into bits so I would have less to paint,” he writes.

Ulp.

Page 24 of 70
Page 24 of 70
Seventh Son Of A Seventh Son

Seventh Son Of A Seventh Son

Torso, spilled entrails, a flaming head and an ice lake…

Maiden’s seventh studio effort was a concept album exploring ‘mysticism, prophetic vision, reincarnation and the afterlife’. According to Riggs, the cover features lots of “meaningful-looking nonsense.”

Page 25 of 70
Page 25 of 70
The Evil That Men Do

The Evil That Men Do

The metal plate in Eddie’s head features prominently here following his lobotomy on the Piece Of Mind cover.

According to Riggs: “It was completed in one single night - it’s not bad for one night’s work."

Page 26 of 70
Page 26 of 70
The Clairvoyant

The Clairvoyant

A song inspired by the death of psychic Doris Stokes (yes, really) - hence Eddie’s ‘third (or inner) eye’.

Ed’s three faces represent the past, present and future. Riggs remains convinced that Queen borrowed the idea for their album The Miracle.

Page 27 of 70
Page 27 of 70
Infinite Dreams

Infinite Dreams

This is a live version of a Seventh Son track released almost a year after The Clairvoyant - hence the design change.

Riggs says: “I hate painting motorbikes, they're fussy and boring.”

Page 28 of 70
Page 28 of 70
The First Ten Years

The First Ten Years

A series of 10 CDs and 12” singles celebrating Maiden’s first 10 years.

This was the boxset artwork - you’ll have probably noticed this stamp on some of the other images in this gallery. ‘Up The Irons’ is, of course, another reference to West Ham United FC.

Page 29 of 70
Page 29 of 70
Holy Smoke

Holy Smoke

Holy Smoke was the first single from eighth studio album No Prayer For The Dying.

This was the first string of covers to ignore the continuity of previous artwork - Eddie’s lost his lobotomy scar!

Page 30 of 70
Page 30 of 70
No Prayer For The Dying

No Prayer For The Dying

Trivia time again!

Unlike the original cover above, the 1998 reissue features an inscription on the tomb’s plaque: “After the Daylight, The Night of Pain, That is not Dead, Which Can Rise Again.”

Page 31 of 70
Page 31 of 70
Bring Your Daughter… To The Slaughter

Bring Your Daughter… To The Slaughter

Originally intended by Riggs as a live album cover, this backdoor nightclub scene features a 3D version of Who Framed Roger Rabbit?’s Jessica Rabbit embracing Eddie and Sesame Street’s the Grouch in the bin on the far right. Charming.

Note that 'Charlotte And The Harlots' are listed as a support band on the poster behind Eddie.

Page 32 of 70
Page 32 of 70
Be Quick Or Be Dead

Be Quick Or Be Dead

By now Maiden were embracing - and Eddie was wading in on - the political scandals of the day.

In this case, our hero takes on Robert Maxwell, the European Stock Market crash and the BCCI (Bank of Credit and Commerce International) case.

Page 33 of 70
Page 33 of 70
Fear Of The Dark

Fear Of The Dark

Nine albums in and Fear Of The Dark features the first LP artwork NOT designed by Derek Riggs. Instead, after creating ‘the best of three submissions’ the band chose Melvyn Grant’s terrifying tree apparition.

The next two singles - From Here To Eternity and Wasting Love (Maiden’s one and only power ballad released in The Netherlands) - were the first since 1984’s live version of Running Free not to feature Eddie on the cover. They used photos instead.

Completists corner: Photo sleeves can be found here (From Here To Eternity) and here (Wasting Love).

Page 34 of 70
Page 34 of 70
Fear Of The Dark (Live)

Fear Of The Dark (Live)

According to Riggs, this one was painted at “the request of [bassist] Steve Harris who wanted to associate himself with being Eddie…

"He actually wanted people to think that he was Eddie really, or that Eddie was based on him in some way.”

Page 35 of 70
Page 35 of 70
A Real Live One

A Real Live One

A naked Eddie playing with live wires - fitting…

This was the first of three live albums released in 1993, recorded at nine venues in Europe during the Fear Of The Dark tour.

Page 36 of 70
Page 36 of 70
Hallowed Be Thy Name (Live)

Hallowed Be Thy Name (Live)

Like Riggs’ scrapped Maiden Japan artwork featuring a soon-to-be-departing band member’s severed head (Paul Di’Anno’s), here Eddie takes the form of Satan to impale departing vocalist Bruce Dickinson with a pitchfork.

In this case, the cover wasn’t scrapped…

Page 37 of 70
Page 37 of 70
A Real Dead One

A Real Dead One

The second 1993 live LP release, again recorded across Europe during the previous two years. Here Eddie becomes a disk jockey… in hell.

Note: A combined version of the previous two albums called A Real Live Dead One was released in September 1993. It featured the same artwork as A Real Live One.

Page 38 of 70
Page 38 of 70
Live At Donington

Live At Donington

The final release from the live saga featured two different covers.

One was white with simple black text reading: Iron Maiden Live At Donnington August 22nd 1982. the second cover (above) was originally a concert poster designed by Mark Wilkinson.

Page 39 of 70
Page 39 of 70
Man On The Edge

Man On The Edge

In a return to the lobotomy first featured on the cover of Piece Of Mind, by this point Maiden were attempting to bring Eddie’s animated form into ‘real life’.

Page 40 of 70
Page 40 of 70
The X Factor

The X Factor

This very graphic cover was created by Hugh Syme.

Slightly less graphic versions featured Eddie from a distance, although the gruesome close-up was still included on the back of the artwork.

Page 41 of 70
Page 41 of 70
Lord Of The Flies

Lord Of The Flies

Erm, wonder if Simon Cowell drew any inspiration from this?

Page 42 of 70
Page 42 of 70
Virus

Virus

Back to Derek Riggs, and back to just Eddie The Head.

Virus was the first single since 1980’s Women In Uniform not to feature on a studio album.

Page 43 of 70
Page 43 of 70
Best Of The Beast

Best Of The Beast

It wouldn’t be a Maiden ‘Best Of’ (this was their first) without paying homage to the many guises of Eddie.

Best Of The Beast features Eddie from the Piece of Mind, Powerslave, Somewhere In Time and No Prayer For The Dying eras to The Trooper, Live After Death and Killers covers.

Page 44 of 70
Page 44 of 70
The Angel And The Gambler

The Angel And The Gambler

Like the accompanying video, The Angel And The Gambler’s sleeve is computer-generated.

An alternative cover (on CD2) portrays Eddie welcoming you to a floating casino on a cruiser called Voodoo Queen.

Page 45 of 70
Page 45 of 70
Virtual XI

Virtual XI

Maiden’s eleventh studio LP (pronounced Virtual Eleven) ties in two of the band’s extra-curricular activities of the time.

The Ed Hunter videogame was on the verge of release and football was important as ever (check the bottom left). Melvyn Grant returned for artwork duties.

Page 46 of 70
Page 46 of 70
Futureal

Futureal

Eddie returns to his Terminator-esque form as seen on the Somewhere In Time cover.

This time, Eddie comes in gorgeous-ish CG…

Page 47 of 70
Page 47 of 70
Eddie's Head

Eddie's Head

A head-shaped boxset containing the band’s first 12 albums (from Iron Maiden to Live At Donnington). When lined up together the spine of each CD forms the original Iron Maiden artwork.

Check out Iron Maiden France for more pics.

Page 48 of 70
Page 48 of 70
Ed Hunter

Ed Hunter

Accompanying the aforementioned Ed Hunter videogame was a compilation album - this was Maiden’s second ‘best of’ album but featured 20 fan-chosen tracks.

Page 49 of 70
Page 49 of 70
The Wicker Man

The Wicker Man

This was the alternative cover (the first was a photo of the band - possibly to mark the return of Bruce Dickinson) designed by Mark Wilkinson.

Riggs, whose effort was rejected, was now nearing the end of his Maiden tether...

Page 50 of 70
Page 50 of 70
Brave New World

Brave New World

Just as Bruce Dickinson returned as frontman, Derek Riggs was departing as artman.

The top half was Riggs’ last new work for Maiden (the “they were getting increasingly difficult to work with” complaint from the Can I Play With Madness single 12 years earlier had evidently become impossible), while Steve Stone designed the bottom half.

The cover and album title are based on Aldous Huxley’s novel of the same name about ‘reproductive technology’ and ‘sleep-learning’.

Page 51 of 70
Page 51 of 70
Out Of The Silent Planet

Out Of The Silent Planet

Another Mark Wilkinson effort, probably inspired by the song’s own influences: science fiction flick Forbidden Planet and CS Lewis’s 1938 novel of the same name.

Page 52 of 70
Page 52 of 70
Run To The Hills (Live)

Run To The Hills (Live)

A third Run To The Hills release, but for a good cause: to raise money for former drummer Clive Burr’s MS Trust Fund.

Page 53 of 70
Page 53 of 70
Rock In Rio

Rock In Rio

Recorded in front of Maiden’s second largest crowd of 250,000 people (ironically the biggest was 400,000 in Rio back in 1985).

Eddie watches on…

Page 54 of 70
Page 54 of 70
The BBC Archives

The BBC Archives

The first in a week-long slew of Maiden compilations to mark the release of Eddie’s Archive, which we’ll come to in a moment.

Riggs originally created this artwork for Billboard magazine to celebrate the band signing to Capitol Records. They changed the building and sign to fit with BBC Broadcasting House.

Page 55 of 70
Page 55 of 70
Beast Over Hammersmith

Beast Over Hammersmith

This live LP was recorded during The Beast On The Road tour at Hammersmith Odeon, London, 20 years earlier.

Fittingly, the band chose an older Eddie for the artwork. Riggs designed a poster for Iron Maiden’s Download Festival appearance with the same theme.

Page 56 of 70
Page 56 of 70
Edward The Great

Edward The Great

All hail King Edward!

Maiden’s third ‘Best Of’ released on the same day - and in conjunction with - Eddie’s Archive box set (next up) as an accessible introduction for new fans.

Page 57 of 70
Page 57 of 70
Eddie's Archive

Eddie's Archive

An embossed metal casket-like box containing three double CDs: The BBC Archives, Beast Over Hammersmith and a new Best Of The ‘B’ Sides; the Iron Maiden family tree (updated from the version which originally appeared in 1993’s A Real Dead One); and a shot glass. Check out Metal.org for a close-up.

Page 58 of 70
Page 58 of 70
Best Of The 'B' Sides

Best Of The 'B' Sides

Here’s that Best Of The ‘B’ Sides cover.

Cheeky....

Page 59 of 70
Page 59 of 70
Wildest Dreams

Wildest Dreams

Based on the accompanying computer-animated music video in which the band drive into Eddie’s mouth. Lovely.

Page 60 of 70
Page 60 of 70
Dance Of Death

Dance Of Death

Apparently, Maiden’s 13th studio LP artwork designer, David Patchett, wanted to dissociate himself from the finished product because the band decided to use his ‘unfinished prototype’.

One look at Maiden World’s list of Dance Of Death cover mistakes will explain why - broken neck, dislocated shoulder, baby’s foot cutting into dog’s back, dog standing on snake…

Awful.

Page 61 of 70
Page 61 of 70
Rainmaker

Rainmaker

A still from Rainmaker’s accompanying video.

Page 62 of 70
Page 62 of 70
No More Lies

No More Lies

In-keeping with the ‘Eddie as Grim Reaper’ theme, the No More Lies boxed EP was released as a ‘thank you’ to fans and came with an Iron Maiden sweatband.

On 5 July 2005 came a North American-only release called The Essential Iron Maiden (part of Sony’s ‘Essential’ series) followed by another live Number Of The Beast single. The album’s cover is a photo of the band posing on flight cases.

Page 63 of 70
Page 63 of 70
Death On The Road

Death On The Road

A live CD, LP and DVD recorded at Westfalenhalle, Dortmund, Germany during the Dance Of Death Tour in 2003.

Eddie turns Funeral Director Of The Apocalypse in this Melvyn Grant-designed artwork. The words ‘Edward & Son Undertakers’ are inscribed on his carriage.

Page 64 of 70
Page 64 of 70
The Reincarnation of Benjamin Breeg

The Reincarnation of Benjamin Breeg

While a quick Google of ‘Benjamin Breeg’ throws up any number of forum debates and conspiracy theories, no one’s really sure who the title character is, or was.

At a guess, we’re inclined to believe this ‘extremely disturbed individual’ explanation. Or it may well have been Eddie’s name in a former life. Either way, Ed’s intent on digging him up in this Melvyn Grant-designed artwork.

Page 65 of 70
Page 65 of 70
A Matter Of Life And Death

A Matter Of Life And Death

Recurring themes of war and religion provide the basis of Maiden’s fourteenth studio album, A Matter Of Life And Death.

Eddie takes the form of an entire zombie-like squadron for the artwork designed by Tim Bradstreet.

Page 66 of 70
Page 66 of 70
Different World

Different World

The second and final single from ‘Life And Death is a tribute to Thin Lizzy - in particular Phil Lynott’s vocals.

Eddie looks like he’s about to take a bite out of the world.

Page 67 of 70
Page 67 of 70
Somewhere Back In Time

Somewhere Back In Time

Another world tour, another accompanying best of.

Fittingly for a jaunt called Somewhere Back In Time, the album covers the first nine years of Maiden releases (1980-1989) while the artwork revisits Pharaoh Eddie and Cyborg Eddie from the Powerslave and Somewhere In Time albums respectively.

The Flight 666 concert documentary film followed a year later on 22 May. The poster and DVD artwork featured the band stood beneath the Iron Maiden plane, famously piloted by Bruce Dickinson himself.

Page 68 of 70
Page 68 of 70
El Dorado

El Dorado

El Dorado was released as a free download on the eve of The Final Frontier World Tour.

The artwork by illustrator Anthony Dry is inspired by EC Comics - check out Metal Hammer’s delighted unboxing of the comic book-like seven-inch promo single.

Page 69 of 70
Page 69 of 70
The Final Frontier

The Final Frontier

Melvyn Grant returned to the drawing board for Maiden's 15th studio LP, The Final Frontier. Befittingly of its title, an alien-like Eddie has conquered space (you know, the final frontier) - one skeletal astronaut’s helmet at a time.

Some are speculating that this is to be Maiden’s last album, a rumour that - while it makes the title all the more meaningful - if true, would mark the end of a 30-year heavy metal tenure and a genre-defining run of graphic artwork.

Fans can at least take some solace by watching Ed’s all-new alien incarnation brought to life for The Final Frontier Tour, and in the title track’s accompanying video. You can also check our the amazing new Final Frontier 3D cover on the latest issue of Metal Hammer. Guess who gets the last laugh?

Up the Irons!

Liked this? Now read: Iron Maiden: The Final Frontier review track-by-track

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Page 70 of 70
Page 70 of 70
Tom Porter

Tom Porter worked on MusicRadar from its mid-2007 launch date to 2011, covering a range of music and music making topics, across features, gear news, reviews, interviews and more. A regular NAMM-goer back in the day, Tom now resides permanently in Los Angeles, where he's doing rather well at the Internet Movie Database (IMDB).

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“A half-million dollars of tone at your feet”: Nail the sound of a holy grail tube amp with a pedal you made yourself – JHS Pedals unveils the NOTADÜMBLË solderless DIY kit
Michael Thompson
“All Strats aren't equal… Then it’s how you smack it, or zing it or strum it… A lot of it is that too”: Session guitar legend Michael Thompson reveals how he created the famous clean tone that’s on countless '80s and '90s hits
Andre 3000
“It’s jokingly the worst rap album in history because there are no lyrics on it at all”: It turns out there’s a reason why André 3000 turned up at the Met Gala with a grand piano on his back
Alexis Lanternier Deezer
‘Artist centric’ music streamer Deezer just made €134 million in the first quarter of 2025
Kali Audio Project Watts
Ever wondered if you need a subwoofer and which one to buy? Kali Audio has the perfect options for producers
The Faces - keyboard player Ian McLagan, drummer Kenney Jones, guitarist Ronnie Wood, singer Rod Stewart and bassist Ronnie Lane (1946 - 1997
The Faces have completed 11 tracks for an album, says Kenney Jones and “most of them are good”

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