It’s not as if Bruce Dickinson doesn’t have enough to do in his life. A pilot who flies planes, a brewer who brews beer, a writer who writes tomes, a DJ who does radio shows, and just as an aside a lead vocalist who has been at the forefront of the music industry for over 40 years. That touches the surface of what Dickinson has done in a life that seems to get busier every year. You can now add on to this creator of yet another solo album, something to tide him over until the next Iron Maiden tour or album or project manifests itself. There is little doubt that Dickinson is a marvel when it comes to what he sets his mind to.
The duo of Dickinson and his frequent collaborator Roy Z last put out an album together in 2005, that being the “Tyranny of Souls” album that came during a break between Iron Maiden releases and tours. Despite the success and general positive reviews of that release, time worked against both men when it came to producing another follow up. Despite this, it is well known that Dickinson had been writing songs with a new solo album in mind at least a decade ago. In fact, Roy Z said in a recent interview that the next Dickinson solo album was prepared to be recorded in 2012 during a break in Maiden proceedings, and that at that time 14 songs had been written, and that many of those songs are still unreleased and that he hoped they would eventually see the light of day. One of those songs of course found its way onto an Iron Maiden album, much like another had done so back in the late 1980’s.
With the onset of the pandemic in recent years, and the delayed release of Maiden’s last album “Senjutsu”, time has been more readily available in order to not only finalise the writing and production of the tracks that make up this album, but the eventual release of the album and even a tour in certain places in the world (not Australia of course) to promote it. Then there is the comic book and the overreaching story of the whole project... but you know, what we are interested in here on this podcast is the album, and if it is any good. It matters not about the story if the songs just don’t hit you in the right places.
The opening track of the album was also the first teaser single release, “Afterglow of Ragnarok”. It’s a different approach from opening tracks on his other solo releases, which have generally been really heavy riffs and hard and fast, whereas this opening track has a more atmospheric feel about it, as though it is setting the scene for what is to come, which of course it is. I must admit I only listened to this a couple of times before the album was released so as not to allow it to dominate my early listening of the album, and I think that worked well. Bruce’s vocals are terrific here, in an easy register to sing along with. It is to become a recurring theme. It’s a really good opening track, that is then immediately crushed by the brilliant follow up “Many Doors to Hell”. Bruce’s dulcet tones on those opening lines... almost sinister in the lower depths of his range... we haven’t heard this for a long time and it is just brilliant, before returning to his more regular register for the bridge and chorus. It has a terrific solo through the middle of the song, and just a great beat about it all the way through. Bruce has said this has nothing to do with the comic – the song tells the story of a female vampire bored with eternity and wanting to find a way back to her humanity – but it sounded good anyway so it made the cut. I agree with him, I think this is a terrific song.
The second single “Rain on the Graves” follows, a song that has its beginnings back in 2008, and continues the same grain that the album has tracked along so far, with another moody musical aspect pulled along by a midtempo range that feels more intense than that description. That is perhaps the best aspect of the opening to the album, the groove is the main drive, but it is more amplified that just a simple midtempo beat, it moves much freer than that.
“Resurrection Man” not only features Bruce on guitar (a real twanging surf-type almost DAD-like guitar too) but is a change in direction musically as well, with this track tying directly to the comic release with the mention of the anti-heroes Doctor Necropolis and Professor Lazarus, and teasing the promise of eternal life. Continuing this change in musical journey, “Fingers in the Wounds” is based around a piano keyboard base with Bruce driving the song with firstly the soaring vocal and then the powerful forceful vocal, through to the middle of the song where keys and synth dominate. It’s an interesting track, one that harks back to earlier solo material Dickinson has done and is one that does take a few listens to dissect given it is so different from his usual pursuits.
The original yet rejigged “Eternity Has Failed” to me is a triumph. Revisiting it after the song was purloined by Mr Harris for his band, this version loses nothing in comparison in my opinion. Some of the lyrics are changed to continue to story of “The Mandrake Project”, and Bruce’s change in the way he sings, along with the slower and more intense sound of the track makes this a joy. I love Maiden’s version, and I find I love this just as much. Then “Mistress of Mercy” cuts in with its heavy opening riff in true Roy Z style, and provides the best straight up heavy song of the album, with Roy given his best opportunity to solo unhindered through the middle of the song.
“Face in the Mirror” drops back out of that mindset and dials everything back as the acoustic guitar and keyboard dominated track brings back “Tears of the Dragon” like tones without replicating the majesty or power of that song. Bruce’s guitar returns, and this track is credited with the first recorded Dickinson guitar solo. “Shadow of the Gods” is almost like a prog metal song, drifting along for the first half like a power ballad, before finally breaking out into a heavy riff and almost a growl in Bruce’s vocals, something that comes as a shock the first time you hear it, and then a grandiose finish with the soaring vocal returning. It could almost be a progressive metal suite. Finally, the album closes out with “Sonata (Immortal Beloved)”, with similar tones to the way the previous two tracks have gone. Stretching to almost ten minutes, here again we are exposed to vocals from Bruce that he rarely uses but obviously has in his repertoire to utilise, the beautiful quiet soar through the mid-range that he used in a song like “Navigate the Seas of the Sun”, but in a more operatic stage musical way, rather than the high range of his pitch. It’s an epic, a slow burner, a song that builds slowly but determinedly over the course of the ten minutes to its eventual conclusion. This song apparently dates to before the release of “Tyranny of Souls”, something that makes you think that it was a project that both Bruce and Roy were passionate about, enabling them to use this as the final chapter of this long awaited new album.
Perhaps the best way to give you an idea of how much people were waiting for this album to be released was that it was impossible to find a copy of the standard CD for sale anywhere on the eastern seaboard the day after its release. Everywhere I looked, it was sold out. You have to say that that is a fair indication of the anticipation that was felt about the release of “The Mandrake Project”. Whether or not that knocks off every single Taylor Swift album from the Australian charts – yes, ALL of them take up the first ten or twelve positions on the Australian Albums charts as I record this - remains to be seen.
It was of course available on all streaming platforms, and that was where most people turned to for their initial listens to this album. Including me. And up to the recording of this episode, I have barely listened to anything else. Six days, and I’m up to 45 rotations of the album... or streams in this case. So I feel as though I have enough initial knowledge to render my verdict here.
What Bruce does best on all of his solo albums is put forward songs and music that he could never produce in Iron Maiden. That’s why he does it, and it opens another door from the material he writes and performs for that band. Which is why we all become drawn to it. And it is also the reason that sometimes some of the songs don’t always hit the right spot for everyone.
For me on “The Mandrake Project”, this is true of the closing three tracks, and that is only through my personal preference of music genre. All three of “Face in the Mirror”, “Shadow of the Gods” and “Sonata (Immortal Beloved)” are that style of song that I don’t personally care for a lot. I APPRECIATE the music, massively in fact, because they are composed and performed brilliantly and beautifully. But having gone through the first half of the album, where songs like “Afterglow of Ragnarök”, “Many Doors to Hell”, “Rain on the Graves” and “Eternity Has Failed” have been so powerful and energetic and riff worthy, the back third of the album slows down to a trickle, and softly moves into the distance. It’s a really interesting transition, from the first third of the album, through to several changes in the middle, and then the final third as written and performed. Like I said, I didn’t come here for Iron Maiden, and I expected a range of songs that showcased the differences in the writing collaboration of Dickinson and Z. And that’s exactly what we get. The band is great, and there is probably more keys and synth in places than I expected. That should not have been a surprise overall. This isn’t the “Accident of Birth/Chemical Wedding” era after all.
Is there more of Bruce’s solo music to come? Or is this like a crack in the window, allowing something to sneak through before that pathway is covered over. This is a truly enjoyable album, because it has the voice of Iron Maiden once again performing songs that Iron Maiden never would, and of course this is why Bruce has chosen to do this. Here, he drives the bus, and he is in control of what direction it goes, and it gives him the freedom to express himself in every way he would like to. It is the reason the album has moments that you might feel are a step too far, and others where you get even more than you bargained for.
Personally, I am enjoying this album a lot, probably more than I expected. It may not be all in a style that is my favourite to listen to, but the album as a whole is quite the triumph. There was always an expectation from myself that I would overhype this before its delivery and have it end up being a disappointment. It turns out that exactly the opposite has occurred. I didn’t listen to the early release of tracks, and went into the album more or less clueless as to what was to come. And through this I have discovered a lot of new songs to enjoy, and an album that, when taken as a story in itself, is another musical triumph for a collaborating pair that still know how to please their fans.
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