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Flight of Icarus

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Wikipedia article




"'Flight of Icarus'" is a song by the English heavy metal band Iron Maiden. It was their eighth single, the first from their fourth studio album, 'Piece of Mind' (1983), and their first in the United States, where it was one of their few with substantial airplay, peaking at a personal best No. 8 on the 'Billboard' Top Album Tracks chart. It was a lesser success in the UK, peaking at No. 11 on the UK Singles Chart.

One of Iron Maiden's most famous songs, "Flight of Icarus" was performed live for the first time in 32 years on May 26, 2018, in Tallinn, Estonia.

Overview



The song is loosely based on the ancient Greek myth of Icarus who was imprisoned with his father Daedalus in the palace of Knossos on Crete. In an attempt to escape, the pair fabricated wings from feathers and wax so they could fly away. Unfortunately Icarus, not heeding the advice of his father, flew too close to the Sun, melting the wax that held the feathers and thus fell to his death in the sea.

In this version, an old man, his father, with blazing eyes stands on a hill facing a crowd. An unnamed youth, presumably Icarus, comes from the crowd and makes extended eye contact with the man. He tells the crowd that he flies "in the name of God, my father." The chorus exclaims "Fly on your wings like an eagle," and to fly as high as & to touch the sun. As he flies, his eyes glaze as he "flies on the wings of a dream." His wings then turn to ash as he realizes his father betrayed him. He then dies. The chorus, however, continues to plead for someone to fly and counter this old man.

Written in the key of F-sharp minor, the song features a galloping pace and a high-pitched chorus. The solos are played by Dave Murray and Adrian Smith and, after a repetition of the main chorus, the song flows into a brief harmonized section followed by another soloin double timeby Dave Murray; after a variation of the chorus ('Fly as high as the sun!'), it finally ends with a prolonged F-sharp minor chord over which Bruce Dickinson holds an A5.

The single cover, in something of a parody of the original myth, portrays a winged Eddie killing Icarus with a flamethrower. Icarus resembles the figure in 'Evening: Fall of Day', by William Rimmer, which was used as a label logo by Led Zeppelin. According to the artist, Derek Riggs, this is a reference to Led Zeppelin's break-up a few years before.

The song received criticism in the UK on release, with Garry Bushell commenting, "Plodding rather than powerful, it seemed universally unpopular with hardcore British metallurgists whose worst fears were bolstered by the number's release as the first American single. Bassist Steve Harris has since said that "releasing 'Icarus' in the States was a mistake," going on to state that "I do wish we'd had time to break it in live before we recorded it, it's a lot more powerful live, a lot faster and heavier." In support of the song, Dickinson stated, "Steve never liked it. He thought it was too slow, but I wanted it to be that rocksteady sort of beat. I knew it would get onto American radio if we kept it that way, and I was right."

The song appears on the tribute album 'Numbers from the Beast', featuring Ripper Owens on vocals, Doug Aldrich on guitars, Jimmy Bain on bass, and Simon Wright on drums, and it was also covered by the progressive metal band Fates Warning in 1983.

Music video



The video for this track was directed by Jim Yukich and was filmed in the Bahamas at Compass Point Studios (where the album was recorded) as the band played a staged recording session of the track. Drummer Nicko McBrain appeared as a blue faced grim reaper. Also, producer Martin Birch had a cameo in the clip as his face morphed with Maiden mascot Eddie. A newer edit of the video features Flash animation by Camp Chaos spliced between the original footage, replacing McBrain and Birch's acting scenes and some of the '80s-style visual effects. The animation depicts Icarus fleeing away from a winged Eddie (as seen on the single cover).

Track listing



;7" Single

'*' A cover of the song "I Got the Fire" from the Montrose album 'Paper Money' in 1974. Iron Maiden originally released a live cover of the song during the Paul Di'Anno era, on 1980 single, "Sanctuary", however the "Flight of Icarus" version features Bruce Dickinson on vocals and is a studio production rather than a live performance.

Personnel



Production credits are adapted from the 7 inch vinyl cover.

;Iron Maiden

*Bruce Dickinson  lead vocals

*Dave Murray  guitar

*Adrian Smith  guitar

*Steve Harris  bass guitar

*Nicko McBrain  drums

;Production

*Martin Birch  producer, engineer

*Derek Riggs  cover illustration

*Simon Fowler  photography

Charts



Notes



References



Category:1983 singles

Category:Iron Maiden songs

Category:Songs written by Adrian Smith

Category:Songs written by Bruce Dickinson

Category:1983 songs

Category:EMI Records singles

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