Exactly so, and otherwise, it is necessary to describe the 1988 Seventh Son of a Seventh Son CD of iron maidens. Maiden were then at the height of her creative and you can hear that this CD from the first note to the last also. No Killers-Only Fillers was here probably the motto of Steve Harris and his cronies. Although in many journals and also from a lot of fans The Number of the Beast is called the best Maiden album, I think that this designation only the Seventh Son of a Seventh Son deserves. Whether the hard and gritty opener "Moonchild", the slow ballad "Infinite Dreams", the melodious "Can I play with madness?", The singalong number "The Evil That Men Do", the epic and-long title track "Seventh Son of A Seventh Son ", the almost prog-heavy" The Prophecy ", the mystical" The Clairvoyant "or the metal anthem" Only the Good Die Young ", each song is a masterpiece of Heavy Metal that all positive Trademarks Iron Maiden unites in itself. This CD is the logical development and perfection of the previous albums "Powerslave" and "Somewhere in Time". Alas Maiden have never delivered a comparably good concoction since the release of this CD. But since now getting on in years men from England have far with their mascot Eddie enough, I think that we can still hope.