Empire Of The Clouds

Album: The Book of Souls (2015)
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Songfacts®:

  • At 18:01, this is the longest song Iron Maiden has ever recorded. "[Bruce Dickinson] was working on ['Empire Of The Clouds'] for about a month on his own," guitarist Adrian Smith recalled to Total Guitar magazine. "Every single day we'd be in the studio blasting out stuff and he'd be in the soundproof glass booth playing piano. Like Beethoven with his ear to the piano, concocting this masterpiece. I think he wrote every single note in it."

    "We interpreted it and we did it in sections," Smith continued. "Kevin [Shirley, producer] and Bruce would be in the control room and say, 'That's too bluesy, can you make it a bit more classical sounding?' He recorded all the piano from start to finish and then we played along to that. Then I think they put on all the orchestration afterwards. It's a bit of a story on its own that one."
  • Lyrically, the song is about the ill-fated British airship, R101, which when built was the world's largest flying craft. It crashed in France on its maiden overseas voyage on October 5, 1930, killing 48 of the 54 passengers on board, a greater toll than the better known Hindenburg tragedy, seven years later.

    Dickinson told Classic Rock magazine: "Originally I was going to write a song about World War I and the soldiers who operated the dawn patrols – something a bit atmospheric. Then I went round to Adrian's house and we wrote this song 'Death Or Glory,' which kind of covered that subject in a slightly different way. So I started thinking about the R101."

    "I've always been fascinated with airships, and the R101 especially. Only five of the passengers survived when it crashed. I've got a pocket watch of one of the survivors, and a tankard that says: 'Welcome aboard from the airship crew.' To tell that story, I thought, it's a big job – oh, go on then! So I started putting it together piece by piece. It was difficult, because I wanted to get everything as historically and technically accurate, but still making it… poetic, I guess."
  • Dickinson highlighted drummer Nicko McBrain's contribution to the huge, dramatic climax in the song when the airship crashes. The vocalist said: "He really bought into the story. I told him I wanted all this dissonant stuff for the airship plummeting to earth. I wanted that in the percussion. I said I wanted twisting metal, and he said, 'Oh, you want a bowed gong.' I said, 'What the f--k is that?'"

    "He has this big orchestral gong at the back of his kit. You take a violin bow, scrape it against the edge of the gong, and it just resonates. I said, 'That's the sound of the airship dying!' So quick, back to the piano: diddle-de-diddle-de, bang, bang! Brilliant, that's it. That's the slo-mo shot in the movie, when suddenly you see everything blowing up and the music stops. That was the moment I had in my head."

    "And then you get the line: "We're down, lads." That's the pilot's voice – the last thing that the survivors heard as they jumped from the back of the airship, from the rear power car, into the dark."
  • During Loudwire's "In Conversation" live event in January 2024, Dickinson recalled his experience writing this epic track. He faced the challenge of recording his segments in bite-sized pieces, meticulously tracking the left and right hands independently.

    "The sound of it is somewhat robotic and mechanical. It lacks that beautiful flow you get when someone truly plays the piano," the Iron Maiden frontman lamented.

    Dickinson would love to re-record the 18-minute opus. He envisions an orchestral collaboration to give it the proper treatment it deserves.

Comments: 8

  • Brayden from Iowa, Uslove you guys! UP THE IRONS!
  • Ash from EnglandYou know what, I love Iron Maiden for so many reasons, mainly because I've listnede to them my whole life. But between Iron Maiden and Doctor Who, I have learnt more about history stuff than in history at school (and I take that for GCSE so...)
  • Ash from EnglandMy dad always wondered why it said "8 and 40 souls" and when I looked it up I realised that of course that makes sence. 8 and 40, 8+40=48. So now I just need to keep remindingy dad whenever we hear the song aha
  • Kasia from Wrocław, PolandMagnificent. A masterpiece. I'm a historian and teacher of English soo... I am looking forward to meeting a person who will be patient enough to work on this lyrics with me. Thank you so much, men - all of you, Iron Maiden team.
  • Ben from UsThis song is an absolute masterpiece. If anyone can tell a story in a song? It’s Iron Maiden. Their poetic beauty can not be matched
  • Lucifur66776 from SydneyGreat song, a dramatic emotional roller coaster ride, imagery through music.
  • Gerhard from San Francisco,california This song shines the masterful musicianship of Iron Madden, they take you on an actual journey of time past through song, I actually can place myself on this fateful voyage on that bridge Listening to the Captain’s last command , Thank you Bruce, Iron Madden!.
  • Chris from Uk"8 and 40 souls, who came to die in France."

    The line refers to the 48 lives lost in the accident.
see more comments

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