Home Featured BRUCE DICKINSON On Why IRON MAIDEN And Others Used Satanic Imagery: “Cause It’s Really Dramatic”

BRUCE DICKINSON On Why IRON MAIDEN And Others Used Satanic Imagery: “Cause It’s Really Dramatic”

iron maiden satanic, BRUCE DICKINSON On Why IRON MAIDEN And Others Used Satanic Imagery: “Cause It’s Really Dramatic”

With the upcoming launch of “Psycho Schizo Espresso” – a new podcast from IRON MAIDEN’s Bruce Dickinson and Oxford University psychologist Dr. Kevin Dutton – on October 31, 2021, you can expect the MAIDEN frontman to discuss numerous in-depth topics with his guests and colleague.

For example, Episode One features New Testament scholar Professor Steven J. Friesen from the University of Texas discussing satanic imagery within heavy metal in it’s early days.

In a preview clip below, Bruce talks about why bands like IRON MAIDEN and BLACK SABBATH have integrated Satanic imagery in their songs and album art and almost celebrating the shocked reactions from people.

“‘Cause it’s really dramatic,” Bruce says (as transcribed by BLABBERMOUTH.NET). “And at a certain point in time, certainly for people of a certain age, like me, from what you might call a society which was — ’cause I’m 62, so going back to, like, the late ’50s, Europe was broadly Christian; a lot more people went to church back then than do now. Probably four or five times, or even more, people would just turn up at church; they weren’t deserted, as they are now. And they would generally believe in things like absolute evil and there being an absolute good, but nobody knew anybody who was absolutely good. But for sure, absolute evil existed somewhere, ’cause otherwise how could anybody be absolutely good. So you had to have something to measure yourself against.

“What heavy metal bands did by adopting imagery was they shocked people,” he explained. “Because in the same way that the early Hammer movies reintroduced Dracula but with sex. So they actually had Dracula, blood, fangs, sex, the devil — all this stuff was, like, ‘Oh my God. That is so shocking,’ but it really kind of turns us on in secret. And, of course, as kids, you’d be forbidden to watch it, and, of course, it would be interesting, and you’d watch it. And then you’d just use your imagination to create stories. And then a whole raft of films came out — ‘The Omen’ and ‘The Exorcist’ and things like that — that all had this idea of an actual physical force of evil. And it was quite exciting, really — not because you wanted to be it, but to know that you could imagine your way into the drama and put that into music and dramatize it.”

You can listen to “Psycho Schizo Espresso” wherever you get your podcasts, with the show also being made available as a Vodcast on YouTube. New episodes will be made available weekly.