Monday, 7 November 2011

IRON MAIDEN


Country: United Kingdom
Label: EMI Records
Website: http://www.ironmaiden.com/

Formed in: 1975

1975-New Wave Of British Heavy metal

Line-up

Current members:
1975-  Steve Harris - bass
1976  Dave Murray - guitars
› 1977-  -//-
1982-  Nicko McBrain - drums
1990-  Janick Gers - guitars
1980-1990  Adrian Smith - guitars
› 1999-  -//-
1981-1993  Bruce Dickinson - vocals
› 1999-  -//-
Former musicians:
1975  Dave Sullivan - guitars
1975-1976  Terry Rance - guitars
1975-1976  Paul Mario Day - vocals
1975-1977  Ron Matthews - drums
1976  Bob Sawyer - guitars
1976-1977  Dennis Wilcock - vocals
1977  Tony Moore - keyboards
1977  Barry "Thunderstick" Graham - drums
1977  Terry Wapram - guitars
1977-1979  Doug Sampson - drums
1977-1981  Paul Di'Anno - vocals
1979  Tony Parsons - guitars
1979  Dave Mac - guitars
1979  Paul Todd - guitars
1979  Paul Cairns - guitars
1979-1980  Dennis Stratton - guitars
1979-1982  Clive Burr - drums
1994-1999  Blaze Bayley - vocals
Guest musicians:
1988-1995  Michael "Count" Kenney - keyboards
1992  Adrian Smith - guitars

Discography


1980 | 8.1Women In Uniform [EP]
1980 | 8.7Iron Maiden
1981 | 8.4Killers
1982 | 9.1The Number Of The Beast
1983 | 7.5Where Eagles Dare [EP]
1983 | 8.9Piece Of Mind
1984 | 9.1Powerslave
1986 | 8.8Somewhere In Time
1988 | 9.1Seventh Son Of A Seventh Son
1990 | 7.3No Prayer For The Dying
1992 | 8.1Fear Of The Dark
1993Playing with Madness [EP]
1995 | 6.9The X Factor
1998 | 6.7Virtual XI
2000 | 8.7Brave New World
2003 | 8Dance Of Death
2004 | 7.7No More Lies [EP]
2006 | 8A Matter Of Life And Death
2010 | 7.5The Final Frontier

Videos

1980 | 6.9Women In Uniform
1982 | 8.2Run To The Hills
1982 | 8.8Number Of The Beast
1983 | 8.4Flight Of Icarus
1983 | 8.5The Trooper
1984 | 8.9Aces High
1984 | 8.3Two Minutes To Midnight
1986 | 8.8Wasted Years
1988 | 8.5Can I Play With Madness
1988 | 9.2The Evil That Men Do
1988 | 8.1Infinite Dreams
1990 | 7.8Bring Your Daughter... To The Slaughter
1990 | 7.9Holy Smoke
1990 | 6.3Tailgunner
1992 | 8.1Be Quick Or Be Dead
1992 | 8.2From Here To Eternity
1992 | 8.3Wasting Love
1995 | 7.6Lord Of The Flies
1995 | 7.3Man On The Edge
1995 | 9.1Afraid To Shoot Strangers
1996 | 5.6Virus
1998 | 7.7Futureal
1998 | 6.4The Angel And The Gambler
2000 | 8Out Of The Silent Planet
2000 | 8.5The Wicker Man
2003 | 7.6Wildest Dreams
2003 | 8.9Rainmaker
2003 | 7.6No More Lies
2006 | 7.4The Reincarnation Of Benjamin Breeg
2006 | 7.9Different World
2010 | 8.9The Final Frontier

Trivia

Somewhere in Time is the first Iron Maiden album that features guitar synthesizers, and Seventh Son of a Seventh Son was the first where they used keyboards.
In the album Piece of Mind, at the beginning of the sixth track, "Still Life", the band included a hidden message which could only be understood by playing the album backwards. This was a joke and an intended swing back at the critics who had accused Maiden of being satanic. The backwards-message (see Wiki: Backmasking) features Nicko McBrain mimicking Idi Amin (or rather mimicking John Bird mimicking Idi Amin) uttering the phrase, "What ho said the t'ing with the three 'bonce', do not meddle with things you don't understand..." followed by a belch. The phrase itself is taken from the satirical album The Collected Broadcasts of Idi Amin by Bird and Alan Coren. "What ho" and "What ho said the t'ing" are phrases that also crop up regularly on McBrain's "Listen with Nicko!" tracks from The First Ten Years collection.
Killers is the only Iron Maiden album to feature two instrumental songs ("The Ides of March" and "Genghis Khan").
Iron Maiden have released 145 original studio songs, here are the members' contribution to music/lyrics:
Steve Harris - 121
Bruce Dickinson - 42
Adrian Smith - 34
Janick Gers - 25
Dave Murray - 20
Nicko McBrain - 1
The song "To Tame a Land" is about Frank Herbert's highly-acclaimed sci-fi book Dune. While it was the band's intention to name the song after the novel, Frank Herbert abhorred heavy metal (and Iron Maiden in particular) so much at the time that he threatened to sue if they used the title.
Steve Harris used to play in the youth West Ham United football team in the 70's as mid or striker and is still considered a great amateur football player.
The lyrics to the song "Man on the Edge" were inspired by the film "Falling Down".
According to notes on The Number of the Beast, the members of Iron Maiden once faced the members of Scorpions in a soccer/football match. They tied, 1-1.
Iron Maiden recruited another guitarist in 1977, Bob Sawyer, who caused a rift between Murray and Wilcock, prompting Harris to fire both Murray and Sawyer. A poor gig at the Bridgehouse in November 1977, with a makeshift line-up including Tony Moore on keyboards, Terry Wapram on guitar, and drummer Barry Purkis resulted in Harris firing the entire band. Dave Murray was reinstated and Doug Sampson was hired as drummer.
Steve Harris started Iron Maiden after leaving his former group, Smiler. Harris attributes the band name to a movie adaptation of The Man in the Iron Mask, which he saw around that time, and so the group was christened after the purported torture device.
Having sold over 100 million albums worldwide. The band won the Ivor Novello Awards for international achievement in 2002. They were also inducted into the Hollywood Rock Walk during their tour in the United States in 2005.
Alongside his Iron Maiden duties, vocalist Bruce Dickinson also works as a pilot for the British airline, Astraeus.
The pub appearing on the cover of the album Killers, just behind Eddie, is the pub "Ruskin Arms" best known as one of Iron Maiden's first venues.
In the album "Powerslave", if you look carefully the hieroglyphics on the pyramids, you'll see "encoded" the words "Bollocks", "Indiana Jones was here" and "Wot, no Guinness?"
The songs "Back in the Village" and "The Prisoner" are based on the '60s TV show "The Prisoner", which both Steve Harris and Adrian Smith liked to watch.
The track "Aces High" is based on World War II dogfights.
The song "Brave New World" is based on the novel of the same name by Aldous Huxley.
Eddie's full name is Eddie The Head -or Edward The Head- and it comes from the following old joke:
Eddie was born with no body and no arms and no legs. Just a head. But despite this slight birth defect his parents loved him very much. So on his sixteenth birthday they run into a doctor that says "Hey, I can give Eddie a body"... so the parents are going totally nuts because finally their kid can have a body and be like other normal people. They go home and are really excited and say "Have we got a surprise for you. It's the best present ever!" and Eddie says "Oh, no, not another fucking hat!"

The original Eddie was just a theatrical mask. It can be seen in the band photos on the first album and on the "Running Free" single picture sleeve. It was a face right next to the band's logo. It was connected to a pump that would eject various kinds of liquids, from food dye to paint, and would drool over Doug Sampson, Clive Burr or whoever was at the drums at the time. Fans would also try to throw stuff into the mouth at gigs.
The song Where Eagles Dare is based on the 1968 classic WWII movie of the same title, starring Clint Eastwood and Richard Burton.
The song Como Estais Amigo is a tribute to the dead Argentinian soldiers in the Falkland Islands conflict between Argentina and England in 1982.
The song "Sign Of The Cross" is based on the book "The Name Of The Rose" (written by Umberto Eco).
Dave Murray started the 'Charlotte Saga' on 'Iron Maiden' (1980) by writing the song "Charlotte the Harlot" about a prostitute in the East End of London. This was continued on 'Number of the Beast' (1982) with the song "22 Acacia Avenue" and the 'No Prayer for the Dying' (1990) song "Hooks in You". "From Here to Eternity", on 'Fear of the Dark' (1992), also mentions Charlotte, although as this is in passing it is not regarded as being a true part of the saga.
The song "Rime of the Ancient Mariner" is based on the poem of the same name written by Samuel Taylor Coleridge. And although the song is perhaps Iron Maiden's longest studio track, it barely scratches the surface of the poem on which it's based.
The song "The Trooper" is about the Charge of the Light Brigade at the battle of Balaklava and is based on a poem written by Lord Alfred Tennyson.
The live keyboardist, not officially a band member, is named Michael "Count" Kenney.



No comments:

Post a Comment