Showing posts with label iron maiden. Show all posts
Showing posts with label iron maiden. Show all posts

Friday, 4 September 2015

the (original) iron maiden

So.... its been a while, a strange few months with not much done or said and time has flown on by. What better time to start getting back into the swing of things than on the day of the release of Iron Maiden's eagerly awaited new album. Now anyone who's into the band or following the rock/metal world lately is likely to have already picked up their copy, or will find a way to listen to it over the weekend. 

So, the obvious thing to do would be to put up the video for the new single which is already all over the internet and been seen a gazillion times by those who are interested. So we wont do that.

However, I will point you in the direction of this gem. Found by chance while trawling through the vast amounts of Iron Maiden material online, I came across this interesting album by a lesser known band that went by a familiar name. For those who didnt know, it turns out the Iron Maiden name had been used before Steve Harris and co. made one of the biggest heavy metal bands of all time.


The original Iron Maiden is another English band, coming from Essex in the late 1960's. Their only album, Maiden Voyage, released in 1969 is a great example of musicianship and influences of that time. After seeing Cream and Led Zeppelin the band adopted a heavy rock style mixing the sound of traditional rock of the time with psychadellic and what would become doom influences, even though the style hadnt been developed yet, something that would become the familiar sound of Black Sabbath later on.

The album is full of great guitar work and lyrical subjects, just a shame its a little let down by the poor production of the time.

Listen to the full album, Maiden Voyage
...


Friday, 12 December 2014

2014 is the number of the beast

December in the UK, and the main preoccupation in the music business here is to try and predict the annual No1 hit single. After an avalanche of pre Christmas releases by December all the front runners are in position. They're a miserable list of jingles too. Gone are the days when the hit Christmas single might be the rebel rocking scream of Slade bellowing "It's Christmas", although that still bellows out from department stores ad nauseam along with various other bygone yuletide anthems, but long gone are the days when a cheery xmas song for children was climbing high in the charts.
Now the top shot is in the hands of a motley crew of old and current X-Factor winners and losers, wannabe and ex wannabe celebrities, and for this year only a re-recording of a 20 year old song by Bob Geldof, who has climbed out of his Boomtown Rathole with ex Ultravox crooner Midge Ure for a charity single to raise funds for the Ebola crisis. Which would just be plain Scrooge like to moan about, although plenty have given the lyrics a thumbs down with them not having stood scrutiny after a 25 year gap.
"It's only an effin' pop record" said Sir Bob in defence of the old lyrics, but despite it "only" being a pop record that pair of numb skulls still couldn't manage to write a new one between them. Obviously their musical muse having departed years back.

So taking all these desperate attempts to produce the big Christmas 2013 record and looking at the potential Christmasiness of it all then it's a pretty safe bet the big money is on one of Simon Cowell's protégés from X-Factor to hit the top. That is if he gets his way.
But also in the UK whenever there's an imminent Cowell domination about to take place, especially at this time of the year, there is also one other sporting phenomena that's played out mainly through social media. That is how to stop the Cowell No.1 event from actually happening. So it's now become a truly festive tradition here to have the equivalent of the polar opposite to an X-Factor song at No.1 for no other reason than the jolly hope of pissing the Cowell off.
A few years back it was the band Rage Against The Machine who, although they'd had already had a hit with their single years earlier, were probably bought into the No.1 position for just their name alone. If they'd actually been named Rage Against Cowell the message could hardly have been clearer.
Anyway this years buzz is to get enough downloads sold for Iron Maiden's 32 year old song 'The Number Of The Beast' to block Cowell's domination of the Christmas chart. Notice here how it's the song title which is most relevant to get the message home.
Whether it all works out though will probably depend on motivating the vast army of Maiden fans to actually give a damn about the whole thing anyway. Either way there'll be a damn good shot at an attempt of Christmas Cowell baiting. It would be fare to say this also reflects the occasional pastime of a percentage of the population sticking two fingers up at the establishment.

Meanwhile while we mull over that Sing-a-longa Christmas fiasco we have the excitable news delivered to us via London News TV that Elvis is in town! Well not actually Elvis as he never was allowed to come to the UK except in a half baked account of an event which supposedly happened in the late 50's and was probably a demented dream in the first place, but here in the capital we have the arrival of a real live Elvis exhibition. Wow! The first event of it's type to ever leave his homeland, or rather Graceland.
There live in the London O2 arena we saw in all its glory, a dozen headless mannequins dressed in a variety of his tacky early 70's Las Vegas rhinestone creations standing as if ready to perform... except for their heads of course.(see pic above)
The TV interviewer excitably turning to the American woman who was guardian and curator of the spectacle and as if trying to bring the glittery mannequins to life for us all, our reporter asks urgently.. "and did Elvis have any say about the designs or ideas about how they should look?" which brought the prompt reply from the proud curator "No.... he left it up to his designer". "er Oh... right" said our TV host.
And moving swiftly on we now are shown in pristine condition one large white Cadillac or Pontiac convertible car that Elvis probably ate a burger in or had just forgotten that it was parked in the garage since the 60's. And then thrillingly we are shown a set of house keys! They were the keys to Graceland we are informed with great reverence. Although they looked like any keys to a shed except they were gold coloured. We then get a quick look at a couple of other clear cases containing undistinguishable objects and then we're done.
So no mementos of his early years, no sign of the early guitars or microphones and gear or images from the early 50's Sun sessions, and nothing personal that resembled the young firebrand who took America by storm in the early 50's and changed the shape of music. No sign of the King Of Rock and Roll here but an exhibition of the King of Bling and from a time when Elvis had lost his interest in rock and roll if not yet his voice and his world was ruled by the Machiavellian desires of one Colonel Tom Parker. It was thin Christmas gruel indeed.

And as if that was not enough to represent the state of the whole filthy music business in the 21st Century this morning the top 20 richest list in music is published and way out on top is Dr Dre's eye watering 395 million. Which is not down to his music but various gizmos that Apple bought up to shove at us.. mainly a line in very expensive crap headphones.
The second artist on the bling list is no surprise, being Beyonce, who comes in at a shabby 79 million. The rest just reduce proportionately from there. Somewhat puzzlingly The Eagles come in at No.3, but that's probably due to them having sold all of their boxsets and played sell out arena size gigs to people who wished they were still back in the 1970's.

Yes folks as we approach the end of 2014, real rock and roll has never looked to be more underground.

Thursday, 10 July 2014

sonisphere 2014


Last weekend Knebworth held what was a monumental event in celebration of '40 years of festivals at Knebworth', that any worthy metal fan could hope to witness and be a part of. The festival was headlined on the Friday by electronic band the Prodigy, with Saturday and Sunday being finished off with the iconic patrons of metal, Iron Maiden and Metallica. 

Iron Maiden play the final night of their three year 'Maiden England' tour on the Saturday, mainly based around the Seventh Son album. You can never get bored of the stage productions Maiden put on, and apart from one slight hitch with the pyrotechnics resulting in Bruce wanting to 'Burn the fucking place down!' the whole set is another masterpiece in performance by the band. The sheer energy and atmosphere of the band proves that they are still at the top of their game even at the end of a long tour, and shows the younger guys a thing... or everything they could be doing to make their live shows entertaining and a success time and time again. 
   
Any cynicism about Metallica over the recent years was completely brushed aside on Sunday, albeit probably only temporarily. The band performed quite possibly the ultimate set list for any Metallica fan with nearly all of the material being played from their first five monumental albums, this being the music that largely shaped the genre in the first place. Also on offer were the crowd pleasing sing along and
James' 'favorite song at the moment' Whiskey in the Jar and the new track Lords of Summer, which also appeared to go down well with the crowd. Metallica proved that when they try, they can still get it right sometimes but sadly this only seems to be the case with their retrospective work, we'll have to see what the future holds for the next album.


Aside from the main two giants, personal favourites had to be Gojira followed by Devin Townsend on the main stage first thing Sunday morning. Gojira opened the Sunday late, probably plagued by someone elses logistical problems, but no doubt made such a noise awakening the tiring campers preparing them for the final day ahead. 

Devin Townsend and his Project then graces us again at the main stage after Protest the Hero on stage two. Devin, smart as always these days, introduces himself to the crowd with his normal sense of irony to... well, the whole world, and provides a fantastic set of his strange but awesomely mesmerising music verging on a blend of ambient, progressive, industrial, death metal that only he seems capable of creating. 

Then, later on the Sunday prog metallers Dream Theater putting in another festival performance and again showing why they are pretty much unsurpassed in the field of musicianship

Carcass were also great on the Saturday, paying their dues to the Metallicas and Slayers of the world, then sarcastically and rightfully stating how every other metal band was inspired by them and generally ripping on the music business as a whole.

Later on the Saturday were the iconic Slayer. Although they played a fantastic and incredibly tight set, the soul of the band just seemed to be missing without the now deceased Jeff Hanneman and Dave Lombardo no longer on drums.

Other highlights of the weekend were Alice in Chains, who although on as the last act on the main stage before Metallica, didnt appear to have much on set with them, likely due to the Metallica stage crew needing to invade on AIC's personal space to make way for the behemoth that was due on next? 
Deftones put on a great show, adding a more chilled but none the less heavy vibe, and Airbourne with the stage climbing antics of Joel O'Keeffe along with his AC/DC-esque hard rock.

There were also enough alternative options for those that dont like it too heavy (if thats even a thing?), especially with the likes of Dropkick Murphys, Reel Big Fish and Chaz and Dave, providing their own forms of fun musical relief.

Bruce Dickinson also put in some extra work hours earlier on the Saturday evening, taking part and flying his Fokker Dr1 triplane as part of the Great War Display team, reenacting a dogfight with these
S.E.5a's and a total of 8 aircraft in commemoration of the 100 year anniversary since the start of the First World War.

Unfortunately the slight downside, (this being more of a personal moan at the music business in general) was for such an iconic event at a venue that had gone off the radar for the previous couple of years it seems so have become even more regulated and commercialised which is a trend that only appears to be increasing in modern times. Food and drink at an extortionate price rendering any younger guys and gals, that saved up money from a weekend job to see their musical heroes, likely to want to starve in favour of a beer. The swarm of police everywhere, that you cant help feeling would be better off somewhere solving crimes, and even the regulations from the standard security personnel... being hounded for a press pass because I had a camera slightly bigger than an normal point and click job!

Anyway, gripes aside this truly was a good show, one for the 'I remember when Maiden and Metallica played Knebworth' conversations in years to come...

Monday, 2 December 2013

heavy metal finance

Pop is big business right? The likes of Cowell and his cronies link arms with advertisers and roll out a grey carpet of blandness worth a fortune, inticing yet another young mind to want a slice of the fame cake.
Rock on the other hand with declining CD sales and burdgeoning tour costs walks into a slow decline right?
Wrong !
A report called "1,000 Companies to Inspire Britain" published by the London Stock Exchange have named Iron Maiden LLP (limited liability partnership) as one of the fastest-growing music companies in the UK, would make Cowell froth at the mouth to get himself a piece of this action.

    *The Guardian reports Iron Maiden fall into the £10-20m earning bracket, using billions of real-time data from sources such as email traffic, financial transactions, PCs on the web and office space.

    According to Musicmetric, in the 12 months ending 31 May 2012, the band attracted more than 3.1 million social media fans; during the course of their Maiden England world tour, which ran from June 2012 to October 2013, their fanbase grew by 5 million online fans, with their popularity increasing markedly in South America.

    Iron Maiden's BitTorrent data suggests Brazil is a huge driver of fans – and given Brazil is one of the biggest file sharing nations on the planet, this is a strong indicator of popularity," said Greg Mead, CEO and co-founder of Musicmetric. "With their constant touring, [the] report suggests Maiden have been rather successful in turning free file-sharing into fee-paying fans. This is clear proof that taking a global approach to live touring can pay off, and that having the data to track where your fan bases lie will become ever more vital.*

As the iron machine rolls on with the economy of a small country no one in UK popular culture talks about the hidden giant that is heavy metal. The TV has little to broadcast about it. The pop shows steadfastly ignore it's relevance. The knighthoods and the plaudits land elsewhere.
Here at their last date of the 2013 Maiden England tour at the Estadio Nacional Chile, thousands watch the tiny figures on a distant stage and chant every word of the song. The resulting clip will be posted amongst a thousand others and have an advert placed on it. Just like every clip does of Iron Maiden.
It is a new age of heavy metal finance.

* via hennemusic

Tuesday, 6 August 2013

maiden england


Last weekend saw England's biggest metal band return to their roots and perform the two final concerts of their latest European tour. The first date which was initially announced during the bands headline performance at Download 2013 was sold out in a matter of minutes following the release of the tickets on the morning of 28th June. A second date for the following day was added shortly after, which was to be the final date of the latest Maiden England tour at London's O2 Arena. The tour marks the 25th anniversary of the band's Seventh Son of a Seventh Son album, and essentially feels like a follow up to 2008's Somewhere Back in Time tour.

Attending on the Sunday, the O2 swiftly filled up with a mass of black tshirts adorned with the bands signature artwork from a collective of historical albums, some 20,000 fans eagerly await the presence of metals greatest custodians who were about to perform another unforgettable concert in their 30 year plus career. A setlist filled with early fan favourites and Maiden epics alike, and the band being on razor sharp form, this was truly a performance not to disappoint.


Personal highlights included the 21st century rendition of the now triple guitar barrage of the 1980 hit Phantom of the Opera, the melodic/heavy/melodic war epic Afraid to Shoot Strangers and the masterful performance of the epic title track from 1988's Seventh Son of a Seventh Son.

A couple of funny turn ups at the event, apparently Bruce Forsyth of all people was at Saturday's show in the crowd. Also, Bruce Dickinson had a dig at the New Musical Express, who are difficult to  consider as a decent source of music journalism at the best of times! I wasnt aware (being a non-NME reader) that after Download festival one of NME's writers referred to the Spitfire flypast at the start of Maiden's set as "a replica of World War II Spitfire fighter jet", but Bruce summed up the writer in question perfectly, as "a fucking dickhead"


With a flawless performance from the band, Bruce's trademark stage antics brandishing a Union Jack flag and a Spitfire pilot in the audience, Iron Maiden once again prove that they are not only a genre defining band with a 30 year legacy, but part of our heritage.

Sunday, 16 June 2013

download festival 2013

Saturday 15th. Visiting Vikings oversee Motorhead

Iron Maiden headlined the main stage, and how did the worlds biggest metal band open the show? With nothing less than a flypast from a Spitfire! (Bruce Dickinson not pilot)

..but down at the Isle of Wight Festival on Saturday night there's a shock for all. No rain!

Friday, 14 June 2013

download festival / isle of wight 2013

The rainy season festival season in the UK gets underway for real this weekend with two of the big hitters being held over the weekend, the Download Festival at Donnington Park and the Isle Of Wight Festival at Newport.

As the UK's College's and University's wind up after the end of year exams many of the besieged students will be making their annual escape to one of the venues in the hope it will be a carefree and uplifting experience as all good festivals should be. Despite the usual madness of testing the UK's weather patterns to remain sunny in June for more than an hour the roads and railways will be the usual clogged exodus of waterproofed and booted fans facing their test of faith in both events. One lot heading to the north midlands Donnington Park the other heading south to the Isle of Wight.

So what's on offer this year? While Donnington is staging more bands than you could possibly see over a weekend the Saturday night looks set for a power overload with rock monsters Alice In Chains, Motorhead, Queens Of The Stone Age and Iron Maiden. This lineup may register on the Richter scale sometime during the evening so all those in Leicestershire and surrounds would do well to find bunkers.

Down at the Isle Of Wight the headline show on Saturday is sedate by comparison with the Killers headlining Saturday and on Sunday, Bon Jovi. Although you suspect the main focus of the weekend will be on Friday night with The Stone Roses who have had huge gigs in the UK recently and greeted with much excitement by press and fans.
The odd thing with the Isle Of Wight this year seems to be the resurfacing of some old bands not seen for years. How they'll fare with an audience of some generations difference could go either way. Bob Geldof and the Boomtown Rats? Steve Harley and Cockney Rebel? Ian Hunter?.. man, these are bands most fans grandparents will know never mind their parents.

But it's all up for grabs once more.. there will be some bands that shouldn't have bothered and some who will sweep all before them.
We'll bring some updates as the weekend unfolds. Our moneys on the Download Festival being the storm bringer.


Wednesday, 13 March 2013

clive burr


Former Iron Maiden drummer, Clive Burr, sadly passed away last night. Iron Maiden have made an announcement regarding their former band mate on the official Iron Maiden website, which can be read here

Clive Burr was the drummer for Iron Maiden on their first three albums in the early 1980's, and previous to this had played with the band Samson, who Bruce Dickinson was also the vocalist for after Burr had left to join Iron Maiden. Following Burr's departure from Iron Maiden due to personal and touring problems he briefly went on to become the drummer for French band Trust, essentially switching places with his replacement drummer in Iron Maiden, Nicko McBrain. 

Burr went on to perform with other bands but was diagnosed with MS which ended up leaving him in a large amount of debt. Iron Maiden went on to form the Clive Burr Trust and following this Clive Aid was set up staging concerts around the world to raise money and awareness for multiple sclerosis. 

Here is a video of Iron Maiden in 1982 with an iconic performance from Clive Burr on Run to the Hills

Monday, 17 December 2012

the prisoner

Iron Maiden's 1982 album, The Number of The Beast, included a song 'The Prisoner'. The song was inspired by the TV show of the same name, starring Patrick McGoohan and the band wanted to use the now famous dialogue used in the titles of the TV show. Rob Smallwood, the bands manager, had to call Patrick McGoohan to ask permission to use the dialogue for the opening of the song. Smallwood had a hesitant conversation with McGoohan who is reported to have said "What did you say the name was? A rock band, you say? Do it."

Thursday, 22 March 2012

the number of the beast

30 years ago today an album was released that would go down in metal history as arguably one of, if not the greatest metal album of all time. Iron Maiden's third album was the debut of singer Bruce Dickinson with the band and an instant classic, with some of the songs being played at nearly every Maiden concert since its release.

Here is the title track performed at the 2001 Rock in Rio festival... Up the Irons \m/



Wednesday, 8 February 2012

bruce dickinson

friday 20th February 2014

update : bruce dickinson treated for cancer


Iron Maiden have released a statement on their official site stating that singer Bruce Dickinson has been treated for cancer at the back of his tongue. Bruce has been undergoing treatment for the last seven weeks and as the cancerous tumour was caught early, the prognosis for a full recovery is looking good. 

The official statement from Iron Maiden can be read here

The band intend on updating us with another statement by the end of may.

 Get well Bruce, hope to see you on the road again soon!
_________________________________________________________________

wednesday 8th February 2012

When not flying airliners, writing books, presenting tv and radio shows, competing in international fencing competitions, saving stranded holidaymakers, or even fronting possibly the greatest heavy metal band in the world, Bruce Dickinson also has a back catalogue of solo releases away from Iron Maiden but just as awesome in their own right.
Here is Bruce performing Tears of the Dragon, a track taken from his first solo album after officially leaving Iron Maiden in the early 90's, The band is the Brazilian metal band Tribuzy with Roy Z on guitar who has performed on many of Bruce's solo records. Bruce casually walks out on stage looking like he's about to go for a jog and then goes on to deliver a phenomenal performance again proving why he is arguably the greatest frontman in metal history!


Thursday, 18 August 2011

iron maiden

Iron Maiden recently completed the final night of their latest world tour for their 15th studio album at the O2 arena in London. This video taken during the 2008 Somewhere Back In Time World Tour shows how after being around for over 30 years, Iron Maiden are still the greatest metal band in existence...