Jump to content

Iron Maiden: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Line 119: Line 119:
In November 2006, Iron Maiden and manager Rod Smallwood announced that they were cutting off their 27 year old ties with Sanctuary Music and have started a new company named Phantom Music Management. Smallwood said:
In November 2006, Iron Maiden and manager Rod Smallwood announced that they were cutting off their 27 year old ties with Sanctuary Music and have started a new company named Phantom Music Management. Smallwood said:


:I formed Sanctuary in 1979 and named it after the Maiden song, so it's a bit of a wrench leaving after all these years. However in the latter stages of my career I want to be able to fully concentrate on and enjoy managing Maiden without being distracted by other areas of the business. As you all know we have an awful lot going on and we have many exciting plans for the future. The forthcoming European Tour will be incredible and l want to be at as many of the concerts as possible to enjoy the feeling l think you can only really get at a Maiden show! My new company is called Phantom and no prizes for guessing where that came from. Don't worry — it's Maiden business as usual!! 6.7 million albums in 2000 alone.{{cn}}\[http://www.ironmaiden.com/homepage.php?section=0&subsection=0]
:I formed Sanctuary in 1979 and named it after the Maiden song, so it's a bit of a wrench leaving after all these years. However in the latter stages of my career I want to be able to fully concentrate on and enjoy managing Maiden without being distracted by other areas of the business. As you all know we have an awful lot going on and we have many exciting plans for the future. The forthcoming European Tour will be incredible and l want to be at as many of the concerts as possible to enjoy the feeling l think you can only really get at a Maiden show! My new company is called Phantom and no prizes for guessing where that came from. Don't worry — it's Maiden business as usual!! 6.7 million albums in 2000 alone.[http://www.ironmaiden.com/homepage.php?section=0&subsection=0]


Upon release in the USA Singles chart, the single "Different World" debuted at number 8. It is due for release in Europe on 26 December 2006.
Upon release in the USA Singles chart, the single "Different World" debuted at number 8. It is due for release in Europe on 26 December 2006.

Revision as of 01:13, 5 January 2007

Iron Maiden

Iron Maiden are an English heavy metal band from east London. The band were formed in 1975 by bassist Steve Harris, who was formerly a member of Gypsy's Kiss and Smiler. Iron Maiden are one of the most successful and influential bands in the heavy metal genre, having sold more than 70 million albums world-wide. The band won the Ivor Novello award for international achievement in 2002.[1]

The band have written many songs based on folklore, movies and books, such as "The Wickerman", "The Prisoner", "Where Eagles Dare", "To Tame a Land" and "Rime of the Ancient Mariner" (based on Samuel Taylor Coleridge's poem). Iron Maiden have headlined several major events in its career, notably Rock in Rio, Ozzfest alongside Black Sabbath, Donington's famous "Monsters of Rock", "Download" Festivals and the "Reading and Leeds Festivals."

Iron Maiden's mascot, Eddie, is a perennial fixture in the band's horror-influenced album cover art, as well as in live shows. Eddie was drawn by Derek Riggs until 1992, but has had various incarnations by numerous artists, the most notable being Melvyn Grant. Eddie is also featured in a first-person shooter video game and best-of album – Ed Hunter – as well as numerous books, graphic comics and band-related merchandise.

History

Eddie, the iconic mascot of the band, has been featured on the artwork of almost every album and single. It also appears in various videos such as "Women In Uniform". He is also the mascot of Brazillian Football organized supporters group "Força Jovem Vasco".

The road from formation to the present started on Christmas Day 1975, shortly after bassist Steve Harris had formed his own band after his bandmates in the group Smiler had rejected many of his original songs. 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 medieval torture device.[2]

Steve Harris and guitarist Dave Murray remain the longest surviving members of Iron Maiden. The band had twelve different line-ups in the 1970s, paying their dues on the mostly punk club circuit in London's rough East End area of Manor Park in a pub called the Ruskin Arms, while struggling to form a stable lineup of band members. Although Iron Maiden were a metal band influenced by Thin Lizzy, Queen, Deep Purple, Led Zeppelin, Black Sabbath, UFO, Yes, Wishbone Ash and Apocalypse, its earlier music had undoubted punk overtones. Lacking "enough energy or charisma onstage",[3] original vocalist Paul Day became replaced by the outlandish Dennis Wilcock, a huge KISS fan who utilized fire, make-up and fake blood during live performances. Wilcock's friend, Murray, was invited to join, to the frustration of guitarists Dave Sullivan and Terry Rance.[4] This fuelled Harris to temporarily split the band in the Winter of 1976,[4] though the group reformed soon after with Murray as sole axeman.

Maiden recruited another guitarist in 1977, Bob Sawyer, who caused a rift between Murray and Wilcock, prompting Harris to sack both Murray and Sawyer.[5] A disastrous gig at the Bridgehouse in November 1977, with a makeshift line-up including Tony Moore on keyboards, Terry Wrapram on guitar, and drummer Barry Purkis (later rechristened 'Thunderstick') resulted in Harris sacking the entire band.[6] Dave Murray was reinstated and Doug Sampson was drafted in as drummer.

Star Studios in Bow, London played host to three rehearsals a week throughout the Summer and Autumn of 1978.[7] A chance meeting at the Red Lion pub in Leytonstone evolved into a successful audition for punky vocalist Paul Di'Anno. Steve Harris reflected; There's sort of a quality in Paul's voice, a raspiness in his voice, or whatever you want to call it, that just gave it this great edge.[8]"

Iron Maiden had been playing for three years, but had never recorded any of their music. On New Year's Eve of 1978, the band recorded one of the most famous demos in hard rock history,[9] The Soundhouse Tapes. Featuring only three songs, and a four-piece (all subsequent recordings featured a five-piece until 1999 when the band became a six-piece) the band sold all five thousand copies within weeks.[10] One track found upon the demo, "Prowler", went to number one on Neal Kay's Heavy Metal Soundhouse charts in Sounds magazine.[11] Their first appearance on an album was on the compilation Metal for Muthas (released on 15 February 1980) with two early versions of "Sanctuary" and "Wrathchild".

For most of 1977 and all of 1978, Murray was the sole six-stringer in the band. This changed with the arrival of Paul Cairns in 1979. Shortly before going into the studio, Cairns left the band and several other guitarists played alongside Murray until the band finally settled on Dennis Stratton. Initially, the band wanted to hire Dave Murray's childhood friend Adrian Smith, but Smith was busy singing and playing guitar for his own band, Urchin.[12] Drummer Doug Sampson was also replaced by Clive Burr (who was brought into the band by Stratton), and in December 1979, the band landed a major record deal by signing an EMI contract at the label's old building in London's Manchester Square.[13]

Initial success

The eponymous 1980 release, Iron Maiden, made number 4 on the UK charts in its first week of release,[14] and the group became one of the leading proponents of the New Wave of British Heavy Metal.[15] The band went on to open for KISS on their 1980 Unmasked tour, as well as opening select dates for the legendary Judas Priest. After the KISS tour, Dennis Stratton was fired from the band as a result of creative and personal differences.[16] The timing was right for the arrival of guitarist Adrian Smith.

Smith brought a sharp, staccato sound to Iron Maiden. His tight, experimental style was the complete opposite of Murray's smooth, rapid take on blues. One of Iron Maiden's trademarks is the double "twin lead" harmonising guitar stylings of Murray and Smith, a style pioneered by Wishbone Ash and Thin Lizzy, and developed further by Judas Priest and Iron Maiden.[citation needed]

In 1981, Maiden released their second album, titled Killers. This new album contained many tracks that had been penned prior to the release of the debut album, but were considered surplus. With songs already shaped on the road well in advance, only three new tracks were written for the album; "Prodigal Son", "Murders in the Rue Morgue" and "Killers".[17]

The next level

Like many bands, Maiden consumed a large amount of alcohol in their early days.[18] However, most members dabbled very little in other drugs, with Steve Harris never taking them at all.[19] The exception was vocalist Paul Di'Anno, who demonstrated increasingly self-destructive behaviour, particularly through cocaine usage.[20] His performances began to suffer, just as the band was beginning to achieve large-scale success in America. At the end of 1981 the band replaced Di'Anno with former Samson vocalist Bruce Dickinson. Legendary DJ Tommy Vance had told Dickinson not to join the band – advice which was ignored. Dickinson's debut with Iron Maiden was 1982's The Number of the Beast, an album that claimed the band their first ever UK number 1 record[21] and additionally became a Top Ten hit in many other countries.[22] For the second time the band went on a world tour, visiting the United States, Canada, Japan and Australia. The tour's US leg was marred (or perhaps promoted) by controversy stemming from an American right-wing political pressure group that claimed Iron Maiden was a Satanic group because of the album's title track, [22] ostensibly concerning a nightmare Steve Harris suffered.[23] Iron Maiden members' attempts to deflect the criticism failed to dampen persistent accusations. A group of Christian activists destroyed the band's records (along with those of Ozzy Osbourne) by burning them in a large fire. However, these accusations of Satanism were largely based on misinterpretation of the song, or fear of the aggressive, energetic nature of the music. Iron Maiden's current drummer, Nicko McBrain, is a born-again Christian, and is happy to play the song, which he sees as a warning against Satanism.[23]

On the same tour, producer Martin Birch was involved in a car accident with a group of church-goers. Coincidentally, the bill for the repair came to £666, a figure which Birch refused to pay, instead opting for a higher amount.[24]

Actor Patrick McGoohan was accommodating when a request was made to allow the band to use a spoken intro from the cult TV series, The Prisoner, in which McGoohan was the lead actor, producer and series writer. McGoohan was a big name in 1982, and Iron Maiden manager Rod Smallwood was nervous about making the request. The conversation between McGoohan and Smallwood allegedly went:

McGoohan: "What did you say the name of the band was again?"
Smallwood: "Iron Maiden"
McGoohan: "A rock band, you say...do it![25]"
Cover from Powerslave album

Before heading back into the studio in 1983, the band replaced drummer Clive Burr with Nicko McBrain and went on to release four albums which went multi-platinum world-wide: the dark and ultra-heavy Piece of Mind, featuring "Flight of Icarus" and "The Trooper" (1983), Powerslave featuring "2 Minutes to Midnight", "Aces High", and "Rime of the Ancient Mariner" (1984), the double-live album Live After Death (1985), and the experimental, Adrian Smith-led Somewhere in Time (1986) featuring "Wasted Years."

Satanic accusations persisted - there was a lot of controversy about occult messages in many bands' music at the time, normally discovered by playing the offending track backwards. On the Piece of Mind album, a backward message was placed at the start of the track "Still Life" as a kind of internal joke. Reverse this track, and you will hear drummer McBrain clearly saying "Hmm, Hmmm, what ho sed de t'ing wid de t'ree bonce. Don't meddle wid t'ings you don't understand",[26] followed by a belch. McBrain later admitted this to be his "famous" impression of Idi Amin Dada. It translates to the following: "'What ho,' said the monster with the three heads, 'don't meddle with things you don't understand.[26]'"

Also on the Piece of Mind album, renowned author Frank Herbert came into conflict with the band when they wanted to record a song named after the book Dune. Not only did Herbert refuse to allow the song to be called "Dune", he also refused to allow a spoken quotation from the book to appear as the track's intro. Bass player Steve Harris's request was met with a stern reply from the agent: "No. Because Frank Herbert doesn't like rock bands, particularly heavy rock bands, and especially rock bands like Iron Maiden".[27] This statement was backed up with a legal threat, and eventually the song was renamed "To Tame a Land" and released in 1983.

Experimentation

In 1986, the band tried a different approach for their sixth studio album, titled Somewhere in Time. This was not a concept album, though it was themed loosely around the idea of time travel. It featured for the first time in the band's history synthetics for the bass/strings and for the guitars to add textures and layers to the sound. Though considered different from the norm of Maiden sounds, it charted well across the world and is still regarded a part of Iron Maiden's 'golden era' (from The Number of the Beast through Seventh Son of a Seventh Son).

This experimentation led to the more refined Seventh Son of a Seventh Son follow-up album. Adding to Maiden's experimentation, it was a concept album featuring a story about a mythical child who possessed clairvoyant powers based on the book Seventh Son by Orson Scott Card.[citation needed].

For the first time, the band used keyboards on a recording (as opposed to guitar synths on the previous release). In the opinion of some critics, this produced a more accessible release.[citation needed] The band also headlined the annual Monsters of Rock Festival for the first time this year. The 1990 edition of the Guinness Book of Records contains the following entry:

"Largest PA system: On Aug 20th 1988 at the Castle Donington "Monsters of Rock" Festival a total of 360 Turbosound cabinets offering a potential 523kW of programme power, formed the largest front-of-house PA. The average Sound Pressure Level at the mixing tower was 118dB, peaking at a maximum of 124 dB during Iron Maiden's set. It took five days to set up the system."[citation needed]

To close off their first ten years of releasing singles, Iron Maiden released The First Ten Years, a series of ten cds and double 12" vinyls. Between February 24 and April 28 1990, the individual parts were released one by one, and each contains two of Iron Maiden's singles, including the b-sides, along with a part of "Listen With Nicko!"

Decline

For the first time in seven years, the band had a line-up change with the departure of guitarist/backing vocalist Adrian Smith. Former Gillan guitarist Janick Gers was chosen to replace Smith, and in 1990 they released the raw sounding album No Prayer for the Dying. This album went back to the heavy style of the band. This album featured one last song co-penned by Adrian Smith with Bruce Dickinson, "Hooks in You", despite Smith's having not been involved in the band after Seventh Son of a Seventh Son. Vocalist Bruce Dickinson also began experimenting with a raspier style of singing that was a marked departure from his trademark operatic style. Nonetheless, the band obtained their first (and to date, only) number one hit single "Bring Your Daughter to the Slaughter". It was released on December 24, 1990, and was one of the first records to be released on several different formats with different B-sides, thus encouraging fans to buy several copies. The single holds the record for being the fastest release straight in to number one and straight out of the charts again over the following couple of weeks. The song was originally penned and recorded by Bruce Dickinson for the soundtrack to A Nightmare on Elm Street 5: The Dream Child.[citation needed]

Before the release of No Prayer for the Dying, Bruce Dickinson officially launched a solo career alongside Iron Maiden, with Gers as guitarist. Dickinson performed a solo tour in 1991 before returning to the studio with Iron Maiden for the album Fear of the Dark. Released in 1992, the album had several songs which were popular amongst fans, such as the title track and "Afraid to Shoot Strangers".

In 1993 Bruce Dickinson left the band to further pursue his solo career. However, Bruce agreed to stay with the band for a farewell tour and two live albums (later re-released in one package). The first, A Real Live One, featured songs from 1986 to 1992, and was released in March 1993. The second, A Real Dead One, featured songs from 1975 to 1984, and was released after Bruce had left the band. He played his farewell show with Iron Maiden on August 28, 1993. The show was filmed, broadcast by the BBC, and released on video under the name Raising Hell. Magician Simon Drake performed grisly illusions on the performance, culminating in Dickinson's "death" in an Iron Maiden.

Winds of change

The band auditioned hundreds of vocalists, both unknown and famous (among them Doogie White of Rainbow[28]), James LaBrie of Dream Theater was one of the vocalists considered.[citation needed] They finally chose Blaze Bayley in 1994, formerly of Wolfsbane. Bayley had an altogether different style to his predecessor, which received a mixed reception amongst fans. After a three year hiatus, Maiden returned in 1995 with the 70+ minute-long album The X Factor. The album was generally seen as having dark, brooding songs that seemed more melancholy and introspective than usual. Chief songwriter Steve Harris was going through serious personal problems at the time with the break-up of his marriage and the loss of his father and many feel the album's sound is a reflection of this.[citation needed] The 11-minute epic "Sign of the Cross", opening the album, is perhaps the stand-out track, and even Bayley's detractors tend to recognise it as a classic. The first concert supporting the new album took place on September 28, 1995 in Jerusalem, Israel.

The band spent most of 1996 on the road before returning to the studio for Virtual XI (1998). The album contained few notable tracks, with only "The Clansman" and "Futureal" surviving on future tours, and chart positions were observably lower. One of the most criticized tracks was the single "The Angel and the Gambler", which was all that many people heard of the album before deciding not to buy it. Virtual XI failed to reach the one million mark in worldwide sales for the first time, and thus sounded Bayley's death knell.

Reunion

File:BluceD.jpg
Bruce Dickinson left the band in 1993, before returning in 1999

In February 1999, Bayley left the band, apparently by mutual consent. The main reason for his departure was his inconsistent onstage performance - Blaze's voice was not up to the rigours of a full-on Maiden tour. At the same time, the band shocked their fans when they announced that both Bruce Dickinson and guitarist Adrian Smith were rejoining the band, which meant the classic 1980s lineup was back in place - plus Janick Gers, who would remain. Iron Maiden now had three guitarists for the first time since the early days of Maiden, and a successful reunion tour followed.

The new millennium

In 2000, a more progressive period began for the band, commencing with the release of the Brave New World album. The world tour that followed ended in January 2001 with a show at the famous Rock in Rio festival in Brazil, where Iron Maiden played to an impressive crowd of 250,000. 2003's Dance of Death followed, then in 2005, Iron Maiden announced a tour to commemorate the 25th anniversary of the release of their first album and the 30th anniversary of their formation. The "Number of the Beast" single was re-released, which went straight to number three in the UK charts, and the band hit the road to support the 2004 DVD entitled The Early Days, playing only older material.

2 Minutes to Midnight appeared in the 2002 videogame Grand Theft Auto: Vice City, playing on Rock station V-Rock.

Ozzfest incident

File:Steve Harris Ozzfest Incident.jpg
Steve Harris on stage after being pelted with eggs at Ozzfest August 20, 2005

At Iron Maiden's last Ozzfest performance (August 20th 2005 at the Hyundai Pavilion at Glen Helen in San Bernardino, CA), the band's sound was turned off several times, eggs were thrown towards the stage, and chants of "Ozzy" were shouted through the PA system. This was the work of Sharon Osbourne, who took to the stage and proceeded to call Bruce Dickinson "a prick" after they performed their encore, followed by a large portion of the crowd booing her off the stage.[29] The band completed its summer tour by headlining the Reading and Leeds weekend festivals on the 26th[30] and 28th August 2005,[31] playing classics from the first four studio albums to a combined audience of approximately 120,000. The final gig took place in London at the famous Hammersmith Odeon (now Apollo) in early September 2005. For the second time, the band played a charity gig for former drummer Clive Burr.

A live album entitled Death on the Road was released on August 30 2005.

A Matter of Life and Death

A Matter of Life and Death album cover

Iron Maiden's 14th studio album named A Matter of Life and Death was released worldwide on the 28 August 2006 (5 September for the US and 29th August for Canada). It was preceded by the "The Reincarnation of Benjamin Breeg" single on August 14. The album was once again produced by Kevin Shirley, and is the longest Iron Maiden album to date. The album is not a concept album, but six songs directly revolve around war and four around religion (some overlapping takes place) and these two themes shade every piece of the album; this is likely Maiden's most serious lyrical effort. The music is often described as a cross between Dance of Death, The X Factor, and Bruce Dickinson's late nineties solo material, and seven of the songs could qualify as epics by general metal standards.

Anticipating the release, the official website released two songs in streaming audio on August 10 and 11. The album topped the charts in ten countries, and entered the American charts in the Top 10 for the first time since album sales could be properly counted (i.e., 1991).

The album won the Classic Rock 2006 — Album of the Year Award, voted for by Classic Rock's fans.

Near Future Performances

During the A Matter of Life and Death tour as well as afterwards, additional performances in the near future have been mentioned. For example, at multiple dates towards the end of the tour frontman Bruce Dickinson hinted that Iron Maiden may be playing at Donington in 2007. On December 22, a message was posted on their official website confirming that they would be playing at the Dubai Desert Rock Festival on March 9 2007, which will be the first time the band have ever played there. [32] During the Copenhagen show on Thursday 28th December, Bruce Dickinson mentioned that Maiden would be "bringing back the 80's egyptian thing in 2008" (apparently referring to their Powerslave album). This could mean a "sequel" to the 2005 "Early Days" Tour and accompanying DVD, which seems to be in line with earlier comments that there would be a tour with songs from after the first four albums.

New company

In November 2006, Iron Maiden and manager Rod Smallwood announced that they were cutting off their 27 year old ties with Sanctuary Music and have started a new company named Phantom Music Management. Smallwood said:

I formed Sanctuary in 1979 and named it after the Maiden song, so it's a bit of a wrench leaving after all these years. However in the latter stages of my career I want to be able to fully concentrate on and enjoy managing Maiden without being distracted by other areas of the business. As you all know we have an awful lot going on and we have many exciting plans for the future. The forthcoming European Tour will be incredible and l want to be at as many of the concerts as possible to enjoy the feeling l think you can only really get at a Maiden show! My new company is called Phantom and no prizes for guessing where that came from. Don't worry — it's Maiden business as usual!! 6.7 million albums in 2000 alone.[2]

Upon release in the USA Singles chart, the single "Different World" debuted at number 8. It is due for release in Europe on 26 December 2006.

Legacy

Iron Maiden were ranked #24 in VH1's "100 Greatest Artists of Hard Rock",[33] and in Kerrang! magazine was ranked as the most important band of the last 25 years.[citation needed] The band were ranked fourth on MTV's "Top 10 Greatest Heavy Metal Bands of All Time".[34] Iron Maiden were named the third best metal band of all time on VH1 Classic: Top 20 Metal Bands. [3]

The band's work has inspired other sub-genres of heavy metal music, including power metal and speed metal and is generally thought of as an influence on any metal music containing dual-guitar harmonisation. Iron Maiden are cited as a major influence by (amongst others) the thrash metal band Slayer, flamenco-metal band Breed 77, pop-punk band Sum 41 and jam band Umphrey's McGee.

Discography

Studio Albums

Singles

  • Year: 2006
  • Song: Different World
  • United Kingdom Top 40: #3

Audio

  • "Phantom of the Opera" Audio file "IronMaidenPhantom.ogg" not found – From the debut album, featuring Paul Di'Anno on vocals.
  • "Run to the Hills" Listen – A top ten hit in the UK, and vocalist Bruce Dickinson's debut.
  • "Caught Somewhere in Time" Listen – This clip showcases the band's trademark twin guitar harmonization/"galloping" bass.
  • "Sign of the Cross" Audio file "IronMaidenSOTC.ogg" not found – The band's third recording vocalist, Blaze Bayley, singing on the opening track from The X Factor album.
  • "Brave New World" Listen – Bruce Dickinson and Adrian Smith return in 2000 to critical acclaim.

Lineup

File:Iron Maiden Steve Harris.jpg
Founding member, Steve Harris
For a complete list, see List of Iron Maiden band members.

Current lineup

Classic Line-up

See also

Notes

  1. ^ "Iron Maiden honoured with Ivor Novello award", 18 September 2002, Sanctuary Group Official Website, at Sanctuarygroup.com; last accessed October 11, 2006.
  2. ^ Barton, Geoff. "BLOOD AND IRON: HM from the punky East End and nothing to do with Margaret Thatcher, sez Deaf Barton", 27 October 1979, Sounds magazine, reported at NWOBHM.com; last accessed October 8, 2006.
  3. ^ Wall, Mick (2001), p. 32.
  4. ^ a b Wall, Mick (2001), p. 33.
  5. ^ Wall, Mick (2001), p. 46.
  6. ^ Wall, Mick (2001), p. 50.
  7. ^ Wall, Mick (2001), p. 52.
  8. ^ Wall, Mick (2001), p. 53.
  9. ^ Fuentes Rodríguez, César (2005), p. 17.
  10. ^ Wall, Mick (2001), p. 104.
  11. ^ Wall, Mick (2001), p. 103.
  12. ^ Wall, Mick (2001), pps. 163-164.
  13. ^ Wall, Mick (2001), p. 108.
  14. ^ Wall, Mick (2001), p. 143.
  15. ^ Fuentes Rodríguez, César (2005), pps. 19-21.
  16. ^ Hinchcliffe, Jon. "Dennis Stratton Interview: Oct 1999", 27 October 1999, at Praying-Mantis.com; last accessed October 8, 2006.
  17. ^ Wall, Mick (2001), p. 183.
  18. ^ Wright, Jeb. "Classic Rock Revisited presents an exclusive interview with... Paul Di'anno", March 2005, at ClassicRockRevisited.com; last accessed October 8 2006.
  19. ^ Wall, Mick (2001), p. 194.
  20. ^ Siva, Shan. "Paul Di'anno", at BattleHelm.com; last accessed October 8, 2006.
  21. ^ Wall, Mick (2001), p. 227.
  22. ^ a b Wall, Mick (2001), p. 228.
  23. ^ a b Martin, Geoff. "Iron Maiden undergoes a renaissance", 18 September 2006, at Canada.com; last accessed October 18, 2006.
  24. ^ Baddeley, Gavin (1999), p. 121.
  25. ^ Wall, Mick (2001), p. 227.
  26. ^ a b Wall, Mick (2001), p. 246. Cite error: The named reference "Wall246" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  27. ^ Wall, Mick (2001), p. 244.
  28. ^ The Official Doogie White Webpage, "Biography & Bands", 2004, Doogie White's Official Website, reported at Archive.org; last accessed October 8, 2006.
  29. ^ Harris, Chris. "Iron Maiden Pelted With Eggs At Final Ozzfest Performance", 22 August 2005, at MTV.com; last accessed October 7, 2006.
  30. ^ Williams, Scott. "Iron Maiden Reading 2005 Review", 31 August 2005, at EFestivals.com; last accessed October 11, 2006.
  31. ^ NME's Official Website, "Iron Maiden rise above Osbourne's drama at Leeds", 2005, at NME.com; last accessed October 11, 2006.
  32. ^ "IRON MAIDEN CONFIRM HEADLINE APPEARANCE ON DUBAI DESERT ROCK FESTIVAL", 22 December 2006, Iron Maiden Official Website, at [1]; last accessed December 26, 2007.
  33. ^ VH1's Official Website, "100 Greatest Artists of Hard Rock", at VH1.com; last accessed October 7, 2006.
  34. ^ MTV's Official Website, "The Greatest Metal Bands of All Time", 2006, at MTV.com; last accessed October 7, 2006.
http://www.maidenfans.com/index.php?ACT=module&name=rwnews&cid=1

References

  • Fuentes Rodríguez, César (2005). Iron Maiden: El Viaje De La Doncella. ISBN 84-933891-2-9. Template:Es icon
  • Gamba, Marco; Visintini, Nicola (2000). Iron Maiden Companion (1st ed.). Moving Media & Arts.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • "Iron Maiden Official Homepage". Official Homepage. Retrieved January 28. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  • Twelve Wasted Years (VHS). UK. 1996. {{cite AV media}}: Unknown parameter |crew= ignored (help); Unknown parameter |distributor= ignored (|publisher= suggested) (help) ISBN 6301092643
  • Iron Maiden - The Early Years (DVD). UK. 2004. {{cite AV media}}: Unknown parameter |crew= ignored (help); Unknown parameter |distributor= ignored (|publisher= suggested) (help) ASIN B0006B29Z2
  • Wall, Mick; Ling, Dave (2001). Iron Maiden, the Authorized Biography (2nd ed.). Sanctuary Publishing. ISBN 1-86074-287-4.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Baddeley, Gavin (1999). Lucifer Rising: Sin, Devil Worship & Rock 'n' Roll (1st ed.). Plexus Publishing. ISBN 0-85965-280-7.

Further reading

  • Bushell, Gary and Halfin, Ross (1985). Running Free: The Official Story of Iron Maiden. ISBN 0-946391-50-5
  • Halfin, Ross (1988). What Are We Doing This For?: A Photographic History. ISBN 0-946391-65-3
  • Stenning, Paul (2006). "Iron Maiden": 30 Years of the Beast - The Complete Unauthorised Biography. ISBN 1-84240-361-3

Template:Link FA Template:Link FA