Iron Maiden (the band)
Created | Updated Jan 28, 2002
Paul Day (vocals)
Terry Rance (guitar)
Dave Sullivan (guitar)
Ron 'Rebel' Matthews (drums)
Steve Harris (bass guitar)
However, the lineup changed frequently over the following four years. Members were fired, or quit for various reasons. Since it's beginning, Iron Maiden has had 18 different band members.
They made a name for themselves in the East End of London. The first pivitol moment for them was in June 1977, when Dave Murray joined the band (which was now minus Day, Rance and Sullivan). Murray was to become one of the more permanant members of the band. He was fired in '78 after a tiff with singer Dennis Wilcock (Paul Day's replacement), but joined back a few months later.
It started off as pub gigs and things like that. As they made a name for themselves, they ended up doing bigger jobs (like the Marquee in '79). But the big break was when their first album was released in 1980.
By now Iron Maiden had been identified as probably the biggest name in the new music scene, the New Wave Of British Heavy Metal (NWOBHM).
Manager Rod Smallwood had secured a record deal with EMI, and the self-titled album Iron Maiden was released. It stormed the charts at #3. The lineup by now was:
Paul Di'Anno (vocals)
Dave Murray (guitar)
Dennis Stratton (guitar)
Clive Burr (drums)
Steve Harris (bass)
Album two, Killers, didn't do as well as Iron Maiden but was still a success. The tour for that album revealed a problem for the band: Di'Anno. He was a reckless maverick, and the band had known about this before. He would cause trouble and get the band into bad situations. In the Killers tour, he would pretend to be ill and crash out after gigs. Thus the band had had to cancel some of the German dates. Eventually Paul was fired (or a 'shock dismissal' as the band called it), and was replaced with Samson's Bruce Dickinson (or Bruce Bruce as known on stage).
The first album recorded with Bruce was The Number Of The Beast, released in 1982. It was their biggest hit yet. It earned them gold albums in the UK and America, and from then on the band was never in any financial trouble. The song The Number Of The Beast was Maiden's first #1 hit.
The Beast On The Road tour was a gruelling 180 date over 8 months, and was pretty hard on the band. It was hard work for them and they learned a few lessons about touring. It took it's toll on drummer Clive Burr, who quit. He was replaced with Nicko McBrain, who has remained with Maiden since. Clive went onto Paul's band, Di'Anno.
In 1985, on the World Slavery Tour (for the Powerslave album), Maiden played to their largest ever crowd. 200 000 people at the Rock In Rio Festival.
Over the 80s metal became less fashionable, and was replaced with the electronic boppy music you always hear of nowadays. Despite this, Iron Maiden were still able to sell albums, and do massive tours.
As the tours got more elaborate, so did the band's mascot: Eddie. Eddie is a zombie who appears on every Maiden album/single cover, and he's up there with the band all the time! His first incarnation was in the 70s, when he was a head stuck on a board that had 'Iron Maiden' written on it. When the band played their song 'Iron Maiden' and got to the line "see the blood flow..." fake blood would spurt out of the head and get in the drummer's hair!
On tour, Eddie was first a bloke with a mask on who ran around scaring everyone. On Beast On The Road he was 9ft tall. Somewhere On Tour, an inflatable Eddie lifted Nicko McBrain and his drums up over the rest of the band. Time went on, Eddie got bigger and better...
As time went on band members came and went, but not as often as it was in the 70s.
Adrian with replaced with Janick Gers in 1990, just before No Prayer For The Dying. Adrian went onto a solo career and was in the band Psycho Motel from 1995.
In March 1993 Bruce quit. He too followed a solo career, and was in Skunkworks.
1995 Blaze Bayley joined. Blaze was ex-Wolfsbane, who had supported Maiden in the 1990 UK tour.
February 1999 Blaze left for, yup, a solo career! Adrian and Bruce re-joined.
More recently Iron Maiden songs have been used on Carmageddon 2 and as the basis of Ed Hunter. They are computer games!
Their latest album, Brave New World, comes out late May, early June, along with a single, The Wickerman, which is released on 8th May.