IRON MAIDEN - Legacy Of The Beast

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anselmo
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Re: IRON MAIDEN - Maiden England 2013

Post by anselmo »

Pientä aprillipilaa eiliseltä, mutta oli niin kova, että piti linkittää eteenpäin näin jälkijättöisesti! :lol:
P.K.
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Re: IRON MAIDEN - Maiden England 2013

Post by P.K. »

Ihan kova läppä. Varsinkin tuo ihan viimeinen heitto, "Paul would be proud!". Todellisuudessa saisi vain uuden syyn kiukutella blabberimouthin tukkoon.
Deathklaat
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Re: IRON MAIDEN - Maiden England 2013

Post by Deathklaat »

P.K. wrote:Ihan kova läppä. Varsinkin tuo ihan viimeinen heitto, "Paul would be proud!".
Minä tykkäsin eniten tästä: "We kicked the tires on this recently and figured, if Di'Anno can tour for thirty years making money playing those songs live and re-recording them...we can just do the 'Manowar' thing and make 2014-2015 a really special time for the fans with three albums to look forward to. Really, we did this for the fans."
Death Metal Maniac
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Re: IRON MAIDEN - Maiden England 2013

Post by Death Metal Maniac »

Myös kevyen suorasukaista vittuilua Manowarin ja muiden re-rekorded classic albumeja tekevien bändien suuntaan. Hymyilin. Kiitos IRON MAIDEN 1980-2014. Olette olleet olemassa koko elämäni mittaisen ajan... ja kauemmankin! Tämä oli paras heviin liittyvä aprillipila. Iron Maiden = Smiles, good times & giant pints!

UP THE IRONS!
anselmo
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Re: IRON MAIDEN - Maiden England 2013

Post by anselmo »

Taisi olla tuon sivuston (metal underground) keksimä pila, mutta oli kieltämättä osuva kohde valittu.
Mane
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Re: IRON MAIDEN - Maiden England 2013

Post by Mane »

Hahhah!!:-D:-D:-D kiitos tuosta postauksesta, Anselmo!! Tuo oli päivän paras läppä!!:-D
Nuclear Holocaust
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Re: IRON MAIDEN - Maiden England 2013

Post by Nuclear Holocaust »

Hyvä läppä :lol:

Ainoa minkä voisi ottaa vähän vakavemmin on tuo 'Powerslave II'. Paluu ainakin biisirakenteiden osalta iskevämpään ja suoraviivaisempaan suuntaan kyseisen ajan tunnelmiin ei välttämättä olisi huono idea. Ei nyt itseään tarvi alkaa kopioimaan, mutta eiköhän tätä haukotuttavaa progemössöä ja stadionrockia kaksi levyllistä riitä.
Death Metal Maniac
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Re: IRON MAIDEN - Maiden England 2013

Post by Death Metal Maniac »

Nuclear Holocaust wrote: Ainoa minkä tuosta voisi ottaa vähän vakavemmin on tuo 'Powerslave II' paluu tuon ajan tunnelmiin ei välttämättä olisi huono idea..
Ihan totta!!! Samaa kelasin kyllä. Mikäli IRON MAIDEN alkaisi tämän läpän myötä oikeasti leikittelemään ajatuksella vakavemmin, ja tekisi oikeasti jotain 80-luvun puolivälin henkistä, ei lopputulos välttämättä olisi täysin kehno... (?) Vaikka onpa nämä kaikenmaailman jatko-osat yleensä + 20 vuotta orkkiksen jälkeen olleet vähän mitä sattuu. Operation:Mindcrime II... ja mitä näitä nyt on. Ei nyt sellaista kiitos.

Blaze Bayleyn paluun Maideniin ja The X Factor II:n kyllä ostaisin mielelläni myöskin. :wink:

Jos Maiden äänittäisi kaksi ekaa levyä kokonaisuudessaan nyky-Maidenin vetämänä, levystä tulisi todella kuriositeetti kamaa. Ei noi esim. vuoden 1988 "Charlotte..." ja "The Prowler" -vetojen perusteella täysin toivottomia olisi... mutta ihan sama miten päin sitä tarkastelisi, joka tapauksessa jotain todella olennaista jäisi aivan varmasti uupumaan, mikäli Maiden oikeasti palaisi niinkin kauas kuin kahden ekan levyn aikaiseen materiaaliin vanhoilla päivillään.

2008 oli sen verran hyvää meininkiä, että Powerslave Kakkonen voisi oikeasti olla jotain aivan ookoo -settiä.

Mutta enpä tiedä.

Ei tällaista kuitenkaan tule, joten ehkä lopetamme tämän ajatuslekin tähän?
StuG
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Re: IRON MAIDEN - Maiden England 2013

Post by StuG »

X-Factorin tummanpuhuvaa tunnelmaa... Maistuisi kyllä. Dickinson pääsisi myös käyttämään ääntään hieman matalemmissa vesissä, eikä tarvitsisi venytellä jo hieman rasittuneita äänijänteitä ylimpiin sfääreihin. Taidanpa laittaa kyseisen x-platan soimaan, yksi maidenin parhaimmista levyistä!
azagthoth
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Re: IRON MAIDEN - Maiden England 2013

Post by azagthoth »

Sattuipa eilen eräällä kirpputorilla vastaan Suosikki 7/1980, jossa on juttu uudesta brittibändistä nimeltä Iron maiden. Kuusrockin tulevaa keikkaa mainostettiin myös ja niin poispäin. Harmi ettei tällä foorumilla voi uploadata kuvaliitteitä viesteihin... :)
Death Metal Maniac
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Re: IRON MAIDEN - Maiden England 2013

Post by Death Metal Maniac »

Onko http://www.dropbox.com sulle tuttu? Pistä vaan skannaten ja meille jaettavaksi!
azagthoth
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Re: IRON MAIDEN - Maiden England 2013

Post by azagthoth »

Warning!!! wrote:Onko http://www.dropbox.com sulle tuttu? Pistä vaan skannaten ja meille jaettavaksi!
On tuttu, ollut käytössä aika monta vuotta. Skanneria en nykyään omista, omistamani skanneri ei enää kelvannut ns. uudemmille Windowseille, ylläri pylläri. Nämä on järjestelmäkameralla otettu (ja jälkikäteen vähän pienennetty), mutta kyllä teksteistä selvän saa. :) (Joskus nämä on kyllä pakko skannata jotenkin jossain.)

https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/129 ... 980_01.jpg
https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/129 ... 980_02.jpg
asa
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Re: IRON MAIDEN - Maiden England 2013

Post by asa »

Warning!!! wrote:Onko http://www.dropbox.com sulle tuttu? Pistä vaan skannaten ja meille jaettavaksi!
Tämäkin artikkeli (+paljon muita) on rautaneidon sivuilla ollut jo ties miten pitkään --> Lehtiartikkelit otsikon alla (oikeassa alakulmassa):
http://www.rautaneito.com/suomi/344
azagthoth
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Re: IRON MAIDEN - Maiden England 2013

Post by azagthoth »

asa wrote:
Warning!!! wrote:Onko http://www.dropbox.com sulle tuttu? Pistä vaan skannaten ja meille jaettavaksi!
Tämäkin artikkeli (+paljon muita) on rautaneidon sivuilla ollut jo ties miten pitkään --> Lehtiartikkelit otsikon alla (oikeassa alakulmassa):
http://www.rautaneito.com/suomi/344
Voe mavonsilimä mitä meninkään tekemään... :twisted:
Pete Bondurant
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Re: IRON MAIDEN - Maiden England 2013

Post by Pete Bondurant »

Iron Maidenin Number of The Beastin nousi Brittein lista ykköseksi tällä päivällä herran vuonna 1982, minkä kunniaksi Classic Rock julkaisee nettisivuillaan oheisen artikkelin:

http://www.classicrockmagazine.com/feat ... ron-maiden

Vaatii rekisteröitymisen CR:n sivuille(mikä ei maksa mitään) eli tässä se ois (jos tätä ei sais jostain syystä tänne postata, niin poistakaa):



In the summer of 1981, Iron Maiden took the decision to fire singer Paul Di’Anno. It was a bold move. The brash, cocksure, 23-year-old East Londoner was a hero to the headbangers, earthdogs, hell rats and rivet-heads whose fanatical support had propelled Maiden to the forefront of the New Wave Of British Heavy Metal.

His expulsion from the band not only marked the end of an era, but also was viewed with a certain amount of unease by long-term supporters. There was genuine concern that, having failed to match the Top 10 success of 1980’s self-titled debut album with the more considered follow-up, 1981’s Killers, Maiden were now thinking about a stylistic makeover more attuned to the lucrative, but notoriously fickle, American rock market.

In December 1981, when the freshly minted Kerrang! magazine published its first Readers’ Poll, Maiden were conspicuous by their absence in the Best Band category. The slight didn’t escape the attention of bassist and founder Steve Harris, but he had more pressing matters to focus on. At the time, Maiden were holed up in an East London rehearsal studio with a new singer, 23-year-old Bruce Dickinson, but as yet no new songs for their crucial third album. The pressure was on the young band as never before. But with their backs to the wall, Maiden responded magnificently.

Just four months later they emerged with The Number Of The Beast, a record that not only redefined their own career, but also served as a benchmark for every heavy metal album that has followed over the past 30 years.

Steve Harris: We knew that it was a big deal to change our singer, but we also knew that we couldn’t carry on with Paul. When he first got involved with the band, Rod [Smallwood, manager] asked me was there any potential problems that might crop up in the future that he should know about. And I said: “I’ve got to be honest. There may be a problem with Paul, because sometimes his attitude is a bit weird”.

Paul Di’Anno: By the time of Killers the band was getting a bit more technical. I didn’t think the songs had the same attack, and I started losing interest. I felt that I might be letting people down by voicing my doubts, so I said nothing. But then it built up to the point where I was rubbing Steve up the wrong way.

Steve Harris: I always thought as the band gets more successful maybe he’ll be more into it. But, if anything, the bigger we got, the worse he got.

Rod Smallwood: Paul started to get a bit into the whole ‘lifestyle’ aspect of being a rock star. And I was like, well you better fucking control it, I’m gonna be watching you. I knew the only thing that could fuck up Maiden was themselves. But Paul was so over-the- top. He started having vocal problems, he smoked like a chimney, he drank brandy, now he’s doing a bit of coke and speed too, and he was missing gigs.

Steve Harris: I’m not into drugs myself, never have been. But I’m not against other people doing what they like – as long as it don’t fuck up their gig. Well, Paul was letting it fuck up his gig.

Paul Di’Anno: When you’re fucked up on drugs and alcohol you turn into a complete prick. But I did feel relief when I played that last gig.

Iron Maiden’s final gig with Di’Anno took place at Odd Fellows Mansion in Copenhagen, Denmark on September 10, 1981. Future Metallica drummer Lars Ulrich was among those in the audience to see him take his final bow. But Steve Harris was already searching for a new singer weeks before Di’Anno was shown the door.

Former Back Street Crawler frontman Terry Slesser was auditioned behind Di’Anno’s back, but his whisky-soaked rasp didn’t gel with Maiden’s more technical material. Harris turned his attention to the flashy, flamboyantly dressed frontman with Maiden’s NWOBHM peers Samson, Worksop-born Bruce Dickinson, aka Bruce Bruce.

Bruce Dickinson: Samson only played a few gig with Maiden on the same bill, but I was acutely aware that they had a big following. I checked them out when Samson were headlining above them at a venue called the Music Machine in London [now Koko]. I got goosebumps watching them. It gave me the same feeling I got as a kid listening to Deep Purple In Rock. I remember thinking, “Wow, this is like Purple for the 80s”. I was looking at Paul, thinking I should be up there.

Steve Harris: I’d never been much into Samson, but I’d always thought their singer was good. I thought, “Yeah, the bloke’s got a really good voice, and he knows how to work a crowd”. I thought he sounded a bit like Ian Gillan, actually. When the shit really hit the fan with Paul, he was one of the first people I thought of. Rod wasn’t keen.

Rod Smallwood: I hadn’t even met Bruce, but I didn’t really like him. I thought Bruce Bruce was a stupid name, I thought the white thing he used to wear on stage looked really naff, and also Samson had messed about with Maiden before I got involved; I do bear grudges.

Steve Harris: I didn’t care, I just thought the geezer had a great voice. So I said, “Stuff that, I want him”. And so we arranged to go to Reading to have a look and see if he was interested.

Bruce Dickinson: Rod talked to me at Reading Festival and said he’d like me to try out. The first words out of my mouth were: “Well when I get the job, which I will, don’t expect that it’ll be the same as with the guy you’ve got at the moment". I thought it was probably best to go in there with all guns blazing.

Bruce Dickinson was officially unveiled as Iron Maiden’s new frontman on stage at the Palasport arena in Bologna, Italy on October 26, 1981. Following a nerve-racking UK debut for the frontman at the Rainbow theatre in London the following month, the band decamped to East London to write their third album. With studio time booked at Battery Studios in North West London in December, the clock was ticking.

Steve Harris: There was a lot of pressure. Not only did we have a new singer, we had no material. The first album was like a ‘best of’ of the songs we’d been playing during the first four years of the band. The second album was mainly early stuff as well, apart from maybe four songs. When we got to the third album we had nothing. We had to write from scratch. Pressure helps to make you come up with the goods. But you have to go through hell to get there.

Adrian Smith [guitarist]: I remember going around to Steve’s place – I think he still lived with his gran at the time – and he was playing me the idea for The Number Of The Beast. I thought: “Wow. That’s amazing. That’s really different”.

Martin Birch [producer]: When Bruce joined, it opened up the possibilities for the new album tremendously. I simply didn’t think Paul was capable of handling vocals on some of the quite complicated directions I knew Steve wanted to explore.

Bruce Dickinson: It was quite good, in that way, because I wasn’t going to be asked to sing words that had already been written by Paul, or songs Steve had written with him in mind. It was all fresh.

Adrian Smith: I was pretty shy about showing the band my songs. It’s painful to sit in front of your bandmates and go: “This is my idea”, and have them just stare at you. But I thought that if I wanted to stay in the band I’d get pretty frustrated if I didn’t contribute ideas. And, fortunately, with The Prisoner Steve liked what he heard.

Bruce Dickinson: The Prisoner started off in the rehearsal room. Our drummer [Clive Burr] wasn’t there, he was out having a cup of tea, so being a frustrated drummer I started bashing out this simple drum beat at the beginning, and then Adrian started playing this riff. Harry came in and went: “Wow, what a great riff!”. And then we just started.

Adrian Smith: And 22 Acacia Avenue was something I came up with when I was very young, one of those first songs you write. I had this band, Urchin, and we did this song, 22. We were getting stuff ready for The Number Of The Beast, and out of the blue Steve turned to me and said: “What was that song you used to do in Urchin?”, and he started humming it. And it was 22. It ended up being on the record.

Bruce Dickinson: I still had a legal sword of Damocles hanging over my head from the Samson contract which meant that I wasn’t allowed to actually write, which was extremely frustrating, but still, the atmosphere was great.
Number Of The Beast


Martin Birch: I had the same feeling on The Number Of The Beast as when we did the Deep Purple album Machine Head [Birch was he engineer on the latter]. It was the same kind of atmosphere, the same kind of feeling, like, something really good is happening here.

Bruce Dickinson: Martin was like a guru to me, and everyone in Maiden at the time. The whole thing was just a lads’ night out. We had a bloody great time.

Martin Birch: I remember we spent ages getting the vocal intro to the title track right. We did it over and over and over until Bruce said: “My head is splitting. Can’t we move on and do something else and come back to this?”. But I wouldn’t let him do anything else until he’d got it perfect. It drove him crazy.

Bruce Dickinson: I got pissed off to the extent that I was trashing the room. When the tape was on, Martin asked me if I could do the scream at the end of the first verse. I was like, “Oh, willingly”.

Steve Harris: The idea was to get a blood-curdling scream like the one on [The Who's] Won’t Get Fooled Again. It worked quite well.

Martin Birch: On the Sunday we were working on the track The Number Of The Beast, it was a rainy night and I hit this van. I looked in the back of the van and it’s got about half-a-dozen nuns in the back. And then this guy starts praying to me. A couple of days later I took my Range Rover in to be repaired, and when they give me the bill it was 666 pounds.

Steve Harris: People don’t believe this, but he changed it to 667.

Martin Birch: I remember saying to them when it was finished: “This is gonna be a big, big album. This is gonna transform your career”. It just had all the magical ingredients: feel, ideas, energy, execution. And I think the response I got was: “Oh, really?”

The first teaser for Maiden’s third album was the galloping, Wild West-themed single Run To The Hills. Released on February 2, 1982, before work on its parent album was complete, it became Maiden’s first Top 10 single, entering the UK chart at No.7. Proudly out of step with the rest of their chart peers, Maiden were considered a novelty by the media; appearances on Top Of The Pops and anarchic Saturday morning children’s TV show Tiswas followed, raising the band’s profile considerably. The exposure paid off. Released on March 29, The Number Of The Beast debuted in the UK album chart at No.1.

Steve Harris: Run To The Hills was written in that rehearsal room too. I came up with some riffs and we worked it out there and then. It was very spontaneous. It came out fantastic.

Bruce Dickinson: We were on tour in Winterthur, Switzerland when we got the news about the album. We got a telegram on the Sunday morning going: “Your album is number one!”. And we went: “Fantastic!”. But at the time, we were pushing a 30-seat coach to jump start it, because the driver had let the battery go flat.

Steve Harris: We knew that we’d made a strong album, but sometimes that’s not enough. For it go like that, with Top 10 singles and number one album, was incredible.

The Beast On The Road tour kicked off on February 25, 1982 at Queensway Hall in Dunstable. It ran for 10 months, racking up a total of 182 shows. And it was on the road that the first tensions between no-nonsense bandleader Harris and his cocky, mouthy, public school- educated new singer began to surface.

Bruce Dickinson: Steve and myself always used to clash. He wanted to fire me after the first month of The Number Of The Beast tour.

Rod Smallwood: There was a bit of argy-bargy between them on stage.

Steve Harris: At first I thought I was imagining it. But there were nights on stage during the early part of that tour when Bruce used to, like, try and jostle me on stage. It was all done in fun... only you could tell it was a bit more than that sometimes.

Bruce Dickinson: You had basically a very passive band, except for Steve, who was right up front in the middle. And when I was watching them from the front I was like: “Hmm, I don’t like the look of that, that’s wrong. The singer should be standing there”. So the first thing I did was move my little monitors into the middle, which got in his way. I’d be singing along, getting into the groove, and I’d feel this thump, and he’d be there, elbowing me out of the way.

Steve Harris: It was like an ego thing. And it did make me wonder if he was right for the band. I don’t know if he thought he had to sort of stamp out his territory or whatever, but he didn’t need to.

Bruce Dickinson: We were young and we were all chucked into this huge shit-storm of success and we dealt with it in different ways. To a certain extent you make a Faustian deal when you join a successful band. There is a price that gets exacted upon you, and there’s very little you can do about that except hope to come out the other end of it right-side up.

On May 11, 1982 Maiden took The Beast On The Road to America for more than 100 shows that took them through to October. In the south, the album’s title track sparked protests from religious groups. “They wanted to believe all that rubbish about us being Satanists,” said a bemused Steve Harris. At the end of the five-month US stint, The Number Of The Beast had broken into the Billboard Top 40, and Iron Maiden were the hottest new metal band on the planet.

Bill Barclay [guitar tech]: The schedules were hefty. We did the Coliseum in El Paso [Texas], flew to England and did the Reading Festival, and the next show was in California. It was pretty heavy going.

Bruce Dickinson: We toured in station wagons, driving around hallucinating with tiredness. Rod said we couldn’t afford a bus, until the tour manager was so exhausted one night that he fell asleep on his feet and sleepwalked off the end of the stage. At that point we got a tour bus. Which then became the subject of all manner of shenanigans.

Adrian Smith: We all liked a drink. And we did overindulge. Part of it was adjusting to the whole thing. I went from being in a pub-circuit band to being in a band that could sell out big venues. It did take a bit of getting used to that pressure.

Bruce Dickinson: The experience of that first US tour was like taking a very powerful drug every night. A bunch of 24-year-olds from England let loose in America, pre-Aids, with endless supplies of drink and party material and willing young girls? We weren’t vicars, but at the same time we’re not daft.

Adrian Smith: Was there a period when anyone considered stimulants harder than drink? I don’t think we should go there in a family magazine. It was mainly booze, let’s leave it at that.

Bruce Dickinson: I remember being pissed, crawling on my hands and knees down a hotel corridor in Tokyo, looking for bread rolls from the room service trays because I was so hungry. I caught a glimpse of myself in a mirror looking like a feral critter and I thought: “What a state you’re in. Look at you!”. I thought I’d better sort this out, because I could already see that 10-month world tours were going to be my life for the foreseeable future.

Steve Harris: Is it true that I used to feign sleep on long-haul flights just to avoid talking to Bruce? Ha ha. No, I don’t think so. We’ve probably all feigned sleep to avoid one another at some point, but I don’t recall specifically doing it to him. Are you trying to cause more arguments?

Thirty years after its release, The Number Of The Beast remains Iron Maiden’s most enduring musical statement, and the record that turned them from an exciting young British band into a proper global concern, in turn wrenching the spotlight back from America to the UK.

Rod Smallwood: It was the record for the time. There was a lot of interest in metal worldwide, and this was the album that focused everybody. Before The Number Of The Beast we were part of the New Wave Of British Heavy Metal. After The Number Of The Beast, Maiden was a worldwide major act.

Steve Harris: I didn’t think it was our best album at the time, and I still don’t. There’s a couple of tracks on it which I think are not quite so good. If Total Eclipse had been on the album instead of Gangland it would have been far better. Also, I think Invaders could have been replaced with something a bit better, only we didn’t have anything else to replace it with at the time.

Bruce Dickinson: We knew that the songs were special. But if we’d known it would be acclaimed as one of the greatest albums in rock history we’d probably have cocked the whole thing up.
Sabbathman
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Re: IRON MAIDEN - Maiden England 2013

Post by Sabbathman »

Hey Pete, kiitos tästä! Oli mieluisaa luettavaa, repesin totaalisesti tuohon Brucen ja Harryn lavaegoiluun, oli jotenkin hauskasti ilmaistu se tuossa.
Death Metal Maniac
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Re: IRON MAIDEN - Maiden England 2013

Post by Death Metal Maniac »

Iron Maiden uskoo HEAVI MUSAAN!
Death Metal Maniac
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Location: Espoo

Re: IRON MAIDEN - Maiden England 2013

Post by Death Metal Maniac »

asa wrote:
Warning!!! wrote:Onko http://www.dropbox.com sulle tuttu? Pistä vaan skannaten ja meille jaettavaksi!
Tämäkin artikkeli (+paljon muita) on rautaneidon sivuilla ollut jo ties miten pitkään --> Lehtiartikkelit otsikon alla (oikeassa alakulmassa):
http://www.rautaneito.com/suomi/344
Kiitti Asa! Harmi, ettei tule enää kyseisellä sivulla käytyä. Sitä sortuu helpoimpaan, eli ihan yhteen kahteen foorumiin joita seuraa.
StuG
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Joined: Sun Mar 09, 2003 10:25 am

Re: IRON MAIDEN - Maiden England 2013

Post by StuG »

Aiheeseen liittyvä:

[youtube]brBtb5ykIoI[/youtube]

Onko Dianno ollut aina tuollainen kusipää? Katkeruus ainakin paistaa...
Wictorey
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Location: Helsinki

Re: IRON MAIDEN - Maiden England 2013

Post by Wictorey »

En jaksa edes avata tuota videota. Di'Anno on kehäraakki, joka on kaikki vuodet rahastanut Maiden-menneisyydellään ja ainakin viime vuosina esittänyt Iron Maidenin ja Killersin materiaalia aivan kelvottomasti. Viimeksi Tavastialla näkyi, että kyse on paitsi yleiskunnon rapisemisesta myös silkasta kiittämättömyydestä: miekkosen omien (enintään keskinkertaisten) soolobiisien tulkinnassa oli edes vähän yritystä. Muuten keikka oli yhdistelmä laiskuutta ja nolostuttavaa stand-upia.

Näillä spekseillä ei voi kuin toivoa, että lupaus eläkkeelle vetäytymisestä pitää.
P.K.
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Re: IRON MAIDEN - Maiden England 2013

Post by P.K. »

StuG wrote:Onko Dianno ollut aina tuollainen kusipää? Katkeruus ainakin paistaa...
Aina on jojoillut mielipiteidensä kanssa Maidenin nykyisistä jäsenistä. Milloin puhuu kivasti ja milloin haukkuu kaikki lyttyyn, tosin niin kuin videolla kuulee niin pelkästään yleisön huutelusta taas innostui haukkumaan. Eli provosoituu helposti ihan turhanpäiväisistä jutuista.
azagthoth
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Re: IRON MAIDEN - Maiden England 2013

Post by azagthoth »

StuG wrote:Onko Dianno ollut aina tuollainen kusipää? Katkeruus ainakin paistaa...
Kusipäästä en tiedä kun en ukkelia henkilökohtaisesti tunne, mutta ainakin melkoista myötähäpeää herättävä muodoton möykky, joka ei tunnu pääsevän Iron maiden -menneisyydestään koskaan yli. Ja rehellisesti sanottuna Paulin fysiikka ja polla eivät olisi kestäneet montaakaan vuotta kauempaa Maiden-keikkaelämää, 187 keikkaa sisältäneestä World slavery tourista puhumattakaan.

Oma reaktioni tuollaisella Dianno-keikalla olisi suunnilleen tällainen: http://media.riemurasia.net/albumit/mme ... 230340.gif
P.K.
Posts: 1095
Joined: Fri Dec 05, 2008 11:53 am

Re: IRON MAIDEN - Maiden England 2013

Post by P.K. »

Eihän se kestänyt jo Killers-kiertueen paineitakaan mikä vei päihteisiin ja saappaan kuvaa tuli perseeseen.
azagthoth
Posts: 146
Joined: Tue Apr 08, 2003 1:30 pm
Location: Lahti
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Re: IRON MAIDEN - Maiden England 2013

Post by azagthoth »

P.K. wrote:Eihän se kestänyt jo Killers-kiertueen paineitakaan mikä vei päihteisiin ja saappaan kuvaa tuli perseeseen.
Niinpä. Parempaa "tuuraajaa" kuin Bruce Dickinson ei bändi olisi voinut löytää - sanoopa Dianno siihen mitä tahansa. :P
StuG
Posts: 825
Joined: Sun Mar 09, 2003 10:25 am

Re: IRON MAIDEN - Maiden England 2013

Post by StuG »

Tämä Maiden England- livetaltiointi on mitä loistavin. Miksaus on kohdillaan ja bändi on liekeissä. Meininki on ilmava sekä energinen. Bruce laulaa hyvin, mitä nyt loppupäässä kuuluu pientä väsymystä. Oikeinkin hyvä nostalgiatrippi koko äänite. Mukava kuulla myös hieman erilaisempaa settiä, kuin yleensä vetävät läpi. Plussaa bassosta, hyvin länkyttää mukana, eikä jää taakse, kuten on miksauksessa tarkoitettukin.

9.5/10

Diannohan jäi aikanaan sosiaaliviranomaisille nalkkiin, kun taisi nauttia työkyvyttömyyskorvausta samalla kun hyppi lavalta yleisöön. Ovatkohan muuten madenin jannut puheväleissä diannon kanssa? Jos on, varmaan pummannut rahaa...
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