Short-answer questions

While Nicko's drumming is great for Maiden's galloping riffs, I wonder why he choses to stay away from double bass drumming? And for that matter, each of the previous drummers have avoided double bass, be it Clive Burr (an awesome drummer as well!), Doug Sampson, Thunderstick and others. Is there any such norm in the band?
 
While Nicko's drumming is great for Maiden's galloping riffs, I wonder why he choses to stay away from double bass drumming? And for that matter, each of the previous drummers have avoided double bass, be it Clive Burr (an awesome drummer as well!), Doug Sampson, Thunderstick and others. Is there any such norm in the band?
According to Bruce, Nicko thinks it’s ‘undrummerish’.
 
I can’t think of Maiden songs that would have really required double kick prior to Where Eagles Dare/The Trooper. Whether Steve started writing to Nicko’s capabilities right away or coincidence is unclear to me, although the level of musical technicality took a pretty big leap going into Piece.

One thing to keep in mind is that rock drumming in Nicko’s time (I.e the 60s) isn’t what it is now or what it would become in the later 80s. With a few exceptions (Motorhead, Priest) I imagine a lot of drummers used double kick drums as a crutch to play simple fast kick patterns. There’s probably an amount of pride to being able to use a single kick on those parts but also it’s hard to switch your setup around and your whole way of playing when you’ve developed a certain style. Nicko famously (?) ended up using double kick on face in the sand so he clearly doesn’t have something against doing it, but obviously it’s a tool that he rarely reaches for. It’s also just not that interesting of a drum part. When you think about players who really furthered drumming using double kick (Binks, Peart, Portnoy, Hoglan, Reinert, Menza) it’s an entirely different style from what Nicko plays.

By the way, not to take anything from Nicko as a drummer, I think he’s the gold standard for single kick playing in rock music. I coached some kids playing Maiden songs on drums a few years ago who were really quite talented and had a lot of modern metal influences but really struggled to capture Nicko’s feel. He’s a unique example in the metal genre.
 
The fast section in BTATS apparently originally was intended to have rapid double kicks rather than a single-kick imitation, apparently. I forgot the details. Somebody mentioned it on these very forums after I posted about a confusing snippet of an interview with Nicko from 2006, where he (mistakenly, I guess?) claimed it was Lord of Light where he and Steve had a bit of a row over the bass drum part.
 
The fast section in BTATS apparently originally was intended to have rapid double kicks rather than a single-kick imitation, apparently. I forgot the details. Somebody mentioned it on these very forums after I posted about a confusing snippet of an interview with Nicko from 2006, where he (mistakenly, I guess?) claimed it was Lord of Light where he and Steve had a bit of a row over the bass drum part.
I remember this, but also don’t have the source.
 
While Nicko's drumming is great for Maiden's galloping riffs, I wonder why he choses to stay away from double bass drumming? And for that matter, each of the previous drummers have avoided double bass, be it Clive Burr (an awesome drummer as well!), Doug Sampson, Thunderstick and others. Is there any such norm in the band?
Double bass or double kick weren't even remotely known in the '70s and the early '80s as they are now. Some drummers used it, but not as extensively as, say, "Animal" Taylor would do on Ace of Spades (or, later, Dave Lombardo on Reign in Blood and Ingo Schwichtemberg on Walls of Jericho); anyways, it was a completely different style. Both of the two most influential hard rock drummers of the '70s, Keith Moon and John Bonham, didn't use double bass.

Also, Nicko started to play in the mid-late '60s in the jazz/blues scene. The drums kicked in (no pun intended) on him when he heard The Dave Brubeck Quartet and by the age of 14 he was already playing in pubs. When he joined Trust and later Iron Maiden, he wasn't a heavy metal / hard rock drummer, rather a blues rock one, and during the sessions for Piece of Mind, he proved with facts that he just didn't need a second kick.

Also I cannot think of many Iron Maiden songs before Nicko that would work with double bass. Phantom of the Opera (between the verses), Transylvania (fast section), Genghis Khan maybe. The opening to Gangland, drawing inspiration from Hot for Teacher as someone mentioned?

Neither after Piece of Mind, to be honest.
 
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