Does anyone have an idea? I'm guessing sometime in late 1980; one of the roughly dozen shows when Adrian first joined.
I'm interested in hearing how he sounded with his Hamer Standard....even 4 nearly decades down the road. Lol.
Cheers.
The one that shows his left nu....eh....oops...wrong one!
I'm partial to the "Assassin" Eddie (or is it called Hooks In You, because of the hook?), since it was my first Maiden concert shirt.
This doesn't surprise me in the slightest; it is a well known fact that Nicko's nickname is "Boomer". I'm guessing that he was fueling-up for the next round of audio and odor assaults on unsuspecting people. I would hate to be his drum stool.
The band carried on without Adrian when he left. But if Dave left, that would be the end of the band. His fluid legato solos are as much as the Maiden sound as Harry's bass is. So within that context....the answer is Dave.
I too listed SSOASS as one of my two albums, however, I left The Prophecy out of my setlist. I always wondering that if they did play it live, how would they handle the ending part of it (e.g. gradualy merge electric to acoustic, then fade out completely). Would they just end it cold...
I think that context has a lot to do with it as well. Look at what else was going on or released during the 86/87 time-frame;
a). The first wave of hair-metal ended (1982 to 1985), and the second one was starting (1986 to 1991)
b). The thrash movement was really starting to take hold
c). So...
Glad to see that my "Ghetto" thread has made a lasting impact on people. Lol.
Anyways, I agree with Crimson's divison of the eras. My rank:
1) "ATG and other moments of H epicness" (86-88)
2) "Early H era" (82-84)
3) "We're all doooooooomed" aka "Forostar and 3 other fans" (90-92)
4) "The...
I'm hope to see them in at the Molson Amphitheatre Toronto on Friday night.
Question: Have physical/paper tickets been issued for this show? I was only looking for cheap seats (e.g. the lawn section), or is that paperless as well? I saw them at the same venue back in 2010, and finding scalpers...
Weekend Warrior by a land-slide.
Reasons:
a) the acoustic intro/interlude parts sound like they ripped-off a folk group, and the drum beat behind it is something that I've heard on The Muppet Show. I think it was the episode with Don Knots.
b) the verses' major-key chord progressions...
1). The artwork of these two albums certainly indicate a rough and run-down feel/environment. The fact that the band were from the East End of London played a factor in this.
2). The autobiographical songs speak for themselves (e.g. that "ho" Charlotte) . Even the songs that are more...
1) Moonchild
2) Wasted Years
3) Sea Of Madness
4) Deja-Vu
5) The Loneliness Of The Long Distance Song Title
6) Infinite Dreams **Bruce introduces this song, by saying that long distance running feels like that it takes forever**
7) Stranger In A Stange Land
8) The Clairvoyant
9) The Evil That...
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