Iron Maiden video interviews / shows

Wow - wild to see such a nonexistent stage set and such a tiny (for Nicko's standards) drum set! Thanks for sharing!
Stage set looks alright. Nicko's drums are surprisingly smaller than normal. I wonder if he was forced to downsize on that tour due to the smaller venues?
 
800 people is not a small nightclub in my book.
I believe there are nightclubs in Europe that can hold few thousand people but those are multifloor dance clubs.

I still believe that Harris had a hunch or just knew from the rehearsal that it's going to be hard with Blaze. Then they had a Africa/Middle East start of the leg, smaller, distant shows but with a hungry audience, which is the usual pattern when known, popular band needs to tighten up but the tour is about to start and rehearsal time ran out. What I think people miss in the story is that promotion/booking for the NA leg was intentionally toned down due to Blaze not being able to recreate the classic Maiden set.
Didn't they have to cancel the NA tour because Blaze was having problems or was that the X-Factour?
 
800 people is not a small nightclub in my book.
I believe there are nightclubs in Europe that can hold few thousand people but those are multifloor dance clubs.

I still believe that Harris had a hunch or just knew from the rehearsal that it's going to be hard with Blaze. Then they had a Africa/Middle East start of the leg, smaller, distant shows but with a hungry audience, which is the usual pattern when known, popular band needs to tighten up but the tour is about to start and rehearsal time ran out. What I think people miss in the story is that promotion/booking for the NA leg was intentionally toned down due to Blaze not being able to recreate the classic Maiden set.
Ive seen some of these venues in the U.S and the defo don't hold a few thousand.
 
. Nicko's drums are surprisingly smaller than normal. I wonder if he was forced to downsize on that tour due to the smaller venues?
The venues (or the stage show) were not smaller than in 1995/1996, in which he had a bigger drumkit.

Just compare these:


They didn't fall further down touring with Virtual XI, even though the album sold considerably less than The X Factor. The North American part was still very weak just as the tour before though, and even having Dio as a support act didn't help much.

And they were signed to an independent label for this market, CMC International, as no major label in the U.S wanted to take them on. Bruce Dickinson was signed to the CMC label as well, for Skunkworks, Accident of Birth and The Chemical Wedding, which didn't really boost sales for him either.

But wasn't just the smaller drum kit a part of his artistic style back then? As Virtual XI didn't have much advanced drumming (and not some of the left over tracks either - The Mercenary and Dream of Mirrors on Brave New World).
 
Last edited:
The venues (or the stage show) were not smaller than in 1995/1996, in which he had a bigger drumkit.

Just compare these:


Wasn't just the smaller drum kit a part of his artistic style back then? As Virtual XI didn't have much advanced drumming (and not some of the left over tracks either - The Mercenary and Dream of Mirrors on Brave New World).
No, for most of the X Factour Nicko played a white Premier Signia kit in his usual setup (6/8/10/12/13/14/15/16 toms, 18 floor, 24" kick) but would sometimes leave off the 6 and 8" toms.

For most of the VXI Tour he played a red Premier Signia Marquis in his usual setup (6/8/10/12/13/14/15/16 toms, 18 floor, 24" kick).

For the Istanbul gig it looks like he's using the same smaller Premier Signia kit in black lacquer with shallower toms that he used for this date on the Real Live tour:

I've often speculated that this smaller, shallower tom black Signia kit is what he actually used to record X Factor, given there's very little tom work on the album and there are some promo shots of him at Barnyard Studios in 1995 with what appears to be the 12" or 13" tom from that kit on his lap: https://www.gettyimages.in/detail/n...brain-nicko-mcbrain-posed-news-photo/85222594
 

If you scroll up and down you can see other years.

The crossed out dates are cancelled shows. It's quite conspicuous that if Blaze was having problems in that era, he only really seemed to have those problems in the US. It's likely that poor sales contributed to some of these cancellations.

EDIT: those dates were verified by the site owner to an academic standard. He refused my confirmation of 23rd May 1993 Maiden gig in Dublin, as my being present at the gig wasn't good enough:lol: Only proper primary sources counted.
 

If you scroll up and down you can see other years.

The crossed out dates are cancelled shows. It's quite conspicuous that if Blaze was having problems in that era, he only really seemed to have those problems in the US. It's likely that poor sales contributed to some of these cancellations.

EDIT: those dates were verified by the site owner to an academic standard. He refused my confirmation of 23rd May 1993 Maiden gig in Dublin, as my being present at the gig wasn't good enough:lol: Only proper primary sources counted.
Yeah some big chunks of that tour just cancelled outright. That must have irked Steve somewhat.

It's interesting that three US dates on the Ed Hunter tour were cancelled.
 
Think that was when Dave fell off Bruce's shoulders and broke a finger

EDIT: it was it says it on one of the dates if you hover over it. Hence Dave doesn't get up on Bruce's shoulders since then
 
Oh he broke it that way? I did not know they did that TNOTB routine after Dickinson came back.
 
Maiden might have had problems selling enough tickets... :innocent:

Known theory, certainly valid, but why go there then? The audiences have been diminishing since 1986, and in ten years they can't sell out 1000 people clubs. I'm not saying avoiding US but going there as a full tour leg does not have logic to me. Why they didn't try with 3 or 4 shows with a good lineup and full Euro stage FX, maybe on the east coast for logistics reasons.
 
Back
Top