RUN FOR YOUR LIVES 2026

Simon just doesn't have that flow that Nicko had. I agree with the comments that his feel is a bit more stiff.

Nicko had a great legato style to his playing that few drummers have. Sometimes it even verged on being a bit loose and out of control, but it just had so much life to it.

Even Joe Lazarus despite being a fantastic drummer doesn't quite match Nickos feel. If anything he's actually tighter and more precise than Nicko, but it misses that groove.
 
Again, I really hope he improves. But right now he ain't adding anything besides getting the band through the setlist like they are rolling through hills —not running to them.
My guess is Simon's about as good as he'll get. He was 66 when he joined, after all, and he's been running (mostly) the same set for the second year. I've only seen a few videos where I really noticed the drums--one was Fear of the Dark, where it was played at about studio speed, which felt odd and almost tired-sounding to me, being used to the sped-up live versions we've had for years. The rest of the snippets I've seen, he's...fine.

This new wave of discontent over him not really improving over 2025's shows brings back some suspicions I had early on. Picking a 66-year-old compentent-but-nothing-extraordinary drummer when you had Joe Lazarus at hand meant Steve wasn't looking for anything long-term, or anyone who might overshadow Nicko's legacy. With his recent "eh, maybe" comments about a new album, I wonder if Steve might have just been looking to limp across the finish line of eventual retirement by picking a buddy of his who was a drummer capable of getting through the set each night until it's over.
 
Simon just doesn't have that flow that Nicko had. I agree with the comments that his feel is a bit more stiff.

Nicko had a great legato style to his playing that few drummers have. Sometimes it even verged on being a bit loose and out of control, but it just had so much life to it.

Even Joe Lazarus despite being a fantastic drummer doesn't quite match Nickos feel. If anything he's actually tighter and more precise than Nicko, but it misses that groove.
This 100%.
 
Im in the camp that he didnt sing any bruce song right. He was just shouting during all songs.

His best Maiden gig may have been Austria 1995. It's now on YouTube. He's fantastic on it.

He nails all of his own era songs. I know there was times in 96 and 98 where he did struggle with stuff like Sign of the Cross but here he was brilliant.

He nails Wrathchild.

He was fantastic as ever on Afraid to shoot strangers.

There was some Bruce songs he could kind of still get away with forcing his baritone range up at this point in the tour where they aren't too bad at all- Fear of the Dark etc.

However you notice at the end of the gig all movement has kind of stopped from him, he's in full concentration mode holding the mic with two hands and trying desperately to get through Hallowed and The Trooper. Two songs that let's be honest should never have been in the set in their original tuning with Blaze. He could never ever sing The Trooper, even on a wonderful performance night like he had in Austria 1995, and it's crazy they left it in the set and brought it back for the VXI tour too.
 
My guess is Simon's about as good as he'll get. He was 66 when he joined, after all, and he's been running (mostly) the same set for the second year. I've only seen a few videos where I really noticed the drums--one was Fear of the Dark, where it was played at about studio speed, which felt odd and almost tired-sounding to me, being used to the sped-up live versions we've had for years. The rest of the snippets I've seen, he's...fine.

This new wave of discontent over him not really improving over 2025's shows brings back some suspicions I had early on. Picking a 66-year-old compentent-but-nothing-extraordinary drummer when you had Joe Lazarus at hand meant Steve wasn't looking for anything long-term, or anyone who might overshadow Nicko's legacy. With his recent "eh, maybe" comments about a new album, I wonder if Steve might have just been looking to limp across the finish line of eventual retirement by picking a buddy of his who was a drummer capable of getting through the set each night until it's over.

An I crazy or was there a period, maybe a few years before Nicko's stroke where on a maiden tour the boys were playing the aforementioned Fear of the Dar really quite slow (for them)? It was a bit of a shock after being so used to it being blasted through at full speed from its inception, through the Blaze era, and the majority of the reunion era..it was the first reminder to me they were getting old.

The one I really noticed was slow though was run to the hills. This was, again, pre Nicko stroke.
 
Perhaps, but you could say the same of the verses in Futureal (which imo is the only song that worked better with Blaze than Bruce)
 
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