I don't know. I thought Bruce slaughtered Futureal and Lord of the Flies. Having said that, The Clansman does sound fantastic with Bruce, but I think it sounds great with Blaze too.
DonnieDarko said:(I'll never forget being at his house listening to the title track (Number Of The Beast) at vol.11 when a family of Jehovah's Witnesses stopped by to try and give him literature. As he opened the door, the chorus played, and they turned and left without saying a word.)
JackAttack said:Blaze will always be better known by the masses for butchering 80's Bruce songs like The Trooper when performing live, whether deserved or not.
Blaze had the unenviable role of following Bruce up, a job that simply will always have a success rate of 0%.
SinisterMinisterX said:First of all, I don't think most fans think of Blaze that way. That may have been true when Blaze was in Maiden and for a while after, but I think he's gotten fair recognition for his solo career since. He is comparable to Ripper Owens in that way: the public impression has come quite a way from just thinking "Halford clone".
SinisterMinisterX said:And your second point up there is the key thing. Dickinson is one of the top metal singers ever, and only someone else of that caliber could have succeeded. Even then, it's very hard to pull off the old singer's songs. We're all thinking about Dio today, right? One of the best ever, and yet the Ozzy-era songs always sounded weird to me when Dio sang them.
I think the mistake which Maiden made was asking Blaze (a baritone) to sing in Bruce's range (tenor). It can be done, but only with difficulty, and eventually it kills your voice. If Maiden had pulled a Sabbath and detuned all their guitars to C# for the Bruce-era songs, Blaze would have sounded much better.
Nearly every metal fan that I know that enjoys Maiden but is not a die-hard fan pretty much looks down on the Blaze albums with varying levels of contempt
JackAttack said:It's been argued here and everywhere by Maiden fans all around the globe, so I won't go into the age old topic of whether Blaze was/is a good vocalist or not (that's a subjective topic, anyway).
Forostar said:With all respect, but your post is also subjective. I think it's a bit unnecessary to open a new topic about this. However, I don't blame you, there's a big chance you have not seen this topic: "The Blaze era"(?)
I think your view fits perfectly in there. If you like you can also react on posts by many other users about the Blaze Era. The latest post was one and a half month ago.
Sorry for not responding more to the content of your post. I rather wanted to show you the other topic first.
I find it unnecessary to leave that one in oblivion, especially now that someone wants continue the discussion.
Forostar said:I don't see what's wrong with inviting you to the other discussion, which is not old. 1 and a half month.
If every member opens a topic for his own opinion on the same subject, we'll have dozens topics on the Blaze period.
LooseCannon said:Hold on. I can just merge the threads.
Forostar said:I have read Blaze's biography (I invite you to do the same!) where he states an account about all kinds of issues which went wrong beyond his control.
I remember Blaze for his concerts where he indeed failed on several songs, but I remember him better for his albums, and the songs he did do well. I followed his solo career from the beginning which helped a lot to appreciate his voice.