Poto
Ancient Mariner
Because they follow Nicko. He starts the last part too early and they simply follow along.If it was just Nicko making a mistake, how come they're ALL doing it?
Because they follow Nicko. He starts the last part too early and they simply follow along.If it was just Nicko making a mistake, how come they're ALL doing it?
That's not a snare roll, it's 16th notes played on the floor tom.No clean intro for Out of the Silent Planet. It goes straight in with the snare roll.
Yeah, I guess that could be it, but it's executed very cleanly which makes it hard to tell one way or the other. Usually when the band makes mistakes like that, there's a little bit more disarray.Because they follow Nicko. He starts the last part too early and they simply follow along.
Good shout. I was recalling it from memory.That's not a snare roll, it's 16th notes played on the floor tom.
I'd be extremely surprised if he didn't as since seventh son, and particularly in the 90s albums onwards he plays them all the timeI'm fairly sure Harris doesn't play any power chords on "Sign of the Cross" on the studio version. But he uses them extensively during the verses, choruses, and guitar solos live.
Didn't he stop doing the Drop D live at some pointAdrian on how songs changed past 1999: “So when I first joined up [with Maiden in 1999], we played Wrathchild, I played it in drop-D tuning. Run to the Hills was in D, so again, I tuned it down. It gave it a slightly different sound. I was bringing that in, playing lower octaves on the harmonies and stuff like that. So I played a lot of stuff totally different to what I did when I was in the band before, which is quite interesting. Janick’s a lovely guy. But I have to say you know Jan wasn't going to change what he was going to play. He's very set in his ways. I sensed that immediately, so I started looking at different ways of doing things."
That guitar wasn't plugged but just deco.
Bruce played a clean guitar on Revelations on the Powerslave tour, so that they could replicate one part more accurately.
On En Vivo it's evidently altered. The context is decisive, but I like it this way more than the original.Pretty sure that at some point after 2010 or so they altered the opening riff to The Wickerman. And while not quite an alteration, Evil That Men Do and Trooper both have harmonized guitar solos.
Yep, Adrian changed the riff, but only before the drums. When the full band starts playing, they play the original riff:Pretty sure that at some point after 2010 or so they altered the opening riff to The Wickerman. And while not quite an alteration, Evil That Men Do and Trooper both have harmonized guitar solos.