Forostar
Ancient Mariner
Perhaps not if you had MS.I think I would remember when my father died in relation to being fired from a dream job, but it seems Clive did not.
Perhaps not if you had MS.I think I would remember when my father died in relation to being fired from a dream job, but it seems Clive did not.
Perhaps not if you had MS.
To be fair, the memory can do funny things, even to the best of us.Perhaps not if you had MS.
Perhaps, but the journalist could have done some research job rather than publishing that crap.
Clive and Paul we're just young kids age 22 at the most, doing what most at that age would do if available to them. Knee jerk decisions and the rest is history.
No, it was a journalist from Classic Rock. I think the interview was posted earlier in this thread.Remind me who was the journalist? Infamous Stipe Juras of Croatian IMFC organized a trip to visit Clive around 2009 or so, I wonder if he is source of any of these information.
To be fair, the memory can do funny things, even to the best of us.
For example, when I was 16 there was a train accident in my town. I can swear I was working at the local store when it happened, but it happened at 2 PM on a school day. There's no way I was at work.
Perhaps not if you had MS.
Bruce's take on Clive's departure from the band, taken verbatim from his book:
'It wasn't about luggage, and it wasn't about partying, or girls, because anybody and everybody was guilty of that at some time or another. 'Artistic Differences' would be to over-state his creative input.
The closest phrase I could get would be 'self-fulfilling irretrievable disagreements'. The breakdown of the relationship between a drummer and bass player is pretty fundamental, especially if the bass
player happens to be the principal songwriter and band leader.
Clive always regarded the Maiden set-up with a jaundiced eye, even as he was held in high regard by fans. I loved his drumming feel, essentially because his sweet spot was of the big-band swing-time
variety that guys like Ian Paice of Deep Purple had going for them.
Where we didn't see eye to eye was in the intricate and often eccentric fills and time signatures dreamt up by Steve. Their personalities were increasingly on a collision course. Steve was shy off-stage,
but aggressive and precise on stage. Clive was Mr Outgoing off stage, but often Mr Approximate when it came to precision on stage. Throw the whole melange into a pot and it got messier and messier
throughout America. By the end, Steve took me to one side and said, 'He's got to go, I can't fucking take it any longer.''
Note also that in an earlier chapter Bruce states that Clive was indulging in drugs more than other band members and that this may have been contributing to him frequently playing too slowly, leading to
on-stage arguments between Clive and Steve.
So he got the boot because he wasn't good enough.
This account is not actually that different from the one given in "Run to the Hills", although the later (looking at it again now) could be interpreted as Clive having a tendency to turn up unfit to really play at all. What Bruce has added is emphasis on the real issue being recurring performance inconsistencies of the kind that Steve really can't tolerate. The personality clash is news, though.Bruce's take on Clive's departure from the band, taken verbatim from his book:
'It wasn't about luggage, and it wasn't about partying, or girls, because anybody and everybody was guilty of that at some time or another. 'Artistic Differences' would be to over-state his creative input.
The closest phrase I could get would be 'self-fulfilling irretrievable disagreements'. The breakdown of the relationship between a drummer and bass player is pretty fundamental, especially if the bass player happens to be the principal songwriter and band leader.
Clive always regarded the Maiden set-up with a jaundiced eye, even as he was held in high regard by fans. I loved his drumming feel, essentially because his sweet spot was of the big-band swing-time variety that guys like Ian Paice of Deep Purple had going for them.
Where we didn't see eye to eye was in the intricate and often eccentric fills and time signatures dreamt up by Steve. Their personalities were increasingly on a collision course. Steve was shy off-stage, but aggressive and precise on stage. Clive was Mr Outgoing off stage, but often Mr Approximate when it came to precision on stage. Throw the whole melange into a pot and it got messier and messier throughout America. By the end, Steve took me to one side and said, 'He's got to go, I can't fucking take it any longer.''
Note also that in an earlier chapter Bruce states that Clive was indulging in drugs more than other band members and that this may have been contributing to him frequently playing too slowly, leading to on-stage arguments between Clive and Steve.