frus
Barbed Wire Hen
Me too, but I could definitely see it from Rod and record company(es?)That seems unlikely. I could see it from maybe Nicko but definitely not Dave and Janick.
Me too, but I could definitely see it from Rod and record company(es?)That seems unlikely. I could see it from maybe Nicko but definitely not Dave and Janick.
Well, ni band in their right mind woukd expect anything from VXI. I mean it is a whole album where the drummer does like 5 rolls. There isnso much repetition. Then again the production on TXF was si damn bad. The sings had so little energy in them.
It was the dropping sales that triggered tge whole reunion thing. And it was no miracle that Bruce demanded a real producer....although Kevin just followed Steve..so they still screw up soundeise if you ask me. I remember Bruce saying that he woyld return only if H did too.
Yes but there is another side to it. Bruce demanded H to rejoin as one of his demands for the Maiden camp during the first meeting they (Harry, Rod and Bruce) had. If H hadn't rejoined Bruce wouldn't.
I think you are absolutely spot on when it comes to Dave's role in it.Dave smiles and nods through the whole process.
That's how I think that happened.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/275760.stmBritish heavy metal band Iron Maiden has launched its first hit on the bond market, selling securities worth $30m that are backed by the flow of royalties from recordings made during a 20 year career.
The band is effectively taking out a $30m loan and promises to pay back its creditors through future earnings - a financial tool called 'securitisation'.
The investor gets burnt if the royalties come in under expectations. But even if the bond collapses, the artist only loses ownership of the catalogue itself - the investor has no rights to pursue the artist's other assets. "Its a non-recourse mortgage - the bond is only secured on the catalogue itself," says Mr Taylor.
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/business/focus-stars-mine-gold-from-rock-of-wages-1100346.htmlThere are many variations on the Bowie Bond theme. Mr Pullman persuaded the record companies to guarantee the income stream on David Bowie's songs, enhancing the credit-worthiness of the bonds. The Iron Maiden bond involved no such credit-enhancement. It pays 7.4 per cent fixed over 18 years - "better than you can get from most banks", says Mr Taylor.
Yeah I know. Wrote it while on the run. It should be ok now.The poor letters in those sentences don't know where they should be.
No, I haven't seen that. There's a contradiction to what Steve said.
Thanks.
JANICK GERS as known by Dave Murray .... In 1990, when Adrian left the band, Janick had just worked on Bruce’s solo album (‘Tattooed Millionaire’) and obviously, he was going to be the first choice as a replacement. But I remember at the beginning that Janick was actually defending Adrian - he was upset that he’d left the band and I think he was trying to talk him into coming back, which shows you what a good guy he is.
..... He is a genuine, salt-of-the-earth bloke, a very smart man with a great sense of humour. He’s a very sociable kind of chap. He likes going out strutting, especially on tour. He’ll go out for 20 mile walks and try to hit every bar on the way back!
He’s a good soul. He’s got a very good way of calming things down if they suddenly start to go overboard. He can pull everything together and make sure that people see things the right way. He’s very good at expressing himself that way, a very diplomatic man.
Gotta love these segments about Janick.