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Iron Maiden are an English heavy metal band formed in 1975 by bassist Steve Harris. After several lineup changes prior to their recording career, they settled on Harris, vocalist Paul Di'Anno, guitarist Dave Murray and drummer Doug Sampson. The band currently consists of Harris and Murray with guitarist Adrian Smith (who first joined in 1980), vocalist Bruce Dickinson (who first joined in 1981), drummer Nicko McBrain (since 1982) and guitarist Janick Gers (since 1990).
The bands original line-up in December 1975, included Harris with singer Paul Mario Day, guitarists Terry Rance and Dave Sulivan and drummer Ron Matthews.[1] Day left in October 1976 due to not having enough stage charisma, he was replaced by Dennis Wilcock.[2] Harris temporarily disbanded Iron Maiden in December 1976 so he could replace Rance and Sulivan with guitarists Dave Murray and Bob Sawyer.[3] By mid-1977 Matthews, Murray and Sawyer were all fired,[4] and replaced by guitarist Terry Wapram and keyboardist Tony Moore and drummer Thunderstick (real name Barry Purkis).[4] This line-up only lasted one show before Moore was fired by Harris.[5]
Wapram stayed until Murray was reinstated in March 1978,[6] Wilcock and Thunderstick left shortly afterwards.[6] The band were quickly joined by Doug Sampson on drums,[7] and began auditioned new singers until Paul Di'Anno joined in November.[8] The band were also joined by second guitarist Paul Cairns in Winter 1978,[9] who played on their 1979 demo The Soundhouse Tapes.[10][11] Cairns stayed for three months before being dismissed.[10]
The band were joined by guitarist Paul Todd in June 1979,[12] however he left after a week,[13] not playing any shows.[9] Tony Parsons was the bands next guitarist, joining in September 1979, before departing in December, soon after the band had signed to EMI,[14] Sampson also left around the same time. The band hired Dennis Stratton (guitar, backing vocals). Doug Sampson was dismissed from the band as he was unable to cope with the touring schedule and, at the suggestion of Stratton, was replaced by Clive Burr, with whom the band recorded their self-titled debut album in 1980.[15] Later that year, Stratton was replaced by Adrian Smith, due to musical and personal differences brought about by choosing not to travel with the band when supporting Kiss on the European leg of their Unmasked Tour.[16]
During the tour supporting their second studio effort, Di'Anno was fired from the band after drug and alcohol abuse affected his live performance.[17] Vocalist Bruce Dickinson left his previous band, Samson, to audition for Iron Maiden in September 1981 and joined shortly afterwards. After the release of their third album, The Number of the Beast, drummer Nicko McBrain replaced Burr, who left due to personal and scheduling problems on the subsequent Beast on the Road tour.[18] This is considered by many as their quintessential lineup,[19] with which they released a series of high-impact works.[20]
In 1990, prior to the recording of their eighth studio album, Smith was asked to leave the band due to a lack of enthusiasm, brought about by the "stripped-down" musical direction they were taking, which Smith considered "a step backwards" from the progressive direction they had been taking.[21] Janick Gers, an old friend of Dickinson's who performed on his debut solo album, became the new guitarist. This formation recorded one more album before Dickinson departed in 1993, in order to pursue his solo career further.[22]
The band listened to hundreds of tapes submitted by vocalists before asking Blaze Bayley to audition,[23] with whom they would go on to release two studio albums, after which Bayley left the band by mutual consent in January 1999.[24] At that point, the band were in talks with Dickinson,[24] who, after a meeting with Steve Harris and Rod Smallwood (the group's manager) in Brighton,[25] agreed to rejoin along with Adrian Smith, who was telephoned a few hours later.[26] Iron Maiden thus became a six-piece band and have gone on to make six further studio releases. The current lineup is now the longest and most stable in the band's history.
Image | Name | Years active | Instruments | Release contributions |
---|---|---|---|---|
Steve Harris[lower-alpha 1] | 1975–present |
|
all Iron Maiden releases | |
Dave Murray[lower-alpha 2] |
|
guitars | ||
Adrian Smith[lower-alpha 3] |
|
|
all Iron Maiden releases from Killers (1981) to Maiden England (1989), then from Brave New World (2000) to present | |
Bruce Dickinson[lower-alpha 4] |
|
|
| |
Nicko McBrain[lower-alpha 5] | 1982–present |
|
all Iron Maiden releases from Piece of Mind (1983) to present | |
Janick Gers[lower-alpha 6] | 1990–present | guitars | all Iron Maiden releases from No Prayer for the Dying (1990) to present |
Image | Name | Years active | Instruments | Release contributions |
---|---|---|---|---|
Ron (Rebel) Matthews[lower-alpha 7] | 1975–1977 | drums | none | |
Terry Rance[lower-alpha 8] | 1975–1976 | guitars | ||
Dave Sullivan[lower-alpha 9] | ||||
Paul Day[lower-alpha 10] | vocals | |||
Dennis Wilcock[lower-alpha 11] | 1976–1978 | |||
Bob Sawyer (later Rob Angelo)[lower-alpha 12] | 1977 | guitars | ||
Terry Wapram[lower-alpha 13] | 1977–1978 | |||
Thunderstick (Barry Purkis)[lower-alpha 14] | drums | |||
Tony Moore[lower-alpha 15] | 1977 | keyboards | ||
Doug Sampson[lower-alpha 16] | 1978–1979 | drums |
| |
Paul Di'Anno[lower-alpha 17] | 1978–1981 (died 2024) |
vocals |
| |
Paul Cairns (a.k.a. "Mad Mac")[lower-alpha 18] | 1978–1979 | guitars | The Soundhouse Tapes (1979 demo) | |
Paul Todd[lower-alpha 19] | 1979 | none | ||
Tony Parsons[lower-alpha 20] | BBC Archives (four songs from 1979) | |||
Dennis Stratton[lower-alpha 21] | 1979–1980 |
|
| |
Clive Burr[lower-alpha 22] | 1979–1982 (died 2013) |
drums | all Iron Maiden releases from Iron Maiden (1980) to The Number of the Beast (1982) | |
Blaze Bayley[lower-alpha 23] | 1994–1999 | vocals |
|
Image | Name | Years active | Instruments | Release contributions |
---|---|---|---|---|
Michael Kenney[lower-alpha 24] | 1988–2022 | keyboards |
| |
Brent Diamond[lower-alpha 25] | 2022–present | none |
Time-span | Lineups | Releases |
---|---|---|
December 1975[1] – October 1976[2] |
|
— |
October 1976 – November 1976 |
|
— |
December 1976[63] – mid-1977[4] |
|
— |
Mid-1977[4] – November 1977[5] |
|
— |
November 1977[5] – early 1978[6] |
|
— |
March 1978 – April 1978 |
|
— |
Early 1978[48] – November 1978[64][lower-alpha 26] |
|
— |
November 1978[64] – December 1979[65] |
|
|
December 1979[66] – November 1980[33] |
|
|
November 1980[33] – September 1981[67] |
|
|
September 1981[67] – December 1982[40] |
|
|
December 1982[68] – June 1990[41] |
|
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June 1990[41] – August 1993[69] |
|
|
January 1994[23] – January 1999[25] |
|
|
January 1999[25] – present |
|
|
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