Maiden medioissa

Keskustelua Iron Maidenista ja kaikesta bändiin liittyvästä.

Moderator: The Killer Krew

S.R.
Horus
Horus
Posts: 3976
Joined: Wed Dec 08, 2004 18:19
Location: Imatra
Contact:

Post by S.R. »

EDIT: Ei enää mittään :lol:
Last edited by S.R. on Wed May 21, 2008 15:43, edited 1 time in total.
"You see, pal: Elvis can't read a contract. All he knows is: No Ferrari, no rides with the top down." - James "Sonny" Crockett
Suotana
Paholainen
Paholainen
Posts: 721
Joined: Mon Jul 17, 2006 13:23
Location: Hämeenlinna

Post by Suotana »

Oijoijoi kylläpä oli mukava yllätys, kun kotiintultuani huomasin uusimman soundin pöydältä lepäämästä, veli näköjään tilannut. Oli kyllä reilusti lukemista tuossa Maiden jutussa ja jonkin verran uuttakin asiaa. Mieleen jäi vahvasti Paul Di'annon haastattelu vuosien takaa, jota en olisi kyllä heti Di'annoksi uskonut. Noh mukava yllätys oli herra Brigatin osuus artikkelissa. Levyarvosteluista nytten ei voisi pahemmin hyvää mennä sanomaan, koska suurin osa oli jotain 50 sanan yhteenvetoja. Tosin eihän tommotteeseen lehteen voi mitään sivun kokosia tarinoitakaan änkeä.

Suosittelen ehdottomasti ostamaan lehden jos ei jo löydy! 8)
Pertti Keinonen
Rautakansleri
Rautakansleri
Posts: 5425
Joined: Sun Jan 04, 2004 21:07
Location: Länsirannikko
Contact:

Post by Pertti Keinonen »

Kolmivuotias otti pöydältä tuoreen Soundin ja tuumasi: "Jes! Aidon Meideni!" Koulutus tehoaa :finger:
Mitä ryppyisempi rusina, sitä makiampi maku!
reptile
Viimeinen voitelija
Viimeinen voitelija
Posts: 1794
Joined: Fri Apr 22, 2005 12:42
Location: Kajaani

Post by reptile »

Kävin irtonumeron ostamassa tuosta Soundista eikä 2,50 ollut ollenkaan paha hinta siitä. Todella mukavan paljon juttua olivat saaneet bändistä. Hienoa, että jaksavat panostaa tuolla tavalla.
Try to hold some faith
in the goodness of humanity...


IRON MAIDEN FOREVER!!
Fender
Sateentekijä
Sateentekijä
Posts: 2021
Joined: Fri Jun 09, 2006 12:13
Location: Hellfuckingsinki

Post by Fender »

Jep, parhain Soundi pitkiin aikoihin! Kattava juttu, mutten sitä maiden-historiikkia jaksanut lukea kokonaan, kun se osio on varsin hyvin jo hanskassa... :lol: .
You're shit and you know you are
metal invader
Hang-Around
Hang-Around
Posts: 187
Joined: Sun Jan 06, 2008 23:50
Location: Kotka

Post by metal invader »

Fender wrote:Jep, parhain Soundi pitkiin aikoihin! Kattava juttu, mutten sitä maiden-historiikkia jaksanut lukea kokonaan, kun se osio on varsin hyvin jo hanskassa... :lol: .
Samaa mieltä. Soundissa on usein sellaisista bändeistä mitkä ei voisi vähempää kiinnostaa liikaa juttua. Eilen mukava ylläri löytyi postilaatikosta ja siitä siten kipin kapin tuli kotiin mentyä. Jäi kokeisiin lukemiset vähän vähemmälle.
P.K.
Rautaneito Crew
Rautaneito Crew
Posts: 8076
Joined: Tue Jan 06, 2004 17:11
Location: Vantaa

Post by P.K. »

JOOOUUUUU!!!!!!!

Uskallatteko avata?
Sir
Kärpästen Herra
Kärpästen Herra
Posts: 4949
Joined: Sat Mar 04, 2006 10:32
Location: Cowschwitz

Post by Sir »

condemned wrote:JOOOUUUUU!!!!!!!

Uskallatteko avata?
Avasin. Ei olis kannattanut. :evil:
Paskalla metallilla on tekijänsä.

2002-2015 ja 2016->
2014-2015
1996-2001
1989-1996
Bruusbruus
Roudari
Roudari
Posts: 494
Joined: Tue Oct 02, 2007 14:35
Location: Vantaa

Post by Bruusbruus »

Hieno ele Soundilta pistää tuommoinen paketti bändistä pihalle. On Juho Juntusen toimittama pläjäys ja kannattaa lukea ne vanhat IM-jutut, jotka Juntunen kirjoitti. Niissä on semmoista gonzojournalismia Hunter S. Thompsonin henkeen, ei nämä nykyiset pelkkään asialinjaan pohjaavat toimittajat samaan kynän käyttöön kykene. No, ehkä tässä on mukana hitunen nostalgiaakin, kun muistui mieleen ajat kun nuo samaiset jutut ekaa kertaa luin. Hieno homma tietysti myös, että Mr Rautaneito sai noin paljon palstatilaa. Uskonpa, että Rautaneitoa näinä päivinä googletetaan vielä tavallistakin enemmän.
Stalker
Roudari
Roudari
Posts: 436
Joined: Sun Jan 15, 2006 16:44
Location: Hellsinki

Post by Stalker »

condemned wrote:JOOOUUUUU!!!!!!!

Uskallatteko avata?
'

Meinasi päästä iso mitävittua kun avasin metro-lehden bussissa. Samainen kuva sielä killui. :evil:
"Egotism is the anesthetic that dulls the pain of stupidity." - Frank Leahy
Backlet
Roudari
Roudari
Posts: 461
Joined: Wed Apr 20, 2005 21:55
Location: Jyväskylä

Post by Backlet »

Pitihän se Soundi käydä ostamassa, kun puoleen hintaan sai. Hyvä ja kattava juttu oli vaikka mitään ihmeellistä ei sisältänytkään. Roudarikertoilu avasi varsin hyvin sitäkin maailmaa.
RealMaiden
Wimp
Wimp
Posts: 40
Joined: Fri Feb 09, 2007 15:56

MAIDEN LEFFA?

Post by RealMaiden »

Kuuntelin eilen illalla radio 957 ja siellä sanottiin että Maiden on tekemässä elokuvaa?? Mitä mitä... Onko kellään asiasta varmaa tietoo? :mrgreen:[/img]
Captain Edward
Roudari
Roudari
Posts: 401
Joined: Mon Nov 13, 2006 17:04
Location: Captain Edward's Casino

Re: MAIDEN LEFFA?

Post by Captain Edward »

RealMaiden wrote:Kuuntelin eilen illalla radio 957 ja siellä sanottiin että Maiden on tekemässä elokuvaa?? Mitä mitä... Onko kellään asiasta varmaa tietoo? :mrgreen:[/img]
Tällä tarkoitetaan varmasti tuota Somewhere Back in Time dokumenttielokuvaa, johon on kuvattu haastatteluja, matkustamista, kaikkea muuta lavan takana tapahtuvaa, sekä jokainen settilistan biisi kuvataan eri maasta/kaupungista.

Ja niinkuin uusimmassa Soundi:ssa sanotaan: "Viellä ei ole päätetty, julkaistaanko dokumenttielokuva DVD:nä vai ihan oikeana elokuvana.
"My son ask for thyself another Kingdom,
for that which I leave is too small for thee"
Backlet
Roudari
Roudari
Posts: 461
Joined: Wed Apr 20, 2005 21:55
Location: Jyväskylä

Re: MAIDEN LEFFA?

Post by Backlet »

eddie-rips-up wrote:Ja niinkuin uusimmassa Soundi:ssa sanotaan: "Viellä ei ole päätetty, julkaistaanko dokumenttielokuva DVD:nä vai ihan oikeana elokuvana.
Saisi tulla ihan teattereihin, niin olisi vaihteeksi joku leffa jonka viitsisi käydä katsomassakin. Tämän peräkylän teattereiden valikoimassa ei nimittäin ole juurikaan kehumista ja pitää melkeen tuonne 70 km:n päähän matkustaa jos meinaa jonkun uutuusfilmin katsoa.
AlexTheAvrg
Peräruiske
Peräruiske
Posts: 72
Joined: Wed Feb 09, 2005 15:27
Location: Tampere

Re: MAIDEN LEFFA?

Post by AlexTheAvrg »

RealMaiden wrote:Kuuntelin eilen illalla radio 957 ja siellä sanottiin että Maiden on tekemässä elokuvaa?? Mitä mitä... Onko kellään asiasta varmaa tietoo? :mrgreen:[/img]
Ja nimeksi varmaan tulee... Edward - The Some Kind of Monster :roll:
"Ilmaiset neuvot ovat aina hintansa arvoisia"
S.R.
Horus
Horus
Posts: 3976
Joined: Wed Dec 08, 2004 18:19
Location: Imatra
Contact:

Re: MAIDEN LEFFA?

Post by S.R. »

AlexTheAvrg wrote:
RealMaiden wrote:Kuuntelin eilen illalla radio 957 ja siellä sanottiin että Maiden on tekemässä elokuvaa?? Mitä mitä... Onko kellään asiasta varmaa tietoo? :mrgreen:[/img]
Ja nimeksi varmaan tulee... Edward - The Some Kind of Monster :roll:
Aika huono :lol:
"You see, pal: Elvis can't read a contract. All he knows is: No Ferrari, no rides with the top down." - James "Sonny" Crockett
Osiris
Sateentekijä
Sateentekijä
Posts: 2489
Joined: Mon Nov 05, 2007 18:38
Location: 02330
Contact:

Post by Osiris »

Tänään tuli viimein ostettua tuo uusin Soundi jossa oli erittäin kattava paketti Maidenista. Sain vähän iltalukemista... :P
** Iron Maiden **

2005-2025 – yli 85 keikkaa Euroopassa ja USA:ssa...
Peke
Kärpästen Herra
Kärpästen Herra
Posts: 4785
Joined: Fri Jan 16, 2004 10:41
Location: Kotka/Karhulan Metallitehdas 48666

Post by Peke »

Osiris wrote:Tänään tuli viimein ostettua tuo uusin Soundi jossa oli erittäin kattava paketti Maidenista. Sain vähän iltalukemista... :P
No prkl.. tuo on vielä hakematta
Into Iron Maiden Since 1983
Osiris
Sateentekijä
Sateentekijä
Posts: 2489
Joined: Mon Nov 05, 2007 18:38
Location: 02330
Contact:

Post by Osiris »

Peke wrote:
Osiris wrote:Tänään tuli viimein ostettua tuo uusin Soundi jossa oli erittäin kattava paketti Maidenista. Sain vähän iltalukemista... :P
No prkl.. tuo on vielä hakematta
Hintakin oli vain 2,5 €!!! :P
** Iron Maiden **

2005-2025 – yli 85 keikkaa Euroopassa ja USA:ssa...
Iron Constable
Crusader
Crusader
Posts: 7993
Joined: Tue Jan 06, 2004 15:13
Location: Bay Area, Southern Finland

Post by Iron Constable »

Kai se Internetkin on media. Alla lainattuna mielestäni oikein mielenkiintoinen Brucen haastattelu in english. Kyllä sillä on ajatukset kohdillaan. Pojastakin näyttää tulevan laulaja, mutta vetää sitten enempi huutoörinä linjoilla. Lukaiskaa ite.
Iron Maiden's secret to success
Singer Bruce Dickinson explains how the British metal gods, who arrive for two nights in Irvine, still attract teenage metalheads by the tens of thousands.
By BEN WENER
The Orange County Register
Comments | Recommend

To keep the excitement level high, he says, "we just, you know, play a bit less."

Not as infrequently as you'd imagine, mind you – it was less than two years ago that Iron Maiden, one of the longest-running and still popular heavy metal bands in rock history, played Verizon Wireless Amphitheater in Irvine. And little more than a year before that they appeared at an ill-fated Ozzfest stop in Devore – that infamous show that still makes fans grumble, when Sharon Osbourne reportedly had eggs thrown at the band during its set and eventually shut off the sound off so she could instead yell, "Ozzy! Ozzy!"

Still, Maiden's touring schedule is never very full, typically sporting only a handful of stateside dates each time out, and often with a conceit attached, from The Early Days Tour, focusing strictly on material from the band's first four albums … to 2006's trek behind the hailed return-to-form "A Matter of Life and Death," when the group would play the album in its entirety … to this season's Somewhere Back in Time Tour, devoted to reviving the bulk of the band's 1984 World Slavery Tour, complete with a wilder pyrotechnic display than they set off at the Forum in February and the most gigantic Eddie (Maiden's skeletal mascot) ever assembled.

"When we looked back at the 'Live After Death' DVD," Dickinson recalls, "the big Eddie at the back that comes out … we said, 'Oh, well, let's just build it the same as we did before.' And then we found the measurements of it, and we went, 'Yeah, that's pretty small. We can't do that. We've got to at least double the size of it.' So now it is absolutely monstrous."

So big, in fact, that a special hydraulic cherry-picker has to be flown with the band in order to lift it.

Could be stunts like that that keep attracting fresh-faced fans. Or it could also be that while so many of Maiden's peers and progeny have faded out or lost their edge after an album or two, these British veterans – including founding members Steve Harris (bass) and Dave Murray (guitar), drummer Nicko McBrain and guitarists Adrian Smith and Janick Gers, all in their early 50s – have soldiered on, surviving a rocky '90s to re-emerge this decade as one of the enduring masters of the form.

I caught up with Dickinson, 49, by phone while Maiden was in final rehearsals after touching down in Texas, and I began by wondering the same thing I do of all global phenomena: Great though both highs must be, it must feel different to play for 30,000 Californians across two nights at Verizon in Irvine, as Maiden does this weekend, than it would to encounter 45,000 people all at once in Bogota, or 50,000-plus most anywhere across Europe.

ORANGE COUNTY REGISTER: But … how is it different, exactly?

BRUCE DICKINSON: Well, it doesn't so much go geographically, but it is different from place to place. Over the years, it's strange how places have taken on different characteristics.

When we first started coming to America 25 years ago, we always used to imagine that the West Coast was the laid-back one, and the East Coast was where it was really happening. But certainly for the last 10 years, we were doing shows in Los Angeles and going, "Man, what a great gig!" The audience reaction is just really in-your-face, and they're really attentive and listening and informed. It was just really spectacular. I would say, actually, that the West Coast is one of our favorite places to play in North America at the moment.

OCR: Well, you have some history here, of course. (Maiden's widely regarded 1985 live album "Live After Death" and its companion video, finally released on DVD in February, was captured across four nights at Long Beach Arena in 1984.) Do you have specific memories of those shows that stand out the most?

BD: Well, it was just a gorgeous summer. It was a time when metal and rock music were really at a peak, culturally speaking. After "Live After Death," to be honest with you, I think the sort of hair bands, and one or two of the more embarrassing episodes in metal history that happened around then, tended to take over a bit in the public perception. Which was a shame, 'cause of course we were still doing the same thing. And we're still here doing the same. So we must be doing something right.

OCR: How would you characterize metal now?

BD: It's kinda come full circle. Except, of course, that now more than ever the audience own the music, because of the Internet and downloads and things like that. Audiences have such a choice now. But because of that, it's really heartening when you see your ticket sales going through the roof. And with no radio advertising, no TV – we don't even have a record out. Well, we do now …

OCR: But it's a greatest-hits record ("Somewhere Back in Time: The Best of 1980-1989").

BD: Yeah, and it's designed – completelydesigned – to capitalize on people that are new to the band, who need some kind of reference to know what to dip into first. In effect, what we're looking at is a global phenomenon that is caused by word-of-mouth, and it's pretty unprecedented.

OCR: It does seem that way. When I saw you at the Forum, I noticed the crowd was astonishingly young. To see 15-, 16-, 17-year-old kids … other bands who have been around as long or longer than you don't draw like that. What accounts for it?

BD: The heartening thing is that it's happening in America now. This is what's been going on in Canada for ages, and it's what we expect in Europe and South America. When we go into a country and 45,000 people show up in Colombia, 30,000 in Costa Rica … we don't even have a record company in Costa Rica. These are not old, die-hard fans. These are people who are seeing us for the first time.

And a lot of them are very, very young, which is great, because with all respect to old rockers, they don't put out like 16-year-old kids. You know, they sit there and nod their heads sagely and ruminate – and they enjoy it for sure. But they don't really start leaping up and down and head-banging and taking their clothes off and sweating buckets. They'd end up in hospital.

But with kids and us … it's like feeding the hurricane. You need those warmer-temperature waters to keep the hurricane fed. We get our energy from the audience, and we fire it right back at them.

OCR: Some of why you're so popular with younger listeners must have something to do with older brothers and even parents handing down records. But I think a lot of it also has to do with metal now bearing so much of your influence.

BD: Yeah, I think a lot of the bands that are around now will all name-check us as being a major influence. Because, you know, we went out and we did things our own way. We went, "Screw the Establishment, we don't care about radio, we just want to rock the way we want to do it."

OCR: You continue to do that.

BD: Exactly. But the thing I'm really proud of is that the stuff we've been doing really stands up to scrutiny. So many of the bands now – the young bands coming up – are much heavier than we are. We don't have a problem with that – we're not gonna try to out-heavy them or anything else like that. We just do what we do.

OCR: Yeah, but you outsing the majority of them. I think there's good new metal, fine, but there's also just a lot of growling and screaming now.

BD: Look, I'm not gonna diss people's choices. People choose to sing that way, and audiences choose to buy it. They enjoy it. My son is in a band, and he's a singer, and his vocals … they're screaming-growling stuff … and he's got a pretty reasonable voice. Yet he practices really hard to get the screaming-growling thing without losing that voice every five minutes. So I'm, like, "Hats off to you." And then I go along to see him at gigs, and I'm like, "OK, I get this." It's not how I would sing it. But I get it, within the terms of reference.

At the same time, all the kids in his band are really into Maiden. They love it because of what it represents and its heritage, but also because of what we do right now. So many of these kids who are into the band now have gotten into us during the last five years. Effectively, that means that they've been listening not only to our heritage albums – if even that – but to the new stuff we've been putting out.

OCR: Perhaps, but they must be hoping to recapture some part of your past, too.

BD: Oh, one of the main reasons this tour has seized young people's attentions in particular is that they have no idea what it was like when Maiden played "Rime of the Ancient Mariner" back then – but they would have given their eyeteeth to have been there.

And now we're offering them that opportunity. Not by doing kind of a pastiche or facsimile of the World Slavery Tour. But we are bringing those songs back to life with more experience than we did in 1984. Everything in 1984 sounded like we were really in a hurry to get to the end, 'cause we were just excited, and still pretty young. We'd come on stage and play everything at twice the speed.

Now, as we've gone down the slippery slope of doing this for umpteen years, we have the confidence to give our songs the power they really deserve. A lot of bands along the way lose the excitement level, 'cause they've been doing it for years. So they get really good at delivering music that kids are gonna look upon and go, "Yeah, but they look kinda bored." (Laughs.)

OCR: You look anything but bored.

BD: We figured this out a while back. How do we stop this happening to us? 'Cause all of us would be really disappointed with ourselves if that happened. And we thought, well, don't play too much. Treat this as a huge privilege. Treat it like when kids get together and they're in a band, and they've got their first three or four gigs – each gig is just like the first time you do a world tour, 'cause it's so exciting.

So to keep that excitement, we just, you know, play a bit less. And we leave gaps in between. That gives us time to recover physically, but more importantly, mentally. It keeps that excitement level there.


OCR: That also helps keep a mystique going.

BD: Of course, once you go out, like when we did the initial part of the tour and we played in L.A. and we played in New York … I mean, you could tell the sort of seismic ripples that went through on the Internet after we played L.A. That went all the way through North America. Kids were e-mailing going, "God, you should have seen it, it was awesome, they were fantastic." The business on this tour … we've never done business like this for years and years and years in North America. It's really, really cool.

OCR: I think part of why you endure is that your music has added resonance, especially now. I think your last album reflected our times very heavily.

BD: I think "A Matter of Life and Death" is one of the best albums Maiden has ever made. It stands up to all of our best from the '80s. I'm immensely proud of that album, and funnily enough, it was critically quite well-received. But even if it hadn't been, what mattered is not so much what the critics say. What matters is what happens when people listen to it and go, "Wow, this is anything but an old and tired band."

Contact the writer: 714-796-2248 or bwener@ocregister.com
Nykyään melkein kaikki on jännää.
asa
MAIDEN HELL
MAIDEN HELL
Posts: 6061
Joined: Tue Jan 06, 2004 18:48
Location: Lahti Metal HELL
Contact:

Post by asa »

Citylehdessä on erään kansankynttilän Jarmo Salon näppärä näpäytys Kiss-faneja kohtaan. Kannattaa tsekata. Lisäksi allekirjoittaneen voi nähdä Uusi-Lahti lehdessä, Maiden paita päällä. Luonnollisesti.
jarmila
Maiden Venturer
Maiden Venturer
Posts: 1781
Joined: Tue Jan 06, 2004 17:07
Location: Kymi/Finland

Post by jarmila »

asa wrote:Citylehdessä on erään kansankynttilän Jarmo Salon näppärä näpäytys Kiss-faneja kohtaan. Kannattaa tsekata. Lisäksi allekirjoittaneen voi nähdä Uusi-Lahti lehdessä, Maiden paita päällä. Luonnollisesti.
Hitto niin, sen tarkoitus oli todella mennä vain toimittajalle vinkiksi. EI minnekkään yleisönosastolle.. en ole itse nähnyt mitä siinä lukee ja en kaikkea muista, mitä kirjoitinkaan. Taisi olla kello liian paljon silloin. :)
83-84-86-88-90-03-03-05-05-05-06-06-06-06-06-06-06-07-07-08-08-08-08-08-08-08-08-08-08-08-09-10-10-10-10-10-11-11-11-11-11-11-11-11-11-11-11-13-13-13-13-13-14-14
OsmaGunner
Kundalini
Kundalini
Posts: 3117
Joined: Sun Mar 13, 2005 0:41

Post by OsmaGunner »

Mitäs siellä City-lehdessä seisoi? Itse en saa tähän hätään mistään sellaista käteen.
Emeritus
Berserkki
Berserkki
Posts: 965
Joined: Fri Mar 26, 2004 13:57

Post by Emeritus »

Otsikolla "Tosi Rautaneitsyt ilmoittautuu", pääpiirteittäin seuraavaa:
Kommenttia siihen juttuun missä raportoitiin Kiss-fanien intoilua ja siitä kun "seuraavat bändiä muutaman keikan verran maailmalla". Tänä vuonna kiertää 11 keikkaa bändin mukana, kaverilla 23. Järkätään faneille keikkamatkoja, fani-meetingejä yms.
Ja vieressä toimituksen mokailun(?) takia kuva neljästä Kiss-fanista näyttämässä kieltä ja kuvateksti "26 vuotta Iron Maidenia".
jarmila
Maiden Venturer
Maiden Venturer
Posts: 1781
Joined: Tue Jan 06, 2004 17:07
Location: Kymi/Finland

Post by jarmila »

Tänään sitten saapui vihdoin, tuo kauan sitten tilattu
GuitarLegends. Ja koko lehti Irmaa tuutin täydeltä. Lehdessä kitara "tabulaarit" muutamille kappaleille. Hieno kokonaisuus kaikinpuolin.

Tulossa on myöskin pikapuoliin BillBoardMaiden numero. Hienoja vetoja kustantajilta, painaa kannesta kanteen Maidenia.

Edit: Olin ihan unohtaa muuta Irmaan liittyvää. Myös ne Lapin Kullan nettisivujen kautta, tilatut omaetiketti tarrat saapuivat tänään. 8kpl maiden aiheista liimattavaa kesänkarkeloihin.
83-84-86-88-90-03-03-05-05-05-06-06-06-06-06-06-06-07-07-08-08-08-08-08-08-08-08-08-08-08-09-10-10-10-10-10-11-11-11-11-11-11-11-11-11-11-11-13-13-13-13-13-14-14
Post Reply