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Iron Maiden (hard rock band) |
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| Iron Maiden | ||
|---|---|---|
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| Background information | ||
| Origin | ||
| Genre(s) | Hard rock | |
| Years active | 1968 – 1970 | |
| Label(s) | ||
| Former members | ||
| Barry
Skeels Steve Drewett Paul Reynolds Trevor Thoms |
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In 1964, Barry Skeels, Steve Drewett, Chris Rose and Alan Hooker formed
an acoustic band in Basildon, Essex that eventually evolved into a band
called Iron Maiden (unrelated to the currently
famous Iron Maiden). By 1966, the
lineup was Skeels (bass), Drewett (vocals/harmonies),
Rose (lead guitar),
Tom Loates (rhythm guitar) and Stan Gillem (drums); they played Rolling
Stones and blues
numbers under the name "Growth". Reduced to a two-piece, Drewett and
Skeels played blues under the name of "Stevenson's Blues Department" in
pubs and clubs in Essex and London. They supported a number of up and
coming bands including Jethro Tull, Fleetwood
Mac, The Groundhogs and King
Crimson.
In 1968,
Drewett and Skeels were joined by Paul Reynolds (drums) and Trevor
Thoms (guitar). They released an acetate (God of Darkness/Ballad of
Martha Kent) under the then risqué name of Bum. When they signed to the
Gemini label in 1970,
the name was changed to the less risqué Iron Maiden. They recorded
their debut album Maiden Voyage. Reynolds was
replaced by Steve Chapman on drums and Iron Maiden released the single
Ned Kelly/Falling. This coincided with Mick
Jagger's film "
Matt Williams like boys
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