| Steve Harris |

Steve
Harris during a concert in Barcelona 30
November 2006.
|
| Background information |
| Birth name |
Stephen Percy Harris |
| Born |
March 12, 1956 (1956-03-12) (age 51)
Leytonstone, London, England |
| Genre(s) |
Heavy
metal |
| Instrument(s) |
Bass
Keyboards
Guitar
Harmonica
Drums |
| Years active |
1973 – present |
| Label(s) |
EMI |
Associated
acts |
Iron
Maiden
Smiler
Gypsy's Kiss |
| Notable instrument(s) |
| Fender
Precision Bass |
Stephen Percy Harris (born March 12, 1956 in Leytonstone,
London, England) is the bassist and
primary composer
of the heavy metal band Iron
Maiden. In addition, he plays keyboards,
sings backing vocals, and is the leader and
sole owner of the band. He founded the band as a teenager in 1975.
Along with Dave Murray, they are the only members of the band that have
appeared on all of the band's albums, and Harris is the only member to
remain in the band throughout its duration. He used to work as an architectural
draftsman in the East
End of London but gave up his job upon forming Iron Maiden. During the
mid 1970s he was a youth team footballer for West
Ham United. He is a talented football player,
and he has stated his first ambition in life before music was to become
a professional footballer.
|
Contents
- 1 Career
- 2 Other
musical talents
- 3 Trivia
- 4 Discography
with Iron Maiden
- 5 References
|
Career
A self-taught bass player,
Harris's first bass was a copy of a Fender
Precision Bass that cost him £40 when he was 17 years old. He went on
to use a signature Lado "Unicorn" model and a late 1950s Fender Precision
with RotoSound
strings. He now uses his own signature RotoSound flatwound bass
strings. Although flatwound strings usually do not have a bright tone,
Harris' playing style causes the strings to forcefully hit against the
frets, producing his distinctive 'clanky' bass tone.
Harris has been influenced by other bass players such as Chris
Squire of Yes, John
Deacon of Queen, Mike
Rutherford of Genesis, Geddy Lee of
Rush,
Andy
Fraser of Free and John Mayall
& the Bluesbreakers, Geezer
Butler of Black Sabbath, and John
Entwistle of The Who. One of his all-time
favourite bass players was Pete Way from UFO,
who was said to influence Harris' playing style greatly.
Harris' first band was named Influence, which was later
renamed to Gypsy's Kiss, (Cockney rhyming slang for "piss"). He later
joined Smiler, of which all the band members were several years older
than he was. He ended up leaving, as the members of the band made it
clear that they did not care for a bassist who leapt around the stage and wrote
songs. After Smiler, Harris went on to create Iron
Maiden, getting the name from seeing an iron maiden, a type of torture
instrument, in the movie The Man in the Iron
Mask.
Steve Harris is Maiden's principal composer and lyricist.
Harris's songwriting has been noted for a galloping bass pattern (see
below)
and long songs with epic lyrics that feature many tempo changes.
Influenced by 1970's progressive rock bands like King
Crimson, Genesis, and Emerson, Lake, and Palmer.
Harris frequently writes lyrics about mythology, history or topics
inspired from books and movies. Harris has commented on the difference
between 1970s progressive music (called "progressive") and contemporary
progressive-style music (known as "prog"), a distinction which is
becoming recognised.
Steve Harris is often considered among the best and most
influential heavy metal bassists.
He frequently writes bass lines with a 'gallop', a pattern consisting
of three rapid notes – one eighth and two sixteenths – which he plays
with two fingers. Before playing, Harris often greases his fingers, to
make such 'gallops' easier to play, as shown on the bonus DVD for the A Matter of Life
and Death album. Besides this he is very
adventurous on the bass and plays intricate accompaniment in many of
Maiden's songs. He also uses power chords, which are relatively unheard
of on bass, on several songs. Harris has also stated that he never uses
a pick
and that he never warms up before a show.
He plays a specially-painted bass guitar which has been
featured on every Iron Maiden album recorded. It
is currently sporting the West Ham United F.C. logo. The
guitar has gone through three colour changes since construction.
Originally being white, it was then changed to black, then blue, and is
currently cream with the rim done in West Ham's light-blue, and the
club's logo on the body. The pickguard is metallic. He is also known to
use a West Ham United football scarf to cover his strap.
Other musical talents
In addition to bass playing and writing music/lyrics for Iron
Maiden, Steve Harris has taken on numerous other roles to support the
running of the band such as:
- music production/mixing
- music video directing/editing
- live music video directing/editing
- keyboards
- backing vocals
- string/bass synthesisers
Steve Harris has been Iron Maiden's principal keyboardist
(other than at live shows and on a few songs where the work has been
done by Michael Kenney who doubles as his
bass technician) since keyboards were first used by the band on the
album Seventh Son of a
Seventh Son. Though since that album keyboards
have played less of a role in Iron Maiden (usually), the complexity and
speed of the playing has increased as Harris has improved. Initially he
was not even credited for it in the band credits, just the album ones.
For the album Somewhere in Time,
Harris made his first experimentation with synthesised sounds, playing
the bass
synth (later on the Seventh Son of a Seventh Son album
referred to as 'string synth'). He has also done so on subsequent
albums, although it has not featured as much as it did on Somewhere
in Time because of the band's less synthesised sounds and
also the use of keyboards.
While he plays keyboards during the recording of Iron Maiden
albums, Steve Harris has apparently shown a lack of ability at drumming. At
times he has been known to demonstrate to Nicko
McBrain what he wants Nicko to play, and, as Nicko put it, sounded 'as
good as your gran'. In The Early Days
documentary he revealed that he originally wanted to be a drummer, but
as he lived with his grandmother he didn't have enough room for a
drum-set.
Steve Harris is also known for playing an increasing role in mixing
Iron Maiden's albums as well as producing them, and has done the work
himself since Fear of the Dark.
Harris also directs and edits many of the band's music videos,
particularly live ones. He also owns a farm with music recording
facilities. Harris' land has been used to write Maiden's albums on
numerous occasions.
Harris has also been involved in backing vocals for Iron
Maiden songs since the band's inception. Since his fellow backing
vocalist Adrian Smith left Iron Maiden in 1990 (replacement Janick Gers
does not sing), he has not been credited for this (after Smith's
return, backing vocals have remained uncredited), since a single
backing vocalist lacked as much and Harris' fame purely as a bass
player had been consolidated by this point. However, he has continued
to provide backing vocals when playing live performances of older Iron
Maiden songs with the band. He is also well known for conspicuously
"singing along" (off microphone, mouthing words) in live performances.
Trivia
- Harris designed Iron Maiden's first logo which used the
current Maiden Font, seen in all of their
album-releases, as stated in The
Early Days
- Given that Harris had been the centre of attention in
Maiden's early gigs the addition of Bruce
Dickinson to the band's line-up originally caused small scuffles
between the two as they both wanted to be at the centre of the stage.
Bruce mentioned in The Early Days
documentary that Harris occasionally elbowed him away, and he returned
the favour by causing Harris to trip on his extra-long microphone stand.
- The darker tone of the album The
X Factor has often been attributed due to
problems in Harris's personal life while making the album. He had
recently divorced and his father had also died.
- His oldest daughter, Lauren Harris, is also a singer and
due to release her debut album soon. She supported Iron Maiden on their
A Matter of Life
and Death tour.
- His son, George Harris plays lead guitar in a band called
Burn In Reason www.myspace.com/burninreason who take a heavy influence
from Iron Maiden as well as bands such as Killswitch Engage, Funeral
For A Friend and Underoath.
- In 1996, Harris had a signature bass sold by Fender. It was
the Steve Harris Signature P Bass. It has a basswood body colored in
lake placid blue, with a maple neck and Bassline pickups. It is no
longer made and very hard to find.
Discography with Iron Maiden
- Iron Maiden
(1980)
- Killers
(1981)
- The Number of the
Beast (1982)
- Piece of Mind
(1983)
- Powerslave
(1984)
- Live After Death
(1985)
- Somewhere in Time
(1986)
- Seventh Son of
a Seventh Son (1988)
- No Prayer for the
Dying (1990)
- Fear Of The Dark
(1992)
- A Real Live One
(1993)
- A Real Dead One
(1993)
- Live at Donington
(1993)
- The X Factor
(1995)
- Virtual XI
(1998)
- Brave New World
(2000)
- Rock in Rio
(2002)
- Dance of Death
(2003)
- Death on the Road
(2005)
- A Matter of Life
and Death (2006)
References
-
http://www.hardradio.com/shockwaves/maiden1.html
-
-
http://www.metal-reviews.com/maiden.htm
-
Ranked 5th "best bassist ever" in Classic Rock magazine, January 2000
-
http://www.ironmaiden.com/index.php?categoryid=8&p2_articleid=287
| v • d • e Iron Maiden |
| Current members |
| Bruce
Dickinson | Dave Murray
| Adrian Smith | Janick
Gers | Steve
Harris | Nicko
McBrain |
| Michael Kenney |
| Former members |
| Blaze Bayley | Clive Burr
| Paul
Di'Anno | Dennis Stratton | Doug
Sampson | Tony Parsons | Dave Mac | Paul Todd | Paul Cairns | Dennis
Wilcock | Terry Wapram | Tony Moore | Thunderstick
| Ron
Matthews | Bob Sawyer | Paul Day | Terry Rance | Dave Sullivan |
| Discography |
| Studio
albums |
Iron
Maiden | Killers
| The Number of the
Beast | Piece
of Mind | Powerslave
| Somewhere in Time
| Seventh Son of a
Seventh Son | No Prayer for the Dying
| Fear of the Dark
| The X Factor
| Virtual
XI | Brave New World
| Dance of Death
| A Matter of Life
and Death |
| Live
albums |
Live
After Death | A
Real Live One | A
Real Dead One | Live
at Donington | A
Real Live Dead One | Rock
in Rio | The
BBC Archives | Beast Over Hammersmith
| Death on the Road |
| EPs |
The
Soundhouse Tapes | Live!!
+one | Maiden
Japan | No More
Lies |
| Compilations
and box-sets |
The
First Ten Years | Best
of the Beast | Ed Hunter
| Edward the Great
| Eddie's Archive
| Best of the B'Sides
| The Essential Iron Maiden |
| Videos
and DVDs |
Live
at the Rainbow | Video
Pieces | Behind
the Iron Curtain | Live After Death
| 12 Wasted Years
| Maiden England
| The First Ten Years:
The Videos | From There to Eternity
| Donington Live 1992
| Raising Hell
| Classic Albums: The Number of the
Beast | Rock in Rio
| Visions of the Beast
| The Early Days
| Death on the Road |
| Singles |
| "Running Free" | "Sanctuary" | "Women
in Uniform" | "Twilight Zone" | "Purgatory"
| "Run to the Hills" | "The Number of the
Beast" | "Flight of Icarus" | "The
Trooper" | "2 Minutes to Midnight" | "Aces
High" | "Running Free (live)" | "Run
to the Hills (live '85)" | "Wasted Years" | "Stranger in a
Strange Land" | "Can I Play with Madness" | "The Evil That Men Do" | "The Clairvoyant (live)" | "Infinite
Dreams" | "Holy Smoke" | "Bring Your
Daughter...To the Slaughter" | "Be
Quick or Be Dead" | "From Here
to Eternity" | "Wasting Love" | "Fear of the Dark (live)" | "Hallowed
Be Thy Name (live)" | "Man on the Edge" | "Lord of the Flies" | "Virus"
| "The Angel and the Gambler"
| "Futureal"
| "The Wicker Man" | "Out of the Silent
Planet" | "Run to the Hills (live '01)" | "Wildest
Dreams" | "Rainmaker" | "The Number of the
Beast (2005)" | "The Trooper (live)" | "The
Reincarnation of Benjamin Breeg" | "Different World" |
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articles |
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Smallwood | Andy Taylor | Kevin
Shirley | Martin Birch | Howie
Weinberg | Ross Halfin | Denis
O'Regan | Derek
Riggs | Melvyn
Grant | Simon
Drake |