For most long-standing Iron Maiden fans, the band as we remember them
best really began to take shape with the arrival, in 1981, of guitarist
Adrian Smith.
Joining the band in time to record their second album, 'Killers',
Adrian would prove to be not only a more than capable replacement
for the exiting Dennis Stratton, but also, in fellow guitarist
Dave Murray's words, "the best partner I'd ever had in Maiden,
up to that point." - But then, not only was Adrian an excellent
guitarist, he and Dave had known each other since they were at
school together. Which perhaps explains why, as Adrian says, "there's
almost a telepathy that exists between me and Dave, it's so spot
on, it's uncanny. We just always know what the other one is about
to do when we're playing."
In short, Adrian and Dave would become the perfect foil with which
to make the trademark twin-lead guitar sound of Maiden back then
work to its utmost potential. Then, as the years passed and each
new Maiden album somehow managed to surpass the last, Adrian began
revealing his talents as a songwriter, too, co-authoring, most
often with singer Bruce Dickinson, but also with bassist Steve
Harris and Dave, too, and eventually on his own, some of the best-remembered
Maiden hits from the '80s. '2 Minutes To Midnight', 'Wasted Years',
'Stranger In A Strange Land', 'Can I Play With Madness', 'The
Evil That Men Do'...the list of songs that began life as what
Adrian calls "these little bits and pieces I come up with"
is long and impressive. - As Steve says: "There's no doubting
Adrian's talent, he even sings pretty well! And to have someone
like him in the band really helped us come up with some interesting
new ideas. He's so versatile, we were able to do things with Adrian
we'd never been able to do before.
Or as Adrian himself says: "The great thing about writing
for Maiden is that the band has such a strong musical identity,
you're always starting from a really good place. Like, if you
fancy writing a fast one - well, there's no better band in the
world for playing fast numbers!
"Same with the slower, or more progressive type of things
- again, there's no better band to take you into some strange
musical places than Maiden. It's such an inspirational band to
write for because it can do anything. And Steve would always encourage
you to use your imagination and come up with something different
from the usual 4/4 beat thing most rock bands do all the time."
And yet, strange to relate, it so nearly didn't happen. Adrian
had actually been offered the job in Maiden prior to the band
going in to record their first eponymously-titled album, in January
1980, but had politely declined. A decision he quickly came to
regret as the first Maiden album rocketed into the UK charts at
No.4 just a few months later.
But then, as Adrian says: "I've never done anything just for
the money. So I didn't regret it, really. I had my own band, Urchin,
that I was still trying to get off the ground, and I think Steve
respected that."
"I suppose it was a bit like me with Maiden," says Steve,
"Adrian had had Urchin going since he was at school and he
rightly wanted to stick with it. I thought, fair enough, good
luck to ya, mate! Then when we came back to him a year later,
he was tempted I think 'cos he liked the band, he was a big mate
of Davey's and Urchin was over by then anyway. And when he finally
made up his mind to go for it with Maiden, he slotted in really
quick."
Adrian was born in Hackney, east London, on February 27, 1957.
The son of a painter and decorator, and the youngest child of
three, he had what he describes now as "a typically happy,
pretty boring upbringing, I suppose."
A Manchester United football fan who later replaced the pictures
on his bedroom wall of Georgie Best and Bobby Charlton with posters
of Jimi Hendrix and Ritchie Blackmore, Adrian was 15 when he bought
his first album: Deep Purple's 'Machine Head'. There was no looking
back after that.
"My sister used to go out with this guy and she used to borrow
his records and leave them lying round the house. Stuff like Purple,
Free, Black Sabbath...Then she stopped going out with him, so
I started buying the records myself."
Dave Murray was the only other person he knew, he says, "that
was into the same sort of thing as me." It was Dave who first
encouraged Adrian to take up the guitar. "I noticed that
whenever Dave brought his guitar to school he used to be surrounded
by girls!" he chuckles. Soon the two were playing regularly
together and had decided to form a band. So convinced was he of
his destiny that Adrian left school at 16 without even bothering
to take his O-level exams.
"I thought, I'm going to be a rock star - I don't need all
this!" he guffaws, before adding with a sad shake of his
head: "It all seems so simple when you're still at school."
- He was in for a rude awakening and while he was "waiting
for something to happen" the would-be rock star worked a
series of dead-end jobs: trainee spot-welder, apprentice cabinet
maker, milkman..."I used to just lurk about until they got
rid of me or I'd had enough and left - usually when there was
a gig coming up."
The band he and Dave formed - Evil Ways - had now metamorphosed
into Urchin. "Dave used to come and go," Adrian recalls.
"Playing with me and then Maiden and then me again, then
back to Maiden..."
Looking back, he says "it was probably only a matter of time
before I hooked up with Dave again." Fortunately for Adrian
- and for his many fans - the band he did finally hook up with
Dave again in was Iron Maiden.
The rest, as they say, is history. The six studio albums Adrian
recorded with Maiden in the '80s are still regarded as one of
the most fertile - not to mention, successful - periods in the
band's career.
When he left the band, in 1990, to pursue a solo career, despite
some excellent recordings, he admits now that, "it felt strange
not being in the band any more. It had become a way of life for
me and I realised how much Maiden will always be a part of me,
and how much I missed it."
The feeling, one suspected and knows now, was entirely mutual...
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