Oh grate...yet ANOTHER fucking Iron Maiden live album

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  • bueno bob
    DIAMOND STATUS
    • Jul 2004
    • 22820

    Oh grate...yet ANOTHER fucking Iron Maiden live album

    IRON MAIDEN - Death On The Road DVD/CD Details Revealed [Hot Flashes - 05.05.11 12:27:00]

    The following update has been posted at IRON MAIDEN’s website (www.ironmaiden.com):



    Iron Maiden have confirmed they are to release a double DVD and live album titled Death On The Road through EMI Records on August 29th, 2005.



    The show was filmed at the Westfalenhalle Arena, Dortmund, Germany during the Dance Of Death European Tour in December 2003 and fully captures the magnificent stage production and electricity of the band’s performance. Steve Harris once again took weeks personally editing the footage and like Rock In Rio this means thousands of cuts right into the heart of the action.



    Says Steve Harris, “The shows on that tour were perhaps far more theatrical than some of our recent tours so it has a very different feel than that of, say, Rock in Rio which was a massive festival environment. The 115 minute show was originally filmed by VIVA TV in Germany to broadcast across their national TV network a few days afterwards. However TV and DVD are always very different mainly owing to the time restrictions. So we’ve spent time starting from the bare bones to create a full length concert feature that captures the excitement of the show but also the drama as well. I think when people see songs like Paschendale and Dance Of Death they’ll be blown away by the spectacle. At the same time there are some great moments in Journeyman that I think will surprise a few people. Iron Maiden with acoustic guitars?! I’m really happy with the end result as it captures the dark and lighter moments perfectly.”



    The album and PCM Stereo/5.1 Surround sound for the DVD has been mixed and produced by Kevin ‘Caveman’ Shirley and co-produced, as always, by Steve Harris.



    The Double DVD also features a full 70-minute documentary directed by Matthew Amos charting the album’s creation and then subsequent preparations for the following tour. The feature length program includes candid and personal footage of the band during the recording and writing of the album, which is the first time it’s ever been filmed.



    Says Manager Rod Smallwood, “The documentary is something quite special for the fans as it really is a very revealing portrait of how Maiden work together recording and it took me hours to persuade them to let the cameras in the recording studio. Previously they’d never allowed any of that to be filmed but this time we decided to have a camera floating around to try and capture the Maiden recording process. A lot of it was filmed by the Kevin Shirley and the band themselves. I think it’s a great representation of the talent, effort and humour of a Maiden recording session. The documentary also covers what it takes to set up a major World Tour and has various interviews with our Killer Krew and hopefully it will be as insightful and interesting as the well received Early Days documentary footage.



    “As usual we have crammed as much as possible into the DVD’s with a host of extras including all of the promo videos from the album, footage of the band performing in South America, background interviews with members of the production crew and fans along the tour, artwork and photo galleries. Many hours of Maiden mayhem.



    “Like Rock In Rio we have again decided to release a DVD and CD. Those who have DVD players will presumably opt for the DVD but we wanted to ensure all fans could get at least the audio of this tour and many countries of the World do not have widespread capacity to play DVDs.”

    The full set list from the show is: ‘Wildest Dreams’, ‘Wrathchild’, ‘Can I Play With Madness’, ‘Trooper’, ‘Dance Of Death’, ‘Rainmaker’, ‘Brave New World’, ‘Paschendale’, ‘Lord Of The Flies’, ‘No More Lies’, ‘Hallowed Be Thy Name’, ‘Fear Of The Dark’, ‘Iron Maiden’, ‘Journeyman’, ‘The Number Of The Beast’, ‘Run To The Hills’.



    The release of the DVD and live album coincides with their headlining performance at this year’s Reading and Leeds Festivals which sold out within hours of going on sale. Reading Festival holds a special place in Maiden history. The band played their first headlining show there in 1980 and the following year a certain Bruce Dickinson was famously approached backstage for the job of vocalist before returning in 1982 for Iron Maiden's second headlining appearance, this time as the front man.



    The Reading and Leeds appearances will complete their busy summer touring schedule that includes top billing at major European Festivals and their own headlining stadium dates like their record breaking show in Gothenburg at the 55,000 capacity Ullevi Stadium that sold out in a mere two and a half hours. Just prior to Reading and Leeds the band will be joining BLACK SABBATH on Ozzfest in North America, plus a handful of arena headline dates.
    Twistin' by the pool.
  • Mr Badguy
    Full Member Status

    • Jan 2004
    • 3554

    #2
    This is great news.

    I went to see the "DOD" show in Glasgow but I was so pissed I can hardly remember any of it.

    Now I`ll get to enjoy the spectacle without the blurry effects of beer goggles.
    sigpic

    Sitting on a park bench!

    Comment

    • Antman
      Commando
      • Jan 2004
      • 1261

      #3
      I'm still looking for the Live After Death DVD from Long Beach Arena on the Powerslave tour. It was available on VHS and I taped it when it was on MTV's Saturday night Concert years ago but since lost the tape.
      When the shit hits the fan, close your mouth and duck.

      Comment

      • Mr Badguy
        Full Member Status

        • Jan 2004
        • 3554

        #4
        Originally posted by Antman
        I'm still looking for the Live After Death DVD from Long Beach Arena on the Powerslave tour. It was available on VHS and I taped it when it was on MTV's Saturday night Concert years ago but since lost the tape.
        It hasn`t been "officialy" released yet.

        It should be part of "The history of Iron Maiden part two" DVD.
        sigpic

        Sitting on a park bench!

        Comment

        • bueno bob
          DIAMOND STATUS
          • Jul 2004
          • 22820

          #5
          Maiden's going to be running neck and neck with Deep Purple for live albums if they keep up the rate they're going
          Twistin' by the pool.

          Comment

          • Full Bug
            Crazy Ass Mofo
            • Jan 2004
            • 2915

            #6
            If the fans want it why not? Personally I too wish they would release the Live After Death DVD, had the VHS tape but lost it years ago, at least they arent trying to sell everything under the sun like KISS....
            Diamond Mafia Forever - 4. To restore fullbug to the prominent place in this board, after various serious attacks by hitch1969 have now damaged his reputation and now is reguarded as a "Retarded, Stoned, Canadian, Dog finger bangin' fuckup"

            Comment

            • DLR82VH
              Foot Soldier
              • Mar 2004
              • 696

              #7
              How many live albums for them does this one make??
              http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v2..._lee_roth4.jpg


              http://img174.imageshack.us/img174/9...0011zv5.th.jpg

              http://img259.imageshack.us/img259/5573/thhy4.th.jpg

              Comment

              • fret_buzz_blues
                Head Fluffer
                • May 2005
                • 375

                #8
                I'll have to check that new material out.
                <img src="http://i6.photobucket.com/albums/y214/screwthesisters/del2.jpg" alt="Image hosted by Photobucket.com">
                "So there, I am, in Sri Lanka, formerly Ceylon, at about 3 o'clock in the morning, looking for one thousand brown M&Ms to fill a brandy glass, or Ozzy wouldn't go on stage that night. So, Jeff Beck pops his head 'round the door, and mentions there's a little sweets shop on the edge of town. So - we go. And - it's closed. So there's me, and Keith Moon, and David Crosby, breaking into that little sweets shop, eh. Well, instead of a guard dog, they've got this bloody great big bengal tiger. I managed to take out the tiger with a can of mace, but the shopkeeper and his son... that's a different story altogether. I had to beat them to death with their own shoes...Nasty business, really, but sure enough I got the M&Ms, and Ozzy went on stage and did a great show..."

                Comment

                • Mr Badguy
                  Full Member Status

                  • Jan 2004
                  • 3554

                  #9
                  Originally posted by DLR82VH
                  How many live albums for them does this one make??
                  I think it`s nine if you include "Maiden Japan", "Maiden England" and the "Eddie`s archive".

                  I don`t care.

                  If they brought an album out of every tour I would buy it.
                  sigpic

                  Sitting on a park bench!

                  Comment

                  • bueno bob
                    DIAMOND STATUS
                    • Jul 2004
                    • 22820

                    #10
                    I wouldn't.

                    Live albums, for me, are only welcome when there's been a significant amount of studio material released over the years (or since their last live effort, in either case...). Maiden, by that way of examination, released two studio albums and then a mini live album (which is great, because...well, they didn't have any live documentation up to that point). Another three studio albums follow and then comes "Live After Death" (like I said, three albums worth of material, five if consider the material from the first two LPs). Another 4 studio albums follow, at which point we're given the "treat" of 3 (potentially 4) live albums from Maiden in a row ("Live at Donington", "A Real Live One", "A Real Dead One", and of course, "Raising Hell" if you care to include it). That, to me, was an exceptionally stupid idea. I can see releasing the "Live One"/"Dead One" business of both eras, that was fine, but that eliminated any reason to have released "Live at Donington" at all. They did, however, wisely opt to release "Raising Hell" on VHS/DVD only, and considering it was Bruce's farewell, it was fitting.

                    Blaze joins and does "The X Factor", then we then get the live cuts on "Best of the Beast", and the only one I bothered listening to at all was Blaze's take on "Afraid to Shoot Strangers"; Blaze hadn't been captured live as of that point, so that was OK with me as well...one more studio album with Blaze and ANOTHER best of set (which was kind of dumb...fan selected greatest hits or not, it should have just been packaged as the "Ed Hunter" video game and left at that), then comes Bruce's return with "Brave New World". Wait a minute - better throw ANOTHER live album out there (which, essentially, showcases a few of the tracks from BNW and Bruce's take on a few Blaze hits and nothing else that hasn't already been done to death on Maidens live albums). A 3rd greatest hits album (which was kinda crappy to my mind), another studio album...then they put out the box set with live cuts from the vaults, BUT WAIT! LET'S HAVE ANOTHER LIVE ALBUM! Which features absolutely nothing other than a DVD which will say the same things that any other Maiden documentary DVD has, and a handful of new tracks in live format, and then includes everything else that's been done to death on a Maiden live album.

                    Live albums, and best of sets, when they're shat out by a band at this rate, lose their luster for me really quick because it makes the band look like they're out of ideas and struggling for ways to make a release every year (see also Styx and Deep Purple for reference points).

                    So...

                    01. Maiden Japan
                    02. Live After Death
                    03. Live at Donington
                    04. A Real Live One
                    05. A Real Dead One
                    06. Rock in Rio
                    07. Death On the Road
                    08. Maiden England (video)
                    09. Raising Hell (video)

                    Gives us 7 live albums and 9 live releases total, including the videos, most of which offer up at least 80-85% of material that's already been represented on their other live albums.

                    In Essence:

                    FILLER.
                    Last edited by bueno bob; 05-12-2005, 11:09 AM.
                    Twistin' by the pool.

                    Comment

                    • Shaun Ponsonby
                      ROTH ARMY ELITE
                      • Oct 2004
                      • 6343

                      #11
                      It's probably for die hards etc.

                      For example, you wouldn't be so bitter towards Van Halen releasing a live album in 1978,1979,1980,1981,1982 and 1984, would you? You would be happy that you have all material from each VH tour.
                      Fast & Bulbous, Got Me?

                      Comment

                      • bueno bob
                        DIAMOND STATUS
                        • Jul 2004
                        • 22820

                        #12
                        Originally posted by Shaun Ponsonby
                        It's probably for die hards etc.

                        For example, you wouldn't be so bitter towards Van Halen releasing a live album in 1978,1979,1980,1981,1982 and 1984, would you? You would be happy that you have all material from each VH tour.
                        Actually, I would.

                        I just don't see any sense in releasing live album after live album after live album after live album that features essentially the same material, sans 4 new songs or so, of material that's already surfaced on other live albums. It just seems pointless to me. Sure, Van Halen deserved a live album with Roth (and really owes one to the fans), but one for every year? Nah. It should have been released in 1985 as a double length set from the 1984 tour, spanning everything throughout the first six albums; it certainly would have gave us one less thing to complain about, and back then it would have provided a good stopgap in between the ending of the Roth era and the beginning of Van Hagar, but...it just seems like overkill to have live albums in the double digits unless the material presented is vastly different than any other live album. One official live recording of a song (unless it's a trademark in the veins of, say, Sabbath's "Paranoid") is enough for me.

                        Sabbath is actually a band whose live releases I can really get behind...as the material is vastly different on all 4 official releases. "Live Evil" focused, for the most part, on Ronnie's stuff and the important Ozzy material (War Pigs, Iron Man, Paranoid, Black Sabbath, N.I.B., Children of the Grave)..."Cross Purposes: Live" was a great cross selection of material spanning all three eras, and not the same material (the Ozzy material was mostly different, included "Sabbath Bloody Sabbath", "Symptom of the Universe", "The Wizard", so forth...the Dio selection was brief and all of the rest was Tony Martin material)...."Reunion", of course, featured ALL of the Ozzy stuff and was the classic lineup live album that had never happened up to that point and certainly needed to..."Past Lives" was a second classic lineup album, true, but recorded back in the day when Ozzy's voice wasn't totally shot to shit and they were at their pinnacle as a live unit, so that made sense (additionally, it was, at long last, an official version of "Live at Last", which I never really considered a official Sabbath album until that point). And that's it. With the exception of the Ian Gillan and Glenn Hughs albums (and having an official live album out there with those two isn't really important, I think), everything's been represented and there's not really any need for anything else.
                        Twistin' by the pool.

                        Comment

                        • Shaun Ponsonby
                          ROTH ARMY ELITE
                          • Oct 2004
                          • 6343

                          #13
                          Still, I think the constant live releses are for die hards. Some people like to have live documents from each tour.
                          Fast & Bulbous, Got Me?

                          Comment

                          • Mr Badguy
                            Full Member Status

                            • Jan 2004
                            • 3554

                            #14
                            I also have "Maiden England" on CD as it was released as a video/CD double pack.
                            sigpic

                            Sitting on a park bench!

                            Comment

                            • Mr Badguy
                              Full Member Status

                              • Jan 2004
                              • 3554

                              #15
                              Originally posted by bueno bob
                              I wouldn't.

                              Live albums, for me, are only welcome when there's been a significant amount of studio material released over the years (or since their last live effort, in either case...). Maiden, by that way of examination, released two studio albums and then a mini live album (which is great, because...well, they didn't have any live documentation up to that point). Another three studio albums follow and then comes "Live After Death" (like I said, three albums worth of material, five if consider the material from the first two LPs). Another 4 studio albums follow, at which point we're given the "treat" of 3 (potentially 4) live albums from Maiden in a row ("Live at Donington", "A Real Live One", "A Real Dead One", and of course, "Raising Hell" if you care to include it). That, to me, was an exceptionally stupid idea. I can see releasing the "Live One"/"Dead One" business of both eras, that was fine, but that eliminated any reason to have released "Live at Donington" at all. They did, however, wisely opt to release "Raising Hell" on VHS/DVD only, and considering it was Bruce's farewell, it was fitting.

                              Blaze joins and does "The X Factor", then we then get the live cuts on "Best of the Beast", and the only one I bothered listening to at all was Blaze's take on "Afraid to Shoot Strangers"; Blaze hadn't been captured live as of that point, so that was OK with me as well...one more studio album with Blaze and ANOTHER best of set (which was kind of dumb...fan selected greatest hits or not, it should have just been packaged as the "Ed Hunter" video game and left at that), then comes Bruce's return with "Brave New World". Wait a minute - better throw ANOTHER live album out there (which, essentially, showcases a few of the tracks from BNW and Bruce's take on a few Blaze hits and nothing else that hasn't already been done to death on Maidens live albums). A 3rd greatest hits album (which was kinda crappy to my mind), another studio album...then they put out the box set with live cuts from the vaults, BUT WAIT! LET'S HAVE ANOTHER LIVE ALBUM! Which features absolutely nothing other than a DVD which will say the same things that any other Maiden documentary DVD has, and a handful of new tracks in live format, and then includes everything else that's been done to death on a Maiden live album.

                              Live albums, and best of sets, when they're shat out by a band at this rate, lose their luster for me really quick because it makes the band look like they're out of ideas and struggling for ways to make a release every year (see also Styx and Deep Purple for reference points).

                              So...

                              01. Maiden Japan
                              02. Live After Death
                              03. Live at Donington
                              04. A Real Live One
                              05. A Real Dead One
                              06. Rock in Rio
                              07. Death On the Road
                              08. Maiden England (video)
                              09. Raising Hell (video)

                              Gives us 7 live albums and 9 live releases total, including the videos, most of which offer up at least 80-85% of material that's already been represented on their other live albums.

                              In Essence:

                              FILLER.
                              I get your point, Bob.

                              However, like I always say, noone will hold a gun to your head to buy it.

                              Take Rush, their "Different stages" and "Rush in Rio" live albums were quite different although they were only seperated by one studio album.

                              Also, on their last tour they played a load of stuff that didn`t feature on either of those sets.

                              If that tour came out on CD (which might happen), I would buy that too.

                              Maybe that`s just because I love live albums, but there is a market out there for live tapes.

                              Ask the guys who run Jimi Hendrix`s estate.
                              sigpic

                              Sitting on a park bench!

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