Famous Like Me > Composer > M > Nicko McBrain
Profile of Nicko McBrain
on Famous Like Me |
|
Name: |
Nicko McBrain |
|
|
|
Also Know As: |
|
|
|
Date of Birth: |
5th June 1952 |
|
|
Place of Birth: |
Hackney, London, England, UK |
|
|
Profession: |
Composer |
|
|
From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia Michael Henry McBrain (born June 5, 1952 in England) is the current drummer in the heavy metal band Iron Maiden. The nickname "Nicko" is from Michael’s childhood, where his favourite book was entitled ‘Nicholas the bear’ – Which he apparently carried everywhere. Due to this, his parents called him ‘Nick’. “Nicko†was spawned when Michael was meeting a manager from CBS records, with the keyboard player Billy Day. Billy introduced him as ‘My Italian drummer – His name’s “Neekoâ€â€™. Michael liked the moniker, so he decided to use it as a stage name, having first adapted the spelling slightly.
He joined the band in 1983 for the Piece of Mind album, replacing Clive Burr, after his previous band Trust had supported Iron Maiden on the road during 1982. In the 1970s, he appeared on some Pat Travers albums, and also appeared in the band McKitty in the early 1980s. It was during a McKitty gig in Belgium that he first met Iron Maiden bassist Steve Harris.
He has been cited as a major influence of many modern drummers over a wide range of styles, and often holds drum clinics for fans and would-be drummers alike.
Strangely, unlike most heavy metal drummers, McBrain has refused to use a double bass drum, since he considers it to be "too complicated", and "un-drummerish". Instead, he has developed an incredibly fast technique on the single bass drum, following Steve Harris' gallops with no problem whatsoever. The first (and last) song Nicko McBrain recorded using a double bass drum was Face in the Sand, on the Dance of Death album, 2004. He subsequently announced publicly that it had been one of the hardest things he had ever had to play and that, for that reason, the number would not be included in the track list of the Dance of Death World Tour. On this album Nicko McBrain also contributed, for the first time in 20 years, to the songwriting, writing the bass line on a New Frontier.
He has filmed several short videos for Iron Maiden fans on the band's official website and keeps a diary of the band's latest tours.
Some might consider it ironic that, considering accusations of Satanism in the band's early career, Nicko is actually a practicing Christian and regular church-goer.
Iron Maiden |
Bruce Dickinson | Dave Murray | Adrian Smith | Janick Gers | Steve Harris | Nicko McBrain
Paul Di'Anno | Dennis Stratton | Clive Burr | Blaze Bayley
|
Albums and EPs |
Studio albums: Soundhouse Tapes | 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
Live albums: Maiden Japan | Live After Death | A Real Live One | A Real Dead One | Live at Donington | Rock in Rio | Death on the Road
Compilations: Best of the Beast | Ed Hunter | Edward the Great
|
Videos and DVDs |
Live at the Rainbow | Video Pieces | Behind the Iron Curtain | Live After Death | 12 Wasted Years | Maiden England | Up the Irons - The First Ten Years | From There to Eternity | Donington Live 1992 | Raising Hell | Rock in Rio | Visions of the Beast | The Early Days | Death on the Road
|
This content from
Wikipedia is licensed under the
GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the Wikipedia article Nicko McBrain
|