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IRON MAIDEN's DAVE MURRAY: 'We Will All Know' When It's Time To Retire

IRON MAIDEN's DAVE MURRAY: 'We Will All Know' When It's Time To Retire


In a new interview with Music Radar, IRON MAIDEN guitarist Dave Murray insisted that he and his bandmates will know when it’s time to quit.

“To me, there’s nothing worse than seeing a band you like on stage and they look like they shouldn’t really be there doing it,” he said. “We’re nearly hitting the seventies mark now, but I think we will all know when it would be time. It would be a mutual decision.

“I think there’s a time and a place to bail out with dignity and grace — as opposed to dragging it out,” he continued. “If you can leave it at that high level, and then bow out gracefully, I think it would be satisfying for us. And not just flog a dead horse, when you’re doing it for the wrong reasons.”

Referencing MAIDEN‘s upcoming “Run For Your Lives” world tour, which starts in May 2025 in Hungary, with dates announced so far going through August 2025 in Poland, Dave said: “We’re all set up for this tour, and after that we’ll see what the future holds. But at the moment the band sounds great, we still have that excitement and adrenaline when we go on stage. We’re still enjoying it, and that’s what it’s all about, really.”

IRON MAIDEN‘s longtime drummer Nicko McBrain played his last-ever gig with the band more than two months ago in São Paulo, Brazil.

The 72-year-old British musician, whose real name is Michael Henry McBrain, announced his retirement on December 7 in a statement on MAIDEN‘s web site and social media. He also said that night’s concert at Allianz Parque in São Paulo, Brazil would mark his final show with the iconic heavy metal act.

Despite the fact that he is stepping away from touring, McBrain said that he will remain closely connected to IRON MAIDEN and continue to be involved in “a variety of projects” with the band, while also focusing on personal ventures and his existing businesses.

On December 8, IRON MAIDEN announced Simon Dawson as its new touring drummer. Dawson is a former session drummer and MAIDEN bassist Steve Harris‘s longtime bandmate in BRITISH LION.

Back in 2019, Harris told SiriusXM‘s “Trunk Nation With Eddie Trunk” that there has been no talk of MAIDEN retiring anytime soon, despite the fact that all the members are in their late 60s.

“We all feel that if we feel we’re not cutting it anymore, then we’ll discuss it and that will probably be the end of it,” he explained. “But at the moment, we don’t feel like that. We feel that we definitely still are pulling our weight, so to speak. We’re just doing well. So far so good. I don’t wanna tempt fate, but we are doing good.”

In 2022, MAIDEN singer Bruce Dickinson told Full Metal Jackie‘s nationally syndicated radio show about the band’s longevity as well as the group’s multigenerational appeal: “We’re not planning to retire at all, really. I think we’ll probably drop dead onstage. I can think of worse places to drop dead. But no, we’re not planning on retiring. We’re all still firing away [with] loads of energy and loads of enthusiasm.

“With respect to our fans, we’ve got generations of fans now,” he continued. “Even at [my] spoken-word shows, I can crack jokes about the age of the audience only because half the audience is, like, my age, but the other half of the audience is often way, way younger. So it’s brilliant. We’ve got this whole intergenerational thing going. And, obviously, at the MAIDEN shows, it’s even bigger, the emphasis on that. And huge numbers of women. It’s fantastic. ‘Cause it always used to be cliché, back when I was starting in the early ’80s, that heavy metal was just, like, misogynist, male-dominated stuff… But no, it’s not true. There’s loads and loads of heavy metal fans who are girls.”

The São Paulo performance marked the final show of “The Future Past” world tour, which began in May 2023.

Last September, IRON MAIDEN promised fans “a spectacular and elaborate new show” on its 50th anniversary tour in 2025 and 2026.

MAIDEN said it will “cover classics and fan favorites from the first nine albums, from ‘Iron Maiden’ to ‘Fear Of The Dark’, many of which we haven’t played in years and many we will likely never play again in the future. We have already been hard at work for months putting together an even more spectacular and elaborate new show which will bring the songs to life more than we have ever been able to do before.”

“Fear Of The Dark” marked Dickinson‘s last album before he exited MAIDEN and then later returned in 1999.



Source: blabbermouth.net

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