Senaste Nytt

God Jul & Gott Nytt År!

Skrivet av Alexandra | 2012-12-23 18:03
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Iron Maiden Scandinavia FC
Vill önska God Jul och Gott Nytt år till alla medlemmar.
Nästa år kommer att bli ett bra år för IMSFC:
IMSFC Barncancerfonden fotbollscup
IMSFC Clive Burr välgörenhetskonsert med Paul och Blaze
IMSFC efterfest på Harry B James (Efter IM Friends konserten)
Med mycket mera!
Gå gärna med i vår grupp på Facebook där vi kommer köra tävlingarna framöver:
Iron Maiden Scandinavia FC på Facebook

 

IMSFC anordnar fotbollscup för Barncancerfonden

Skrivet av Alexandra | 2012-12-19 20:08
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Iron Maiden Scandinavia FC presenterar: Barncancer Fotbollscup 2013

Den 6:e januari så kommer det att hållas en fotboll cup i Thomashallen, Strängnäs för Barncancerfonden. Cupen kommer att hålla på hela dagen i Thomashallen (08.00-20.00)
Cupen kommer att ha 2st grupper.
Grupp 1 kommer att innehålla korpenlag/företagslag tex Mekonomen
... Grupp 2 kommer att innehålla Strängnäs/Eskilstuna lag som tex Ärla IF.

Alla lag från respektive grupp kommer att mötas 1 gång och sedan blir det en semifinal då 1:an och 2:an från grupp 1 möts och 1 och 2 från grupp 2 möts.
Vinnaren i semi-finalen från grupp 1 och grupp 2 kommer att mötas i en avgörande final där lagen från grupp 1 kommer att få börja med 2/3 straffar mot grupp 2, så att det kanske blir lite spännande.

Vi hoppas nu på att alla kommun lag vill ställa upp i denna cup för att stödja Barncancerfonden.

Matcherna kommer att vara mellan 12-15 min långa och lagen behöver inte ha med sig mer än 10-12st spelare från varje lag.
Kostnaden per lag är 500kr som kommer att gå direkt till Barncancerfonden utan mellanhänder. Är man intresserad av att ha med 2 lag så går det ev att ordna. Vet att tex Stallarholmen har väldigt många spelare.

Vi vill även uppmana alla lag som kommer att ställa upp i cupen att tävla om vilka som kan samla in mest pengar fram till cup dagen. Vinnaren kommer att presenteras under mitten av dagen för att ta emot ett pris. Anmälningsavgiften på 500kr kommer inte att räknas in.

Klara lag är:
Grupp 1:
Iron Maiden Scandinavia FC
Mekonomen 1
Mekonomen 2
Café George
Älska Strängnäs
ICA Bengtsson?
SEVAB?

Grupp 2:
Ärla
Aspö

Vid frågor och anmälningar av lag kontakta:
Michael Salenius
Iron Maiden Scandinavia FC
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www.laget.se/imsfc

Iron Maiden Scandinavia FC presenterar: Barncancer Fotbollscup 2013  Den 6:e januari så kommer det att hållas en fotboll cup i Thomashallen, Strängnäs för Barncancerfonden. Cupen kommer att hålla på hela dagen i Thomashallen (08.00-20.00) Cupen kommer att ha 2st grupper. Grupp 1 kommer att innehålla korpenlag/företagslag tex Mekonomen Grupp 2 kommer att innehålla Strängnäs/Eskilstuna lag som tex Ärla IF.  Alla lag från respektive grupp kommer att mötas 1 gång och sedan blir det en semifinal då 1:an och 2:an från grupp 1 möts och 1 och 2 från grupp 2 möts. Vinnaren i semi-finalen från grupp 1 och grupp 2 kommer att mötas i en avgörande final där lagen från grupp 1 kommer att få börja med 2/3 straffar mot grupp 2, så att det kanske blir lite spännande.  Vi hoppas nu på att alla kommun lag vill ställa upp i denna cup för att stödja Barncancerfonden.  Matcherna kommer att vara mellan 12-15 min långa och lagen behöver inte ha med sig mer än 10-12st spelare från varje lag. Kostnaden per lag är 500kr som kommer att gå direkt till Barncancerfonden utan mellanhänder. Är man intresserad av att ha med 2 lag så går det ev att ordna. Vet att tex Stallarholmen har väldigt många spelare.  Vi vill även uppmana alla lag som kommer att ställa upp i cupen att tävla om vilka som kan samla in mest pengar fram till cup dagen. Vinnaren kommer att presenteras under mitten av dagen för att ta emot ett pris. Anmälningsavgiften på 500kr kommer inte att räknas in.  Klara lag är: Grupp 1: Iron Maiden Scandinavia FC Mekonomen 1 Mekonomen 2 Café George  Älska Strängnäs ICA Bengtsson? SEVAB?  Grupp 2: Ärla IF   Vid frågor och anmälningar av lag kontakta: Michael Salenius Iron Maiden Scandinavia FC 070-4174704 
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Köp Support Clive Burr T-shirt

Skrivet av Alexandra | 2012-12-08 12:08
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Ni som vill vara med och stödja Clive Burr och Barncancerfonden genom att köpa en Support Clive Burr T-shirt ska föra över 220kr till DanskeBank OGB cleringnr 1300 kontonr 0122230 märk med Clive Burr. Skicka sedan ett mail till Den här e-postadressen är skyddad från spamrobotar. Du måste tillåta Javascript för att visa e-postadressen med all info som behövs för att skicka iväg ett paket på posten hem till dig.
Alla pengar förutom 20kr går till CB och BCF. 20kr är för frakten. Vill ni köpa flera t-shirtar så är det bara x på antalet med priset ;)
Skynda er för det finns inte så många kvar.

 

Steve tror inte att Maiden fortfarande håller på om 10 år

Skrivet av Phantom Icarus | 2012-10-16 20:23
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I en ny intervju med The Quietus där Mr. Harris pratar om sitt nya soloalbum så säger han sig även vara tveksam att Maiden fortfarande håller på om 10 år. Säkerligen 5, men 10, nja...

Här har du hela den matiga intervjun.


 

Av: John Doran , October 15th, 2012 05:51

Finally after 20 years of on/off preparation, Steve Harris’s side-project band British Lion are ready to tour… but only if the legendary metaller feels there is demand for it. When the founding member and de facto leader of Iron Maiden frets that maybe only 200 people per city would bother turning up to see him and his band, it’s clear that he’s not doing so out of false modesty. He says he would genuinely love to take his first ever solo album, also called British Lion, out on the road but is unsure whether he’d be playing to near empty rooms or not.

The idea that one of the most important and powerful people in the history of rock music - the crown prince of heavy metal - has to think this way seems ridiculous until you consider what a bizarre, brilliant and maverick band Maiden actually are.

Harris formed the Irons on Christmas Day 1975 shortly after the demise of his previous group Smiler and he’s been at the helm ever since. By comparison the most high profile musician in the band, Bruce Dickinson, was actually their fourth vocalist and took most of the 90s off to pursue a moderately successful solo career. Only guitarist Dave Murray – the Michael Collins of the group - has featured alongside Harris on all 15 studio albums, whose sales add up to approximately 90 million units and has also been on every tour, comprised of 2,000 shows, taking in 65 countries. (This massive number doesn’t even include one off gigs, the biggest of which was 1985’s Rock In Rio, which saw them play in front of a live audience of 300,000 people. Iron Maiden have always come bristling with eye-boggling statistics. Their first – and best – live album Live After Death tells you everything you could ever want to know about the World Slavery Tour 84/85, in its calculator melting liner notes. During the 100,000 miles travelled, 7,778 hotel rooms were stayed in, 6,392 guitar strings and 3,760 drum sticks were used and 50,000 cans of beer, 6,000 pints of milk and 2,500 pints of orange juice were drunk.)

But of course, in some respects, the most important member of the group doesn’t even exist as such. First drawn by Derek Riggs in the late 70s (and originally called Electric Matthew), Eddie The Head (or ‘Ed for short) is more than the band’s mascot - this desiccated zombie like figure represents the band on stage, on artwork, on T shirts, on posters, in videos and, most importantly, in the imaginations of their millions of fans.

Between Eddie’s lumbering antics and Dicko’s exhortations for the stadia of the world to “scream for me!”, it feels like Harris, a former architectural draughtsman from Leytonstone, East London, has been almost left out of the spotlight to get on with making and maintaining The Irons as the world’s biggest operational metal band. Harris, guides The Irons in the same way as Eddie pulls the strings on a puppet Satan on the cover of The Number Of The Beast, given that he is the chief song writer, bassist, studio keyboard player, occasional producer and mixer, maker of music videos and editor/producer of live concert film for the group, as well as their ruling strategist. It’s hard to think of another high profile band leader who happily cedes the lion’s share of attention to another member – let alone to another member and a puppet.

So perhaps it’s not so much surprising that it’s taken him two decades to get round to putting his solo album out but that he has managed to find time to do it at all. The genesis of the LP occurred when an old work colleague gave him a cassette featuring Graham Leslie [guitar] and Richie Taylor [vocals]. Harris enjoyed it so much he started mentoring – and also named - British Lion, who split before anything was released. Harris stayed in touch with Taylor however and the pair form the backbone of the new British Lion group whose self-titled album of MOR/classic rock is out now on EMI.

It is Harris’s very down-to-Earthness which is bizarre by today’s standards but this probably has a lot to do with the group’s longevity. He comes from a different age when rock stars simply wished to achieve what their dads dreamed of – escape from the city to a nice satellite town, upmarket fishing, great seats at the football, a lot of travel and perhaps even one’s own pub inside the house for all their mates to drink in. During our chat he compares himself to a cabbie and is very keen to find out what I think of the album. He speaks sadly of not being able to play that much football any more but how he now plays a lot of tennis instead, meaning hopefully the band can carry on touring for another five to ten years… not that he takes this or anything else for granted. Even when he tells me where he is calling from he laughs gruffly like anyone born in Leyton would if asked the same question: “Where am I speaking from? The Bahamas… Yeah, terrible innit!”

I’ve enjoyed hearing the influence of bands like UFO and Blue Oyster Cult on British Lion

Steve Harris: You’re the first person to mention them but I’ve always loved Blue Oyster Cult. Before I was in Maiden, my band Smiler covered ‘The Red And The Black’.

Why rock over metal?

SH: That’s the original stuff I was into. I suppose in Iron Maiden we evolved into being a metal group if you like but originally we always saw ourselves as being a heavy rock band with lots of melody. Over the years as more and more hardcore and extreme bands have come along they’ve made us sound more like The Moody Blues! [laughs] But effectively, when we started we were a heavy rock band and British Lion is not that far removed from it.

Normally side projects seem to get cranked out in six months down time but British Lionmust have the longest gestation period of any side project album ever.

SH: Probably yeah. [laughs] We’ve actually taken longer to get this album out than Guns N’Roses took with Chinese Democracy. You say side projects are usually done in a six month period but I don’t get that amount of time available to me unfortunately. As most people realise I’m probably the busiest one in Maiden and there’s always stuff going on. It would be a lie to say this album was done at a leisurely pace even… it was done at a snail’s pace, a little bit here and a little bit there. But that’s how it had to happen.

And of course you weren’t working on it the whole time because there was a major hiccough in the middle.

SH: Originally, going back a long time ago, I was working in an architect’s office and I met a guy there who was really into rock music. Later on he gave me a tape. It had great songs and great playing on it so I met up with the guy and we took it from there. Originally I was just trying to develop them really. Then I started managing them in the early 90s and just got more involved with them until I was producing them as well. Unfortunately, as usual, musical differences and god knows what else got in the way and there was very little I could do from stopping it from imploding. The best thing that came out of it was the idea to do something else in the future – and that’s what this is.

British Lion isn’t that different from early Maiden material essentially in the style of song writing at least. But there is one way in which it is very different. Part of Iron Maiden’s success is that they appeal to the imagination and even if the songs are set in a real life situation like during World War One or Ancient Egypt, they are primarily about escapist fantasy and using your imagination. On British Lion you seem to be dealing with the day to day struggles of life. Is Richard singing for himself or for the whole band?

SH: Well it’s both really. We worked on the songs together. He wears his heart on his sleeve a little bit more than I do. I do sing about some of these things sometimes but I tend to disguise tahem in little stories. I think if you dive in a little deeper with Maiden that stuff is there but maybe it’s more obvious to me. British Lion is a little bit more open in the lyrics, like The Who were. You’ll understand ‘Us Against The World’ if you support a sports team. It’s the vibe you get that makes you feel invincible. It’s a really strong and powerful feeling that can inspire you to fight and get through things even when it feels like everything is against you.

Are you going to play live?

SH: I’d love to play the album live, I think we have to wait and see what the reaction is like first though, I never take anything for granted. I’d love to start with some club shows in key cities in Europe and then see how we go. Obviously it would be really weird because I know we haven’t played any clubs for years.

When was the last time you were actually phased by playing in front of an audience? You must be so used to big crowds now would you actually find it more frightening to play in front of an intimate audience… would the adrenaline be pumping more?

SH: Well, I don’t know for sure but yeah, I can imagine that once you step outside of the Maiden comfort zone, then you don’t know what to expect. I still do get a little bit nervous at the beginning of Maiden tours but that’s mainly because of the new material. We will have rehearsed but you can rehearse until the cows come home and the first few shows will always be a little bit rusty. Once you’re confident it doesn’t matter so much. I used to get more worried years ago with Maiden about whether people were going to turn up or not. It’s different now. I may not expect every single show to sell out and I never take everything for granted but you still know you’re going to get a certain amount of people.

It would be a bit like that with British Lion. People say, ‘Ah, you’ll be alright.’ And I say, ‘Well it’s all very well saying that but you can’t expect things to go your way and nor should you take anything for granted.’

What’s the worst stage fright you’ve ever had playing a gig?

SH: Again, this would be during the early times… The worst times I can remember would be going back to the pub gigs in East London really. Some of our fans used to follow us about all over the place but then once in a while we’d play somewhere off the beaten track and we’d be fretting, ‘God I hope they turn up soon.’ You’d be more worried from that side of things really than the actual physical side of playing. Those were the times that I remember being most physically afraid. You know, we did have gigs years ago where no one turned up. I’m thinking specifically of places like the Double Six in Basildon or Lafayette in Walthamstow. At that one there were women punching each other out at the bar and we could see them clearly because there was hardly anyone else there. Just two women having a fight! I guess there’s an element of that fear with British Lion but that’s also what’s exciting about it.

I wanted to talk to you about East London, you must have watched with interest what was happening in your old manor in the run up to the Olympics.

SH: To be honest, I moved out of East London to Essex 27-years-ago. I remember thinking when I was 19 that I was there for good. I remember saying to someone: ‘I’ll never leave Leytonstone.’ Ha ha ha! It’s weird but when I moved out of London – and I’ve got to be honest – I didn’t really miss it. I mean, I didn’t move that far away so I could always visit if I wanted. And I had a grandmother who lived there until she passed away and I would visit her but other than that I didn’t really go back. I may pass through there now and it’s strange. I know the place like the back of my hand. Sometimes my kids phone me up if their Sat Nav isn’t working right or something like that. I’m like a cabbie, I can tell them where to go.

When I first moved to Stratford 15 years ago there was a story on the front of the Newham Recorder that a man got stabbed in the Swan on the Broadway and a nurse celebrating passing her exams did an emergency tracheotomy on him with the knife they used to slice the lemons behind the bar and a biro. Was it rough when you lived there?

SH: I didn’t think it was that bad really. We didn’t have anything like that happen to the best of my knowledge. There were certain parts of London which were a little bit dodgy but really to me, it didn’t seem that bad at all. Maybe that’s just what it’s like when you live somewhere – you don’t notice the trouble.

What was your first gig at the Cart and Horses in Stratford in 1976 like?

SH: Actually it was really good. We just pulled in as many people as we could, family and friends and there were a few regulars in anyway. I don’t like leaving things to chance so I put a few posters up and it ended up being pretty rammed out. There was a bit of a comfort zone for us to operate in, with it being packed out – it always makes it a lot easier. If you’re playing to a near empty place that makes it next to impossible. I can’t understand the mentality of people who don’t promote their gigs. I always say to people, ‘Have you advertised, put it in the local paper, put posters up, handed out fliers? How do you expect people to come if you don’t?’ In those days with there being no internet, you had to. It doesn’t take that much time and effort. It’s amazing the amount of people who don’t bother.

You’ve always said that you had nothing to do with punk but you did share that real do it yourself sensibility with them didn’t you?

SH: I didn’t share it with them. I wouldn’t share anything with them because I hated them! They were taking gigs away from us. They came along – the upstarts that they were – and most of them couldn’t play their instruments, which was annoying. And most of them were getting gigs and publicity and not letting us get a look in. So we were lucky that we had a few places where we could play like the Cart and Horses, The Ruskin Arms in Stratford and The Bridgehouse in Canning Town. It was really, really tough. So no, we hated them and we hated what they were about. We had nothing in common with them. Most of them seemed to be kids from good backgrounds who were just bullshitting about being young and hungry anyway. They weren’t for real most of them.

Did you get A&Rs in the late 70s trying to get you to cut your hair and put on bondage trousers?

SH: Oh yeah, definitely. There was a record company that invited us down to do a gig in Fulham. Afterwards they said, ‘You’ve got some good songs but what you really need to do is to cut your hair and wear different clothes.’ I just laughed at him. I told him that my dad didn’t have a say in how long my hair was so there was no way he was going to: ‘We aren’t going to change for anyone. We are what we are. You got us down here because of who we are – if you don’t like it, tough because we’re not going to change.’ People make it sound like it was some kind of defiant thing but it was pretty easy to say no to that kind of thing. If something feels wrong it is wrong.

Article continues after photograph

When did you notice that heavy metal was becoming popular again?

SH: When we were playing gigs in pubs like the Cart And Horses in about ’76, basically we were pulling crowds that were getting bigger. We were playing our own stuff and if we did a cover we did something really obscure, so people probably thought those songs were our own anyway. You could go and see covers bands then anywhere and they’d all be playing the same songs. We wanted to do something really different. So right from the start we got a hardcore following going. Before we ever made up our own shirts, our fans were making their own with the names of our songs on them… It was pretty amazing what was happening. We’d go and play somewhere like The Harrow in Ripple Road, Barking – which is not the easiest place to get to or from – and there were fans that would follow us all the way over there. And these were people who didn’t really have much money, they couldn’t just jump in a cab. They’d have trouble getting home. In fact sometimes we’d give them a lift home. We’d stick them in the back of the truck with the gear! So our fans were really hardcore from day one. I think it’s because we had strong original material and other people weren’t doing that.

There’s a shot during the recent Flight 666 documentary which has a clip that focuses on one fan after you go off stage and he’s having what looks like a religious experience, with his eyes shut, clenching his hands in front of him. So you’ve always had that kind of hardcore fan from day one?

SH: It’s amazing. It’s a phenomenon. Maiden fans are renowned round the world as being the best fans and rightly so. I can’t think of any other bunch of fans to touch them.

How strong has the visual presence of the band been… I don’t mean the way you dress…

SH: Certainly not that! We’ve not been pathfinders in fashion terms, let’s be honest.

I’d say you’ve certainly moved on positively from the days of Bruce Dickinson’s harlequin tights…

SH: [sounds unsure] Hmmmmmmm.

What about the logo? You seem to have had that since day one.

SH: No, actually there was another one before that. When we were really just starting out in Stratford, we put up posters around and that had an earlier logo. It was boring really. I drew it because I was a draughtsman myself. We had a phantom character at the time and the Iron Maiden logo was in an Olde English style.

Even before you had Eddie The Head, you had this genius idea of having a mascot that represents the band and, in a way, is more important than any one member. And I’ve seen footage of you on stage before you were even signed, with a weird face hanging from the pub wall with stuff pouring out of its mouth.

SH: That originated from a guy singing in the band at the time Dennis [Wilcock] who was heavily into KISS. He used to put a red heart over one of his eyes and he had blond curly hair and he was into sword fighting, funnily enough, so he would have an épée on stage and he would put that through his mouth bursting loads of blood capsules. He was only in the band for a short while and after he left we thought we’d love to carry on doing that sort of thing so we came up with the idea of having this thing behind the drummer. We’d hang this face on the wall behind the drummer and it had the pump from a fish tank in it. During the song ‘Iron Maiden’ it would pump ‘blood’ out of its mouth. It would go all over [Doug Sampson] the drummer’s head. He used to love it! It was the highlight of his evening… We had a bubble machine, we had a dry ice machine made out of an old kettle. It was great. We were trying to put on something a bit different. Not just to get attention but to put on a show which was different to what you’d normally get. I used to go to pubs and watch bands all the time and I wanted our show to stand out from the crowd.

You did your first ever world tour after Killers [1981]. Did you feel ready for it?

SH: We’d been going for four and a half years before we got signed, so we’d had a lot of time to get ready going round the UK on tours. By the time we got to the second album we’d already toured Japan and done a couple of UK tours, we’d done a support tour with Judas Priest and another with KISS. We were ready for it. And that’s half the problem these days. You get a band with any kind of promise and they get shoved up to the front too quick and they don’t get chance to grow. They get things thrust upon them too early.

Was there a gig or a tour where you thought, ‘We’ve made it? We’re now among the greats’?

SH: Well, that wasn’t after the Killers tour. Although it was great when we turned up at the Stadsgehoorzaal arena in Leiden, Netherlands and people had banners with our name on it even though we’d never been there before. That’s when we thought, ‘There’s something going on here.’ When we released the third album [The Number Of The Beast, 1982] and it went in at number one, I think that’s maybe when we thought, ‘We’re here to stay!’ [laughs] I think the success of that album helped us get over the worry of [vocalist] Paul [Di Anno] leaving. It was really worrying for us to think that all of that hard work over the previous seven years could just have gone to waste. We just couldn’t let that happen. I couldn’t let that happen. I just couldn’t. So when Bruce came in it was worrying. We knew he was good and we knew he could handle it but whether people would take to him was another thing altogether. But take to him they did in a big way. And I think that was the big turning point for me, when people took to Bruce, I thought, ‘Well, we’re here to stay now.’ Because then I knew, longevity wise that he could cut the mustard.

Obviously in Iron Maiden you’re all really fit, you play football, the gigs themselves are obviously work outs. Is there any reason why you can’t keep on doing this for another ten years?

SH: I don’t know about ten years but I think we’ve certainly got another five years in us but it’s hard to say. As you get older it gets doubly hard to keep yourself fit and in shape. We do work really hard on doing that. It’s important to us. We’d be selling ourselves and everyone else short if we didn’t, so we do look after ourselves. It does get tougher. I don’t play football much any more but I play a lot of tennis. Partly because I’ve had so many problems with my back that I can only play the odd match here or there. Unfortunately it’s five years since I’ve played a full season of football and that’s something that I miss a lot but I had to make a decision.

You’ve seen heavy metal become revived from a fading sub genre of heavy rock to take over the entire world and become the biggest type of music there is globally. Where is there left for Iron Maiden to go, which territories would you like to invade?

SH: I’d love to go into China. Up to now they’ve not let us go in or if they did let us, it wouldn’t be in the way we wanted. They’d want to look at lyrics and they’d be worried about Eddie…

You could have a communist Eddie in a Chairman Mao outfit.

SH: [laughs] Yeah. I mean I’d love to go to China anyway as a tourist but I’d also love to get paid to tour there. We’ll see.

Given how abrasive heavy metal is with image, sound, philosophy, lyrics etc, how do you explain it’s huge global appeal?

SH: Because it really means something to the people who listen to it. It gives them an identity where they can feel part of it. And it’s appealing that outsiders don’t understand it. And if people from the outside do check it out properly, then I think a lot of people end up thinking, ‘You know, there’s a lot more to this than meets the eye.' And you know what? There is.

 

Bonafide tävling

Skrivet av Alexandra | 2012-10-14 11:31
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Många av er känner nog till det svenska bandet Bonafide vid det här laget.
Enligt mig och Michael är just nu Bonafide ett av Sveriges bästa rockband.
Vill man se ett bra liveband så kan vi på IMSFC varmt rekommendera Bonafide.

För er som inte ännu känner till Bonafide så kommer här lite fakta:
Bonafide är ett svenskt rockband, som grundades av sångaren/gitarristen Pontus Snibb i Malmö 2006. Bandet fick uppmärksamhet efter att ha släppt sitt självbetitlade debutalbum samma år och gjort två framträdanden vid Sweden Rock Festival året därpå, samt förbandsspelningar till band som Deep Purple, Quireboys och Status Quo. Deras mest välkända låt är Fill Your Head With Rock, som skrevs för nämnda festival, och blev utsedd till en av 2011 års bästa låtar av Classic Rock Magazine.
Gitarristen Mikael Fässberg i Bonafide har IMSFC ägare Michael haft kontakt med långt innan Bonafide tiden. Mikael Fässberg spelade i det berömda AK47´s som Paul DiAnno använde sig av flitigt i många år. AK47´s blev fort väldigt populära bland DiAnno och Maiden fansen.

Vi på IMSFC kan i dag stolt meddela att vi får tävla ut 3st ex av Bonafides nya album Ultimate Rebel.
För att ha chansen att vinna ett ex så vill vi att ni svarar på vad spår 10 heter på Ultimate Rebel albumet. Ni kan skriva in svaret i kommentarer här på sidan eller maila Den här e-postadressen är skyddad från spamrobotar. Du måste tillåta Javascript för att visa e-postadressen .
Tävlingen avslutas 1 november.

Besök gärna Bonafides hemsida för turné datum och andra nyheter: http://www.bonafiderocks.com/

 

Hjälp Clive Burr

Skrivet av Alexandra | 2012-10-12 20:37
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De flesta i den här gruppen vet säkert att Clive Burr är svårt sjuk i MS.
De flesta vet också att jag jobbar för Paul DiAnno som är en mycket god vän till Clive.
Paul och jag har pratat en hel del om Clive och Paul har ställt upp på en hel del saker för Clive.
Paul har många gånger försökt få mig att göra något för Clive genom Sveriges IMFC och vi har diskuterat konserter mm och det kommer att komma en konsert för Clive här i Sverige nästa år.
Men först kommer IMSFC att ge ut en t-shirt där 50% av intäkterna går till Clive och 50% går till barncancerfonden här i Sverige.
Varför kommer vi inte ge allt till Clive? Vi har fått en sponsor som betalar hela kostnaderna för att trycka t-shirten, bara vi skänker hälften till barncancerfonden.
På så vis så får Clive 25% mer till sin fond än om IMSFC hade betalat för t-shirten själva. Och självklart så vill vi i Sverige hjälpa barn med cancer så det här gynnar 2 fonder.
T-shirten kommer att släppas på Rockmässan i Malmö 27-28 oktober och kommer att kosta 200sek. Kan du inte komma på Rockmässan men vill ha en t-shirt och ge ditt stöd så kan du nu förhandsboka
T-shirts genom att skicka ett mail till: Den här e-postadressen är skyddad från spamrobotar. Du måste tillåta Javascript för att visa e-postadressen . I mailet anger ni antal och storlek, samt er adress. OBS! Frakt tillkommer om ni ska ha den hemskickad OBS!
Dessa kommer att gå åt fort så tveka inte att boka en eller varför inte flera.

Vi kan också meddela att vi kommer att släppa en förbokning för den nya Maiden Scandinavia FC T-shirten i december.

 

 

Maiden till Sthlm 13 juli 2013

Skrivet av Alexandra | 2012-09-25 08:44
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LIVE NATION NYHETER
IRON MAIDEN till Friends Arena sommaren 2013
Datum: 25-09-12
Iron Maiden tar sin fantastiska ”MAIDEN ENGLAND WORLD TOUR” till
Friends Arena i Stockholm nästa sommar
Detta innebär den första rockkonserten någonsin att bekräftas på vår nya nationalarena!
Live Nation är extremt glada och stolta över att åter hälsa Iron Maiden välkomna till Sverige.
De har nyligen avslutat den nordamerikanska delen av MAIDEN ENGLAND WORLD TOUR, en av de mest
framgångsrika rockturnéerna i år. Nu kommer alltså Iron Maiden till Europa under 2013 för att spela på
arenor och stora festivaler med sin kritikerhyllade show.
Den 13 juli landar turnén i Sverige då bandet spelar på vår nya nationalarena i Stockholm –
Friends Arena. Detta är den första rockkonserten någonsin att bekräftas på denna gigantiska
spelplats.
Biljetterna släpps till allmänheten på tisdag den 2 oktober kl 9.00.
Mellan kl 10.00 lördag den 29 september till kl 18.00 söndag den 30 september kommer ett exklusivt förköp
erbjudas till medlemmar av Iron Maidens fanclub. Fan Club-medlemmar kommer också kunna delta i
utlottningen av ”first to the barrier”, som innebär att man får företräde in på arenan.
Som en följd av den otroliga succén ”Final Frontier World Tour” som fyllde Ullevi i juli 2011, kommer nu Iron
Maiden tillbaka med MAIDEN ENGLAND WORLD TOUR som när det kommer till scendesign och låtlista
mer eller mindre helt speglar den klassiska konsertvideon från 1988 som hette just ”Maiden England”.
Videon filmades under turnén ”Seventh Son Of A Seventh Son Tour”.
Bruce Dickinson hälsar:
”It is a great honour to be the first rock band to be announced to play the new National Stadium, especially
as we have always had a very close connection with your country and have massively enjoyed every visit."
"We were completely overwhelmed by the reaction from our North American fans to the MAIDEN ENGLAND
Tour, which was our most extensive tour there for many years. We had a lot of fun playing the older songs
and the fans seemed to love the set list and Eddie’s various incarnations! The band can’t wait to bring this
show to our Swedish fans.”
Steve Harris tillägger:
”The Final Frontier show in Ullevi last year was magic along with the very warm reception we recieved from
our friends in Sweden. Its terrific to return next year, especially playing in the new National Stadium for the
first time. This time round we will be playing the older songs and think our fans will enjoy this just as much!”
Harris fortsätter:
“We k now how popular the History of Maiden Tours are with fans of all ages and we will be tak ing with us the
full production we had in North America. We had a huge amount of fun with the set list as we got to play
songs we had not played in a very long time lik e Seventh Son, The Prisoner and Afraid To Shoot Strangers,
as well as fan favourites lik e The Trooper, Aces High, The Number Of The Beast, Wasted Years and Run
To The Hills. The opening leg of the tour was so enjoyable for the whole band, we’re really look ing forward to
tak ing it to our fans around Europe and, as always, greatly look ing forward to the Swedish show.”
MAIDEN ENGLAND markerar det tredje kapitlet i Historien om Iron Maiden, en resa som startade 2004 med
DVD:n ”The Early Days” som följdes av 2005 års ”Early Days Tour”. Det andra kapitlet i historien inleddes
2008 då DVD:n ”Live After Death” släpptes – DVD:n innehöll den nyskapande konserten på Long Beach
Arena från turnén ”World Slavery Tour” från 1984. Denna DVD följdes sedan av banbrytande ”Somewhere
Back In Time World Tour” 2008-2009, där de spelade för över 2 miljoner fans i nästan 40 länder. Både ”The
Early Days Tour” och ”Somewhere Back In Time World Tour” gästade Sverige och Ullevi – och sålde slut på
mindre än en timma. På den senare turnén sålde de även slut Stockholm Stadion lika snabbt, vilket gör Iron
Maiden till den enda akt någonsin att sälja slut två stadion-konserter i Sverige i två olika städer på samma
turné.
Det är ingen överdrift att kalla dem en av de största rockakterna genom tiderna – Iron Maiden har sålt nästan
90 miljoner album, gjort över 2000 livekonserter i 58 länder, släppt 15 studioalbum
Köp med förtroende
Vi säljer biljetter via betrodda
biljettsystem och partners.
Följ Live Nation * Biljettpriser och tillgänglighet kan komma att ändras.
© 2012 Live Nation Sw eden AB. Live Nation är ett registrerat varumärke tillhörande Live Nation Worldw ide, Inc.
Föregående
”The Final Frontier”, som är deras största listsuccé någonsin med en förstaplats i hela 28 länder, där Sverige
självklart var ett av dessa.
VIKTIGT:
Iron Maiden, Live Nation och Friends Arena tar starkt avstånd från andrahandsmarknaden av konsertbiljetter
och menar att fans aldrig ska betala ett högre pris för en biljett än det pris som står på biljetten. Därför
uppmanar vi alla att enbart köpa från auktoriserade återförsäljare; LiveNation.se, Friendsarena.se, Ticnet.se /
077-170 70 70 samt TicnetOmbud.
DATUM
13.7 Stockholm, Friends Arena
BILJETTER
Biljetterna kostar 450-725 kr och säljs via LiveNation.se, Friendsarena.se, Ticnet.se / 077-170 70 70 samt
TicnetOmbud.

 

Lyssna på Steve Harris solo album imorgon

Skrivet av Alexandra | 2012-09-19 19:30
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Want to hear Steve's new album 'British Lion'? We're pleased to announce that you'll be able to do just that tomorrow!

On Thursday 20th September, from 11am BST we'll have the whole album here on the site for you to listen to. So bookmark this page and come back tomorrow to hear the whole of 'British Lion'!

 

Paul DiAnno VS Blaze Bayley promotion video

Skrivet av Alexandra | 2012-09-13 18:43
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Paul DiAnno och Blaze Bayley kommer till Sverige i mars 2013 som nog alla redan vet.
Nu släpper IMSFC med hjälp av Team ProPain en promotion video för spelningarna.
Se videon HÄR och sprid den gärna vidare på olika sidor som tex Facebook mm.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QGq2R_yWs1E&feature=plcp

 

IMSFC på TV4 Sport

Skrivet av Alexandra | 2012-09-09 17:38
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Missa inte dokumentären om världens hårdaste fotbollsturnering! Första visning i morgon Söndag kl 20.00 på TV4 Sport! Ett sammandrag från Metallsvenskan, spektaklet där Sveriges rockelit gör upp på fotbollsplanen. Lag som deltar är bland annat Armageddon FF Capitals, Mustasch DSGDÖ, Z(l)atans FC, Iron Maiden Scandinavia FC, Close Up Magazine, Rockklassiker, Örebro United och The Kristet Utseende.
Tv tider:
Söndag 09 September 2012 20.00 TV4 Sport
Lördag 15 september 2012 17:30 TV4 Sport (R)
Lördag 22 september 2012 14:00 TV4 Sport (R)

 

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