Raven wrote:
IMO the material they've produced since 2000 has been the strongest of their career
I respect your opinion, but can't fathom that assessment.
Raven wrote:
A band must stay fresh and try new ideas otherwise they become a caricature of themselves. I don't want Iron Maiden to become Poison. A band that tours every summer and just plays songs from 'the good 'ole days'.
Poison isn't putting out new albums consistently. Maiden IS. That's how they're staying fresh. That's how they're showcasing their creativity. And that's why the two are not comparable. Maiden can feature their huge songs, and also sprinkle in the new stuff. Very simple. And that's the ratio that works for me, as a long-time fan. When Maiden puts out a new album, I buy it on the first day. But when I go to a live Maiden show, I want to see the classics. I have no problem with them changing them up a bit....but I'm not there to see a brand new album in its ENTIRETY (or close to it). It's not going to be as compelling, live, for me to see that, versus music from their genre-defining creative peak.
Hey, if you want to see the entirety of Final Frontier on the next tour, minus anything from Iron Maiden, NOTB, Piece of Month, Somewhere in Time, SSOASS or FOTD, all the power to you. I'll be at the show too - but I sure won't like it as much.
Eternal Idol wrote:
. I don't blame Maiden one bit I'm sure they are sick to fucking death of Run to the Hills, hell I know I am. I don't really ever want to hear that song ever again in my entire life. Besides, if you don't like the new stuff that Maiden puts pout you aren't really a true fan anyways, just one of the legions of uncreative dullards stuck living in 20 years ago. I've come to find that fans are the people who stifle creativity for the groups. Nobody wants anything new, different, or adventurous, all words I would use to describe Maiden's post reunion work. You want the same old shit your comfortable with and I'm more than pleased that Maiden is willing to give that type of "fan" the middle finger.
Who said anything about not liking the new stuff? I'm simply saying I don't want to see all (or mostly) new songs LIVE. The critique of who is and who isn't a true fan is ridiculous and generalizing. I'll tell you what a true fan is in my opinion - supporting the band by buying everything they put out - AND not getting "sick" of their classics. I'm NOT sick of Run to the Hills. I've heard it a 1000 times, but still love hearing it live. If you can actually utter the words "I don't ever want to hear that song ever again", I'd say YOU'RE not a true fan.