fbpx

Iron Maiden at First Midwest Bank Amphitheatre

July 5, 2012 by A.S. Van Dorston

I’ve been a fan since I first saw the video for “Run To The Hills” on MTV in 1982, but haven’t seen them until now. Normally I’d feel I’ve missed out on a band’s peak years, but damn, Iron Maiden were great. The opener was Alice Cooper, who played a nice set of his classics and a few newer songs. His tried-and-true stageshow centerpiece with his decapitation seems unchanged from the past 40 years, and was charmingly low-budget.

The large outdoor venue is bigger than I prefer, and the ticket cost me over a hondo, but hey, it’s Iron Maiden! Before the band came out, they played a recording of their cover of UFO’s “Doctor Doctor,” then launched into “Moonchild.” The Maiden England set roughly matches what they played on their 1988 tour in support of Seventh Son Of A Seventh Son. It wasn’t my favorite album at the time, but in retrospect its mix of long, proggy epics and catchy hooks surpasses their previous album Somewhere In Time (1986) and even parts of Powerslave (1984). And it certainly beats the heck out of any of their 90s albums. Fortunately they played a good sample of some of my all-time favorites from their classic 1980-84 era too. I was in the pit in front of the stage which is normally an ideal spot, but with the 98 degree heat, the shooting flames were excruciatingly hot, and only increased the discomfort as I’d get scrubbed with sweaty backhairs as sweaty metalheads in tank tops or even without shirts would squeeze by me in the crowd. Bruce Dickenson was scampering around the stage and jumping up and down the set pieces like he’s friggin’ 25! I don’t know how the band does it, they are true Troopers.

The setlist:

Doctor Doctor
(UFO song)
  1. Encore:

Always Look on the Bright Side of Life
(Monty Python song)

They had a million t-shirts at the show, but not this one. This would be a great birthday present for a certain someone!

Posted in: LiveReviews
@fastnbulbous