Nicko McBrain
More famous than any drummer has a right to
be, with a style as punchy and distinctive as his battered, lived-in face, Nicko McBrain
enjoys the rare distinction of being both the jester in the Iron Maiden pack and the ace.
"I can't think of any other drummer that would have fitted in so perfectly,"
says Steve Harris. "Nick plays the drums the way most guitarists play their guitars -
he's riffing right along with you, note for note, I've never known anything like it! He
doesn't just hold the beat, he drives the whole thing along, and as the bass player having
to keep up with him every night, that's great for me. It means none of us is ever allowed
to give less than 100 per cent."
Ask the great man himself, of course, and you get a more modest assessment. "Every
drummer worth his salt has his own unique way of doing things," he says. "I just
do what I do and, luckily for me, what I do sounds great in Iron Maiden."
It certainly does. Joining the band in 1983, in time to record the 'Piece Of Mind' album -
still regarded by many, not least Steve Harris, as one of the greatest Maiden albums ever
- it's impossible to imagine now what Maiden masterpieces like 'Where Eagles Dare', '2
Minutes To Midnight', 'Can I Play With Madness', 'Be Quick Or Be Dead' or ' Man On The
Edge' would or could have sounded like without Nicko's full-spectrum drums thundering
along behind them.
Playing live on stage though, is where Nicko has really made his larger-than-life presence
felt. Clive Burr, his predecessor, was a fine drummer, too, and an argument could be - and
often is - had over which of the two is, technically, the best. For most of us, Nicko wins
hands down. But there's never been any doubt over who was the more entertaining stage
personality. The Mad McBrain, as he has become known to the Maiden fans, is almost as
freaky an on-stage presence as Eddie, leaping shirtless from his drum stool to lead the
cheers as the band bound into another diamond from their bejewelled back-catalogue.
As for his off stage personality, "Mr Excess All-Areas," he once described
himself as to me, and it's fair to say he wasn't exaggerating. I remember flying with him
once from London, on our way to a record company party in Germany for what was then the
new 'Seventh Son of A Seventh Son' album. We sat in First Class and Nick had already
charmed the stewardesses into letting us have a jug of Bucks Fizz before the plane had
even taken off. He then proceeded to hand out signed black- and-white photographs of
himself on stage with Maiden. I'm not sure how many of the other Fist Class passengers -
tired-looking businessmen, mostly - had heard of Iron Maiden before the plane took off,
but they certainly had by the time we'd landed.
"I'm a born entertainer, me," Nicko laughed, and we all laughed with him because
we knew it was true (and besides, we were onto our third jug of Fizz by then).
And yet, behind the laugh-a-minute facade, there is, after all, a real human being
lurking. Michael Henry McBrain was born in Hackney, East London, on June 5, 1952. Don't
laugh but he was, he cheerfully confesses, nicknamed 'Nicky' as a child, because that was
the name of his favourite teddy bear - Nicholas The Bear. "I used to take him
everywhere with me, and so my family just started calling me 'Nicky' for fun. Unless I was
in trouble, then it was 'Michael!'"
His first experience of music came via his father's love of trad- jazz. Little Nicky's
hero was Joe Morella, the late, great drummer with the legendary Dave Brubeck jazz band.
"I used to pretend I was Joe Morella hitting the tubs. I'd go into the kitchen and
pick up a pair of knives and start hitting the gas cooker."
Fed up with him bashing up the kitchen utensils, his parents finally bought him a proper
drum-kit when he was 12.
"Most kids wanted a bicycle or something like that, but all I wanted was drums. When
my mum and dad finally got me one it was like all my birthdays and Christmases rolled into
one!"
He says he seemed to be able to play "almost straight away - I don't know how, I just
could." By the time he left school at 15, he was already a veteran of several
part-time pub groups. Musically, however, his tastes had broadened to include more
contemporary Sixties sounds and suddenly his dad's jazz collection was infiltrated by
records from The Shadows, The Animals, The Beatles and the Stones. On the recommendation
of another drummer he knew, he began to take on session work, playing on countless
different recordings.
"I'd do anything - pop albums, folk albums, religious albums, or more rock type
stuff, I didn't mind. It was all good practise."
His first 'proper' band was The 18th Fairfield Walk, who did covers of Otis Redding and
Beatles tunes. Then he joined the Wells Street Blues Band, who were, in the lingo of the
day, "a more purist blues thing". But again, they never got beyond the clubs and
Nicko found himself meandering from gig to gig, playing with now barely remembered names
like singer and keyboardist Billy Day (who first started calling him Nicko, as a joke),
The Blossom Toes (also featuring guitarist, Jim Cregan, later of Cockney Rebel and Rod
Stewart fame) and others.
It wasn't until 1975, when he joined Streetwalkers, the band formed by ex-Family members,
vocalist Roger Chapman and guitarist Charlie Whitney, that Nicko first found any sort of
fame.
"They were lovely fellas, Roger and Charlie, and the Streetwalkers was a great little
band. Why they never made it, I don't know."
Unfortunately, the Streetwalkers was destined to be one of the great also-rans of the
Seventies: good albums, no hits. From then until he joined Maiden, Nicko had been occupied
mainly in session work, most memorably with the Pat Travers Band (on their 1976 'Makin'
Magic' album), then with French soci-politico punk-metallists, Trust - who actually
supported Maiden on tour in the UK in 1981.
Steve, however, remembered him from before that, when Nicko was playing in a three-piece
called McKitty, who Maiden shared the bill with at an open-air festival in Belgium, two
years earlier.
"I remember McKitty's guitar got fucked-up halfway through the set and Nick ended up
doing this sort of solo jam thing while they tried to fix it. And he was just fucking
amazing! I mean, I find drum solos pretty boring, but this was better than watching the
rest of the set! Then when Clive left, Nick was one of the first people I thought
of."
Of course, nobody - not even Nicko - is perfect, and he admits he has his "funny
moods", as he calls them. "One minute I'm up and I'm Mr Party All Night! Then
the next minute I'm down and I'm Mr Grumpy. But that's just the way it is. Maybe I need to
do that sometimes to get myself psyched up for a gig. 'Cos believe me, the way I play -
the way this whole band plays - you better be psyched up for it! Or you'll get left
behind!"
And that's a promise...