The culmination of almost three years of work: Blaze Bayley is the latest member added to the Grab A Stack of Rock show alumni!
In November of 2022 I started working on something I’d wanted to do for a long time: make a show intro video that included every guest we ever had. Back then there were not many, but the guests kept coming and coming and I kept adding and adding. Now we have 49 guests on the list! The Blaze Bayley episode will air this Friday September 19 at 7:00 PM EST. The Bob Cesca (Camp Chaos) episode will air when we get to Visions of the Beast.
Thank you to all 49 of these special guests. More to come on 50 Years of Iron Maiden!
Harrison and Mike are thrilled to announce that this week on 50 Years of Iron Maiden, we have an incredibly special guest: Blaze Bayley himself, the first Iron Maiden alumni to ever grace the show with their presence. Thank you so much to Blaze for doing this.
In this interview, we cover:
Re-recording Wolfsbane.
AI, science fiction and technology.
The Silicon Messiah.
Virus.
Canada.
Who the King of Metal really is.
Mental Health.
And so, so much more.
Get ready this Friday for the premiere of our interview with the amazing Blaze Bayley! You can find all things Blaze at BlazeBayley.net.
GRAB A STACK OF ROCK With Mike and the Mad Metal Man
Episode 116: Music & Mental Health 3 with Dan Chartrand
The third part of our Mental Health trilogy will be a live show, Friday night as usual, but what will we do differently this time?
Special guest Dan Chartrand will be with Mike as we discuss the challenges of overcoming Seasonal Affective Disorder, and childhood bullying. Even if it happened 40 years ago, bullies can still have an affect on your behaviour today. If you ever feel overly defensive, for example, that could relate to old bullies that you thought you have long forgotten. We will dive deep.
With fall upon us, we’ll also tackle Seasonal Affective Disorder and techniques to deal with it. This is a ghost that has haunted Mike for many years and though it is an annual struggle, Mike will share what he has learned.
As always, we’ll bring it all back to music too. Mike will share his favourite music that he plays to feel good when things get him down. Don’t miss this live episode as we’ll be taking your questions and comments.
Be kind to yourself. See you tonight.
Friday September 12 at 7:00 PM EST, 8:00 PM Atlantic. Enjoy on YouTube or Facebook.
BEHOLD! After much shopping and hunting, Harrison has acquired a “complete” Blaze Bayley solo CD collection. With two caveats:
1. A physical copy of every released song is included – not necessarily every CD that Blaze ever released. There is one very rare and limited Blaze compilation that Harrison does not have, but has nothing on it that he needs.
2. Blaze has done many collaborations on others artists’ albums that are not a part of this solo CD collection.
To compensate, Mike brought in one Blaze collaboration on the new Absolva album Justice, which features the Appleton brothers from his current band.
Harrison breaks down his collection chronologically, beginning with the amazing Silicon Messiah album, right up to the present day. Lots of signed CDs here including some very limited rarities. Check it out!
BEHOLD! The inspiration and artwork of the Mad Metal Man, Harrison Kopp, knows no bounds.
In this incredible piece of art, Harrison has paid homage to Albany’s greatest band, BLOTTO, in Lego form! This is a first of its kind for the band.
In the artwork you can clearly see the five core members of the band, with their images paying tribute to the “Metal Head” music video (and the Combo Akimbo album in Bowtie Blotto’s case). Their backdrop is a reference to their Across & Down EP, with a crossword puzzle painstakingly made by Harrison. Even the audience members in the photo contain Easter eggs and references to Blotto songs, and maybe even the artist himself.
No AI was used in this image, and only minimal Photoshop was employed. The lighting itself is made in a very creative and cool way, with physical lights. Harrison breaks down all the details in the video below. Can you spot them all yourself?
As thanks for creating this art, Harrison has been honoured with the privilege of choosing his own Blotto name. Watch the video to see what name he chose!
You can’t keep everything forever. This is an unfortunate truth that is one we must all face. Eventually, you gotta throw things out.
Or, if you have a flair for the dramatic as I do, you gotta burn ’em.
I’m sure at one point in my life, I thought that these science notebooks would come in handy. Indeed, I can’t remember how electron shells work anymore, which I used to find easy, so maybe there was some value in those books. The real reason I hung onto them for so long was because I made so many doodles and sketches that I thought might be funny to keep. I took a quick look and scanned some of the memorable ones (some can be seen here) but there were so, so many. Were they all keepers? I didn’t want to tackle that task and so I stuffed the notebooks in a corner for five years.
These books are over 35 years old now, took up too much space for something that will never be read again, and a decision had to be made.
I remember a lot of kids in highschool saying, “Ooh I’m gonna burn my notebooks as soon as school is out!” I don’t know if they did that, but I decided to honour them by burning mine. I kept some pages. As I went through them, I pulled out pages with doodles and sketches and funny notes. Those might be shown in another video later on, but for now, let’s see what some 35 year old highschool notebooks had in them that was worth saving from the fires.
As you can see, heavy metal music was always the main thing in my life. There are guitars, there are band logos, lyrics, and a few passing grades too.
I guess the truth is, I always felt like school was something I had to do, in order to go home and listen to music at the end of the day. I did fine, I passed, but my mom always felt I could have focused more. I think these notebooks show she was right. The grades were good, not great, and my attention was clearly elsewhere at times.
With notes dating back to 1988 and ’89, perhaps some earlier, it wasn’t easy to let these go. I’ll never be able to use them to teach myself about electron shells. The best I could do was keep some pages and use the rest to have a cool fire.
As Jon Bon Jovi said, “it’s hard letting you go.” I hope the video is worth it.
Who doesn’t love musical mail? Check out some thoughtful gifts from Tim Durling and Marco D’Auria, plus a really cool surprise from Amazon.
Marco and Tim were apparently on the same wavelength when these two parcels are sent.
Sometimes Amazon’s listings are not accurate, and you have to take a chance. Fortunately their return policy makes things easy if you ordered the wrong thing. In this case, I ordered a CD that I need for an upcoming show. I found a Japanese import reasonably priced, but there was also a deluxe edition that I was told was really good. Check out what happens next. You won’t believe it!
The audio version of my Grandma’s eulogy differed slightly from what I wrote on the page. I am glad to have this record of how it happened, live.
For most of my life, I’ve only had one grandparent. Grandma Ladano was gone before I was born. Grandpa Ladano died in 1981. We lost Grandpa Winter in 1984. Since that time I only had one Grandma, and she was very special to all of us. Not just because she was the only one, as you will hear today.
My mom tells me that Grandma babysat me a lot as a kid. I don’t remember this very much, but I do remember that she was my favourite babysitter. I can remember that I would look forward to those nights that Grandma would take care of me. I also remember visiting her house a lot. She had board games there that we didn’t have, like Mousetrap and Clue. The idea was that they wanted us to have special games that we could only play at Grandma’s house, but we didn’t need special games to enjoy those visits. She let us watch the Flintstones and run around the yard. She and Grandpa took me to the Welland Canal to see the big ships going through the locks. It seemed like being there was never boring, even to a kid. It was always fun to visit Grandma’s house. My dad and I would pick carrots from her garden, much to her scolding. My sister and I never took her scolding very seriously. We heard she could be strict, but she never was with us.
Most of my memories are from adulthood. I suppose adulthood started with the end of highschool and moving on to University. I attended Wilfrid Laurier, which was just a short drive from her place. On Thursdays during my first year, I had a full slate of classes. I had history and psychology in the afternoons, with a short break before evening Anthropology, which was a favourite of mine. It was too long a trip to drive all the way home for dinner and back again for class, so instead I had dinner at Grandma’s house. She would make my favourite: pork chops in mushroom soup. That was a special meal that only she made. It was like a treat. She’d offer me something for dessert and then I’d be running back to school again. For her, our visits were always too short.
In 1997, we took a special trip with Grandma and Aunt Marie, out west to see Aunt Lynda and Cousin Geoff in Calgary. This was a special trip for me. Work didn’t want me to take a week off in the fall, but I insisted. I really wanted to go. That trip was everything I wanted it to be. Grandma was a little slower moving, and I used to make sure everybody stopped and waited for her to catch up at the airport. If I saw her lagging behind, I would stop and shout, “Wait for the grandma!” That was an excellent trip. We made daily trips out shopping and just relaxing reading books. We went to the mountains. Some of my happiest memories are visiting the mountains out west, but that trip was special because Grandma and I really took care of each other that time.
I think one of the best ways we spent time together was driving to the cottage. I would pick her up at her place, load the car with her planters and bags, and we’d make the two hour trip together. I’d pick the music; something she’d like. O Brother Where Art Thou was a favourite of hers. She liked “You Are My Sunshine”. Whatever we picked, we’d talk the whole way there. She would point out all the flowers along the way, which I couldn’t stop to look at because I was driving! I always found that funny, because Grandma didn’t drive and didn’t realize I had my eyes on the road. Those were some special trips, just the two of us.
Grandma always supported Dr. Kathryn’s music, even as it got more experimental. “Kathryn, will you ever play some of the songs that I like?” she would ask. Kathryn wasn’t into playing anything that wasn’t original and eclectic, but Grandma kept going to her shows anyway. Few people really understand that kind of music, but Grandma went with the loyalty that only a grandparent has.
At the age of 96, Grandma endured a global pandemic. The isolation really bothered her, but we did porch visits every other weekend with her. When Uncle Don died, it really affected her. Suddenly she was living alone. She won two battles with Covid, which is unbelievable. It really felt like Grandma was bulletproof, given all the hardship she endured. First Uncle Don, then his cat. This is enough loss for most people to just pack it in.
She was touch as nails. Covid couldn’t take her down. Several close calls happened, and she bounced back every time.
In 2024, she had what I will call her final wish. Grandma loved food. A good meal of meat and potatoes was all she wanted. She always told us how much she craved a good old fashioned home cooked feast. She got it that on Christmas Day 2024. It was a struggle to move her from her home to ours, up the stairs to the dining room. There was one moment frozen in time when I thought we’d have to back out and take her home, so difficult were the stairs. But she made it, and had her one last family dinner with us. It was a very special moment. She declined for seven months after. That trip fulfilled her final wish, but I believe it also took the last of her strength from her. Also, I think she had a hard realization that she couldn’t come and go anymore. That there was no way she could do that again. That she’d never see the cottage again, or have another big family dinner. But I don’t think she regretted it. It was a very special night. She still made it to 101 years old.
All of us went to see her for her birthday that day. She enjoyed her lunch and coffee, and had a nice rest afterwards. She was thinking of her sister, Aunt Marie. Towards the end, it was difficult to see her decline, but her birthday was the last time I saw her. Even though she had so many close calls, it was still a shock to me when she finally went on July 30 2025. I’m glad she made it to 101. I really wanted that to happen because it is such a huge milestone. They make birthday cards for 100, but not 101. She defied all the odds.
She was always special, in life and in death. Always full of surprises, right to the very end. She had the spirit of a fighter and a well of feistiness that most of us will never find.
I miss our phone calls, and I miss seeking her advice. I used to say that Grandma was the only one in the family who understood me. Now that’s gone. My confidant is gone. The one person who always knew what I was going through. The memory remains, and I will always be grateful for my special grandmother that lived to 101 years old. Goodbye Grandma. They always say this when someone is gone, but there truly will never be another one like Dolly Winter.
Maiden were back in a big way. Though the video game began life with Blaze Bayley on lead vocals, when it was finally released, Bruce Dickinson and Adrian Smith were both back in the band! The ironic thing about this was that neither of them were depicted in the game, though Blaze was!
A 3 CD set, Ed Hunter was the first release with Bruce and Adrian back in the band. A “greatest hits” album and a video game all in one, Ed Hunter was a must-buy for Maiden diehards, especially in the United States where it contained a bonus track: “Wrathchild 1999 (New Vocal Version with Bruce Dickinson)”. Standard versions contained 20 tracks split over one-and-a-half discs, with the tracks selected by the fans in an online poll. We break it down track by track, and compare to the previous “hits” album, Best of the Beast, while also discussing the new track which was also available on a promotional CD single with band art.
As for the game? The last disc-and-a-half of space featured the game and installation software. Harrison got his copy working! He got out a vintage computer and some video capture software, and recorded himself playing and winning the game! We provide a highlights reel from Harrison’s video, to give you a feel for the gameplay and graphics. (Epilepsy warnings will appear when appropriate.)
This release also featured a tour. A big one! Harrison breaks down the setlist, and what tracks from that tour were released in live versions.
Maiden were back…and so is 50 Years of Iron Maiden!
Friday September 5 at 7:00 P.M. E.S.T. Enjoy on YouTube.