50 Years of IRON MAIDEN bonus episode: Run For Your Lives Dream Setlist
GRAB A STACK OF ROCK bonus episode
Welcome to our very first “bonus episode” of 50 Years of Iron Maiden! These bonus episodes will feature shorter videos on a variety of topics. With Maiden’s 2025 tour beginning in May, we wanted to get ahead of the pack and speculate on the setlist.
Harrison and I set two rules for these setlists, based on what we know from Iron Maiden themselves. 1) Each one of the first nine albums will be represented in the set, and 2) They will at least one song that has never been played live before. From there we let our imaginations run wild!
What songs do you think Maiden will play this year? What’s on your wishlist? Tell us in the comments below, and UP THE IRONS in 2025!
50 Years of IRON MAIDEN episode 8: Drummer Spotlight
With Glen “Archie” Gamble
GRAB A STACK OF ROCK #95
Do you want to know who almost replaced Nicko McBrain in Iron Maiden? Stay tuned because Archie Gamble has the details in this special episode of 50 Years of Iron Maiden, on Grab A Stack of Rock!
Former Helix drummer Glen “Archie” Gamble joins us for this special drummer spotlight, bringing us insight as a touring musician. In this episode, we discuss Archie’s fandom, each drummer’s approach, Nicko’s stance on double bass, a drummer’s retirement, what challenges the new guy Simon Dawson will face, and much more.
Archie’s perspective in this episode was invaluable, as we sat down to appreciate the drummers of Iron Maiden, and catch a glimpse of life on the road and in a band.
Kiss – You Wanted the Best – Unseen photos from the archives? I call BS!
Kiss – The Box Set (guitar case version) – CDs fall out of top flap every time you open it, as demoed on last show.
Alice Cooper – Old School (box set) – Top of “desk” curls up over time. Due to shape and fragility of box set, it is hard to flatten safely.
Ozzy Osbourne – 1995 remasters – The postage stamp sized art and the circular song titles on back are an epic fail.
Kick Axe – Rock the World (reissue with the really bad cover) – The brilliant original cover was replaced in 2005 with something far uglier.
Marillion – Marbles – campaign edition 2 CD digipack – Discs pop out and the little foam things that hold the discs in, come unglued with time.
Pearl Jam – Vitalogy – Known to fatally scratch discs.
Kim Mitchel – Itch – People think the album is actually “self titled” due to messy cover art.
AC/DC – PWRUP lightbox – Mine ripped, trying to get all the stupid tape off the box set. Ripped on day one!
Twisted Sister – Live at the Marquee – Rhino limited edition – Doesn’t file nicely anywhere, doesn’t stand up straight…a straight fail!
Packaging fails! Cover art that’s too small, discs that fall out, packages the scratch the precious CD inside…we’ll cover lots of them tonight on the Contrarians Live.
There will be a variety of “fails” tonight, from the usual suspects. Unfortunately I may have to start skipping these Wednesday night shows. With spring now here, I no longer need to occupy my evenings in front of a screen. We will see what the future holds. I had a great run – 17 shows in a row without missing a single one. Only Grant can say he also hasn’t missed a single show of the last 17. We’ll see how it goes. It’s bittersweet. I’d like to continue doing this every week, but when the sun is shining outside and the air is warm, it’s hard to sit at a screen.
Watch live and comment! Martin always tries to address the comment section.
THE CONTRARIANS – Packaging Fails – Wednesday March 12 – 7:00 PM EST
Packaging fails! Cover art that’s too small, discs that fall out, packages the scratch the precious CD inside…we’ll cover lots of them tonight on the Contrarians Live.
There will be a variety of “fails” tonight, from the usual suspects. Unfortunately I may have to start skipping these Wednesday night shows. With spring now here, I no longer need to occupy my evenings in front of a screen. We will see what the future holds. I had a great run – 17 shows in a row without missing a single one. Only Grant can say he also hasn’t missed a single show of the last 17. We’ll see how it goes. It’s bittersweet. I’d like to continue doing this every week, but when the sun is shining outside and the air is warm, it’s hard to sit at a screen.
Watch live and comment! Martin always tries to address the comment section.
THE CONTRARIANS – Packaging Fails – Wednesday March 12 – 7:00 PM EST
RECORD STORE TALES #1179: Spring Dinner With Aaron
The clocks have changed and we have beaten winter once again! Though it was the harshest winter for weather since the 1990s, it was the easiest winter for my mental health in decades. And I have you to thank for supporting me through it. Though winter’s not completely over, the darkness that pervaded my evenings is. We’re due for one or two more big storms, but nothing like what we endured in February.
Spring is so close I can taste it.
Coinciding with the clock change, another sign of spring has emerged: that being Aaron of the KMA! Aaron was in town on Sunday, so we met up with him and his lovely wife Cindy for a dinner at my favourite local establishment, Borealis. Shop local, buy local! So that is what we did. Aaron was curious about the “local” aspect. “Does Kitchener have a lot of wild boar?” he asked, only partly joking. All the food comes from Ontario. Aaron and Cindy had the wild trout, while I had mushroom rigatoni and Jen had prime rib. All-Ontario menu! They did serve some foreign spirits such as Absinthe, but we didn’t look too deep into the liquor menu.
Of course there were gifts! I gave Aaron his own copy of Live In Ontario by Max the Axe, and he gifted me a Def Leppard tour shirt (with Journey), a Jacob Moon album I needed, and the new 40th Anniversary edition of Stay Hungry by Twisted Sister.
Dinner was incredible, and we received special service from “Cousin” Luigi, whom we have not seen since before the pandemic. I have been wanting to take Aaron to Borealis for years, so it was a happy circumstance that we had Luigi. We didn’t want to eat upstairs due to Jen’s health conditions, so they opened up the entire downstairs dining room just for us. We had the whole room to ourselves.
And Luigi made sure Jen never ran out of drinks.
A delightful night, and two wonderful reunions in one.
JIM CUDDY – “We Used to Be the Best of Friends” (March 7 2025)
This is less a review, and more of a share.
We currently live in the darkest times in our lives. Decades of history washed away. The gravity of this situation is hard to express. Google “Manifest Destiny”.
Jim Cuddy has captured our disappointment and fear in his brilliant new song “We Used to Be the Best of Friends”.
The poignant final lines are simple. “Give us a call when the fever ends…maybe we can be best friends again.”
Here comes Melissa Nee, dropping knowledge bombs all over Piece of Mind! Melissa is a long time fan, having seen the band on this actual tour. Her insight, appreciation and multitude of knowledge make this a must-watch episode!
Flying over the valley, to the Eagles’ Nest, we cover the album album track by track from “Where Eagles Dare” to “To Tame A Land”. Special attention is paid to the lyrics. Four songs on this album have accompanying books or movies, and this is covered as well. Most importantly, this album is the debut of Nicko McBrain, replacing the beloved Clive Burr on drums.
As usual, we cover the artwork, both single B-sides, and the tour. Harrison and Melissa go deep on the live show, setlist and stories. (There is one important story that happened on this tour, that we will save for the Powerslave episode.)
Please join Harrison, Melissa and I for this mission behind enemy lines: Piece of Mind!
Last week on Rock Daydream Nation, Peter Kerr and Martin Popoff broke down the history of Australian producer team Harry Vanda and George Young. You may recognize those names from the AC/DC albums in your collection. As I recently discovered, Vanda & Young were also responsible for the early Rose Tattoo records. What else have Vanda & Young brought to the music world? Watch this episode of Rock Daydream Nation and hear about their best works.
There’s an old saying; I think it goes back to Aristotle. It goes, “Never meet your heroes.”
I think we can prove that wrong, right here.
Quick recap: I first heard Blotto’s song “Metal Head” as a young kid. Not sure what to make of these guys, I filed it away as “interesting” but never had the opportunity to hear more through my younger life. I even worked at a used CD store from 1994-2006. You know how many used CDs by Blotto came in during that 12 year span? Zero! Not a one! I started to wonder if they were a real band. Fortunately, along came the internet, confirming that my memory wasn’t playing tricks on me. Some of the core Blotto members first assembled in the early 1970s, as the Star Spangled Washboard Band. They had albums and singles. Yet, up here in Kitchener Ontario Canada, nobody I knew had the record, heard the record, or knew where to buy the record. It was frustrating as hell, but I never forget the name “Blotto” nor the song “Metal Head”. The music video was indelible. The singer had charisma! The band looked unique. One guy was bald (a rarity in 80s rock bands) and one guy had glasses and wore a tie!? What was with that? In the 80s, we had Revenge of the Nerds and I couldn’t help but wonder what this band was about, because visually, that was what I was seeing! A nerd with a guitar? It made no sense to 13 year old me.
But I never forget.
Fast forward to 2018. My pal Aaron and I had this summer ritual of hitting Toronto to go record shopping. This trip almost never happened because Jen’s mom was dying of cancer and we only had so many weekends together left. However, she ordered me: “Mike, go with your friend.” And so, first thing in the morning, we embarked. The first store we hit was BMV and there it was: Combo Akimbo by Blotto, featuring the song “Metal Head”. Flip the record over. There was the bald guy, and the guy with the glasses! I snapped it up immediately. It went under my arm and stayed there until checkout. There was no question I was getting it. The whole trip was documented on video, including this find. In the video, I was delighted to find the guys all had “Blotto” names: Sarge Blotto, Bowtie Blotto, Broadway Blotto, Cheese Blotto, and Lee Harvey Blotto too. I got the gag, and all my hopes were confirmed when I dropped the needle on that record later that night.
Fast forward again. We lost Jen’s mom, and I started writing again. My Blotto reviews were spotted by drummer F. Lee Harvey Blotto himself, who contacted me in gratitude. He even sent me a shirt, while defending their cover of “Stop! In the Name of Love” which I wrote slightly negatively about. “What a cool guy,” I thought to myself.
I wore that Blotto shirt with pride until it pretty much wore out. I also emailed F. Lee in 2019 when Sarge passed away from cancer. What shitty disease it is.
I continued to listen to and love my Blotto albums over the years. I purchased the Collected Works CD which has most of their studio material. The rest of their discography eluded me, at least at prices that Jen won’t smite for me. And finding Blotto, in the wild, in Ontario? Not frequent, or I would have had an album sooner than 2018!
I’ve lost a lot of weight since then!
Fast forward again! It is now 2025, and to my delight, I discovered that a Blotto documentary film was coming! Hello! My Name Is Blotto – The Movie, directed by Rob “Bert Blotto” Lichter will premier April 12 at the Cohoes Music Hall. I asked for any band member to come on my show Grab A Stack of Rock to talk about it.
A day or two later, F. Lee emailed. “Why not!” he said, and offered the whole band and director Bert too.
And so we did the interview, and it was a lot of fun and hopefully gained the band a few new fans. I know that among many of my regulars, particularly in Australia, it was their first time hearing and seeing Blotto.
What was really cool was the pre and post-show chat when we weren’t recording. Bert was first to arrive in the virtual studio, and his passion for Blotto was only exceeded by his feelings of camaraderie with them. We chatted a bit, and then Bowtie arrived. He was curious about me, so I told him I was from about an hour west of Toronto in a place called Kitchener/Waterloo.
Without pause, Bowtie said “We played there as the Star Spangled Washboard Band in the early 1970s. 1975 or so. We also played Guelph and Richmond Hill.”
My jaw must have dropped at that moment. Guelph is pretty obscure even among Canadians. And Bowtie pronounced it right, which most people don’t do on their first try. He said that Broadway Blotto would remember. I speculated that they might have played at the Coronet Club, not far down the street from me. They were known for their regular-hours lunch menu, and strippers and rock bands at night. That was the kind of place that Blotto would have played up here, as Bowtie and Broadway confirmed.
Also confirmed by F. Lee: There are lots of Blotto live collections up on Spotify waiting to be streamed. Lots more music for me to hear, right at my fingertips.
At the end of the show, the Blotto guys thanked me for my support over the years and said some very kind things about my writing. I’ll tell you, there is nothing better than when someone whose art you admire, tells you that they also like what you do.
Broadway called us “kindred spirits” which I find very flattering, but this is where it gets really cool.
He asked me to choose my own “Blotto name”.
I thought about it, and I played with Hoser Blotto for a little bit. I ultimately decided on “Kitchener Blotto”, because that really identifies me. Maybe there are lots of fellow hosers who are Blotto fans, but I hope when Blotto hears the word Kitchener, they think of me. And the strip club.
Thank you guys.
Don’t meet your heroes? Pfft. Choose your heroes wisely, I say.