September 19, 2024

Adrian Smith Recalls How He and Dave Murray Wrote Solos, Explains How His Writing Is Different to Steve Harris’

“Dave and I rarely spoke about it.”

As Iron Maiden guitar legend Adrian Smith recalls, coming up with lead guitar parts with his axe-wielding partner in crime, Dave Murray, came naturally and without too much discussion.

Smith joined Iron Maiden in 1980, not long after the release of the band’s self-titled debut record and the firing of Dennis Stratton. Although different from Stratton’s more classic-rock-oriented approach, you could notice Smith’s obvious blues influences in his lead parts. Three incredible albums lined up — “Killers,” “The Number of the Beast,” and “Piece of Mind” — and it was time for yet another superb record.

In his recent interview with Guitar World, Adrian reflected on the creative process behind the music that would end up on 1984’s “Powerslave” record. The album is full of Smith’s and Murray’s lead parts and, as Smith explained, they came on top of a finished song but were conceived to serve the piece.

“As far as our intent, it was still about the song,” the guitarist said. “We’d just write the song, and then Dave and I would worry about the solos after.”

Going more into the matter, Adrian also said that he and Murray easily communicated through music. We all know how perfectly their solos flow from one to another and this came pretty much intuitively to them.

“Dave and I rarely spoke about it,” he said. On top of that, Smith had a few songs credited to him on the album, including “2 Minutes to Midnight,” one of Iron Maiden’s biggest songs that he co-wrote with Bruce Dickinson.

As he explained, and as we can also notice ourselves, there was a clear distinction between his writing and that of the band’s founder and bassist Steve Harris:

“I’d started writing more, but Steve wrote many of the harmonies. Steve wrote the harmony sections on ‘Aces High,’ which was typical. When I’d write, I never had harmony guitars; I arrived at things differently.”

Going back to the solos, Adrian also added that writing these parts “came down to Dave and I knowing each other rather than talking.”

“Powerslave” also marked the band’s fourth record with producer Martin Birch. This was about the halfway through as Martin would go on to produce four more studio albums for Maiden before retiring. Knowing Martin’s reputation and impressive albums he worked on until that point, he was an authoritative figure in the metal business. Smith said of him:

“Martin worked with all the giants. When he suggested something, you took notice.”

“Considering all he’d done, it was a matter of trying to impress him and wanting to do a good job. You were probably doing pretty well if he thought highly of you.”

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