Clive Burr (8 March 1957 – 12 March 2013) was an English - TopicsExpress



          

Clive Burr (8 March 1957 – 12 March 2013) was an English drummer, best known as a member of Iron Maiden from 1979 to 1982. Burr died in his sleep on 12 March 2013. He was 56. Born on March 7 1957, Clive Burr was brought up on a council estate in Manor Park in London’s East End, and gave an early indication of his future preferred instrument as a child, hitting as many inanimate objects around him as possible. His idol wasDeep Purple drummer Ian Paice, and as a schoolboy he constructed his own drum kit on which to learn his craft. His teenage years coincided with the rise of a new form of music, the New Wave Of British Heavy Metal (traditionally abbreviated to NWOBHM). Heavy metal had been popular in Britain, Europe and America for some years thanks to bands such as Black Sabbath, Judas Priest and Deep Purple, but by the late Seventies heavy metal had begun to appear old-fashioned compared to the new phenomenon of punk rock. After a spell with the band Maya, Burr joined Samson, one of the better-known NWOBHM acts. Two years later he was invited to join Iron Maiden, whose rapidly-rising profile enabled him to abandon his day job as a runner in the City of London. Burr, Iron Maiden’s fourth drummer after Ron Matthews, Barry “Thunderstick” Purkis and Doug Sampson, powered the group’s ambitious, anthemic songs with great precision and panache on their first three albums, Iron Maiden (1980), Killers (1981) and The Number Of The Beast (1982). By 1980 Burr was internationally known — in July that year he was featured as the teen magazine Oh Boy’s “Hunk Of The Month” — and he won praise from fans and critics alike for his inventive playing on classic songs such as Phantom Of The Opera, Running Free and Run To The Hills. In 1982, however, Burr was asked to leave the band, for reasons that were unclear. He vigorously denied rumours that he had “overindulged”, and later told Classic Rock magazine that his habits were no more or less debauched than anyone else’s in Iron Maiden. “I was too upset to feel angry about it,” he recalled. “We were like schoolkids [on tour] in America. We’d never been there before and it opened our eyes. There was a lot of parties, and girls were throwing themselves at us. We’d never experienced anything like it.” In 1994 Burr was diagnosed with primary progressive multiple sclerosis, which seriously affected his drumming skills . “I kept dropping things,” he recalled. “I couldn’t grip properly. I could barely keep hold of my sticks.” Other members of Iron Maiden, to whom he had remained close, organised a series of fundraising events to enable Burr to pay for his treatment, and he became the patron of the Clive Aid charity in 2004. The organisation raised funds for various health programmes and enabled Burr to travel in a modified Volkswagen Caddy, nicknamed the “Clivemobile”. He is survived by his partner, Mimi. Clive Burr, born March 7 1957, died March 12 2013 . Band Interests Iron Maiden
Posted on: Thu, 13 Mar 2014 01:44:13 +0000

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