
Today we hit a milestone mark in the Maiden singles series – we are now to the third album The Number Of The Beast and therefore Bruce Dickinson has joined the band as the replacement to Paul Di’Anno. This marks the start of the “golden era” for Maiden and the bulk of their epic releases fall in this time frame.
Run To The Hills features another stunning Derek Riggs cover piece depicting Eddie and The Beast in a fight. The cover was the same across different versions of the single, in fact this single has no differences among versions – everything is just different pressings for various countries. Art and content are the same through all. Mine is a 12-inch paper sleeve version. Also we’re on a run through several singles that are simply A-side and one B-side, it’ll be a little while before something with multiple B-sides pops up again.
Run To The Hills
On the feature side is one of Iron Maiden’s most iconic songs. Run To The Hills is a very popular tune, having been a part of many setlists over the years. I’d wager it’s one of their top 5, if not top 3, most well-known songs.
The song is about the plight of the Native Americans at the hands of the invading European-American forces. Such a song could come off as boneheaded or worse, but Maiden handled the subject matter with suitable degrees of both seriousness and accuracy. The first verse’s lyrics are from the perspective of a Cree native who is lamenting the invasion and slaughter, while the second verse is told from an American cavalryman’s perspective. Note that this verse shift happens before the chorus is delivered. The final verse pulls back into a distant perspective and harshly recounts the brutal nature of the actions against the Cree.
While the subject matter is grave, the song’s iconic chorus is simple and, at least musically, uplifting. For many the cry of “run to the hills, run for your lives” would be one of the first things heard from the lips of the new singer Bruce Dickinson. Iron Maiden was re-armed with a potent young singer, and here was the first taste of what would become heavy metal history. The “Human Air Raid Siren” was just getting started.
Again, this is one of Maiden’s most-played songs live and most recognizable on the airwaves. Some feel maybe it’s been played a bit too much but I personally don’t get enough of hearing it.
Total Eclipse
The B-side is an interesting case, as it was a song intended for the album but cut in favor of Gangland. The band have long expressed regret over the decision. Reissues of The Number Of The Beast have included this song, and last year’s vinyl only reissue actually did replace Gangland with Total Eclipse. While I’m personally fine with the other reissues that have all the songs, I can understand last year’s decision as they had to keep the album to one record to accommodate a (very awesome) double-LP live album press as well.
I’d say I agree that Total Eclipse is a better song than Gangland, but of course that makes this single that much better. The song is a doomsday track, one of many that Maiden would crank out over the decades. It has the sound and feel of the first few albums, but of course with Bruce wailing away on it. I’d say it’s one of the better original non-album cuts the band did.
That does it for this week’s single. Next week it’s on the iconic title track from the iconic album, and another point where we’ll say farewell to a member of the band. And there a few things sifting through the mail system on their way to me to expand the list a bit further, including at least one representation of the Blaze era.
The Iron Maiden Singles Series
Run To The Hills (you are here)
Aces High
Run To The Hills (live)
Running Free (live)
Stranger In A Strange Land
Wasted Years
The Clairvoyant
Infinite Dreams
Bring Your Daughter … To the Slaughter
Holy Smoke
Be Quick Or Be Dead
From Here To Eternity
Virus
Out Of The Silent Planet
Rainmaker
Different World
The Reincarnation Of Benjamin Breeg
Empire Of The Clouds
I remember hearing this song on MTV back in the day and I loved it. First Maiden song I had ever heard. But for some reason, never pulled the trigger to buy the album and therefore, never started a Maiden collection. I keep saying someday, but who knows if it will happen. For now, I’ll just enjoy these posts.
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C’mon Man..do it!
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MTV had a lot of weird stuff on back in the day but this stuck out even then.
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Total Eclipse is a killer track. I bought the triple vinyl set of TNOTB and that live version of T.E is stellar especially when the song breaks down after the guitar solos and Bruce’s vocals soar. Wicked post dude!
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That live album is one of their best, glad it got a vinyl release finally.
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Like a lot of people, “Run to the Hills” was the first Iron Maiden song I heard and I absolutely loved it, still do.
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It got a lot of people in on the train.
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It’s like a Jovi song to me. I can’t listen to it anymore. Way overplayed and on every Spotify playlist.
But it’s nice to have in the collection.
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It’s gotten around more than a Catholic schoolgirl on prom night, that’s for sure.
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