The Beast on the Road
Appearance
Tour by Iron Maiden | |
Associated album | The Number of the Beast |
---|---|
Start date | 25 February 1982 |
End date | 10 December 1982 |
No. of shows | 188 in total (191 scheduled) |
Iron Maiden concert chronology |
The Beast on the Road was a 1982 tour by the heavy metal band Iron Maiden in support of the album, The Number of the Beast. It is one of Iron Maiden's longest tours to date, only surpassed in length by the World Slavery Tour, comprising 187 dates in 18 countries taking place over ten months.[1]
Setlist
- "Murders in the Rue Morgue" (from Killers)
- "Wrathchild" (from Killers)
- "Run to the Hills" (from The Number of the Beast)
- "Children of the Damned" (from The Number of the Beast)
- "The Number of the Beast" (from The Number of the Beast)
- "Another Life" (from Killers)
- "Killers" (from Killers)
- "22 Acacia Avenue" (from The Number of the Beast)
- "Total Eclipse" (B-Side of Run to the Hills single)
- Drum solo
- "Transylvania" (from Iron Maiden)
- Guitar solo
- "The Prisoner" (from The Number of the Beast)
- "Hallowed Be Thy Name" (from The Number of the Beast)
- "Phantom of the Opera" (from Iron Maiden)
- "Iron Maiden" (from Iron Maiden)
- "Sanctuary" (from Iron Maiden)
- "Drifter" (from Killers)
- "Running Free" (from Iron Maiden)
- "Prowler" (from Iron Maiden)
Notes:
- The band encored with "Tush" (ZZ Top cover) at the Reading Festival.
- "Smoke on the Water", a Deep Purple cover, was performed as an encore on 4 December 1982.
- "Genghis Khan" (from Killers) was performed on March 11, 1982.
- "Killers" and "Total Eclipse" were dropped from the setlist after the April 30 concert.
- "I Got the Fire", a Montrose cover, was performed as a last encore during the Asian leg of the tour.
Tour dates
- Festivals and other miscellaneous performances
- A This show was in support of Scorpions
- B This show was in support of Rainbow
- C This show was in support of 38 Special
- D This concert was a part of "Day on the Green"
- E This concert was a part of "Reading Festival"
- F This show was in support of Judas Priest
References
- ^ Wall, Mick (2004). Iron Maiden: Run to the Hills, the Authorised Biography (3rd ed.). Sanctuary Publishing. p. 228. ISBN 1-86074-542-3.
- ^ Bushell, Garry; Halfin, Ross (1985). Running Free, The Official Story of Iron Maiden (2nd ed.). Zomba Books. p. 109. ISBN 0-946391-84-X.
- ^ http://archives.chicagotribune.com/1982/08/07/page/22/article/3-acts-set-to-replace-wonder-at-fest
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Iron Maiden.