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» Janick Gers «
He's that blur
of hair and white Stratocaster that you first see buzzing
round the top right hand corner of the stage. That madly
whirling dervish who can't possibly be doing that and
turning out those finely wrought guitar lines - can he? Yes,
welcome to the totally wired world of Janick Gers - Iron
Maiden's most over the top guitarist ever. Some
accomplishment, given the contenders - not least Dave Murray
himself, who became re-energised when Janick first joined
the band as Adrian Smith's replacement, back in 1990."Adrian
and Janick are two completely different kinds of players,"
explains Dave, who's been there since day one. "Adrian would
have everything worked out before he went on, while Janick
never prepares anything, he just goes with the flow. And he
never stops moving. That's something else that was different
to Adrian, who used to stand fairly still by comparison. But
then, almost everybody looks like they're standing still
next to Janick!" Janick Robert Gers was born in Hartlepool
on January 27, 1957. His father had been in the Polish Navy,
but settled in England after meeting his mother. (He later
joined the British Royal Navy.) Swimming, football and music
- "in that order" - were Janick's chief interests as a kid.
It wasn't until he was in his teens that he began to take a
serious interest in the guitar."I started out wanting be
John Lennon, then, once I got into the guitar properly, I
decided Id rather be Ritchie Blackmore," he smiles. He was
18 when he bought his first white Gibson Fender
Stratocaster, a guitar he still uses now. "I got it
second-hand from a guy in Darlington for two hundred quid
and I remember thinking, 'Wow, this is fucking it!'"It was
1970 and his favourite bands were Deep Purple, Rory
Gallagher, and T-Rex. Later he "became transfixed" by Led
Zeppelin, but it was always Ritchie Blackmore's playing that
"really did it for me. I thought, if I could be just a tenth
as good as that, I could die happy."His first serious band
was a local Hartlepool outfit called White Spirit, who he
joined in 1975. Steeped in the music of Purple, Zeppelin and
Rush, a single, 'Back To The Grind', was released on the
independent label, Neat Records, in 1978. "It was a big deal
for us up in the North East, but it meant nothing anywhere
else. I was just happy to have a record out with my playing
on it. But we were all still on the dole." Later signed to a
major deal by MCA, their debut album, 'White Spirit', was
released, ironically, the same year, 1980, that Maiden
released their self-titled debut. But while Maiden - at the
forefront of the then burgeoning New Wave of British Heavy
Metal scene - watched their album soar into the UK charts at
No.4, White Spirit was not nearly so well known, and their
album fared considerably less well. "That whole NWOBHM thing
passed us by, really" Janick admits. "We all used to moan
that we didn't get enough attention from the media. But the
truth is, Maiden simply made the better record. I can see
that now." But it wasn't all gloom. When White Spirit
supported Gillan on tour that year, Janick got to meet one
of his life-long heroes, former Purple singer, Ian Gillan. "It
was like getting to meet Father Christmas when you're a
kid!" he laughs. When, just a few months later, he was
invited to actually join Gillan, he was, he says,
"absolutely gobsmacked!" A short-lived but highly productive
period, in which Janick played on two of Gillan's finest
albums, the live 'Double Trouble', a Top 10 hit in the UK,
in 1981, and 'Magic', another Top 10 entry in 1982, when
Gillan decided after that to break up the band, Janick was
philosophical. "I was disappointed but I thought, well, this
gives me the chance to do something different." Having
played in bands all his adult life, he took the unusual step
of enrolling in college, where he took a course in
Humanities. "While I was waiting for something else to come
along, I thought I might as well do something useful," he
explains simply. There had been talk, in 1986, of joining
forces with former Twisted Sister singer Dee Snider, then
some discussion about forming a band with ex-Maiden members,
vocalist Paul Di'Anno and drummer Clive Burr, in the
ludicrously named Gog Magog, which was also to have included
ex-Def Leppard guitarist Pete Willis and former Whitesnake
bassist Neil Murray. But nothing came of it and it was a
guest appearance with Marillion at Wembley Arena, for the
Prince's Trust, in 1988, that proved to be the catalyst that
would finally seal his fate. Also on the bill that night was
vocalist Bruce Dickinson, then still in Maiden. And when
Bruce began work on his first solo album, 'Tattooed
Millionaire', in 1990, it was to Janick he turned for help
after being blown away by Marillion singer Fish's first solo
album, 'Vigil In The Wilderness Of Mirrors', on which Janick
co-wrote 'View From The Hill', one of the album's most
affecting tracks. "I'd known Bruce since he was in Samson, "Janick recalls. "He wanted to do something outside Maiden
and I fitted the bill. Then when he called me up one day and
asked if I'd rehearse some Maiden numbers, I was surprised.
I said, 'What for?' He said, 'Adrian's left the band and we
need somebody to fill in. Are you interested?' I was so
flabbergasted, I didn't know what to say!" Although Janick
joined too late to take part in much of the writing for the
'No Prayer For The Dying' album, he did have one song on
there that would become one of their most notorious songs
ever, the delightfully disrespectful, 'Bring Your Daughter
To The Slaughter'. "Bruce had this song that sounded a bit
AC/DC-ish," Janick recalls. "And I said, 'Nah, it wants to
be more like this...' So I put the chords in and then we
re-did the chorus. It was great, so simple. And that was
'Bring Your Daughter To The Slaughter'." Originally
conceived for the soundtrack of the movie, Nightmare On Elm
Street - Part Five, the first time Steve Harris heard it, he
says, "I said to Bruce, 'Look, this is too good to be lost
on some movie soundtrack, let's do it in Maiden!" Which they
duly did. Released as the second single from the 'No
Prayer...' album, in January 1991, 'Bring Your Daughter...'
rocketed straight to the top of the UK charts, where it
stayed for three gloriously non-PC weeks, becoming Maiden
first ever UK No.1 single. Quite a start to his career. And
he's been going from strength to strength ever since, as
anyone will know who has witnessed more recent Janick-derived
works like 'Lord Of The Flies' and 'The Unbeliever' - which
he co-wrote with Steve on 1994's 'The X Factor' - or the
beautifully poignant 'Como Estais Amigos' (rough
translation: 'How Are You My Friends') - which he co-wrote
with vocalist Blaze on last year's 'Virtual XI'. The Official Iron Maiden History has been taken by the Official web site.
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