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10/18/2009 Iron Maiden - Hallowed Be Thy Name (Live @ Rock In Rio)



"Hallowed Be Thy Name" is a song written by Steve Harris for the 1982 Iron Maiden album The Number of The Beast.

The song describes a man's thoughts just before being sent to the gallows. He begins to feel terror and realizes he really is afraid of dying, despite claims that he's not ("tears flow, but why am I crying?/after all, I'm not afraid of dying/don't I believe that there never is an end?"). At the end of the vocal section, the man gets executed; this is followed by a long instrumental section, culminating in his ambiguous final words, "Hallowed be thy name". When the album "Number of the Beast" was profiled on VH1's Classic Albums, Steve Harris said the song was about "having faith, whether it be in religion or whatever, but could that faith fail you at the last second when you need it most?"

* Bruce Dickinson – vocals
* Dave Murray – guitar
* Adrian Smith - guitar (album version)
* Janick Gers – guitar (live single version)
* Steve Harris – bass guitar
* Clive Burr – drums (album version)
* Nicko McBrain - drums (live single version)

Official Website: http://www.ironmaiden.com/

Unskinny Bop



The meaning of "Unskinny Bop", according to band mates of guitarist C.C. DeVille, was a term they coined on the spot when at a rehearsal studio, a drunken DeVille was approached in by a pair overweight prostitutes (a fact somewhat suggested in the music video by DeVille's appearance with a suggestively clad woman on each arm). Upon retreating from the advance, DeVille tripped and hit his head on a solid guitar case, after which he passed out. When the guitarist came to his senses and couldn't remember what had happened, the band mates reported that he had been engaged in the "unskinny bop" with the prostitutes.