Nicko-McBrain

Iron Maiden’s Nicko McBrain Announces Retirement From Touring: Tonight Will Be ‘My Final Gig’ With The Band

Holy huge news! Iron Maiden drummer Nicko McBrain just announced his retirement from touring!

The 72-year-old has been a member of Iron Maiden for more than four decades and shared his decision to “step back” from being on the road earlier today (Saturday, December 7) in a statement on the band’s official web site and on his social media.

Nicko McBrain wrote, “After much consideration, it is with both sorrow and joy, I announce my decision to take a step back from the grind of the extensive touring lifestyle. Today, Saturday, December 7th, Sao Paulo will be my final gig with Iron Maiden. I wish the band much success moving forward.

“I will, however, remain firmly part of the Iron Maiden family working on a variety of projects, my long time managers, Rod Smallwood and Andy Taylor, have in mind for me. I’ll also be working on a variety of different personal projects and focusing on my existing businesses and ventures, including The British Drum Company, Nicko McBrain’s Drum One, Titanium Tart, and of course, Rock-N-Roll Ribs!

“What can I say? Touring with Maiden the last 42 years has been an incredible journey! To my devoted fan base, you made it all worthwhile and I love you! To my devoted wife, Rebecca, you made it infinitely easier and I love you! To my kids, Justin and Nicholas, thank you for understanding the absences and I love you! To my friends that are always there for me, I love you! To my bandmates, you made it a dream come true and I love you!

“I look into the future with much excitement and great hope! I’ll be seeing you soon, may God bless you all, and, of course, ‘Up the Irons!'”

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Iron Maiden’s longtime manager Rod Smallwood of Phantom Music Management said, “Nicko, and we all love you too!! Thank you for being an irrepressible force behind the drum kit for MAIDEN for 42 years and my friend for even longer. I speak on behalf of all the band when I say we will miss you immensely!

“Ever since Rock In Rio in 1985 we have had a special relationship with Brazil so to bow out of touring in front of 90,000 fans here in Sao Paulo over 2 nights is poetic and you are deserving of all the accolades I am sure these marvellous fans will give you on this last show.

“Phantom look forward to many more years of working with you on the projects you mentioned and I am sure we can find a few more special ones around the Maiden family and FC!

“The band and I all have a thousand great memories of the past 42 years, great gigs, copious platinum and gold discs and awards, love from the fans and one beer too many on too many occasions! Such a bond is forever! And, as Steve Harris says, ‘Nicko is and will always be part of the Maiden family’.

“P.S. Maiden always get their man and our already chosen new drummer will be announced very shortly.”

This likely started Nicko’s decision to exit the band – In January 2023, McBrain was at his home in Boca Raton when he suffered a stroke with partial paralysis.

McBrain addressed his health issues on an episode of The Washington Tattoo podcast, “It happened on January the 19th last year. I was actually having cataract surgery that day. And I guess there was a lot of stress and angst, with somebody messing with your peepers. And I was getting them both done at the same time. In the old days, I’d do one at a time just in case it didn’t work. You’d be walking around blind in one eye, not both. And I had it on good authority that’s the only reason they don’t like to do, even today, both at the same time. But I had confidence in the surgeon, with the way they do it nowadays. And I said, ‘Oh, can I get done both at the same time?’ ‘Yeah, no problem.'”

He added, “Anyway. So I remember I was watching some tennis on the telly. I was up at six o’clock in the morning, which is unusual for me, ’cause I get up about 7:00, 7:30 nowadays. And I got up and I was a little bit anxious. And I lazed on the chaise lounge, and I went to sleep. About eight o’clock I thought, ‘I’m gonna have a nap. I feel really tired.’ And I woke up about 45 minutes later, and I’d had this stroke. And I thought it was pins and needles, but I couldn’t feel the pins and needles. I picked my arm up, going, ‘What’s going on here?’ And I could feel [the arm] but nothing was happening… And I let my arm go and it just dropped, and I’m, like, ‘Oh, shit. Something ain’t right.’ And it didn’t paralyze my leg, although my leg was wobbly. Which is a good thing, because my foot still worked. At least one saving grace — God gave me my right foot. It’s not quite as good as it was, but… Anyway, I went to the doctors, or they took me to the hospital. I had a whole team of people work around me. It was like I was a superstar. And they didn’t even know who I was. That’s the sort of treatment that everybody gets when they have a stroke and they go to the Boca Baptist Hospital, (Baptist Health) Boca (Raton) Regional (Hospital). They have a crew of, like, 12 people around you instantly, no matter who you are. And so after the MRI — they did a CT scan, then I went to an MRI. And I came out, Swerdloff, my neurologist doctor, he had a plethora of students around him, and he had about six kids, young ‘uns — I call them kids; they’re probably all in their 20s or 30s. Anyway, he goes, you’ve had a stroke, Mr. McBrain, I went, ‘Yeah, tell me something I don’t know.’ And he laughed. And he said, ‘It’s a TIA.’ I said, ‘Okay, so it’s not a major stroke.’ He said, ‘Yeah.’ He said, ‘We’ve got this drug called TNK,’ which, what it stands for I’ve no idea. And he said it’s a clot buster, and it prevents any further damage being done to your brain that may have or that has already occurred. He said, ‘But there’s a risk.’ And I said, ‘What’s the risk?’ He said, ‘You could die.’ I went, ‘Okay. So what’s the percentage of failure from people (treated with intravenous tenecteplase)?’ It (was) seven to nine percent. He says, ‘So if you have it, we have to put you in intensive care for 24 hours and monitor you every hour.’ And I went, ‘Well, okay, let’s have it.’ He says, ‘Sign here.’ And I’m right-handed, so I had to put a cross. And he said, ‘Just make out as much as you can.’ I sort of squiggled my name on a line. He gave it to me outside the MRI. About three hours later, I’m upstairs. And finally, I could move my thumb a little bit — the first thing I could move. I was in for two nights, and the day after I got out, I went for therapy, and I had three physiotherapies a week and OT, occupational therapy. My scapula had dropped and apparently my face was down here, although I could talk. So the only thing I had was a paralysis.”

Nicko-McBrain

Seven months ago, Nicko McBrain reflected on that fateful morning when he suffered a stroke while talking to Baptist Health, “It was about probably 8, 8:15. I had a sleep. I woke up about quarter to 9. And as I got turned over, my arm wasn’t moving. And I thought, ‘What’s going on?’ And I pulled my hand up. I could feel — I had sensation in my hand. And I thought, ‘Well, where’s the pins and needles? Why has it gone to sleep?’ And I started to (squeeze my hand). And I let my hand go, and it just dropped. And I thought, ‘Uh oh.'”

Nicko said he didn’t think he’d be able to recover quickly enough to join Maiden on tour that spring.

“I did honestly think that was it. Now I’m laying in the bed, and I’m trying to move, move my hand, at least my fingers or something, encourage my body to, ‘Come on, you can do this. You can do this.’ Because we had scheduled this tour two years prior. And we were starting in May, and we were gonna do rehearsals starting the last week of April. So I thought, ‘Well, I’ve got three months to see if I can at least play again.’ And even holding a drumstick, there was nothing there.”

Nicko McBrain release this statement: “I hope this message finds you all well!

“The reason I’m writing to you all today is to let you know of a very serious health problem that I have been through. In January I had a stroke, thank the Lord it was a minor one referred to as a TIA. It left me paralyzed on my right side from my shoulder on down, of course I was very worried that my career was over but with the love and support from my wife, Rebecca and family, my doctors, especially Julie my OT (Occupational Therapist),and my Maiden family I was able to bounce back to somewhere near 70% recovered. After 10 weeks of intense therapy it was almost time to start rehearsals for our tour.

“I feel it’s important to let you know about this now instead of earlier as I was mainly concerned with doing my job and concentrating on getting back to 100% fitness. I’m not there yet but by the grace of God I’m getting better and stronger as the weeks go by.

“Thank you all for a most wonderful and magical tour so far, you have all been so amazing.

“Well that’s it from me. God bless you all, stay safe and well and I look forward to seeing you all somewhere in time. ”

Big day in metal news! And how crazy that Iron Maiden ALREADY has a new drummer picked out!?! Who could it be?

 

Written by Todd Hancock 

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