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| 8/30/2010 |
Dickinson Calls Glastonbury "Too Polite," Talks Tour Life
Bruce Dickinson is speaking out on one of the biggest annual music events in the United Kingdom. The Iron Maiden frontman told London's "The Sun" that The Glastonburry Festival is just too proper for Maiden. Dickinson said, quote, "Glastonbury is a bit too cream cakes and afternoon tea for us. It's all yurts and people being far too polite." The 52-year-old singer also used his "Sun" interview to dispel illusions that Maiden's touring life is luxurious. Dickinson described the amenities backstage on the road by saying, quote, "We just have three loaves of white bread, some butter, a tin of tuna fish and some beers. People come backstage looking for the spread and we say: 'Go make yourself a sandwich.'"
In related news, Iron Maiden just scored its fourth number one album across the pond last week with "The Final Frontier." "Frontier" is the band's 15th studio project and it features the advance single, "El Dorado." |
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