*** Welcome to piglix ***

The Number of the Beast (song)

"The Number of the Beast"
Notb.jpg
Single by Iron Maiden
from the album The Number of the Beast
B-side 1982
"Remember Tomorrow" (live)
2005 CD
"The Number of the Beast" (live)
"Hallowed Be Thy Name" (live)
2005 7"
"The Number of the Beast" (live)
2005 12"
"The Number of the Beast" (live)
"Remember Tomorrow"
Released 26 April 1982
3 January 2005
Recorded 1981
Genre Heavy metal
Length 4:49
Label EMI
Writer(s) Steve Harris
Producer(s) Martin Birch
Iron Maiden singles chronology
"Run to the Hills"
(1982)
"The Number of the Beast"
(1982)
"Flight of Icarus"
(1983)

"Rainmaker"
(2003)

"The Number of the Beast"
(2005)

"The Trooper" (live)
(2005)
The Number of the Beast track listing
"22 Acacia Avenue"
(4)
"The Number of the Beast"
(5)
"Run to the Hills"
(6)

"The Number of the Beast" is a song by the English heavy metal band Iron Maiden. It is Iron Maiden's seventh single release, and the second single from their 1982 studio album of the same name. It was reissued in 2005 and also prior to that in 1990 in The First Ten Years box set on CD and 12" vinyl, in which it was combined the previous single, "Run to the Hills".

Upon release in 1982, the song caused controversy in the United States where its religious subject matter caused outrage amongst religious groups. In spite of this, it remains one of the band's more popular songs, reaching No. 18 in the UK singles charts, and has been performed on almost all of their concert tours. Additionally, the song has been covered numerous times and has appeared in several video games and films.

According to the song's writer, bassist and band-founder Steve Harris, it was inspired by a nightmare he had after watching the film Damien: Omen II, in addition to the poem Tam o' Shanter by Robert Burns.

The song opens with a spoken word passage, read by English actor Barry Clayton, which quotes Revelation 12:12 and Revelation 13:18. According to lead vocalist, Bruce Dickinson, the band originally asked Vincent Price to read the intro, but decided to hire Clayton after Price refused to do it for anything less than £25,000.

The track is known for its very long, high-pitched and guttural wail at the end of the intro, which AllMusic describes as "the most blood-curdling Dickinson scream on record". In the Classic Albums documentary based on The Number of the Beast album, Dickinson states that it came about through frustration with producer Martin Birch, who forced him to sing the introduction repeatedly for hours on end.


...
Wikipedia

...