Music
Iron Maiden Drummer Nicko McBrain on Time, Timing and the Joy of Still Playing
Nicko McBrain Has Played at Full Speed for Decades. Now He’s Slowing Down, Listening Harder and Finding New Joy Behind the Kit.
January 22nd, 2026
The conversation began with a Riviera Beach Prep high school student named Anthony Noel, but it quickly moved past introductions and into something quieter and more revealing. This was not a run through career highlights or a celebration of longevity. It became a reflection on time, physical limitation, and how a lifelong relationship with music evolves when the body no longer responds the way it once did.
For Nicko McBrain, sitting behind the drum kit today is no longer about conquering it. It is about meeting it where he is.
Practice is still part of his life, though its purpose has shifted. He no longer approaches the drums with the expectation of regaining what was lost, but with an interest in staying connected to the instrument itself. After suffering a stroke three years ago that affected his right hand, recovery reached a point where effort stopped producing results.
“The neurologist told me, after a year, ‘You’ve got what you got, Nicko,’” McBrain said. “I’ve tried and tried and tried for the last two years to get it back, but unfortunately, it’s not coming back.”
That reality reshaped everything. Practice sessions became shorter and more focused, often lasting only a few minutes. Instead of pushing for speed or endurance, he now uses those moments to maintain feel and timing, sometimes working quietly with a metronome. There is an understanding of what his hands can and cannot do now, and no anger attached to it.
“I just sit behind a kit now and enjoy rattling around and playing,” he said. “I just can’t do the drum fills that I’m used to doing from like three or four years back.”
There is no frustration in the way he says it. Just acceptance.
Even with those limits, certain songs still unlock something physical. Hallowed Be Thy Name remains the one Iron Maiden track that affects McBrain every time it is played live. It is not a matter of preference so much as something instinctive.
“It’s my all-time favorite,” he said.
Trying to explain why, he admitted, is nearly impossible. Music does not operate on logic or ranking systems. Iron Maiden songs are not played to a click, and even with fixed arrangements, no two performances are exactly the same. That looseness is part of what keeps the song alive.
The mood of Hallowed Be Thy Name settles in immediately, beginning with the tension of the intro. In earlier touring years, that atmosphere was literally built into the stage. McBrain recalled having tubular bells mounted behind him, partially lowered through the floor so they could be miked without being visually distracting. It was a small detail, but one that mattered.
As the song builds, it becomes less about mechanics and more about physical response. The layered guitar solos, the gradual rise in intensity, and the release that follows still hit him the same way. In the band’s early years, that energy sometimes pushed him to play faster than intended.
“I used to play it really quick,” McBrain said with a laugh. “Poor old Bruce couldn’t get the vocals out.”
Still, the payoff was always worth it. From start to finish, the song remained immersive, something that took over completely when played live. It was not aggression or darkness that defined the experience for him, but joy.
That same instinct, feel over calculation, guides how Iron Maiden approaches its work more broadly. McBrain avoids ranking albums as achievements or missteps. Each record exists on its own terms, shaped by the moment it was made rather than by comparison to what came before.
“You’re not thinking, ‘Let’s make an album better than the last one,’” he said. “You make an album that has its own identity.”
Still, A Matter of Life and Death stands out for him based on feel rather than reputation. Recorded at SARM West Studios in London with producer Kevin Shirley, the album carries something McBrain still finds difficult to define. There was a sense, at the time, that everything aligned.
“It just had a magic about it,” he said. “I can’t really say why.”
It also marked a rare moment in the band’s touring history, as it was the only Iron Maiden record performed live from start to finish on tour.
In the studio, McBrain explained, not every strong take feels complete. Sometimes a song can be technically solid and still lack something essential. The band had a name for that feeling.
“We used to call that the X Factor,” he said.
When that absence appeared, they did not settle. Songs were rebuilt, sections swapped, and performances pushed until instinct said it was right. Technology helped, but feel always made the final call.
Despite decades of recording, Iron Maiden does not maintain a vault of unused studio material. What the band records becomes the album. There are no shelved songs deemed unworthy after the fact. Any unreleased material exists only in the form of live performances, and even those are left largely untouched.
“If there’s a mistake, it’s in there,” McBrain said. “Believe me, there’s quite a few.”
That same trust in reality extends to the band’s live approach. Iron Maiden does not do traditional soundchecks, a decision rooted in experience rather than rebellion. Empty venues do not sound like full ones, and the atmosphere changes once thousands of people are in the room.
“When the audience aren’t in the room, the atmosphere changes,” McBrain said. “It’s not the same when there’s 12,000 kids in there.”
Instead, the crew handles line checks, even forming an unofficial band made up of technicians who play a single song, Highway to Hell, to make sure everything is working. At some point, the band stopped fighting physics and let the process be what it is.
As the conversation wound down, McBrain reflected on the advice he often gives to musicians struggling with self-doubt. It starts with perspective. Having heroes is important, but imitation can become a trap. He speaks openly about drummers he deeply respects, including Thomas Lang, while acknowledging his own limits.

“I can’t play like that,” he said. “But I completely respect him.”
His most practical advice is also the simplest. When frustration sets in, step away.
“When you hit a brick wall, put your sticks down. Walk away,” he said.
Trying to force progress in the moment can do more harm than good. Self-doubt, while uncomfortable, is not always a weakness. In some cases, it can sharpen awareness and accountability.
“That doubt can work on the other side,” McBrain said. “Because you don’t want to let the people you’re playing with down.”
There was no grand closing statement and no nostalgia for what once was. Just gratitude.
“Absolutely my pleasure,” he said. “God bless you.”
It was a fitting end to a conversation that was never about speed, volume, or legacy, but about staying present, listening to the room, and continuing to play what you can, exactly as you are.
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