Shropshire Star

Take a Flight with Iron Maiden

Okay, so they won't be playing live in Shrewsbury. But Iron Maiden will be doing the next best thing when their film, Iron Maiden: Flight 666, is screened at the town's Music Hall on April 21.

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Okay, so they won't be playing live in Shrewsbury. But Iron Maiden will be doing the next best thing when their film, Iron Maiden: Flight 666, is screened at the town's Music Hall on April 21.

The Brit Award-winning band have put tickets on sale for the event, which will see the film screened on over 400 screens in 34 countries as part of Maiden Day.

Iron Maiden: Flight 666 is a full length documentary film and follows on from Iron Maiden being crowned Best British Live Act at the Brit Awards 2009.

The film was shot as the band embarked on the first leg of their momentous Somewhere Back In Time World Tour in February and March of 2008, considered to be the most ambitious and adventurous tour in rock history.

The film is a revealing portrait of one of the world's most successful rock bands and an inspirational and often humorous account of the chaotic world of a band on tour around the stadiums of the world.

Circumnavigating the globe in just 45 days, the band flew in a specially customised Boeing 757 airliner, piloted by lead singer Bruce Dickinson, with the entire tour crew and 12 tons of music and stage equipment on board, to

23 sold-out stadium and arena shows in Asia, Australia and North, Central and South America.

The band played in 13 countries, also landing in Azerbaijan and Papua New Guinea en route for fuel stops, travelling 50,000 miles and performing to almost half a million fans ­ a schedule that was only made possible by having their own "magic carpet" which enabled them to go where they wanted with all the key elements of band, crew and equipment on board one plane, christened Ed Force One.

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