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While not an original member of <a href="spotify:artist:6mdiAmATAx73kdxrNrnlao">Iron Maiden</a>, English guitarist Adrian Smith proved to be one of the missing pieces to the puzzle (singer <a href="spotify:artist:7Iffw1nP3NjCWkRIx3Ily9">Bruce Dickinson</a> being the other) early on -- resulting in the band obtaining elite status among the metal masses soon after. Between 1982 and 1989, the group issued some of the most seminal heavy metal records of all time, including the gold- and platinum-selling Piece of Mind (1983) and Powerslave (1984). He left the band in 1990 and formed Psycho Motel, and later joined up with <a href="spotify:artist:7Iffw1nP3NjCWkRIx3Ily9">Dickinson</a> for his solo group. He and <a href="spotify:artist:7Iffw1nP3NjCWkRIx3Ily9">Bruce Dickinson</a> rejoined <a href="spotify:artist:6mdiAmATAx73kdxrNrnlao">Iron Maiden</a> in 1999. They spent the next two decades fortifying the group's legendary status via acclaimed late-period efforts like The Final Frontier (2010) and Book of Souls (2015). During this time, Smith also played in the side projects <a href="spotify:artist:6RZCdy9351sHxVoq8kHEC9">Primal Rock Rebellion</a> and <a href="spotify:artist:5DE14yhJCkOYGtBVFnrtK5">Smith/Kotzen</a>, and in 2020 he published the rock & roll/fishing memoir Monsters of River & Rock.

Born on February 27, 1957, in Hackney (located in East London), Smith was captivated by such renowned hard rock guitarists as <a href="spotify:artist:776Uo845nYHJpNaStv1Ds4">Jimi Hendrix</a> and <a href="spotify:artist:568ZhdwyaiCyOGJRtNYhWf">Deep Purple</a>'s <a href="spotify:artist:3jhRxlzBA9m3NTxNNQ8GtK">Ritchie Blackmore</a> early on, while his sister's boyfriend's record collection only intensified his appreciation of the genre. It wasn't long before a school chum and guitarist, Dave Murray, convinced Smith that he should take up the guitar himself. Murray and Smith began to play together in bands, and with Smith's decision to pursue music full-time, he opted to drop out before graduation. His first serious band, Evil Ways, eventually evolved into <a href="spotify:artist:1Pqgbj238Xo5RIsbkcUt30">Urchin</a>, a group that Murray would sometimes be a part of as well. But Murray's main focus was his other band, the up-and-coming <a href="spotify:artist:6mdiAmATAx73kdxrNrnlao">Iron Maiden</a>, who were making quite a name for themselves locally during the late '70s. Smith was even asked to join <a href="spotify:artist:6mdiAmATAx73kdxrNrnlao">Maiden</a> at one point during this time, but opted to pass due to his commitments to <a href="spotify:artist:1Pqgbj238Xo5RIsbkcUt30">Urchin</a>.

Meanwhile, <a href="spotify:artist:6mdiAmATAx73kdxrNrnlao">Maiden</a> quickly became one of England's top metal outfits, as the band's 1980 debut, Iron Maiden, nearly topped the charts back home. With <a href="spotify:artist:1Pqgbj238Xo5RIsbkcUt30">Urchin</a> disintegrating, Smith had a change of mind, and finally agreed to join <a href="spotify:artist:6mdiAmATAx73kdxrNrnlao">Maiden</a> in time for the recording of the group's sophomore effort, 1981's Killers (supposedly beating out <a href="spotify:artist:5ZedcFUHfB6ejLwD668YpN">Phil Collen</a> for the spot, who would soon turn up in <a href="spotify:artist:6H1RjVyNruCmrBEWRbD0VZ">Def Leppard</a>). Automatically, Smith and Murray formed one of the genre's most influential guitar duos, as they took <a href="spotify:artist:6biWAmrHyiMkX49LkycGqQ">Thin Lizzy</a>'s twin-guitar setup to a whole other level -- especially on such subsequent releases as 1982's classic Number of the Beast (which saw the arrival of singer <a href="spotify:artist:7Iffw1nP3NjCWkRIx3Ily9">Dickinson</a>), 1983's Piece of Mind, 1984's Powerslave, 1986's Somewhere in Time, and 1988's Seventh Son of a Seventh Son. Smith also turned out to be a valuable songwriter, as he completely wrote or co-penned such <a href="spotify:artist:6mdiAmATAx73kdxrNrnlao">Maiden</a> classics as "22 Acacia Avenue," "Flight of Icarus," "2 Minutes to Midnight," "Wasted Years," and "Can I Play with Madness," among others (Smith even sang lead on the Somewhere in Time-era B-side, "Reach Out").

However, by 1989 it was becoming increasingly obvious that Smith was growing disenchanted with <a href="spotify:artist:6mdiAmATAx73kdxrNrnlao">Maiden</a>, as he issued an obscure solo album, credited to A.S.A.P., titled Silver and Gold. Despite the record not exactly lighting up the charts, Smith exited <a href="spotify:artist:6mdiAmATAx73kdxrNrnlao">Maiden</a> in 1990, replaced by Janick Gers. Smith founded Psycho Motel and later reappeared alongside <a href="spotify:artist:7Iffw1nP3NjCWkRIx3Ily9">Dickinson</a> (who had followed Smith's lead and left <a href="spotify:artist:6mdiAmATAx73kdxrNrnlao">Maiden</a>) on the releases Accident at Birth (1997), Chemical Wedding (1998), and Scream for Me Brazil (1999). With Smith and <a href="spotify:artist:7Iffw1nP3NjCWkRIx3Ily9">Dickinson</a> working together once more (and with <a href="spotify:artist:6mdiAmATAx73kdxrNrnlao">Maiden</a>'s popularity sagging), the duo reunited with their old <a href="spotify:artist:6mdiAmATAx73kdxrNrnlao">Maiden</a> pals in 1999, resulting in further sold-out tours and new studio albums, including 2000's Brave New World, 2003's Dance of Death, and 2006's A Matter of Life and Death.

In 2011, Smith formed the side project <a href="spotify:artist:6RZCdy9351sHxVoq8kHEC9">Primal Rock Rebellion</a> alongside <a href="spotify:artist:03mz3G1gu1GPNgAWY4qR2w">SikTh</a> vocalist Mikee Goodman. The 21st century edition of <a href="spotify:artist:6mdiAmATAx73kdxrNrnlao">Maiden</a>, which includes three guitarists -- Smith, Murray, and Gers -- continued to find fortune in the 2010s with acclaimed efforts like The Final Frontier (2010) and The Book of Souls (2015). In 2020, Smith released a memoir, Monsters of River & Rock, and in 2021 he teamed up with <a href="spotify:artist:6nYo7m5cO64bANRvilwVBb">Richie Kotzen</a> (<a href="spotify:artist:1fBCIkoPOPCDLUxGuWNvyo">Poison</a>, <a href="spotify:artist:5OfhOoKunSnuubxxRML8J3">Mr. Big</a>, <a href="spotify:artist:0XQIFN6X5mD98c6gOSLtfJ">the Winery Dogs</a>) for the LP Smith/Kotzen. ~ Greg Prato & James Christopher Monger, Rovi

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