But drummer Nicko reveals how he “got positive” through inspiration from singer - and explains why he left mistakes in Speed Of Light. Nicko McBrain has told how he thought Iron Maiden were finished after hearing Bruce Dickinson had cancer – but the thought only lasted a moment.
And the drummer has revealed why he was happy to leave his mistakes in the final version of lead track Speed Of Light.
Maiden recorded 16th album The Book Of Souls last year, while frontman Dickinson suspected he was ill but decided not to seek medical attention until work was finished.
McBrain tells Overdrive: “Do you know that none of us knew he was poorly until after the record was done? He performed that whole album, knowing that something wasn’t quite right with himself – but didn’t get diagnosed till after we’d finished the tracks.
“So The Book of Souls is very special to me and all the rest of the guys. We weren’t aware, and neither was he, that he had the tumour.”
He adds: “I’d be a liar if I didn’t think for a minute, ‘That’s Iron Maiden finished.’ I thought more about the possibility of losing my friend than anything else, to be honest.
“I did question his mortality at one point, and thankfully that didn’t last long. I got down on my knees and said a prayer, picked my thoughts up and got positive, thinking to myself, ‘If anyone can beat this, it’s Bruce!’
“Basically, I prayed for him and my prayers were answered, as well as everybody else that knows and cares for him.”
Speed Of Light was issued ahead of the chart-topping album’s launch, and it was recorded moments after guitarist Adrian Smith played the main riff to his colleagues in their French studio.
McBrain says: “We went off and recorded it right then and there. There are a couple of little drum mishaps in it, and I deliberately kept them in.
“There were people moaning about it, saying, ‘Oh, there’s mistakes in there!’ My response was: ‘Bollocks to that – it’s live and it’s a great vibe.’”