Doug Sampson

Douglas William Sampson (born 30 June 1957)[1] is a British musician. He was the drummer for Iron Maiden from 1978 to 1979.[2]

Doug Sampson
Born (1957-06-30) 30 June 1957
Hackney, London, England
GenresHeavy metal
InstrumentsDrums
Years active1975–1979, 2016–present
Associated acts

Biography

Prior to joining Iron Maiden, Sampson was a member of one of Steve Harris' previous groups, Smiler, along with Dennis Willcock, Mick Clee (born 1949) and Tony Clee (b. 1949) in 1975,[1] after which he was asked to join Iron Maiden at their inception in the same year.[3] He declined to join at the time as he was "a bit fed up with the whole rock band thing" because he was "completely skint,"[3] but accepted a further invitation from Steve Harris at Dennis Willcock's last gig to replace Barry Purkis in 1978 after he had taken up drumming again in a Southern Rock group called Janski.[4]

Following a year of rehearsing the band began playing small pubs with the band, during which they gained a large following, a highlight being a gig at London's famous Marque club. Doug participated in the recording of Iron Maiden's demo, later released as The Soundhouse Tapes, on 31 December 1978,[5] Prowler and other tracks from it appeared in the charts of Neal Kay's Heavy Metal Soundhouse club, published weekly in Sounds.[6] Iron Maiden eventually signed to EMI in 1979,[7] following up by recording further demos, one song from these sessions ("Burning Ambition") was included on the B-Side of "Running Free".[8]

Doug also played on Iron Maidens BBC Archives released on 4 November 2002 as part of the Eddie's Archive box set. It is a collection of songs from three live shows and one live radio broadcast, recorded by the BBC between 1979 and 1988. Doug can be found on the BBC Radio 1 Friday Rock Show, 14 November 1979 disc.

Sampson eventually left the band on 22 December 1979, following health issues brought about by the band's extensive touring schedule driving up and down the country in vans at night in a hectic schedule freezing half to death in the van and a lack of sleep contributing to fatigue and illness. Although he calls leaving Maiden "a blow," he states that "After leaving Iron Maiden he had a jam with Chop Pitman and Tony Hatton from EL34 and they formed a new band Airforce when joined by Sam 'Tomcat' Sampson Dougs brother who was the vocalist from local legends Sams Apple Pie. Airforce played heavily in the london circuit including nights including the Ruskin Arms and the Marque supporting Shy."

In 2015,Doug was invited to be a guest at The Legacy Projects charity fund raising gig supported ex many members of Iron Maiden. Doug brought down his Smiler drum kit that he also used in Iron Maiden and was swamped for autographs and photos, Sampson's old band, Airforce performed a set and had also contributed a track ("War Games") to the "Origins of Iron" compilation, which featured nine tracks by former members of Iron Maiden. After seeing the response from fans, in 2016, Sampson rejoined Airforce after a 20-year absence. He recorded three new tracks with the band and released their career-retrospective album, Judgement Day on 15 July 2016 via, WatchOut Records.

Doug finally returned to the stage, in April 2017. At just his second show back with Airforce, the band headlined the inaugural "Burr Fest" event, at The Lounge, in London. The event raised money for the MS Action Fund, in memory of Doug's Maiden successor, Clive Burr.

Airforce have recorded a new EP "The Black Box Recordings: Volume 1", which was released on 21 July 2017. The EP was the first material to feature the reunited trio of Chop Pitman, Tony Hatton, and Doug Sampson, with new vocalist Dilian Arnaudov.

The band then recorded The Black Box Recordings: Volume 2, a Special Soundhouse Edition of the EP featuring a rough mix and featuring Doug's old Iron Maiden bandmate as Paul Dianno special guest vocalist on the track Sniper got its first public airing at the Born Again Heavy Metal Sound House event on 22 December in London.

Doug and Airforce will be recording an as yet untitled album in 2018 and can be found performing home and abroad in 2018.

Discography

Iron Maiden
Airforce
  • Origins of Iron (2015) - "War Games" only
  • Judgement Day (2016)
  • The Black Box Recordings: Volume 1 EP (2016)
  • The Black Box Recordings: Volume 2 EP The Soundhouse Edition (2017)
  • The Black Box Recordings: Volume 2 EP (2018)

Notes

  1. Wall 2004, p. 25.
  2. Weber, Barry. "Biography: Iron Maiden". AMG. Retrieved 8 May 2010.
  3. Wall 2004, p. 26.
  4. Wall 2004, p. 49.
  5. Wall 2004, p. 66.
  6. Wall 2004, p. 69.
  7. Wall 2004, p. 108.
  8. Wall 2004, p. 126.
gollark: Sure, that makes *some* sense then.
gollark: You could say "it's better than nothing", but if you think you can do something it might give you a false sense of confidence and stop you considering safer options.
gollark: Generally, I'm pretty sure *consistently* defending (physically) against armed people when you are *not* armed is not really possible.
gollark: But there's probably a selection effect where people who both have guns and are really stupid about using them soon die/get imprisoned and no longer go around with guns.
gollark: I suppose there are a lot of stupid people.

References

  • Wall, Mick (2004). Iron Maiden: Run to the Hills, the Authorised Biography (third ed.). Sanctuary Publishing. ISBN 1-86074-542-3.
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