Aces High

"Aces High" is a song by British heavy metal band Iron Maiden, written by bassist Steve Harris. It is Iron Maiden's eleventh single and the second from the 1984 studio album Powerslave. The song tells the story of a British RAF pilot fighting against the German Luftwaffe during the Battle of Britain (1940), the first battle to be completely fought by aircraft.[1]

"Aces High" is one of Iron Maiden's most popular songs, and has been covered numerous times. It was released as a single over a month after Powerslave came out. It was featured on the video game Madden NFL 10 as part of the game's soundtrack and on the MTV show Nitro Circus, it also features in Steve Peat's segment on the mountain bike film on New World Disorder III. Colin Mckay used it on his part of the skate video Plan B Questionable as well.

When performed live - as seen in among others, Live After Death and Iron Maiden: Flight 666 - it is usually preceded by Winston Churchill's famous "We shall fight on the beaches" speech with the sound of planes in the background. Churchill's speech was also added into the beginning of the song's official music video.

The first B-side is a cover of Nektar's "King of Twilight", from their 1972 album A Tab in the Ocean. Their cover is actually a medley of the songs "Crying in the Dark" and "King of Twilight", the last two songs on the album.

The Japanese 12" was mixed with the B-side covers from "The Trooper" & "2 Minutes To Midnight" singles, which for some reason do not seem to have been released there.[2][3]

Contents
[hide]
 * 1 Track listing
 * 1.1 UK single
 * 1.2 Japan and Brazil 12"
 * 2 Personnel
 * 3 Appearances
 * 4 Chart Performance
 * 4.1 Notes
 * 5 References
 * 6 External links

UK single[edit]

 * 1) "Aces High" (Steve Harris) - 4:31
 * 2) "King of Twilight" (Nektar cover) - 4:49
 * 3) "The Number of the Beast" (live in Dortmund - 18 December 1983) (Harris) - 4:57 (12" only)

Japan and Brazil 12"[edit]

 * 1) A1 - "Aces High" (Steve Harris) - 4:31
 * 2) A2 - "The Number of the Beast" (live in Dortmund - 18 December 1983) (Harris) - 4:56
 * 3) B1 - "King of Twilight" (Nektar Cover) - 4:50
 * 4) B2 - "Rainbow's Gold" (Beckett cover; Terry Slesser, Kenny Mountain) - 4:57
 * 5) B3 - "Cross-Eyed Mary" (Jethro Tull Cover) - 3:52[4]

Personnel[edit]
Production credits are adapted from the 7 inch vinyl,[5] and 12 inch vinyl covers.>[6]
 * Iron Maiden
 * Bruce Dickinson - vocals
 * Dave Murray - guitar
 * Adrian Smith - guitar
 * Steve Harris - bass guitar
 * Nicko McBrain - drums
 * Production
 * Martin Birch – producer, engineer
 * Derek Riggs – cover illustration

Appearances[edit]

 * A version recorded in the summer of 1996 by Arch Enemy was – as guitarist Michael Amott observed in the liner notes to Wages of Sin (on which the cut reappears) – "released on the Japanese Iron Maidentribute album Made In Tribute. This one turned out really intense, and was easily one of the better songs on a really terrible collection of Iron Maiden cover versions."
 * It was covered in 2005 by Jeff Scott Soto (Yngwie Malmsteen), Nuno Bettencourt (Extreme), Billy Sheehan (Mr. Big, Niacin), and Vinny Appice (Black Sabbath, Dio) – drums on the tribute album Numbers from the Beast.[7]
 * It was covered in 2005 by Scott Lavender on the album The Piano Tribute to Iron Maiden.[8]
 * It was covered in 2006 by Concord Dawn (featuring State of Mind) on the album Chaos by Design.[9]
 * It was covered in 2006 by The Iron Maidens on the album The Iron Maidens[10]
 * It was covered in 2008 by Children of Bodom on the album Skeletons in the Closet.[11]
 * It was covered in 2011 by Reinxeed on the album 1912
 * It was covered in 2013 by Thomas Zwijsen on the album Nylon Maiden

Notes[edit]

 * 1) Jump up^ Re-release of both singles as part of The First Ten Years box set. Exceeded the length limit of the UK Singles chart.