Iron Maiden Run To The Hills. Iron Maiden Run To the Hills / the Number of the Beast Music This iconic song was released through EMI Group as a single from the English band's "The Number of the Beast" album Credited solely to the band's bassist, Steve Harris, Dickinson contributed to the song but could not be credited due to a contractual agreement.
Iron Maiden Run To The Hills (VG) (7") Mr Vinyl from www.mrvinyl.co.za
It is their first single with Bruce Dickinson as vocalist Run to the hills, run for your lives Run to the hills, run for your lives Soldier blue in the barren wastes Hunting and killing their game Raping the women and wasting the men The only good Injuns are tame Selling them whiskey and taking their gold Enslaving the young and destroying the old Run to the hills, run for your lives
Iron Maiden Run To The Hills (VG) (7") Mr Vinyl
Credited solely to the band's bassist, Steve Harris, Dickinson contributed to the song but could not be credited due to a contractual agreement. It was released as their sixth single and the first from the band's third studio album, The Number of the Beast (1982) Run to the Hills Lyrics: White man came across the sea / He brought us pain and misery / He killed our tribes, he killed our creed / He took our game for his own need / We fought him hard, we.
How Run To The Hills kickstarted Iron Maiden's rise to the top — Kerrang!. Run to the hills, run for your lives Run to the hills, run for your lives Soldier blue in the barren wastes Hunting and killing their game Raping the women and wasting the men The only good Injuns are tame Selling them whiskey and taking their gold Enslaving the young and destroying the old Run to the hills, run for your lives Iron Maiden's "Run to the Hills", officially hit the shelves on 12 February of 1982
How Run To The Hills kickstarted Iron Maiden's rise to the top — Kerrang!. The Official Video for Iron Maiden - Run To The Hills Taken from Iron Maiden's 3rd studio album The Number Of The Beast released in 1982, which featured the. The 1982 single charted at #7; the 1985 live version went to #26