
- Born: March 12, 1957 in Leytonstone, London, England
- Years Active: 1988-2005
- Member of: Iron Maiden
- Genre: Rock & Alternative
- Influenced by: Dennis Dunaway, Genesis, Deep Purple, Geddy Lee, Chris Squire, Greg Lake, Phil Lynott, Roger Waters, Geezer Butler, John Wetton, John Paul Jones, Ian Hill, John Deacon, UFO
- Followed By: David Ellefson, Eddie Jackson, Tom Araya, Joey DeMaio, Duke Erickson, Leviathan, Jason Newsted, Paulo Jr., Savatage, Frank Bello, Eddie Jackson, John Myung, Joe DiBiase
- Similar Artists: Diamond Head, Mercyful Fate, Motörhead, Samson, Saxon, Triumph, Les Dudek, Savatage, Bugs Henderson, Mark King, Nova, Whitewitch, Billy Sheehan, Tom Araya, Jimmy Bain, Frank Bello, Glen Cornick, David Ellefson, Flea, Kai Hansen, James Jamerson, Duff McKagan, John Myung, Jason Newsted, Derek Smalls, Andy Sturmer, Pete Trewavas, Eddie Van Halen, Joey DeMaio, Duke Erickson, Sebastian Bach, Cliff Burton, Eddie Jackson, Joe DiBiase, Leviathan, Paulo Jr., David Lindley & El Rayo-X, Joe Perry Project, Labyrinth, Brett Scallions
The founder of the long-running heavy metal outfit Iron Maiden, bassist/songwriter Steve Harris was born in London on March 12, 1957. A highly touted soccer player in his youth, he gave up his sporting career to pursue his musical aspirations, forming Iron Maiden in 1976. Though the group's 1979 debut EP The Soundhouse Tapes reflected their punk inspirations, their self-titled 1980 full-length fully embraced metal, earning a Top Five hit at home. Harris composed much of Maiden's material, drawing upon mythology and the occult to write hard rock epics like "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner," "Children of the Damned," and "The Number of the Beast." The 1981 addition of vocalist Bruce Dickinson further solidified the band's position at the forefront of the New Wave of British Heavy Metal and throughout the 1980s, Iron Maiden enjoyed a huge following at home and abroad despite almost no mainstream media attention. Although Dickinson's 1991 departure proved a severe blow to the band's popularity, they soldiered on with new vocalist Blaze Bayley until Dickinson returned to the lineup in 1999, in time to celebrate Iron Maiden's 20th anniversary. ~ Jason Ankeny, All Music Guide