British Columbia·Point of View

Heavy metal music is family music — just ask my son

When Lisa Christiansen took her son to see Iron Maiden on the weekend it was more than just a concert - it was a bonding moment.

Family bonding at Iron Maiden? Anything can happen at a metal show.

Iron Maiden members Dave Murray (left) and Janick Gers rock out during a concert. Lisa Christiansen says metal music like theirs brings families together. (Reuters)

I don't have a lot of friends who share my musical loves.

Maybe in the back of my mind I thought, "I'll make one!"

That was perhaps part of my reasoning that went into taking my just-13-year-old son Noah to his first big metal concert back in 2008: Iron Maiden's Somewhere Back in Time World Tour at the Pacific Coliseum.

It sure seemed like the right thing to do — sharing passions and all that. Also, it was educational — this was one of the bands from the New Wave of British Heavy Metal.

Not your typical 'car' music growing up

Getting my kids to appreciate heavy metal wasn't necessarily something I set out to do, but maybe I had been doing it all along.

Lisa Christiansen and her son Noah at the Iron Maiden concert on April 10, 2016. (Lisa Christiansen/CBC)

Only later did I wonder if Masters of Reality by Black Sabbath might not have been the greatest choice of car music for the kids when they were in elementary school.

But soon enough, there was Kill 'Em All By Metallica and The Number of the Beast by Iron Maiden.

So when Noah and I got to the Pacific Coliseum, I was awfully excited to show him the ropes.

Wear an old t-shirt. We'll get a new one.

What kid doesn't want an Iron Maiden tour t-shirt, with band mascot Eddie the Head's zombie face on it?

We popped our ear plugs in and sung our hearts out.

It was a great night.

A music fan, if not a metal fan

Noah didn't become a metal lover like his mom, but on April 10, we got a chance to re-create our Iron Maiden night from years ago. He had become their fan.

A different venue, some news songs — but then again those classic songs we know so well.

We've seen a lot of shows since then, even Black Sabbath three years ago.

We argue a lot about songs and artists and play each other lots of music.

I'm proud and happy to say I raised a music fan, if not a metal fan.

And really, more importantly, I've got a son who still goes out with his mom.

So if anyone ever asks you what's the good in metal music, tell them it brings families together.

Ask my son. It's true.

With files from On The Coast

A ticket from the March 31, 2008 Iron Maiden concert. This was the first big metal show for Lisa Christiansen's son, Noah. (Lisa Christiansen/CBC)

To hear the full story, click the audio labelled: Bonded metal: how big riffs made for big love in one music-loving family