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Stuart Adamson

William Stuart Adamson (11 April 1958 – 16 December 2001) was a Scottish rock guitarist and singer. Adamson began his career in the late 1970s as a founding member and performer with the punk rock band Skids. After leaving Skids in 1981, he formed Big Country and was the band's lead singer and guitarist. The group's commercial heyday was in the 1980s. In the 1990s, he was a member of the alternative country band The Raphaels. In the late 1970s the British music journalist John Peel referred to his musical virtuosity as a guitarist as "a new Jimi Hendrix".[1]

Stuart Adamson
Adamson with Big Country in 1991
Background information
Birth nameWilliam Stuart Adamson
Born(1958-04-11)11 April 1958
Manchester, England
OriginDunfermline, Scotland
Died16 December 2001(2001-12-16) (aged 43)
Honolulu, Hawaii, U.S.
GenresPunk rock, new wave, Celtic rock, alternative rock
Occupation(s)Singer-songwriter, musician
Instrument(s)Vocals, guitar, keyboard, bass guitar
Years active1976–2001
LabelsNo Bad, Virgin, Phonogram, Mercury, Vertigo, Compulsion, Fox, Transatlantic, Track
Formerly ofSkids, Big Country, The Raphaels

Early life and career

Adamson was born in the city of Manchester, England, to Scottish parents Anne (née Muir) and William Adamson. When he was four, his family relocated to the small mining village of Crossgates, about a mile east of Dunfermline in Fife.[2] Adamson's father, a fishing industry executive who travelled the world, encouraged his son to read literature, and both parents shared an interest in folk music. Adamson received his formal education at Beath High School.[3]

Adamson entered rock music during the British punk rock movement of the mid-1970s, forming a Dunfermline band called Tattoo in 1976 after seeing The Damned at a gig across the Firth of Forth in the capital city of Edinburgh. Besides Adamson, Tattoo included his friend William Simpson, who would also play bass guitar in their next band, Skids, which began performing in the local area and in Edinburgh.[4]

Skids

Adamson founded Skids in 1977 when he was 18. He and Simpson first recruited drummer Thomas Kellichan and performed as a trio until meeting the 16-year-old Richard Jobson.[5], who became the act's lead singer/frontman, Adamson and Jobson being the principal songwriters for the act.

Skids' biggest success was the single "Into the Valley", released in 1979, which reached #10 in the UK Singles Chart.[6] The band had four chart singles in the United Kingdom that year. Adamson was involved with the band's first three long-players, before quitting the act in 1981 after disagreements with Jobson, whose personality was increasingly dominating the band's output.[7] Jobson later said of Adamson: "This was a guy who had a mortgage, a wife, and a family when we were all trying to live some mythic punk lifestyle. He seemed level-headed, grounded."[8]

Big Country

Adamson found international fame with Big Country, a band formed with friend and fellow guitarist Bruce Watson, then employed as a submarine cleaner at Rosyth naval base, and a rhythm section of studio musicians Mark Brzezicki and Tony Butler, found with the help of his label.

Big Country's first hit, 1983's "Fields of Fire", reached the UK's Top 10, and was rapidly followed by the album The Crossing. The album was a big hit in North America (Canada.#4,[9] United States #18) powered by the single "In a Big Country", which was performed on Saturday Night Live and the Grammy Awards. The video for "In a Big Country" received frequent airplay on MTV and featured the band riding all terrain vehicles in the countryside.

Their second album Steeltown appeared in October 1984. The band's third album The Seer (1986) featured Kate Bush on the title track. The first two albums were produced by Steve Lillywhite. The band continued to record studio albums and tour until 2000. Adamson supplied much of the distinctive guitar work, as well as being the lead singer and main songwriter (both music and lyrics). The band's lineup rarely underwent changes, the exception being the departure of drummer Mark Brzezicki who left in the summer of 1989 and was replaced by Pat Ahern. Brzezicki re-joined the band in 1993.

Personal life

Adamson was married twice. He had two children with his first wife Sandra in 1982 and 1985. His son Callum Adamson is the guitarist of the band Ahab, and his daughter Kirsten has a solo musical career. In 1996, Adamson split with Sandra and moved to Nashville, US.[10][11] There he married his second wife in 1999, a hairdresser named Melanie Shelley,[12] and founded his final band, the alternative country band The Raphaels, a duo of Adamson and Nashville songwriter Marcus Hummon.

Adamson was a keen motorcyclist who regularly purchased new machines for riding around Fife. His interest extended to the race track where he sponsored the career of the British Championship rider Iain Duffus in the late 1980s.[13]

Death

On 26 November 2001, Adamson was reported missing by his wife Melanie. At the time the couple had been estranged for several weeks, and Melanie filed for divorce on the day he had disappeared. He had been due to face drunk-driving charges in March 2002, and had been ordered to attend Alcoholics Anonymous (AA). He had previously experienced problems related to alcoholism, and had begun drinking again after having been sober for over a decade. On 16 December 2001 he was found dead in a room that he had booked into in the Best Western Plaza Hotel in Honolulu in Hawaii. According to a local police report he had died by hanging himself with an electrical cord from a pole in a wardrobe.[14][15] A subsequent Coroner's Office report found that he had consumed a 'very strong' amount of alcohol around the time of his death.[16]

His body was flown back to Scotland, where after a private funeral service at Dunfermline Crematorium in Fife, he was cremated.[17] In the evening of 27 December 2001 a public memorial service was held to celebrate his life and career at Carnegie Hall, Dunfermline, attended by Richard Jobson and a crowd of several hundred mourners, including Adamson's family and friends, and former members of Big Country. Messages of condolence were publicly read out, including one from U2's The Edge, stating that Adamson with Big Country had written the songs that he wished U2 could write.[18]

Memorials

In April 2009, a mural of Stuart Adamson was unveiled at East End Park, the home of Dunfermline Athletic Football Club of whom Adamson was a fan: the mural was painted by art students from the local Queen Anne High and Dunfermline High Schools, and adorns the wall of the north stand.[19]

In September 2011 a commemorative bench to Stuart Adamson was unveiled at Pittencrieff Park in Dunfermline. It was paid for by fans and is inscribed with some of his lyrics chosen by fans in an online poll.[20]

Stuart Adamson was the inspiration behind the song "3 Ways To See Despair" by Manic Street Preachers.[21]

A housing development in Crossgates, opened in 2021, is named "Stuart Adamson Crescent".

Equipment

According to Skids bassist Bill Simpson, Adamson's first real guitar was a Gibson Flying V. He is usually associated with the Yamaha SG2000 guitar, which he used extensively during the Skids years, as well as on the first two Big Country albums. He also used Fender Stratocasters in this period to achieve lighter tones. Around the time of The Seer, Adamson began to lay his SG2000s aside[22] and experimented with other models. Among these were several Les Pauls,[23] a Gretsch Duo-Jet, and a number of ESP Model 901 Stratalike with humbucking pickups (in distinctive yellow and red colours). Adamson also had several guitars made for him by the Glasgow guitar-maker Jimmy Moon.

Big Country's distinctive 'Scottish' sound was created using an MXR pitch transposer,[24] which pushed the guitar notes up an octave and created a shrill, bagpipe-esque whine. This can be heard in the lead guitar passages in the song "In a Big Country". Adamson was also noted for his use of the E-Bow, a device that magnetically vibrates guitar strings and generates unique tones with infinite sustain.[25] The e-bow is most prominent in the introductions to the songs "The Storm" and "Lost Patrol".

The Scottish flavour is also present due to Adamson (and other co-writers in the band) using an open ‘drone’ string when writing and playing songs.

Adamson used Session 'Sessionette:75' amplifiers mainly for live performances and recordings.

During his time in Skids, Stuart used HH amplifiers. In early Big Country he used Marshall but moved to Fender Showman twin amps, including two with silver eagles stencilled on the grilles (a reference to cover art of their third album, The Seer). Later he moved to Mesa Boogie amps and often displayed a small Saltire badge on the corner.

Discography

Skids discography
Big Country Discography
The Raphaels Discography
Year Title Label
2001 Supernatural Track

See also

References

  1. ^ Glen, Allan. Stuart Adamson – In A Big Country. ISBN 184697142X.
  2. ^ www.stuart-adamson.co.uk
  3. ^ Reid, Stuart (17 December 2001). "Rock Star Adamson dies in hotel". The Scotsman. Retrieved 8 May 2018.
  4. ^ Reid, Stuart (17 December 2001). "Rock Star Adamson dies in hotel". The Scotsman. Retrieved 8 May 2018.
  5. ^ Sean O'Hagan, Jobson's Choice, The Observer, Sunday 20 June 2004.
  6. ^ Official Charts Company - Skids - Into the Valley, Officialcharts.com
  7. ^ Simon Goddard, Once more into the valley 30 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine, The Scotsman, 17 February 2007.
  8. ^ Sean O'Hagan, Jobson's Choice, The Observer, Sunday 20 June 2004.
  9. ^ . RPM. archived at Library and Archives Canada (Volume 39, No. 11). 12 November 1983. Archived from the original on 24 October 2012. Retrieved 15 September 2011.
  10. ^ STARDOM: LIFE AND TIMES OF PUNK HERO, The Scotsman, 18 December 2001.
  11. ^ "Daughter of Big Country legend Stuart Adamson is happy the world still loves his music as she prepares to release her debut album". Daily Record. 15 February 2015. Retrieved 29 November 2018.
  12. ^ "Ex-wives feud over fortune of Big Country suicide star". The Guardian. 27 January 2002. Retrieved 28 November 2018.
  13. ^ "Stuart Adamson and Motor bikes | Stuart Adamson". Stuart-adamson.co.uk. Retrieved 2 July 2020.
  14. ^ "Death of rocker Adamson likely suicide, official says | The Honolulu Advertiser | Hawaii's Newspaper". The Honolulu Advertiser. 18 December 2001. Retrieved 2 January 2012.
  15. ^ Jeevan Vasagar, Big Country's Stuart Adamson dead in hotel, The Guardian, 17 December 2001.
  16. ^ Mike Wade, Autopsy shows star was drunk at time of suicide, The Scotsman, 26 January 2002.
  17. ^ "Singer Adamson's funeral held". News.bbc.co.uk. 30 December 2001. Retrieved 2 July 2020.
  18. ^ "ADAMSON REMEMBERED | Stuart Adamson". Stuart-adamson.co.uk. Retrieved 2 July 2020.
  19. ^ "Stuart Adamson Mural, East End Park, Dunfermline". Stuart Adamson fans website. Retrieved 28 November 2018.
  20. ^ "'Spiritual home' pays tribute to rock legend Stuart Adamson with a little help from Wigan". The Courier. 26 September 2011. Retrieved 27 November 2018.
  21. ^ "Interview: Manic Street Preachers, still fired up". The Scotsman.
  22. ^ www.muzines.co.uk
  23. ^ www.lespaulforum.com
  24. ^ www.equipboard.com
  25. ^ www.musicradar.com

External links

    stuart, adamson, william, april, 1958, december, 2001, scottish, rock, guitarist, singer, adamson, began, career, late, 1970s, founding, member, performer, with, punk, rock, band, skids, after, leaving, skids, 1981, formed, country, band, lead, singer, guitari. William Stuart Adamson 11 April 1958 16 December 2001 was a Scottish rock guitarist and singer Adamson began his career in the late 1970s as a founding member and performer with the punk rock band Skids After leaving Skids in 1981 he formed Big Country and was the band s lead singer and guitarist The group s commercial heyday was in the 1980s In the 1990s he was a member of the alternative country band The Raphaels In the late 1970s the British music journalist John Peel referred to his musical virtuosity as a guitarist as a new Jimi Hendrix 1 Stuart AdamsonAdamson with Big Country in 1991Background informationBirth nameWilliam Stuart AdamsonBorn 1958 04 11 11 April 1958Manchester EnglandOriginDunfermline ScotlandDied16 December 2001 2001 12 16 aged 43 Honolulu Hawaii U S GenresPunk rock new wave Celtic rock alternative rockOccupation s Singer songwriter musicianInstrument s Vocals guitar keyboard bass guitarYears active1976 2001LabelsNo Bad Virgin Phonogram Mercury Vertigo Compulsion Fox Transatlantic TrackFormerly ofSkids Big Country The Raphaels Contents 1 Early life and career 2 Skids 3 Big Country 4 Personal life 5 Death 6 Memorials 7 Equipment 8 Discography 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksEarly life and career EditAdamson was born in the city of Manchester England to Scottish parents Anne nee Muir and William Adamson When he was four his family relocated to the small mining village of Crossgates about a mile east of Dunfermline in Fife 2 Adamson s father a fishing industry executive who travelled the world encouraged his son to read literature and both parents shared an interest in folk music Adamson received his formal education at Beath High School 3 Adamson entered rock music during the British punk rock movement of the mid 1970s forming a Dunfermline band called Tattoo in 1976 after seeing The Damned at a gig across the Firth of Forth in the capital city of Edinburgh Besides Adamson Tattoo included his friend William Simpson who would also play bass guitar in their next band Skids which began performing in the local area and in Edinburgh 4 Skids EditAdamson founded Skids in 1977 when he was 18 He and Simpson first recruited drummer Thomas Kellichan and performed as a trio until meeting the 16 year old Richard Jobson 5 who became the act s lead singer frontman Adamson and Jobson being the principal songwriters for the act Skids biggest success was the single Into the Valley released in 1979 which reached 10 in the UK Singles Chart 6 The band had four chart singles in the United Kingdom that year Adamson was involved with the band s first three long players before quitting the act in 1981 after disagreements with Jobson whose personality was increasingly dominating the band s output 7 Jobson later said of Adamson This was a guy who had a mortgage a wife and a family when we were all trying to live some mythic punk lifestyle He seemed level headed grounded 8 Big Country EditAdamson found international fame with Big Country a band formed with friend and fellow guitarist Bruce Watson then employed as a submarine cleaner at Rosyth naval base and a rhythm section of studio musicians Mark Brzezicki and Tony Butler found with the help of his label Big Country s first hit 1983 s Fields of Fire reached the UK s Top 10 and was rapidly followed by the album The Crossing The album was a big hit in North America Canada 4 9 United States 18 powered by the single In a Big Country which was performed on Saturday Night Live and the Grammy Awards The video for In a Big Country received frequent airplay on MTV and featured the band riding all terrain vehicles in the countryside Their second album Steeltown appeared in October 1984 The band s third album The Seer 1986 featured Kate Bush on the title track The first two albums were produced by Steve Lillywhite The band continued to record studio albums and tour until 2000 Adamson supplied much of the distinctive guitar work as well as being the lead singer and main songwriter both music and lyrics The band s lineup rarely underwent changes the exception being the departure of drummer Mark Brzezicki who left in the summer of 1989 and was replaced by Pat Ahern Brzezicki re joined the band in 1993 Personal life EditAdamson was married twice He had two children with his first wife Sandra in 1982 and 1985 His son Callum Adamson is the guitarist of the band Ahab and his daughter Kirsten has a solo musical career In 1996 Adamson split with Sandra and moved to Nashville US 10 11 There he married his second wife in 1999 a hairdresser named Melanie Shelley 12 and founded his final band the alternative country band The Raphaels a duo of Adamson and Nashville songwriter Marcus Hummon Adamson was a keen motorcyclist who regularly purchased new machines for riding around Fife His interest extended to the race track where he sponsored the career of the British Championship rider Iain Duffus in the late 1980s 13 Death EditOn 26 November 2001 Adamson was reported missing by his wife Melanie At the time the couple had been estranged for several weeks and Melanie filed for divorce on the day he had disappeared He had been due to face drunk driving charges in March 2002 and had been ordered to attend Alcoholics Anonymous AA He had previously experienced problems related to alcoholism and had begun drinking again after having been sober for over a decade On 16 December 2001 he was found dead in a room that he had booked into in the Best Western Plaza Hotel in Honolulu in Hawaii According to a local police report he had died by hanging himself with an electrical cord from a pole in a wardrobe 14 15 A subsequent Coroner s Office report found that he had consumed a very strong amount of alcohol around the time of his death 16 His body was flown back to Scotland where after a private funeral service at Dunfermline Crematorium in Fife he was cremated 17 In the evening of 27 December 2001 a public memorial service was held to celebrate his life and career at Carnegie Hall Dunfermline attended by Richard Jobson and a crowd of several hundred mourners including Adamson s family and friends and former members of Big Country Messages of condolence were publicly read out including one from U2 s The Edge stating that Adamson with Big Country had written the songs that he wished U2 could write 18 Memorials EditIn April 2009 a mural of Stuart Adamson was unveiled at East End Park the home of Dunfermline Athletic Football Club of whom Adamson was a fan the mural was painted by art students from the local Queen Anne High and Dunfermline High Schools and adorns the wall of the north stand 19 In September 2011 a commemorative bench to Stuart Adamson was unveiled at Pittencrieff Park in Dunfermline It was paid for by fans and is inscribed with some of his lyrics chosen by fans in an online poll 20 Stuart Adamson was the inspiration behind the song 3 Ways To See Despair by Manic Street Preachers 21 A housing development in Crossgates opened in 2021 is named Stuart Adamson Crescent Equipment EditAccording to Skids bassist Bill Simpson Adamson s first real guitar was a Gibson Flying V He is usually associated with the Yamaha SG2000 guitar which he used extensively during the Skids years as well as on the first two Big Country albums He also used Fender Stratocasters in this period to achieve lighter tones Around the time of The Seer Adamson began to lay his SG2000s aside 22 and experimented with other models Among these were several Les Pauls 23 a Gretsch Duo Jet and a number of ESP Model 901 Stratalike with humbucking pickups in distinctive yellow and red colours Adamson also had several guitars made for him by the Glasgow guitar maker Jimmy Moon Big Country s distinctive Scottish sound was created using an MXR pitch transposer 24 which pushed the guitar notes up an octave and created a shrill bagpipe esque whine This can be heard in the lead guitar passages in the song In a Big Country Adamson was also noted for his use of the E Bow a device that magnetically vibrates guitar strings and generates unique tones with infinite sustain 25 The e bow is most prominent in the introductions to the songs The Storm and Lost Patrol The Scottish flavour is also present due to Adamson and other co writers in the band using an open drone string when writing and playing songs Adamson used Session Sessionette 75 amplifiers mainly for live performances and recordings During his time in Skids Stuart used HH amplifiers In early Big Country he used Marshall but moved to Fender Showman twin amps including two with silver eagles stencilled on the grilles a reference to cover art of their third album The Seer Later he moved to Mesa Boogie amps and often displayed a small Saltire badge on the corner Discography EditSkids discographyYear Title Label Notes1979 Scared to Dance VirginDays in Europa1980 The Absolute Game1981 Joy Guitar on Track 5 only 1982 Fanfare1987 Dunfermline A Collection of the Skids Finest Moments2007 The Saints Are Coming The Best of The Skids EMI VirginBig Country DiscographyMain article Big Country discography The Raphaels DiscographyYear Title Label2001 Supernatural TrackSee also EditList of solved missing person casesReferences Edit Glen Allan Stuart Adamson In A Big Country ISBN 184697142X www stuart adamson co uk Reid Stuart 17 December 2001 Rock Star Adamson dies in hotel The Scotsman Retrieved 8 May 2018 Reid Stuart 17 December 2001 Rock Star Adamson dies in hotel The Scotsman Retrieved 8 May 2018 Sean O Hagan Jobson s Choice The Observer Sunday 20 June 2004 Official Charts Company Skids Into the Valley Officialcharts com Simon Goddard Once more into the valley Archived 30 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine The Scotsman 17 February 2007 Sean O Hagan Jobson s Choice The Observer Sunday 20 June 2004 RPM 100 Albums RPM archived at Library and Archives Canada Volume 39 No 11 12 November 1983 Archived from the original on 24 October 2012 Retrieved 15 September 2011 STARDOM LIFE AND TIMES OF PUNK HERO The Scotsman 18 December 2001 Daughter of Big Country legend Stuart Adamson is happy the world still loves his music as she prepares to release her debut album Daily Record 15 February 2015 Retrieved 29 November 2018 Ex wives feud over fortune of Big Country suicide star The Guardian 27 January 2002 Retrieved 28 November 2018 Stuart Adamson and Motor bikes Stuart Adamson Stuart adamson co uk Retrieved 2 July 2020 Death of rocker Adamson likely suicide official says The Honolulu Advertiser Hawaii s Newspaper The Honolulu Advertiser 18 December 2001 Retrieved 2 January 2012 Jeevan Vasagar Big Country s Stuart Adamson dead in hotel The Guardian 17 December 2001 Mike Wade Autopsy shows star was drunk at time of suicide The Scotsman 26 January 2002 Singer Adamson s funeral held News bbc co uk 30 December 2001 Retrieved 2 July 2020 ADAMSON REMEMBERED Stuart Adamson Stuart adamson co uk Retrieved 2 July 2020 Stuart Adamson Mural East End Park Dunfermline Stuart Adamson fans website Retrieved 28 November 2018 Spiritual home pays tribute to rock legend Stuart Adamson with a little help from Wigan The Courier 26 September 2011 Retrieved 27 November 2018 Interview Manic Street Preachers still fired up The Scotsman www muzines co uk www lespaulforum com www equipboard com www musicradar comExternal links EditThe Skids Official Website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Stuart Adamson amp oldid 1141064309, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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