| Stuart Adamson |

|
| Background information |
| Birth name |
William Stuart Adamson |
| Born |
April 11, 1958
Manchester,
England |
| Origin |
Dunfermline, Scotland |
| Died |
December 16, 2001
Honolulu,
Hawaii |
| Genre(s) |
Rock
Punk
New Wave
AOR
Alternative country
Folk
rock |
| Occupation(s) |
Singer-songwriter
Guitarist
Keyboard
Player |
| Instrument(s) |
Guitar
Vocals
Keyboards |
| Years active |
1976-2001 |
| Label(s) |
Virgin |
Associated
acts |
The Skids
Big
Country |
Stuart Adamson (born William Stuart
Adamson, 11
April 1958 –
December
16, 2001),
was an English-born
Scottish
Musician (Guitars / Vocals / Keyboards / Songwriter). He founded the
top-40 Scottish art-punk band The Skids and later the more
mainstream rock Big Country, as well as the
1990s alternative country rock act, The Raphaels.
|
Contents
- 1 Adamson's
music
- 2 Early
life
- 3 The
Skids
- 4 Big
Country
- 5 Final
years
- 6 Notes
- 7 External
links
|
Adamson's music
Adamson is best known for his distinctive guitar work, which
made the harmonics of two electric guitars sound somewhat like a bagpipe;
Adamson, along with Big Country's other guitarist,
Bruce
Watson, achieved this with a combination of various guitar effects and
heavy use of reverb. The often quoted "bagpipe" sound was actually
probably more to do with the phrasing of Big Country's guitar work as
it often loosely followed traditional Scottish pipe band arrangements
and rhythms. Also adding to the distinctive Big Country guitar sound
was the use of the e-bow,
a device that provided a haunting strings type effect in Big Country's
music. Along with Bill Nelson
(Guitars / Vocals / Keyboards / Bass Guitar / Drums / Percussion /
Songwriter with such bands as Be Bop Deluxe, Red Noise, Channel Light Vessel and solo),
Adamson's use of the e-bow
helped popularize the device.
Adamson's songwriting was at least as distinctive and
significant a part of his musical contribution as his guitar work. His
songs melody, structure and lyric content were heavily influenced by
the Scottish folk music he heard in his parents home and the pub of
Crossgates. His primary lyrical concern were the factors he perceived
as dehumanizing working-class people. For example, he suggested that
factory work not only destroyed worker's dreams, but even their
intelligence. Yet while many of his songs addressed melancholy topics,
they also frequently championed positive emotions, such as hope and
love.
Early life
Adamson is usually considered Scottish,
although he was born in Manchester, England. His
parents were both Scottish, and returned to Scotland when Adamson was
four. The family settled in a small mining town, Crossgates,
about a mile to the east of Dunfermline in Fife. Adamson founded
his first two bands in Dunfermline and they both started out playing
Dunfermline and across the firth in Edinburgh.
He went to school with Ian Rankin, who was two years younger and
a great fan of The Skids.
Adamson was a life-long supporter of Dunfermline
Athletic Football Club.
Adamson's father was in the fishing industry and travelled the
world. He encouraged his son Stuart to read literature,
and both parents shared an interest in folk music. As such they were
strong influences on Adamson's art.
Adamson founded his first band, Tattoo, in 1976 after seeing The
Damned play in Edinburgh. Originally the band played
covers of Status Quo, but it split up
when Adamson got more interested in Roxy
Music and Mott the Hoople
. Besides Adamson, Tattoo included good friend William
Simpson, who would also play bass guitar for his next band, The
Skids.
The Skids
Adamson founded The Skids in 1977, when he was
18. Adamson and Simpson first recruited drummer Thomas Kellichan. They
played as a trio around Dunfermline and Edinburgh until running into
"the only other punk in town" on a street corner, 16-year-old Richard Jobson.
Jobson was recruited as a frontman; Adamson and Jobson both wrote songs
for the band.
The Skids' biggest success was the single Into the
Valley in 1979, which did well in the UK charts, and still
regularly appears in anthologies. The band had four singles chart in
the UK that year. Adamson was involved with three of their four albums,
leaving in 1980 before Joy (which many
fans considered "non-canonical", though Adamson did play guitar on one
memorable song of the album, 'Iona'). Jobson's influence had increased
in the band, which may have lead to the increasing disputes between the
two artists.
Six years later, Adamson reported he'd suffered a nervous
breakdown at around this point in his life. He seems to have kept any
such problems deeply private though. Jobson later said "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."
Adamson was a large part of The Skid's sound, which set it
apart from many of the punk/New Wave bands of the period,
including slow riffs, as opposed to speedily played ones, which
anticipated Black Flag and Grunge's "slow
punk". In 2006, Adamson's music achieved an unexpected success when U2 and Green Day
covered The Saints are Coming
as a charity single. The Edge, who also contributed to Adamson's
memorial service, paid tribute to the guitarist by exactly replicating
his original solo for the single. The single led to a revival of
interest in Adamson's earlier material. Richard Jobson
in an interview with the Sunday Post,
said that he was upset Adamson had not been alive to see it.
Big Country
Stuart Adamson first came to international prominence with Big
Country. Adamson constructed the band with friend and
fellow-guitarist Bruce Watson (then employed as a cleaner on submarines
at Rosyth naval base) and a rhythm
section of well-established studio musicians Mark
Brzezicki and Tony Butler, whom
he found with the help of his record company. He founded the band in
1982, the same year his first child was born.
Big Country's first hit, 1983's "Fields of Fire", reached the
UK's Top Ten, and was rapidly followed by the album The
Crossing. The album was a crossover hit in the United States,
powered by the single "In a Big Country". They were sometimes
considered a one-hit wonder in the USA, but clearly they were more than that
worldwide due to their popularity in the UK
and the rest of Europe,
and the band still have a devout following in their homebase of Scotland.
Their second album Steeltown appeared
in 1984, and was again a success with both fans and critics, although
not quite to the same heights as their debut. The band's third album
"The Seer" continued along somewhat familiar territory, but did veer
towards album oriented rock. The first two albums were produced by Steve
Lillywhite. The band continued to record studio albums, and to tour
until 1999. In many ways, Adamson was the sound of
Big Country, supplying much of its distinctive guitar work, as well as
being lead singer and main songwriter (both music and lyrics). In terms
of being an instrumentalist, a vocalist, and a prolific songwriter, he
is matched by very few contemporaries, such as Paul
Weller (The Jam, Style
Council, solo). The band's lineup never really underwent
changes, the exception being a brief departure of drummer Mark
Brzezicki.
Final years
Adamson was married twice. He also had two children, born to
his first wife Sandra in 1982 and 1985. After his death, some close
friends were surprised to learn Adamson had long had problems with
alcohol. He reportedly gave up drinking in 1985 at Live Aid, but
apparently returned to drinking about a decade later. In 1996 Adamson
split with Sandra, and moved to Nashville.
There he remarried, and founded his final band, the alternative country
band The
Raphaels, which was really a duo of Adamson and veteran Nashville
songwriter Marcus Hummon.
In 1999 Stuart Adamson disappeared for a time before
resurfacing, stating that he had needed some time off. His family
reportedly "knew where he was" during this period, leading some to
speculate that he was in rehab.
In November 2001, while undergoing a divorce with his second wife,
Adamson disappeared again, this time to the great concern of his first
ex-wife Sandra and manager, Ian Grant. They initiated an international
search, appealing to fans who might have been drinking with the singer
to encourage him to telephone home. On December
16, 2001 he
was found dead, hanging from a rope, in a room at the Best
Western Plaza Hotel in Honolulu, Hawaii, having committed suicide. At the
time of death he had a blood-alcohol content of 0.279
per cent.
Notes
-
Stuart Reid, Rock Star Adamson dies in hotel, The
Scotsman, 17 December 2001.
-
Adamson obituary web page by Alec Downie and hosted by the Glasgow
Barrowland Ballroom, [1].
-
Sean O'Hagan, Jobson's Choice, The Observer,
Sunday June 20, 2004.
-
Simon Goddard, Once more into the valley, The
Scotsman, 17 February 2007.
-
Sean O'Hagan, Jobson's Choice, The
Observer, Sunday June 20, 2004.
-
STARDOM: LIFE AND TIMES OF PUNK HERO,
The Scotsman, 18 December 2001.
-
Glen Mcdonald, When you can't stay here, The
War Against Silence, 20 December 2001.
-
Mike Wade, Autopsy shows star was drunk at time of
suicide, The Scotsman, 26 January 2002.
External links