Stuart Adamson

Stuart Adamson Wiki

Celebs NameStuart Adamson
GenderMale
BirthdateApril 11, 1958
DayApril 11
Year1958
NationalityUnited Kingdom
Birth SignAries
DiedDec 16, 2001 (43 age)
Body Stats
HeightNot Available
WeightNot Available
MeasurementsNot Available
Eye ColorNot Available
Hair ColorNot Available
Feet SizeNot Available
Dress SizeNot Available

Explore about the Famous Guitarist Stuart Adamson, who was born in United Kingdom on April 11, 1958. Analyze Stuart Adamson’s net worth, age, bio, birthday, dating, height-weight, wiki. Investigate who is Stuart Adamson dating now? Look into this article to know how old is Stuart Adamson?

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Stuart Adamson Biography

Scottish guitar virtuoso known for leading the bands Big Country, The Raphaels, and The Skids.

His first band was called Tattoo and it included his friends from school.

He is considered to be the Scottish counterpart of Jimi Hendrix.

His family moved from England to Scotland when he was four years old.

His music has been covered by many artists, including Bono and U2.

William Stuart Adamson (11 April 1958 – 16 December 2001) was a Scottish guitarist, vocalist, and songwriter. He was the co-founder, lead vocalist, and guitarist of rock group Big Country, which rose to prominence in 1983.

Adamson’s father was in the fishing industry and travelled the world. He encouraged Stuart to read literature, and both parents shared an interest in folk music. Adamson founded his first band, Tattoo, in 1976 after seeing The Damned play in Edinburgh. Besides Adamson, Tattoo included his friend William Simpson, who would also play bass guitar for his next band, Skids.

Adamson founded 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 meeting 16-year-old Richard Jobson. Jobson was recruited as a frontman; Adamson and Jobson both wrote songs for the band.

Skids’ biggest success was the single “Into the Valley” in 1979, which reached number 10 in the UK charts. The band had four chart singles in the UK that year. Adamson was involved with three of their four albums, leaving in 1980 before Joy. Jobson’s influence had increased in the band, which led to the increasing disputes between the two musicians. 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 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.

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 British band Ahab, and his daughter Kirsten has a solo musical career. In 1996, Adamson split with Sandra and moved to Nashville. There he married his second wife, Melanie Shelley a celebrity hairdresser in 1999, and founded his final band, the alternative country band The Raphaels, a duo of Adamson and Nashville songwriter Marcus Hummon.

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, 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 1984. The band’s third album was The Seer. The first two albums were produced by Steve Lillywhite. The band continued to record studio albums and to tour until 1999. 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 a brief departure of drummer Mark Brzezicki in the early 1990s and his temporary replacement by Pat Ahern.

Prior to that he founded Scottish art-punk band Skids. In the late 1990s he founded alternative country rock act The Raphaels. He was once described by DJ John Peel as “the new Jimi Hendrix”.

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 and experimented with other models. Among these were several Les Pauls, a Gretsch Duo-Jet, and an ESP Model 901 Stratalike with humbucking pickups. Adamson also had several guitars made for him by the Glasgow guitar maker Jimmy Moon. Among these were a Telecaster-style electric that Adamson used live on songs such as “The Teacher,” “Steeltown,” and “Just a Shadow.”

His body was flown back to Scotland, where after a private funeral service at Dunfermline Crematorium in Fife, he was cremated. 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.

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. 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 suicide by hanging himself with an electrical cord from a pole in a wardrobe. A subsequent Coroner’s Office report found that he had consumed a ‘very strong’ amount of alcohol around the time of his death.

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.

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.

What's Stuart Adamson Net Worth 2024

Net Worth (2024) $1 Million (Approx.)
Net Worth (2023) Under Review
Net Worth (2022) Under Review
Net Worth (2021) Under Review
Net Worth (2020) Under Review

Stuart Adamson Family

Father's Name Not Available
Mother's Name Not Available
Siblings Not Available
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Childrens Not Available