There are players who wow us with great feats of speed and endurance. There are those who blind us with their melodic erudition. Then there are those whose musical outpourings of pure emotion knock us for ten. Finally there are those who make us giggle by making funny noises with their guitar. Adrian Belew falls into the latter category. That is not to take away from Mr. Belew's obvious instrumental talents. However, any person who can make elephant noises on their guitar is eh-ok in my book.
In 1960s Kentucky, Adrian Belew was a teenage guitar obsessive listening to the experimental rock sounds of Hendrix, Beck and The Beatles. He began to emulate their studio-created sounds on his solitary electric guitar, soon developing a very personal and eccentric style. In the late 1970s, he was spotted by Frank Zappa playing covers in a bar band. Zappa offered him a place in his touring act, which the eager Belew accepted. He describes his short tenure with the notoriously demanding Zappa as a crash course in music theory.
The experience he gained from Frank served him well when he joined David Bowie's band for the Heroes tour of 1978, subsequently added demented lead guitar and backing vocals to Bowie's Lodger album of 1979, the last of his Berlin Trilogy. Here is a select cut from that album, a perfect encapsulation of Belew's freaky noise workouts.
Talking Heads were the next legends to come knocking. He joined them in the midst of the arduous recording sessions that produced Remain In Light. Tracks like The Great Curve are taken into another rhelm thanks to Belew's heavily-processed solos and led to his addition to the expanded touring version of Talking Heads. He also featured on the band's off-shoot project, Tom Tom Club.
In the early 1980s, he joined the act with whom he is most recognised. Belew and Robert Fripp had both worked on albums by Bowie, but never met. They eventually bumped into each other at a Steve Reich concert (why doesn't this surprise me?). They hit it off, and began a new project together, Indiscipline. This would eventually morph into a new lineup of Fripp's legendary prog godfathers, King Crimson. This new lineup would resemble some bizarre Talking Heads tribute act rather than the heavy-riffing art rock monsters of the mid 1970s. Here is sample of this new direction, complete with Belew's animal noise guitar.
As well as serving as King Crimson's frontman for nearly three decades, Belew has been a popular session man. Pau Simon, Joe Cocker, Cyndi Lauper and even Captain Kirk himself, William Shatner have requested his services. He has also released a steady stream of Beatles-inspired solo albums and noise experiments.
As you have seen from these clips, Belew is naturally drawn towards bizarre noises and outlandish sounds. He seems to take great glee in washing over conventional pop songs with his distinct guitar style, the weirder the better. To finish, some more animal noises. I never get tired of this.
Recommended Listening: King Crimson - Indiscipline
http://allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=10:kvfrxquald0e
Some Choice Belew Craziness: Oh Daddy (Solo Hit), Flakes (Frank Zappa - Sheik Yerbouti), I'm Down (Beatles Cover)
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