Barry Adamson is a British musician, composer and multi-instrumentalist born on June 11, 1958 in Moss Side, a suburb of Manchester. From an early age, he was interested in art, music and film, writing his first song "Brain Pain" at the age of 10. After briefly studying graphic design, he immersed himself in the Manchester punk scene of the late 1970s and began playing bass in the post-punk band Magazine (1977-1981), contributing to albums such as Real Life (1978) and the cult single "Shot by Both Sides". He played briefly with the Buzzcocks, then with Visage, appearing on their first two albums. He collaborated with Luxuria and Pete Shelley, then joined Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds, playing bass on four albums: From Her to Eternity (1984), The Firstborn Is Dead (1985), Kicking Against the Pricks (1986) and Your Funeral, My Trial (1986). He toured with Iggy Pop in 1987, before embarking on an eclectic solo career, oscillating between jazz, electro, soul, funk and dub. He also produced several film soundtracks in the same spirit, evoking the atmosphere of cinematic thrillers. His first solo album, Moss Side Story (1989), is an imaginary film noir soundtrack, followed by the soundtrack to the film Delusion (1991). He continued in a highly varied vein with the albums Soul Murder (1992) and The Negro Inside Me (1993), then composed several tracks for the soundtrack to David Lynch's film Lost Highway. His style evolved towards introspective, orchestral works, with critically acclaimed albums such as Oedipus Schmoedipus (1996), As Above So Below (1998) and The King of Notting Hill (2002). In 2002, he founded his label Central Control and directed his first film, Therapist (2011), for which he naturally composed the music, as well as that of Dreams of a Life (2012). Barry Adamson also produced remixes for Grinderman, Depeche Mode and Recoil, then reunited with the Bad Seeds in 2013 for the album Push the Sky Away and tours. Back in his studio, he recorded the album Know Where to Run (2016), followed eight years later by Cut to Black (2024). In 2026, he wrote the music for the documentary film SCALA!!!
Read All
Read Less