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  • NIN Tour Dates

    Posted on April 4, 2013 by Webhamster in News

    NIN2013

    NIИ Tour Dates are being added to the Tour page as they are announced.

    Current tour dates include:

    7.26.13 Naeba, Japan – Fuji Rock Festival
    7.28.13 Ansan, South Korea – Ansan Valley Festival
    8.2-4.13 Chicago, IL – Lollapalooza Festival
    8.15.13 Hasselt, Belgium – Pukkelpop Festival
    8.16.13 Biddinghuizen, Holland – Lowlands Festival
    8.18.13 Hockenheim, Germany – Rock’n'Heim Festival
    8.23.13 West Yorkshire, UK – Leeds Festival
    8.24.13 Paris, France – Rock en Seine Festival
    8.25.13 Reading, UK – Reading Festival

    More to come

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    15Questions with Adrian Belew

    Posted on March 20, 2013 by Webhamster in News

    Fifteen Questionswith Adrian Belew
    A kind word for different
    Music no one can hear

    Discovered by Frank Zappa in the 70s, head-hunted by David Bowie, Talking Heads and going on to play with the likes of Paul Simon, Laurie Anderson, Mike Oldfield, King Crimson and Nine Inch Nails, Adrian Belew continues to go from strength to strength. In a career that has moved with the impact and speed of a freight train, Belew has not only been critical to the work of many other musicians, but has also managed to illuminate the music world as a solo artist – next to his possibly most prominent position as a guitarist and frontman to progressive rock ensemble King Crimson, of course. With a legion of dedicated fans that stick with him for every turn and triumph, and as the awards and recognition stack up, Adrian Belew remains the guy that everyone wants in their band.

    When did you start writing/producing music – and what or who were your early passions and influences?

    As far back as I can remember singing was my first passion. As a child I seemed to be singing all the time. When I was 5 years old I would sing along with the jukebox in a neighbourhood bar at the end of our street. The adults would give me nickels to feed into the jukebox. I would stand in front of it and imitate the various singers.

    My first musical instrument was drums. I was in the jr. high marching band for 3 years. What a passion I had for drumming! We lived on the second floor of my grandmother’s house. It must have driven her crazy to hear my feverish practicing, but she never said a word. I started writing as a 16-year old junior in high school in 1966 as soon as I had taught myself (incorrectly) a few strange chords.

    I’m an autodidact in everything I do. At the time I taught myself guitar I was drumming and singing in my first teen band, The Denems. We wore matching denim suits. The Denems emulated everything to do with the so-called British invasion. Seeing the Beatles on the Ed Sullivan show quite literally changed the direction of my life and made me determined to be a recording artist.

    Before the Beatles my pop influences were mostly singers like the Everly brothers, Roy Orbison, and the Beach Boys. But I always had a great appreciation for music outside of the pop realm. I loved Gershwin, Stravinsky, and film and cartoon music. My first production, at age 31, was my first solo record in 1981, called The Lone Rhino.

    What do you personally consider to be the incisive moments in your artistic work and/or career?

    Artistically there have been many small moments of discovery, which have propelled my work forward. Finding a new sound or technique, mastering a new piece of gear, learning different instruments, and working in various situations with unique cohorts has kept me moving in fresh directions.

    In my career the big moments are easier to enumerate: being discovered by Frank Zappa, then by David bowie and Talking Heads, followed by joining King Crimson which was a huge leap forward, while simultaneously starting a solo career. Most recently, I have been able to achieve a life-long ambition by performing a composition of mine called E with the Metropole Orchestra. There are too many singular moments I cherish to mention here, but I have a wonderful memory reel in my head.

    What are currently your main compositional- and production-challenges?

    I’ve saved some of my biggest challenges for right now. I’m attempting to do a new solo work, which is a way of doing music that has never been done before. It requires a new kind of production. The idea has been in my head since 1978! This is my third year of working on it. I can’t say more at this point but hopefully you’ll hear it someday. As well as the compositional and production challenges, it requires the integration of new software just to hear this music! Only now has technology allowed the realisation of this idea.

    What do you usually start with when working on a new piece?

    My triggering mechanisms for starting a new idea are varied. Sometimes I have even daydreamed a song or piece of music. But that’s very rare. When I find a new sound or try something I’ve never been able to do, it almost always results in a musical entity of some sort. So experimenting with sounds and technology remains crucial.

    However, most of my music comes from good old-fashioned hard work. Sitting with a guitar or at the piano trying to decipher what I hear in my mind. The music i.e. chords and melody comes to me first. Most of the time while I’m writing something I have a good idea of the melody.

    Words, if there are words, almost always come last. Lyric writing is sometimes the most difficult part. A less traditional way I work is to use the studio itself as my palette. That has been very fruitful. Start with a drum track, add something, take away something, add something else, and so on.

    To me that process of making a record is much like painting. I record my ideas in the simplest form and listen to them over and over. Eventually I know what to add and hopefully when to stop.

    How strictly do you separate improvising and composing?

    Not strictly at first. Improvisation sometimes kick-starts what turns into a composition. But once the ideas are there the improvising has to take a back seat to the compositional process. You still may stumble on new areas by improvising along the way but the task at hand is to formalise your thoughts into, well… a composition.

    Most often I like to leave space in a piece of music for some improvisation to happen before returning to the composed piece. In live performance I feel some improv is very valuable to keep things fresh from night to night.

    How do you see the relationship between sound, space and composition?

    They are a bit like Lego. You can fit them together many ways with differing results. Of course you can have each without the other but the beauty lies in the mixing of the three.

    Space can be a very important element in recording. Space can give the illusion of depth or dimension; it can clear the senses for the next onslaught. But space works best as one more tool of composing. To me sound is everything. Composition itself is all about sound. The combining of sounds, including space, and rhythms are what makes a composition.

    Do you feel it important that an audience is able to deduct the processes and ideas behind a work purely on the basis of the music? If so, how do you make them transparent?

    I had to think about that for a moment, but for me the answer is no, I don’t feel it’s that important. What is important to me is true self-expression. What is ultimate is true self-expression appreciated by your audience, no matter how they reach that point. As much as I love my audience I don’t take them into account during the creative process. There is no point in second-guessing my audience. I just have to hope they go with whatever changes I present.

    In how much, do you feel, are creative decisions shaped by cultural differences – and in how much, vice versa, is the perception of sound influenced by cultural differences?

    That’s two different questions. Let me answer the first one this way: I believe cultural differences have an enormous effect on most everything in our lives including our decision-making. If I had been born and raised in say, Iraq, would I make the same music I make today? Not likely. But this is a not a bad thing. We are all one race but we have many versions of mankind and it’s supposed to be that way.

    Second question: I love listening to music from other cultures but I seriously doubt my perception and appreciation of Indian music, for example, matches that of an Indian musician. Having said that let’s not forget music is its own language and can be understood and appreciated by anyone anywhere. That’s the inner beauty of music.

     

    More

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    Crimson Projekct Official Live Bootleg 2012

    Posted on March 9, 2013 by Webhamster in News

    thecrimsonprojekct_officialbootleg2012The Official bootleg recording compiled from stereo soundboard recordings on the summer tour 2012 supporting Dream Theater is now available for purchasing in StoreBelew.  $15  USD.

     

     

    1.  B’Boom  05:17
    2.  THRAK  04:10
    3.  Dinosaur 05:10
    4.  Elephant Talk  04:50
    5.  Red  06:37
    6.  Frame by Frame  04:01
    7.  Thela Hun Ginjeet  06:10
    8.  Indiscipline 09:37

    credits

    release date:  March 13, 2013
    Adrian Belew: Guitar & Vocals
    Tony Levin: Stick, Bass Guitar & Backing Vocals
    Pat Mastelotto: Acoustic & Electronic Drums and Percussion
    Markus Reuter: Touch Guitars® U8
    Tobias Ralph: Drums and Percussion
    Julie Slick: Bass Guitar

    Music by King Crimson, except Red (Fripp)

    crimson projekct Read More

    Adrian to join Trent Reznor’s Nine Inch Nails World Tour

    Posted on February 25, 2013 by Webhamster in News

    20130225-reznor-306x-1361807899RollingStone Magazine:

    Trent Reznor has stayed busy in the four years since Nine Inch Nails’ farewell tour. In November, Trent Reznor broke the news to Rolling Stone that the band is working on new material. “All signs point to yes,” he said. “There are some things in the works.”

    Today on his website, Reznor confirmed he is rebuilding Nine Inch Nails with an almost entirely new lineup, including bassist Eric Avery (formerly of Jane’s Addiction), guitarist Adrian Belew (King Crimson), keyboardist Alessandro Cortini (NIN), keyboardist Josh Eustis (Puscifer, Telefon Tel Aviv) and drummer Ilan Rubin (NIN, Lostprophets).” “Nine Inch Nails are touring this year,” Reznor writes. “The first shows will begin this summer, followed by a full-on arena tour of the U.S. this fall and lots of other dates worldwide to follow through 2014.”  More…

    nine inch nails, tour, trent reznor Read More

    Better Late Than Never

    Posted on February 13, 2013 by Webhamster in Uncategorized

    -A message from your Web Hamster, Rob.  (Yes, I’m still alive).

    First, please allow me to apologize for my long absence in bringing you ever-changing content on Adrian’s web site. My apologies to Adrian too.  I cannot tell you all how many times I’ve redesigned a new Belew site over course of the the past 6 years only to have life get in the way of actually allowing me to see it through.

    In January 2013, I began working on yet another new web site.  My original intentions were to have it built to go live on March 6, 2013 – the 17th Anniversary of the birth of the original web site and I was right on schedule.  I had the basic structure built, with a lot more to go, but then Trent Reznor announces the new NIN lineup with Adrian so I needed to go live… NOW.  So here we are.

    Thanks to everyone for your patience and for hanging in there with the site.  Thanks to Adrian for keeping his blog going so the site could have ever-changing substance.  The new layout and design will hopefully make the site easier to maintain while on the go and I’m hoping for a LOT of traffic over the next year or so.  If you’re new here because you want to know more about Adrian, WELCOME!  We know you’ll love Adrian as much as we do.

    Regards,

    rob
    Rob Murphree, your Belew WebHamster since 1996.

    webhamster@adrianbelew.net

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    Crimson ProjeKct to perform in Japan

    Posted on February 2, 2013 by Webhamster in News

    cp

    Crimson Projekct will perform in Japan in March.  More.

    crimson projekct Read More
  • Adrian’s Life In A Nutshell

    Posted on January 1, 2013 by Webhamster in News

    An introduction to Adrian Belew

    Adrian Belew’s Life In A Nutshell

    Read More

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recent news

  • NIN Tour Dates
  • 15Questions with Adrian Belew
  • Crimson Projekct Official Live Bootleg 2012
  • Adrian to join Trent Reznor’s Nine Inch Nails World Tour
  • Better Late Than Never

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