By Tom Nolan
There aren't too many players who can honestly be said to have developed their own style on an instrument as cliché-ridden
as the electric guitar, but undoubtedly one such musician is the Edge. In the five years since the band's inception, he has
steadily evolved a unique approach that owes absolutely nothing to anyone, and indeed, I can't think of anybody who sounds
remotely like him.
So how did he manage to come up with his own sound in the first place? Obviously there were several factors, mainly connected
with the way the band got together, as the Edge explains.
"I suppose the first link in the chain was a visit to the local jumble sale where I purchased a guitar for a pound. That
was my first instrument. It was an acoustic guitar and me and my elder brother Dick both played it, plonking away, all very
rudimentary stuff, open chords and all that.
"The next stage was a note on the schoolboard to the effect that 'Larry had wasted a lot of money on drums and was interested
in finding other people to waste money on guitars' and stuff like that, so we all met in his kitchen one day. I think between
us there was one kit of drums, one bass without amp ('I had a purple Marshall amp with a tatty little speaker that used to
blow up every time I wound it up,' protested Adam), one borrowed electric guitar and a borrowed amplifier. It was like first
day in the army, everyone was knocked into shape and telling everyone else what to do. It was Larry's kitchen so he was sort
of in charge, but he was only really interested in playing drums, so eventually it winnowed down from four lead guitarists
to three, then two, then Bono started to concentrate fully on vocals, so it developed from there.
"We never really got into it because we wanted to make a living. It certainly didn't enter my head at that stage. I may
have been naïve but I'm not that stupid. I think maybe a year later it suddenly dawned on us that actually there wasn't such
a gulf of musical ability or talent between the stage we were at and the stage that most bands on television and with recording
deals were at, so we decided then that we would go for it."
Gigs followed and the band began to get a following in Dublin. Eventually Bono packed his bag and took a trip to London
with his girlfriend, calling round to music papers and talking to people about U2.
"We got a bit of interest going," recalled Edge, "and during that six month stage we were talking to yourself."
This was in reference to the period in September '79 when I, as an EMI A&R man, went to Dublin to see them and decided
there and then that this was the best new band around and must be signed immediately. Sadly I was alone in this opinion, and
to my and the band's intense disappointment the deal was unceremoniously booted out.
"That was a devastating period in our lives, as you can well imagine, but we rebounded quite well, and eventually we came
and did a small London tour, and off the back of that and the subsequent Irish tour, we signed to Island Records about seven
months later.
"Much earlier on we tried to do cover versions of things, but to be honest we were so bad at working out stuff that we
just had to give it up and write our own songs, so by the time we came to realise there were other bands doing new things
it was too late, because we already had our own style of writing. We just played together and things came out. We always try
to do things differently, we never accept the normal, so it was mainly trial and error. I like a nice ringing sound on guitar,
and most of my chords I find two strings and make them ring the same note, so it's almost like a 12-string sound. So for E
I might play a B, E, E and B and make it ring. It works very well with the Gibson Explorer. It's funny because the bass end
of the Explorer was so awful that I used to stay away from the low strings, and a lot of the chords I played were very trebly,
on the first four, or even three strings. I discovered that through using this one area of the fretboard I was developing
a very stylised way of doing something that someone else would play in a normal way."
Mention of the Explorer led us naturally to the subject of the Edge's equipment, which is typically unusual. His setup
is basically solid guitar into a small case of effects and from there to two Vox AC30s. He uses three guitars onstage these
days, but when I first saw him he was using the Explorer only. I wondered why he had chosen this particular guitar at the
time.
"I think it's the most distinctive of my guitars. It seems that the body shape affects the sound somehow. It's a very vibrant
guitar with lots of treble. I had a Strat what I wasn't that pleased with in those days, and when I was in New York with my
parents, I went to some stores to look around. I picked up this secondhand Explorer and played around on it for a while. It
was just so naturally good, and it felt right, so I bought it. It was quite cheap as well, about 450 dollars. A lot of people
look at it and think it's one of the originals (under 100 of these were made in 1958 and they are very rare) but it's one
of the '76 limited edition reissue models.
"I used it for the first album, and up until the recording of the October album, but I seem to use another Strat that I
bought more and more, so I think I'll probably end up using the Strat for half the show and the Explorer for the rest.
"I dont have any vintage guitars, apart from the newest addition to the collection, a lap steel, circa 1940, by Epiphone.
It's art deco, really weird. If anyone knows what a lap steel is like, it's just like a square thing, not like a guitar at
all. It's black, with inlays in some other sort of wood, also black. I got it in the States, in Nashville. I'm going to be
messing about with it a lot.
"I'm very interested in this lap steel because it's something that hasn't been done before in this context. What we want
to do is break new ground musically all the time, whether through guitars or whatever. Like you'll notice the piano is being
used a lot now. I like the texture of the piano, and I learnt to play it for the album. I think probably the same thing will
happen with the lap steel.
"I don't think a lot of people realise the musical benefit harmonics can give to a song. I just developed that a bit and
brought the harmonics more to the foreground. Some of our songs use harmonics as the main guitar part."