Adrian Vandenberg

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Adrian Vandenberg
Adrian VanDenBerg in 2012, door Willem van Walderveen.jpg
Vandenberg in 2012
Background information
Birth nameAdriaan van den Berg
Also known asAdje, Ad
Born (1954-01-31) 31 January 1954 (age 71)
The Hague, Netherlands
Genres Hard rock, heavy metal, glam metal, blues rock
OccupationGuitarist
Years active1978–present
Website vandenberg-art.com

Adriaan van den Berg [1] (born 31 January 1954), known as Adrian "Adje" Vandenberg, is a Dutch rock guitarist, best known for his tenure as one of the guitarists in Whitesnake during their successful late 1980s period and the band Vandenberg which he started in 1981. In 2013, Adrian formed a new band, Vandenberg's MoonKings, and recorded a new studio album which was released in early 2014.

Contents

Early years

Born in The Hague in the Netherlands, [2] Adrian van den Berg was originally the lead guitarist for the Dutch band Teaser, a band that released a self-titled album in 1978. He then started his own band, simply named Vandenberg, who released three albums in the 1980s, Vandenberg , Heading for a Storm and Alibi . They are arguably best known for the ballad "Burning Heart," a song that features complementing guitar layers and harmonies, and "Friday Night", from the Heading for a Storm album. They toured extensively, including a support slot to the Michael Schenker Group in the UK in late 1982, and Kiss in 1983.

Career

Whitesnake

Adriaan van den Berg was originally approached to join Whitesnake in the early 1980s, having impressed David Coverdale with not only his guitar skills, but also with his songwriting talent and his ability as a band leader. He initially declined, due to the success of his own band Vandenberg and their Top 40 hit, "Burning Heart." By 1986, however, with pressure from the record company to become more and more commercial and their success hitting a plateau, he relented and finally disbanded Vandenberg, agreeing to join Coverdale in Whitesnake. Initially he was hired as a session musician, helping to complete their eponymous album Whitesnake (known as 1987 in Europe) after a mass-firing of the original band members by Coverdale. He contributed the solo to their No. 1 hit "Here I Go Again," but guitarist John Sykes played all of the other lead and rhythm guitar on the album.

After an extremely successful world tour and extensive airplay for their 3 videos on MTV, van den Berg co-wrote all of the music to the follow-up album Slip of the Tongue . Injury prevented him from recording for the album, so Coverdale enlisted Steve Vai to record both lead and rhythm guitar. [3] Van den Berg was sufficiently healed to play with the band, in a dual-guitar role alongside Vai, for the tour supporting the album. After Whitesnake was disbanded in 1990, he returned as part of other Whitesnake incarnations such as the 1994 Whitesnake's Greatest Hits reunion/tour. He once again co-wrote the songs for the 1997 album Restless Heart with Coverdale. This time, he played all of the guitars on this stripped-down, bluesy album, turning away from his well-known rock/metal neo-classical chops and towards his original main influence, Jimi Hendrix. He also collaborated with Coverdale on the Whitesnake unplugged acoustic album, Starkers in Tokyo .

Vandenberg in 1990 AdrianVandenberg.jpg
Vandenberg in 1990

After Whitesnake, he played in the band Manic Eden, which also featured former Little Caesar singer Ron Young, and Adrian's former Whitesnake bandmates bassist Rudy Sarzo and drummer Tommy Aldridge. The band split up when Adrian took part in Whitesnake's 1994 Greatest Hits reunion/tour.

He has since returned to painting and is an accomplished airbrush artist, having created the cover art for both the Heading for a Storm and Alibi albums. [4]

When Whitesnake played in van den Berg's home country, the Netherlands, he made a "surprise guest appearance," doing so at the June 2008 Arrow Rock Festival in Nijmegen, where he joined the current line-up for a performance of "Here I Go Again". [5] He also played with them on the Sweden Rock Festival in 2011 along with Bernie Marsden.

2011–2013

As of 2011, Adrian van den Berg has written and recorded a song called "A Number One" for Dutch football team FC Twente from his hometown in Enschede. Controversy would soon ensue, resulting from the fact that he released the single under the moniker "Vandenberg". Other (former) members of his eponymous band in the 1980s did not approve of Adrian using the name "Vandenberg" without his first name, which resulted in a lawsuit. In court, Adrian won, with the final decision declaring that he has all the rights to use the name "Vandenberg." [6]

MoonKings

Vandenberg's MoonKings in 2014 Vandenberg's Moonkings.jpg
Vandenberg's MoonKings in 2014

Vandenberg formed Vandenberg's MoonKings in late 2013. The band consists of Vandenberg (guitar), Jan Hoving (vocals), Mart Nijen-Es (drums) and Sem Christoffel (bass). On 21 February 2014 Vandenberg's MoonKings released their debut album MoonKings on Mascot Records. On November 3, 2017, with the same group of musicians, "MoonKings MK II" was released. The album is a mixture of classic seventies style rock with current heavy style of rock.

Discography

DateBandsTitlesNotes
1978TeaserTeaser
1982 Vandenberg Vandenberg
1983Vandenberg Heading for a Storm
1985Vandenberg Alibi
1985VandenbergLive In JapanVideos
1987 Whitesnake Whitesnake Plays guitar solo on "Here I Go Again" but does not appear anywhere else on the album
1988VandenbergThe Best of Vandenberg
1989Whitesnake Slip of the Tongue co-writer; credited as guitarist, but does not play on the album
1994Manic Eden Manic Eden
1997Whitesnake Restless Heart
1997Whitesnake Starkers in Tokyo live acoustic album
2004Vandenberg Different Worlds: The Definitive Vandenberg compilation album
2011Whitesnake Live at Donington 1990 CD&DVD
2014Vandenberg's MoonKingsVandenberg's MoonKings
2017Whitesnake"Snakeskin Boots" Live on Tour 1987/1988Bonus disc on the 30th anniversary edition of Whitesnake's self-titled album
2017Vandenberg's MoonKingsMK II
2018Vandenbergs's MoonkingsRugged and UnpluggedAcoustic album
2020Vandenberg2020
2023VandenbergSin
Guest appearances

References

  1. Bauer, Simon. "VANDENBERG biography". Rock Hard (in German). Retrieved 17 January 2025.
  2. "Adrian Vandenberg - From Whitesnake to Moonkings". whitesnake.com. 8 November 2018. Retrieved 17 January 2025.
  3. Andrew Catania (27 November 2018). "Adrian Vandenberg Discusses Moonkings, David Coverdale & Whitesnake". All That Shreds. Archived from the original on 18 September 2021. Retrieved 14 June 2019.
  4. "Vandenberg Art". Archived from the original on 30 January 2009. Retrieved 17 December 2008.
  5. "Whitesnake – Arrow Rock Festival 2008" . Retrieved 17 December 2008.
  6. (in Dutch) Adrian Vandenberg has the rights to use the bandname Vandenberg
  7. "ARJEN LUCASSEN Reveals Final Tracklisting And Musicians For New STAR ONE Album". Brave Words & Bloody Knuckles . 17 January 2022. Retrieved 19 February 2022.