Adam Thomas Jones (born January 15, 1965 in Libertyville, Illinois) is best known as the guitarist for the band Tool.
He is the creative mind behind the guitar riffs and music videos of Tool. Besides his reputation as a musician, Jones is also well respected as a visual artist.
In addition to playing classical music, Jones played bass guitar in the Electric Sheep with Tom Morello of Rage Against the Machine until Jones moved to California (Morello soon followed). According to both of them, the band was quite unpopular at the time. Jones never received traditional guitar lessons, but instead learned by ear. Jones was offered a film scholarship but declined and chose to move to Los Angeles to study art and makeup effects.
Jones' studies began in 1983 at the Hollywood Makeup Academy by learning "straight make-up," because he thought it would help him out. His focus of interest shifted to film, and he began to work as a sculptor and special effects designer where he learned the stop-motion camera techniques he would later apply in Tool's videos for "Sober", "Prison Sex", "Stinkfist", "Ænema", "Schism", "Parabola", and "Vicarious". He graduated in 1987.
After graduation, he went to work at Rick Lazzarini's Character Shop. During the next couple of years, he worked on a TV show called Monsters. He designed and fabricated a Grim Reaper makeup and a Zombie head on a spike (later used in Ghostbusters 2), among others. After that he went to Stan Winston's special effects workshop, where he worked on Predator 2, sculpting a unique looking skull for the Predator's space ship interior.
Jones worked on several other big films in Hollywood doing makeup and set design, including Jurassic Park and Judgment Day.
After Tom Morello introduced Jones and his friend Maynard James Keenan to Danny Carey in 1990, they - along with Paul d'Amour - formed Tool.
On Undertow and the Opiate EP the Marshall bass amplifier was used, as the mesa boogie dual rectifier and the Diezel were not around in 1993 or before.
On Ænima the Marshall amplifier was used for high frequencies (treble). The Diezel VH4 was used to contribute the bass and mid range frequencies. The two amps were mixed accordingly to level out the frequencies.
Lateralus may have been recorded with the Diezel amp, along with the Marshall bass amp. Adam has made references to a Sunn head and may have also used his Mesa Boogie rectifier in the studio. By the time of the main Lateralus tour, the only Mesa Boogie equipment in sight was the two Mesa Rectifier Standard cabinets.
In an interview in Guitar World Magazine, Adam discusses some of the amps used on the recordings for 10,000 Days. Rivera Amps also claims on its web page that Adam is using a Rivera Knucklehead Rev Mick Thompson model on the recording.
Jones does not use an electronic bowstring (E-bow) as generally believed. Instead he explained in a different interview only a couple of months earlier, that he uses an Epilady, a razor-like item used to rip off leg hair. Apparently, an Epilady "makes great sounds when you push it against the pickups."
In the April 2006 edition of Guitar World magazine, Jones revealed that he used the Gig-FX Chopper Effects Pedal. He also mentioned that he had several pedals modified, and that he used an altered volume pedal to control the strength of some effects. He also stated that he uses the Foxx Tone Machine Reissue and a Heil Talk Box on the song "Jambi", that he learned to use via tips from Joe Walsh
1965 births | American rock guitarists | Tool | Living people | People from Illinois | Illinois musicians | Music video directors
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