Adam Clayton is known to multiple generations as the bass player for world-renowned rock band
U2, which showcases his driving, hard rock style marked by melodic flair. Though his career has been defined by his decades-long association with the band, he also found the U.K. and U.S. Top Ten in the mid-'90s with his cover of the theme to Mission: Impossible with bandmate
Larry Mullen, Jr. Clayton was born in Chinnor, Oxfordshire, England, though his pilot father briefly moved the family to Nairobi before settling down in Malahide, Ireland when
Adam was five years old. Early exposure to classical music led to piano lessons before he took up the guitar, occasionally playing music with neighborhood family the Evans, who included young David Evans, later known as
the Edge. After moving away to boarding school,
Clayton invested in his first guitar at age 15 upon learning that
Eric Clapton didn't begin playing until around that age. He switched to bass after starting a band with a guitarist friend. A year later, in 1976, he would audition for the band that would become
U2 (then called Feedback) in drummer
Larry Mullen, Jr.'s kitchen. With the lineup of lead vocalist
Bono, guitarist
the Edge,
Mullen, and
Clayton, the group's first album,
Boy, was released in 1980. They found international superstardom with the release of subsequent albums such as
The Joshua Tree and
Achtung Baby. Previously untrained, as part of his regrouping after the band's massive, multimedia Zoo TV stadium tour wrapped up in 1993,
Clayton set course for New York City and took formal bass lessons. His success with the band has continued well into the next century.
Outside of
U2,
Clayton contributed to albums by artists including
Robbie Robertson (1987 self-titled),
U2 producer
Daniel Lanois (1989's Acadie),
Sharon Shannon (1993 self-titled),
Nanci Griffith (1994's
Flyer), and
Little Steven & the Disciples of Soul (1999's
Born Again Savage). In the mid-'90s,
Clayton had a hit under his own name with his contribution to the soundtrack for the 1996 Tom Cruise film-franchise opener Mission: Impossible. The single Theme from Mission: Impossible by
Clayton and
Mullen, a version of the well-known theme by
Lalo Schifrin from the '60s TV series upon which the film was based, hit the Top Ten of the U.K. and U.S. singles charts and was certified gold in the U.S.
As the bassist continued to release albums and tour the world with his chart-topping band, in 2011 legendary guitar makers Fender produced a limited-edition signature Precision Bass designed to his specifications, and in 2013
Clayton married lawyer and art gallery director Mariana Teixeira de Carvalho. ~ Marcy Donelson