Dave 'The Edge' Evans was born in Barking, Essex, in East London, to parents Gwenda and Garvin Evans. When he was one year old, the family - which included younger sister Gill and older brother Dick - moved to Dublin, where he has lived ever since. There, he grew up as a quiet kid, a loner and very intelligent. He did well in school, and up until before he met who would be his future bandmates, he wanted to go to the university and become a doctor. It was in the fall of 1976 when he spotted Larry's note on the Mount Temple Comprehensive High School bulletin board, which asked for anyone interested in forming a band. He was the first to respond to the ad, and he went to the first meeting in Larry's house with his brother Dick and their friend, Adam Clayton. Along with Paul Hewson, this was the first meeting of what would become U2. The Edge showed them he had guitar playing skills that seemed well beyond his age, and the chemistry among them was obvious from the beginning. Early in the band's career, Dave Evans was
re-baptized by Bono - then Bono Vox - as 'The Edge'. The nickname was
inspired in the beginning by the sharp features of his face, but it also
applied to his sharp mind and the way he always observes things from the
edge. When he finished high school, he told his parents he'd take a year
off, to see where the band and their music would take him. In 1983, Edge married Aislinn O'Sullivan, with whom he remained for 7 years and had three daughters: Holly (1985), Arun (1986), and Blue Angel (1989). In 1990 they separated, and in 1996 they got a legal divorce. He now has a daughter, Sian, with Morleigh Steinberg, the belly dancer and choreographer from the ZooTv Tour, whom he started dating in 1993. The couple is now expecting their second child before the end of the year. The Edge's guitar sound is part of U2's trademark, the characteristic and mesmerizing sounds he plays and the emotions he puts through them are what make him one of the most unique guitarists in rock and roll. He has often been called an "anti-guitar hero" because of his aversion to the indulgent, solo style of many contemporaries. Only Edge could could capture the pain and frustration of El Salvador in "Bullet the Blue Sky," or play the melancholic, soul-grabbing, mind-blowing guitar riff from "One." His style -- clean, sharp, incisive, cutting-Edge -- is unmistakable. His voice, proving to be able to be monotone yet interesting as in "Numb," and mellow yet lead-worthy as in "Sunday Bloody Sunday" from the PopMart Tour, is just one more proof that there are no limits to this man's talents.
Bio obtained from
@u2.com
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