"Adam Tinley focused most of his energies as a musician on perfecting the sounds of the British acid house craze throughout the late 1980s. The genre electrified Britain's population, and Tinley was at the heart of it. Before all of this though, Tinley made his debut on the music charts with the punk band known as the Stupid Babies. He was just a teenager at the time, and in fact, even his five-year-old brother was part of the collective that concentrated on the punk genre as their means to riding the waves of success. Adam Tinley, who was now going by a stage moniker Adamski, would not stop when the popularity of Stupid Babies faded. He went on to join the hip-hop band Diskord Datkord in the mid-1980s, although he would soon find that his interests lay in the electronic beats that made up the chords of house music.He met Jimi Polo, a prominent electronica music artist, who in turn started introducing him to other famous figures in the industry of house music. After some lessons on the sequencer, Adamski found himself regularly playing live at warehouse parties and raves around London. Soon, the former punk and hip-hop star found himself square in the middle of an electronica revolution.By the end of the 1980s, Adamski signed with MCA and debuted his music with the hit single ""N-R-G."" The song went to the number 12 spot on the charts in the U.K. He followed up with another popular song, ""Killer,"" which went on to claim the number one spot. On into the 1990s, Adamski performed his particular brand of house beats, releasing the album Naughty in 1992 and Adamski's Thing in 1998. Though his popularity began to fade along with the sounds of house and electronica music in general as the 1990s started to wind down, you can still catch his hip beats in the swanky London disco-clubs."