50 SKY SHADES - World aviation news

Bryan Adams: Cairo Airport Officials 'Defaced' My Vintage Guitar

Download: Printable PDF Date: 12 Mar 2016 06:34 (UTC) categories:
Publisher:
Bryan Adams: Cairo Airport Officials 'Defaced' My Vintage Guitar - Personalities publisher
Dana Ermolenko
Country: Egypt
Source: CNBC

"Summer of '69" may have been the best days of Bryan Adams' life, but the Canadian singer isn't too happy about the spring of 2016.

His entire collection of instruments — including his prized vintage guitar — was "defaced" by customs officials at an airport in Egypt, the singer told NBC News on Friday.

Adams said he was traveling through Cairo International Airport on Tuesday ahead of an outdoor concert at the Pyramids.

After initially "refusing to release the equipment" with "zero" explanation, customs officials finally returned the instruments — which had been scrawled on with green indelible marker, according to the singer.

Bryan Adams vintage guitar defaced by Cairo airport officials.

He took to Instagram to show the marking on his most prized instrument — a 1957 Martin D-18 guitar worth thousands of dollars.

"The problem is, it's a vintage guitar [from] 1957 and the outside of old instrument is fragile," he told NBC News via his official Facebook account.

The instruments "were all marked — even my harmonicas! So silly," Adams added.

A source at the airport told NBC News that the incident was "nothing new, the system is the same."

The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the media, said: "We mark it to be sure the same item that came in the country left the country."

This wasn't the first time Adams' instruments have been tagged by airport officials. He took to Twitter in July 2015 to allege that one of his guitars had been written on by Air Canada staff.

Adams is currently on a world tour to promote "Get Up," his 13th studio album released in October last year.

He was keen to stress that the incident had "not dampened my love for Egypt — I love the country and its people" but said that was "just extremely unfortunate that the customs people at the airport had no respect for our musical instruments."





Recommended

BAA Training France certifies world's first A320 FFS Airbus Standard 2.2.1

BAA Training France has become the first aviation training center worldwide to operate an Airbus A320 Full Flight Simulator, certified to the new Airbus Standard 2.2.1 and declared ready for training....

Airbus and MTU Aero Engines to create a joint venture to develop a fully electric hydrogen fuel cell engine

Airbus and MTU Aero Engines intend to deepen their collaboration by establishing a joint venture dedicated to the development and commercialisation of a fully electric hydrogen fuel cell engine. This...

Do228 NXT Demonstrator makes international trade fair debut at Farnborough International Airshow 2026

General Atomics AeroTec Systems will showcase the brand-new Do228 NXT Demonstrator aircraft at the Farnborough International Airshow (July 20–24, 2026) in Great Britain, marking the aircraft'...

FlyBy Aviation Academy graduates 33 new pilots in June and welcomes new summer ATPL class

FlyBy Aviation Academy announced two graduation ceremonies held during the month of June, marking the finish line for a combined total of 33 new pilots, as well as the start of a new ATPL cl...

Android Apps development in Riga, Latvia