Name : Bryan Adams
Profession : actor, musician
Date of Birth : November 5, 1959
Place of Birth : Kingston, Ontario, Canada
Height : 5' 8''
Claim to fame : album Cuts Like A Knife (1983).
Bryan Adams - Detailed Biography
Born on Guy Fawkes' Day into a military family, Adams lived all over the
world from two weeks after he was born until his parents split up and
his mother finally settled in Vancouver with a 14-year-old Bryan and his
younger brother. Hearing the Beatles for the first time while crossing
the English Channel on a ferry, Adams was pointed in the rock n' roll
direction his life would take.
Because of this he knew that being a musician was all he would ever want
to be at a very young age, so he auditioned for band after band in the
Vancouver area, finally putting his own together out of frustration; he
ended up singing lead only because he could find no one he liked well
enough to do the honours. After playing the Vancouver nightclub scene
for awhile, he finally quit school because he couldn't be both a student
and a musician. The money his parents had put away for his university
tuition went towards buying a piano.
In the summer of 1976 Nick Gilder left the newly-popular area band
Sweeney Todd; Adams approached the band and convinced them that he was
the one to replace Gilder. One audition was all it took and the band
re-recorded their hit single 'Roxy Roller' for release in the US. They
went into the studio for Sweeney Todd's second album, and Adams co-wrote
three songs for the 1977 London Records release, 'If Wishes Were
Horses...'. Constant touring in confined vehicles eventually put too
great a strain on Adams's relationship with the rest of the band, and he
left at the end of 1977.
While in a music store one day in January of 1978, a mutual friend
introduced Adams to local musician/producer Jim Vallance, then
moonlighting with the newly-formed Prism as Rodney Higgs. The two hit it
off immediately and got together the next day to attempt songwriting
together; the first song they wrote, 'Don't Turn Me Away', ended up as
the B-side to two later Adams singles.
Their combined talents and Adams's intense persona garnered Adams a
recording deal with A&M Records in Toronto, for the now-legendary sum of
$1.00. It has proven to be just about the best single dollar A&M has
ever spent. Adams's very first release for the label, 'Let Me Take You
Dancing', recorded when Adams was 19, became a disco hit in 1979,
selling 80,000 copies as a remixed 12' single in New York City alone.
In 1979 Adams knew that he needed someone to handle the business side of
his career and there was no bigger music manager in Canada than
Vancouver's own Bruce Allen; the success he had had internationally with
Bachman Turner-Overdrive coupled with the then-initial success in Canada
with Prism made him the man Adams wanted, and so he went after him
doggedly until Allen had no choice but to say yes.
Impressed with the success of the first single, A&M sent Adams to record
a full album in Toronto, the result of which was Adams's eponymous debut
in 1980. Although not having any chart-busting singles, the album paved
the way for radio interest in the young Canadian singer on both sides of
the North American border, as did touring with a band that could
reproduce the sound live. For this task Adams hired a local existing
quartet known as Remote Control featuring Steven Weakes (keyboards),
Paul Iverson (bass), Darryl Kromm (guitar and back-up vocals - Kromm
went on to form Strange Advance with Iverson a few years later), and
Ross Hembling (drums).
Such was A&M's belief in the Adams-Vallance team that the label sent
Adams to New York City to record his second album, 1981's 'You Want It,
You Got It'. Produced by Bob Clearmountain, and featuring guest
appearances by G.E. Smith (guitarist for Hall and Oates), Jeff 'Skunk'
Baxter (The Doobie Brothers), Cindy Bullen, Tommy Mandel, and Mickey
Curry, the less-polished, edgier material and production caught the ears
of radio programmers in the US and Canada, and the record's various
singles started climbing up charts across the continent.
Needing a band, Adams went out and convinced three of Vancouver's
best-known musicians (Keith Scott, guitar; John Hannah, keyboards; and
Dave Reimer, bass) to hook up with him; this line-up eventually changed
and stabilized with Scott, Hannah, Dave Taylor (bass), and Jimmy Wesley
(drums). Tours with the Kinks, Foreigner, and Loverboy across North
America helped spread the word, and having songs covered by so many
other artists at the time also assisted in establishing Adams and
Vallance as a writing duo to be reckoned with. Releases of Adams-Vallance
tunes on the charts at the time showed covers by such diverse acts as
Lisa Dal Bello, Prism, Tim Bogert, Ian Lloyd, Bob Welch, Bonnie Tyler,
Rosetta Stone, Loverboy, and Kiss.
By the time Adams was ready to record again, he had established a strong
working relationship with guitarist Scott and bassist Taylor, so into
the studio they went, and Adams once again used Mandel and Curry for
keyboards and drums respectively. The result of their efforts was 1983's
'Cuts Like A Knife', once again produced by Clearmountain and featuring
Foreigner's Lou Gramm on back-up vocals. The album was an immediate hit
in Canada and Adams hit the road again, with Scott, Taylor, Hannah, and
new drummer Frankie La Rocka from New York. Various singles caught on
south of the border, and Allen secured Adams a tour opening for Journey
in the US, one of their biggest acts at the time, as well as many
headlining gigs all over the continent. The hard work paid off and
single after single from the album hit the charts, as well as racking up
considerable sales in both Canada and the United States.
Anticipation was high for the next album, 1984's 'Reckless', so A&M did
something no other label had done before then: they simultaneously
released a video package with the album. With Clearmountain returning as
producer, and featuring the same core musicians as 'Cuts...' (Scott,
Taylor, Curry and Mandel), plus a duet featuring Tina Turner, the album
shipped platinum in Canada and the first single, 'Run To You', hit the
charts instantly in the US and Canada.
Once again recruiting Scott, Taylor and Hannah to tour with him, Adams
added relative newcomer Pat Steward on drums, and Adams set out for the
first time as headliner in 1985. On the strength of strong single
choices and constant touring, 'Reckless' eventually went on to sell over
eight million copies worldwide and established Adams as a true music
star.
It was in 1984 that the world's attention was brought to the famine
situation in Ethiopia by Boomtown Rats' singer (Sir) Bob Geldof and the
charity single by Band Aid, 'Do They Know It's Christmas', so when Adams
heard that a similar effort was being made by a group of all-star
American musicians, Adams insisted that Canadians get into the act as
well.
The result of which was the Adams/Vallance/David Foster song, 'Tears Are
Not Enough', a Canadian-history-making video featuring most of the
country's biggest stars, and an Adams band appearance at the historic
Live Aid concert in Philadelphia that summer. This was the beginning of
Adams's public display of support for various charities, which he
continues to this day.
The next album, 1987's 'Into The Fire', took a little longer to record
and was met with critical and commercial puzzlement. Adams felt his
experience with Live Aid and the 1986 Amnesty International tour
(featuring U2, Peter Gabriel, Sting, and Adams, among others) had helped
him to grow as a person, and the songs on 'Into The Fire' showed a more
reflective, mature Adams that had left many a fan of his usual rock and
roll fare confused. This showed in sales of the Clearmountain produced
album, and featured the by-now core studio band of Scott, Taylor,
Mandel, and Curry; it failed to reach the standard set by 'Reckless',
eventually selling just over three million copies worldwide.
While not a flop by any stretch of the imagination, it also did not
produce great box-office numbers, and some live dates on the 1987 North
American tour had to be cancelled. By now Adams had managed to convince
Mickey Curry to accompany him on the road with Scott, Taylor and Hannah,
and while still garnering positive reviews for their live shows in the
US and Canada, 1987 was the year that saw Adams firmly establish himself
in the hearts and minds of European and Japanese audiences. While
previous tours overseas had always done well, particularly the opening
slot for Tina Turner in Europe, the 'Into The Fire' tour solidified a
fan base for Adams that to this day remains his strongest, both in terms
of record and ticket sales. It was also on this overseas tour that Adams
persuaded Tommy Mandel to join the band and his dream band was finally a
reality.
After coming off the road in 1988, Adams decided to regroup and refocus
on his music. His writing relationship with Vallance had begun to
deteriorate, but they managed to record a full album's worth of material
with producer Daniel Lanois. Not happy with the way it turned out, Adams
scrapped the entire thing and started from scratch, writing new material
and recruiting a new producer and writing partner in Robert John 'Mutt'
Lange (Def Leppard, AC/DC, Shania Twain).
Lange had a reputation for taking his time with recording projects and
such was the case with Adams's album, and it didn't see the light of day
until 1991. 'Waking Up The Neighbours' surpassed everyone's expectations
and went on to sell over 10 million copies worldwide. The band - Adams,
Scott, Taylor, Curry, and Mandel - stayed on the road, predominantly
overseas, for almost two full years, playing in sold out after sold out
venue everywhere. With all the attention that was generated from this
album and tour, Bryan Adams finally became a household name.
Between 'Waking Up The Neighbours' and the next album of new material,
1996's '18 'Til I Die', A&M Records capitalized on Adams's new-found
superstardom and released a best-of package, 'So Far So Good', in 1993,
which eventually sold over 13 million copies worldwide. In 1994 they
also released a live album called 'Live! Live! Live!' (feauring a bonus
live disc with the Asian release), which showcased Adams's strongest
point - his live concert.
But once again the rollercoaster of Adams's career took a dip with '18
'Til I Die', also produced by Lange. Stylistically all over the board,
it failed to produce any hit singles; even with a long tour of Europe,
the album failed to sell well anywhere in the world (although going
platinum in Canada almost immediately, it was a far cry from the
multi-platinum sales of previous albums), and proposed dates in the US
were cancelled due to lack of interest.
Regrouping once again, Adams decided to take MTV up on their years long
offer to do one of their famous 'Unplugged' shows, and a concert in New
York City in early 1997 was recorded and released as 'Bryan Adams MTV
Unplugged' later in the year. Reworking some of his biggest hits and
some obscure album tracks to fit the more acoustically-inclined setting,
the first single was very well received in North America, so A&M
released a second single in the hopes the album would start gaining
sales numbers in the US. It ended up selling fairly well, but nowhere
near the numbers previous Adams releases saw.
However, Adams is firmly established as one of the most successful
singer-songwriters in music history, having sold over 50 millions albums
worldwide, and with an impressive list of nominations and awards won: 24
Juno nominations (16 won); 13 Grammy nominations (3 won), including one
from the American Paper Institute for the environmental packaging of
'Waking Up The Neighbours'; 3 Academy Awards nominations; 4 MTV Awards
nominations (2 won); 5 MuchMusic Awards nominations (3 won); plus
literally dozens of other awards worldwide since 1983.
Adams took on the rock world again, with the 1998 release of the
Brit-pop styled single/video, 'On A Day Like Today' which was the title
track from the album released in North America October 20/98.
The second single/video, 'When You're Gone', features The Spice Girls'
Mel C. A planned tour for the U.S. was cancelled following the CD's
slide from Billboard's Top-200 in December '98.