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........My FAvourite Artist ~Bryan Adams~..........

On this page I list all my favourite artists and bands.........

 

My favourite Bryan Adams and all abt him....


Bryan Adams Talks About Songwriting, His New 2-CD Anthology Set, And His Other Projects

By Dale Kawashima

Bryan Adams is renowned for being one of the top, hit-making artists in rock & pop over the past 25 years. Starting with his debut album Bryan Adams in 1980, on through to last year's Room Service in 2004.

 

Bryan Adams
Bryan Adams

 

With the release of the comprehensive, new two-CD Anthology set (which contains 36 cuts), Adams took time from his busy touring schedule and other projects, to do this exclusive interview. He discussed how Anthology was compiled, and talked about how he collaborates with songwriting partners, such as Jim Vallance, Robert “Mutt” Lange and Gretchen Peters. Lastly, he gives good advice to young artists & songwriters who are trying to break into the music business.

Adams has been the recipient of three Academy Award nominations for Best Original Song, a Grammy Award, two Golden Globe Awards for Best Original Song, an American Music Award, BMI and ASCAP songwriter awards, two Ivor Novello songwriting awards and many Juno Awards from his native Canada.

Here is the Q&A interview with Bryan Adams:

DK: I really like your new Anthology set. How did you compile and select all of the songs for this package?

Adams: The Anthology was the idea of Richie Gallo at the U.S. record company, Universal. I ended up changing the selection of songs a few times to get something that wasn't just a hits package. It was an interesting project as it pushed me to dig up photos and technical notes from the ‘80s and ‘90s of when songs were written, recorded and mixed and so on - something for the fans that know these songs and would like more detail. Basically, it was a trip down memory lane.

DK: Of your hit songs, which ones are your favorites and why?

Adams: I always get asked this question and I always say I like the songs everyone else likes, but honestly this package is way too small to put all my favorites on. I mean I'm into making my 14th record now, so there are quite a few that I like.

DK: Which of your lesser known songs (on this Anthology) are your
personal favorites?

 

Bryan Adams
Bryan Adams performing live.

 

Adams: I like the songs where vocals really matched the song - things like “Please Forgive Me” and “Why Do You Have To Be So Hard To Love” are good examples of that. A song like “Summer of '69” is of course one of my faves, but it was the most difficult song to record and the biggest example of a song that didn't go to number one, but is known around the world. It was recorded in its entirety three or four times including demos, but it wasn't until I recorded it with a drummer [from a] quasi-punk ska band that the song took on the naive innocence that was required to convey the sexual energy of the song. While we are on the topic, lets clear up a misconception about that song, and that is it has nothing to do with the year 1969 - it's about making love and looking back on growin' up.

DK: You've written with excellent collaborators such as Jim Vallance, Robert “Mutt” Lange and Gretchen Peters. Please describe each writer's strengths, and how you write with them.

Adams: With Jim (Vallance) we crawled from nothing, in a basement full of cat-piss, to write a collection of classic pop songs. It was the best ride of my life. We sat together for days and years until we had written a song. Jim is a fabulous musician, drummer, bass, guitar, keyboards...and an excellent songwriter on top of that. He basically taught me how to work out all the ideas I had collected and was writing, but the thing was we complemented each other somehow and it was like lighting a bonfire, because we wrote something practically every time we got together. Some of it was forgettable...but like mining, every now and then we'd find a gem, and what a gem it would be.

With Mutt (Lange), I always like to say working with him was like going to the university of rock. I learned as much working and becoming friends with Mutt as I did with Jim. He is an absolutely incredible musician and a very accomplished singer, with a sense of rhythm that I presume he got from growing up in South Africa, but more likely it's just him and his way. His songwriting with me was different in the sense that we would sometimes put two or three ideas from different songs together in one song, and then sometimes I would drop a title on him like "the only thing that looks good on me is you" and he'd be off on some sort of riff. Even today when we get together, it's a veritable kitchen sink of ideas until we hone it down to the right thing. I remember once we had written a song called “Not Guilty” and the verse wasn't working, so he put the multi-track recorder in record mode and simply erased the entire verse, guitars, vocals - everything but the drums and looked at me and said, ok, "let's write a new verse.” He taught me not to be precious about an idea, that it was changeable, and you had to be flexible if you want to be unique. He's a musical genius.

 

Bryan Adams
The CD cover of Bryan Adam's new Anthology 2-CD set, on A&M/Universal Records.

 

With Gretchen (Peters) she simply has a poetic gift and that is extremely inspiring. It forces me to think in a more lateral way lyrically - the latest songs are good examples of the power of the words, like "I'm Not The Man You Think I Am.” That was a title I was thinking about after hearing about a film about a con man who impersonates director Stanley Kubrick. I told Gretchen about it and the result is the dark reflective lyric; sometimes I'll go back to an idea we would have started years ago and dump the melody and track and re-write an entirely new song, (something Mutt would approve of) like “Cloud Number Nine” for example. That started out quite differently to how it ended up, and the song transformed again after it was released on the album On A Day Like Today. I remixed it with a dance engineer sometime after release and changed the structure.

I guess the biggest lesson you can ever learn about writing is to
learn to let go, be open to it changing.

DK: You've written and performed great songs for soundtracks. How did you co-write "(Everything I Do) I Do It For You," and how did this project come about?

Adams: Writing “Everything I Do” with Mutt took about 45 minutes and it was a moment that I've only felt a few times - it's the moment when you know it's a good song, you don't know if it's a hit, you just know it's good. The track originally started from a long piece of orchestration written by film composer Michael Kamen (who I went on to write many more songs with) and we narrowed the theme down to the little piano intro at the beginning, and then we started writing a top line to it. Next time you check it out, notice the use of counter melodies, where the piano plays one thing and the vocal does another. I used that technique on many of Michael's future piano parts, like on the song "When You Love Someone" which was featured in the film Hope Floats and on my MTV Unplugged album. I've always found it extremely interesting to work with pianists, particularly film composers. They normally hear something in their head that ordinarily would be the melody; it's good to stir it up and drop something else on them. I've done it to loads of other scores, like the Marvin Hamlisch's Mirror Has Two Faces score for Barbara Streisand, which turned into "I Finally Found Someone," or Hans Zimmer's score for Spirit: Stallion of the Cimarron which turned into the majestic "I Will Always Return.”

 

Bryan Adams
Bryan Adams live.

 

DK: Speaking of Spirit: Stallion Of The Cimarron, did you enjoy writing & performing for a project which was more family/kids oriented, and would you like to do more projects like this?

Adams: I’d do another one in a second; I'm just waiting for (Dreamworks CEO) Jeffrey Katzenberg to ask me again. Working with him and Hans was extraordinary and exciting. I learned a ton from being around them - in fact I credit Jeffrey for making music exciting for me since the turn of the millennium. He's really an inspiration.

DK: You have a new single, "When You're Gone," with Pamela Anderson. How did you team up with Pamela for this song?

Adams: Well, the song was a huge hit all around the world with the exception of the U.S. back in the ‘90s, so when the idea of the Anthology came up, and with particularly this song, it didn't make sense to have it on the U.S. version unless it had a new angle. So I called Pam and she agreed to do a version, even though she had never sung before. I thought it would be fun as she is such an icon. She's a good sport and actually a good singer, too. I believe she could do an album of country songs or something like that, because her voice has a sort of melancholy to it.

DK:. Are you already writing and recording songs for your next studio album?

Adams: Yes, I was checking out the album on the plane today; it's coming along. I expect it will come out at the end of next year (2006)...God willing!

DK: You also have a new photography book called American Women (which is a collaboration with Calvin Klein). Have you always been into photography?

 

Bryan Adams
Bryan Adams

 

Adams: I suppose I've always been into it on some level. Some of the shots on the inside of the Anthology package are from my old Canon AE-1 camera. American Women is my second book and it was done, like the first one (which was titled Made In Canada), to support breast cancer awareness. Proceeds go to the Sloane Kettering Memorial Hospital in NYC. It came about as I had worked with the head of PR for Calvin Klein on a previous exhibition in London. He called me to NYC to do the project; it was an incredible project.

DK: Lastly, is there any advice you would give to young songwriters and artists who are trying to break into the business?

Adams: Yes there is! Don't sign anything and if you have to - get a good lawyer first. Don't sign anything over to any dodgy managers or production companies, because unless they manage the Rolling Stones you'll get ripped off for sure. If they are good people, they won't ask for your publishing. That's actually a great judge of if they are creeps or not. Remember the most important thing about any song deals: they need you a lot more than you need them.

DK: Bryan, thank you very much for taking the time to do this interview.

Adams: It was fun!


 

I Luv Music

Biography

With his distinctive vocals and blue-collar songwriting skills, Canadian icon Bryan Adams' take on rock 'n' roll basics found a niche that has lasted for over 20 years.

Adams solo career was launched with the release of his self-titled debut album Bryan Adams in February of 1980 on A&M Records. Adams had already been touring, recording demos and working as a studio musician paying his rent for a few years, but it was when Adams formed a song-writing partnership with drummer Jim Vallance that things started to happen.

The first album was not initially released in the U.S. (although "Hiding from Love" was issued as a single and reached No. 43 on the dance chart), so Adams assembled a backup band and embarked on his first Canadian tour as a solo act, spending four months playing clubs and colleges.

The tour was to be the foundation for his second album, You Want It, You Got It, which was recorded in NYC in two weeks and released in the spring of 1981. The original album title was Bryan Adams Hasn't Heard Of You Either but that title was rejected by A&M as being too provocative. This 2nd album became Adams' first 'official' release in the U.S.

He toured America for six months, opening for the Kinks and Foreigner and by January of 1982 the album broke into the Billboard charts peaking at No. 118 in 13 weeks. The single "Lonely Nights" became his first Hot 100 entry at No. 84 and peaked at No. 3 on the mainstream rock chart.

His third album, Cuts Like a Knife was released in January of 1983, with the single "Straight from the Heart", leading the way. It broke his career open, peaking in the Top Ten of the Hot 100 and setting up the LP, which followed. The album also reached Top Ten, selling platinum and spawning further Top 40 hits with the title song and "This Time".

The album's success was stimulated by Adams' extensive touring in support of it, which began in Canada and continued into the U.S., where he opened for Journey. From there he toured Europe followed by dates in Japan and then back to Canada.

Adams' fourth album Reckless was released on his 25th birthday, November 5, 1984, and was preceded by the single "Run to You", which reached the Top Ten. It was followed by no less than five Top 20 singles drawn from the album: "Somebody", "Heaven" (which hit number one), "Summer of '69" (Top Ten), "One Night Love Affair", and a duet with Tina Turner, "It's Only Love".

Reckless reached No. 1 in the U.S. selling five million copies in America and a reported three million more in the rest of the world. Adams also earned his first two Grammy nominations, Best Male Rock Performance for the album as a whole, and Best Rock Performance by a Duo or Group for "It's Only Love". As per usual, Adams toured extensively in support of it. His "World Wide in '85" tour began in December of 1984 finally wrapping in November 1985. One of the highlights that year included being the first artist to open the American side of the Live Aid concert from Philadelphia on July 13th.

Into the Fire, followed in March of 1987, prefaced by the single "Heat of the Night," which became Adams' fifth Top Ten hit in the U.S. The album reached the Top Ten in the U.S. and sold a million copies, with another million sold overseas. It also spawned the Top 40 hits "Hearts on Fire" and "Victim of Love". Adams' worldwide tour in support of the album went on for more than a year. One of the final shows, in Werchter, Belgium, was filmed for a television special, "Bryan Adams: Live in Belgium", broadcast in Canada the following year.

Live! Live! Live! a concert album drawn from the 1988 Belgium show, was initially released only in Japan but later garnered a wider audience. In a departure from earlier years, Adams did not tour extensively but opted to spend his time in England with writer/producer Robert John "Mutt" Lange, preparing for his next album.

In June of 1991, Adams went back on the road in Europe co-headlining with ZZ Top. This coincided with the release of the single "(Everything I Do) I Do It for You" which topped the U.S. charts for seven weeks - the longest any song had remained at No. 1 in eight years. Its international success was even greater; spending 16 weeks at No. 1 in the U.K., making it the longest-running chart-topper in the history of the British charts.

Waking Up the Neighbours was released in September of 1991, and Adams once again hit the road - this time until July of 1993. The album featured two Top Ten hits "Can't Stop This Thing We Started" and of course, "(Everything I Do) I Do It for You". Before it finished running its course there would be three more Top 40 hits, "There Will Never Be Another Tonight", "Do I Have to Say the Words?" and "Thought I'd Died and Gone to Heaven". Waking Up the Neighbours sold four million copies in the U.S. and another six million in the rest of the world. It also earned Adams a Grammy nomination and his first Academy Award nomination.

Adams began to look forward to his next studio album, but in the interim released a hits compilation, So Far So Good, in November 1993 featuring the single "Please Forgive Me," a new Adams/Lange track. The song would also find its way into the Top Ten. Then came the Adams' theme song for the movie The Three Musketeers, "All for Love", recorded with Rod Stewart and Sting, which hit No. 1 in the U.S. in January of 1994. That same month, Adams embarked on an ambitious tour of the Far East, including countries like Vietnam that were rarely visited by Western pop artists.

Throughout the better part of 1994, Bryan kept a low profile with the exception of a song called "Rock Steady" written for Bonnie Raitt's live album Road Tested. He performed the song as a duet with her, and the two soon shared a chart single.

At the beginning of 1996 Adams released a new album 18 'Til I Die. The album featured the flamenco-tinged "Have You Ever Really Loved a Woman?" from the Johnny Depp/Marlon Brando film Don Juan DeMarco. Adams was rewarded with yet another No. 1 hit, as well as a Grammy nomination for Best Male Pop Vocal Performance and his second Oscar nomination for Best Song.

An 18-month world tour followed and the album soon went platinum in the U.S. The singles "Lets Make A Night To Remember" charted briefly in the Top 40 and the provocatively titled "The Only Thing That Looks Good On Me Is You" proved to do well outside of the US, but didn't dent the US charts, perhaps due to the fact that his record company (A&M) transferred his contract in the middle of the release to independent rap label, Interscope Records.

Adams filmed an appearance for MTV's popular Unplugged series in the fall of 1997, and it was released as an album in December. It was a modest success, and served as a stopgap until the appearance of his next studio album, On a Day Like Today, which was released in October 1998. Overseas, the disc featuring the Melanie C duet "When You're Gone", reached the UK No. 3 spot in December of 1998 and spent 10 weeks in the Top 10. This was followed by the Top 10 dance re-mix of "Cloud Number Nine". The album also hit No. 3 in Canada.

In November 1999, Adams issued a second hits compilation, The Best of Me, but the American branch of A&M/Interscope declined to release it. The title track "The Best Of Me" charted all over Europe and in Canada.

Adams returned in the spring of 2002 collaborating with Hans Zimmer on his first full-length song score for a film, the animated DreamWorks feature Spirit: Stallion of the Cimarron. The soundtrack made it into the Top 40 and Adams and Zimmer earned a Golden Globe Nomination for their collaboration.

In September of 2004, Room Service was released in Canada and Europe where it debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard European Top 100 albums Chart. This was shortly followed by its release in the US in the spring of 2005.

In the fall of 2005 Bryan Adams celebrated his 25th anniversary as a recording artist with his first two-CD collection Anthology, the biggest retrospective of his multi-platinum career. The 36 selection Anthology spans Adams' entire career from 1980 through to present day, offering the very best of one of the most popular rock singer-songwriters to ever don jeans and a t-shirt.

 

SUMMER OF 69 VIDEO

HERE I AM VIDEO

on a day like today video