Arena Square, Engineers Way, London HA9 0AA, United Kingdom
Canadian singer-songwriter Bryan Adams performing on Tina Turner's Private Dancer Tour, on one of four nights at Wembley Arena, London, 14th-17th March 1985. (Photo by Michael Putland)
Gallery of Bryan Adams
1990
Berlin
Bryan Adams performs on stage at The Wall Concert Berlin 20th July 1990. (Photo by Michael Putland)
Gallery of Bryan Adams
1996
N Wall Quay, North Dock, Dublin 1, Ireland
Bryan Adams and Brad Pitt sign autographs after the concert at The Point Depot, Dublin, 22/07/1996.
Gallery of Bryan Adams
1996
N Wall Quay, North Dock, Dublin 1, Ireland
Bryan Adams concert at The Point Depot, Dublin, 22/07/1996
Gallery of Bryan Adams
1999
Bryan Adams in 1999.
Gallery of Bryan Adams
2000
Hyde Park, London, England, United Kingdom
Mel C joins Bryan Adams on stage to perform at the 'Party In The Park' in Hyde Park on July 9th, 2000 in London, England.
Gallery of Bryan Adams
2007
Hamburg, Germany
Adams live in the Line Arena, Hamburg, Germany, on 3 June 2007.
Gallery of Bryan Adams
2007
Bryan Adams, Best Original Song nominee, Motion Picture "Never Gonna Break My Faith" from "Bobby."
Gallery of Bryan Adams
2011
Bangalore, India
Adams & Keith Scott during their tour in Bangalore, India in 2011.
Gallery of Bryan Adams
2011
45 Queen Caroline St, Hammersmith, London W6 9QH, United Kingdom
Bryan Adams performs onstage during 'A Concert For Killing Cancer' at Hammersmith Apollo on January 13, 2011, in London, England. (Photo by Gareth Cattermole)
Gallery of Bryan Adams
2011
Peninsula Square, Greenwich Peninsula, London SE10 0DX, United Kingdom
Bryan Adams performs on stage at O2 Arena on December 8, 2011, in London, United Kingdom. (Photo by Neil Lupin)
Gallery of Bryan Adams
2014
Royal Hospital Rd, Chelsea, London SW3 4SR, United Kingdom
Bryan Adams meets with some Chelsea Pensioners after unveiling a plaque named in honor of his foundation 'The Bryan Adams Foundation' at Royal Hospital Chelsea on May 13, 2014, in London, England. (Photo by Tristan Fewings)
Gallery of Bryan Adams
2017
40 Bay St, Toronto, ON M5J 2X2, Canada
Bruce Springsteen and Bryan Adams perform during the closing ceremony of the Invictus Games 2017 at Air Canada Centre on September 30, 2017, in Toronto, Canada. (Photo by Chris Jackson)
Gallery of Bryan Adams
2017
40 Bay St, Toronto, ON M5J 2X2, Canada
Bryan Adams performs during the closing ceremony of the Invictus Games 2017 at Air Canada Centre on September 30, 2017, in Toronto, Canada. (Photo by Chris Jackson)
Gallery of Bryan Adams
2017
New York City, New York, United States
Yolanda Hadid and Bryan Adams attend the Global Lyme Alliance third annual New York City Gala on October 11, 2017, in New York City. (Photo by Mike Coppola)
Arena Square, Engineers Way, London HA9 0AA, United Kingdom
Canadian singer-songwriter Bryan Adams performing on Tina Turner's Private Dancer Tour, on one of four nights at Wembley Arena, London, 14th-17th March 1985. (Photo by Michael Putland)
45 Queen Caroline St, Hammersmith, London W6 9QH, United Kingdom
Bryan Adams performs onstage during 'A Concert For Killing Cancer' at Hammersmith Apollo on January 13, 2011, in London, England. (Photo by Gareth Cattermole)
Royal Hospital Rd, Chelsea, London SW3 4SR, United Kingdom
Bryan Adams meets with some Chelsea Pensioners after unveiling a plaque named in honor of his foundation 'The Bryan Adams Foundation' at Royal Hospital Chelsea on May 13, 2014, in London, England. (Photo by Tristan Fewings)
Bruce Springsteen and Bryan Adams perform during the closing ceremony of the Invictus Games 2017 at Air Canada Centre on September 30, 2017, in Toronto, Canada. (Photo by Chris Jackson)
Bryan Adams performs during the closing ceremony of the Invictus Games 2017 at Air Canada Centre on September 30, 2017, in Toronto, Canada. (Photo by Chris Jackson)
Yolanda Hadid and Bryan Adams attend the Global Lyme Alliance third annual New York City Gala on October 11, 2017, in New York City. (Photo by Mike Coppola)
Bryan Guy Adams is a Canadian singer-songwriter, musician, producer, actor, social activist, and photographer. He is best known for his 1984 album Reckless, which produced the hits "Heaven," "Run to You," and "Summer of '69."
Background
Bryan Guy Adams was born on 5 November 1959 in Kingston, Ontario, Canada, to parents from the United Kingdom: Elizabeth Jane (née Watson) and Captain Conrad J. Adams, who emigrated to Canada from Plymouth, England in the 1950s. His father served in the Canadian army, was a United Nations peacekeeping observer, and served as a diplomat, necessitating many relocations for the family. The Adams family lived in Portugal, Austria, Israel, and Japan during Bryan’s childhood.
From his early childhood, Bryan Adams started displaying his talent in music. As a teenager, he was so passionate about music that he worked as a dishwasher to accumulate money to buy a guitar.
Education
Raised in Ottawa, Adams attended Colonel By Secondary School in the Beacon Hill neighborhood of East Ottawa. At age 16, he dropped out of high school, ready to pursue a full-time career as a musician, having already performed as lead vocalist for Canadian glam-rock band Sweeney Todd.
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 songwriting partnership with drummer Jim Vallance that things started to happen. The first album was not initially released in the United States (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 United States. 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 United States, 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 United States 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 United States. The album reached the Top Ten in the United States 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 United Kingdom, 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 United States 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 Adams’ theme song for the movie The Three Musketeers, "All for Love," recorded with Rod Stewart and Sting, which hit No. 1 in the United States 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 De Marco. 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. Later that year, he sang and wrote the single, "I Finally Found Someone," a duet with Barbra Streisand for her movie, The Mirror Has Two Faces (1996), later that year. "I Finally Found Someone" became a top ten hit and won Adams his third Academy-Award nomination.
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 United Kingdom 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 the present day, offering the very best of one of the most popular rock singer-songwriters to ever don jeans and a t-shirt.
In 2006, Adams wrote and performed the theme song "Never Let Go" which was featured in the closing credits of the film The Guardian starring Kevin Costner and Ashton Kutcher. Adams also co-wrote the song "Never Gonna Break My Faith" for the film Bobby. The song was performed by the R&B singers Aretha Franklin and Mary J. Blige and earned him a Golden Globe Nomination in 2007.
In 2008, Adams released his eleventh album called 11 containing 3 songs with Vallance credited as co-songwriter. The first single released from the album was "I Thought I’d Seen Everything." Adams did an 11-day, 11-country European acoustic promotional tour to kick off the release of the album. The album debuted at number one in Canada as well as reaching number 2 in Germany. In the United States the album charted at number eighty. In December 2009, Bryan Adams released the song "You’ve Been A Friend To Me" for the movie Old Dogs.
For his contributions to music, Adams has garnered many awards and nominations, including 20 Juno Awards among 56 nominations, 15 Grammy Award nominations including a win for Best Song Written Specifically for a Motion Picture or Television in 1992. He has also won MTV, ASCAP, American Music awards, three Ivor Novello Awards for song composition and has been nominated five times for Golden Globe Awards and three times for Academy Awards for his songwriting for films.
Adams was awarded the Order of Canada and the Order of British Columbia for contributions to popular music and philanthropic work via his own foundation, which helps improve education for people around the world.
Adams was inducted into the Hollywood Walk of Fame in March 2011 and Canada's Walk of Fame, Canadian Broadcast Hall of Fame in 1998, and in April 2006 he was inducted into the Canadian Music Hall of Fame at Canada's Juno Awards. In 2008, Adams was ranked 38th on the list of All-Time top artists in the Billboard Hot 100 50th Anniversary Charts. On 13 January 2010, he received the Allan Waters Humanitarian Award for his part in numerous charitable concerts and campaigns during his career, and on 1 May 2010 was given the Governor General's Performing Arts Award for his 30 years of contributions to the arts. He has sold more than 75 million records, making him one of the world's best-selling music artists.
In 2009, Canada released a set of four stamps to pay tribute to artists who had enriched Canada’s music industry. Adams was among four chosen. The others were Édith Butler, Charles Thomas ‘Stompin’ Tom’ Connors, and Robert Charlebois.
Adams is a well-known philanthropist. Most of his charitable activity is focused on The Bryan Adams Foundation, which aims to advance education and learning opportunities for children and young people worldwide, believing that an education is the best gift that a child can be given. The foundation is mostly funded by Adams himself. Apart from that, he is engaged in many charity projects like Greenpeace's 'Saving the Whales' or Amnesty International.
Quotations:
"I always knew I'd be in music in some sort of capacity. I didn't know if I'd be successful at it, but I knew I'd be doing something in it. Maybe get a job in a record store. Maybe even play in a band. I never got into this to be a star."
"The thing that was most interesting to me was getting my first prints back from the printer and realizing photography doesn't end with the click of a button, it starts there. Printing is so exciting."
"I feel quite sad for the young musicians coming up because they may never get to pay their rent properly. It doesn't matter what the genre; nowadays, it's so much harder than it ever was."
"People have to go through what they have to go through. I think in some cases you sort of bring things on yourself and that's what you want it to be than that's the way it is."
"Thoughts of doubt and fear are pathways to failure. When you conquer negative attitudes of doubt and fear you conquer failure."
"I'm quite happy with the music carrying on. I've never been one to clamor for fame. It just got dumped in my lap. The ambition is definitely not fame. The ambition is to be creative."
"There's not an instruction manual on how to deal with success, so you just have to rely on having great friends and a good team."
"I like the idea of helping people help people."
Membership
The Bryan Adams Foundation
Personality
Bryan Adams has been a vegan for a long time, having quit eating meat and dairy in 1989.
Interests
photography
Music & Bands
Deep Purple, Led Zeppelin, T-Rex, Elton John, Tina Turner
Connections
Adams is single. In the 1990s, he was in a relationship with Danish model Cecilie Thomsen. Adams and Alicia Grimaldi, who is also a trustee and co-founder of his namesake foundation, had their first daughter in April 2011. They announced the birth of their second daughter in February 2013.
Father:
Conrad Adams
Bryan Adams' father Conrad James served in both the British and Canadian Army. Later he became a Canadian Foreign Service Diplomat, so he used to travel to many countries.
Mother:
Elizabeth Jane
Elizabeth is an artist and she conducts exhibitions of her work of Arts, Landscape Photos and maybe her work inspired Bryan to become a photographer too.
Tina Turner and Bryan Adams appeared on stage together several times. According to Adams, "Working with Tina Turner was amazing. I used to go to see her in the clubs when I was in my late teens, early 20s before she hit the big time. It was incredible to watch her. It was such a privilege to have sung with her, especially since I was only 24 at the time."
Amy Winehouse and Bryan Adam were friends. Not only did Adams take a number of portraits of the British songstress (including the cover of her 2011 posthumous album Amy Winehouse Lioness: Hidden Treasures), but he also helped her get away from London in the midst of her drug, drinking, and marital problems. Over Christmas 2007, Adams invited Winehouse to stay at his home on the private Caribbean island of Mustique to detox. It worked, at least for a while: according to Winehouse, Adams only had beetroot and carrot juice in the fridge, and the stay was a good reboot for her. Two months later, when she won five Grammys for her multi-platinum album Back to Black, she was still sober, likely at least partially thanks to her stay with Adams.