
As I greet Bryan Adams on our phone call, heās surprised that SPIN is doing a feature on him.Ā
āI didnāt know that SPIN was a big fan,ā he says, as he heads to Italy to continue his world tour supporting his new album, Roll With the Punches. Iām confused and ask him to elaborate.Ā
More from Spin:
- Radiohead Eyeing Winter Comeback Shows
- The Shirley Manson Manifesto
- The Best Albums of 1995 (According to Us)
āNever had a decent article or anything from SPIN,ā he says. āNot that I really follow all that stuff that much, but Iāve been around such a long time, you kinda get to know who the players are. Theyāve never given me any space, so Iām just surprised that Iām actually getting to talk to you guys.ā
Iām surprised, too. I assumed heād never agree to talk to me after my piece, āMy Name is Charles and Iām a Diehard Bryan Adams Fan,ā in which I wrote about my admission of being a lifelong fan.Ā

Turns out, Adams didnāt know about it, which is not surprising, despite my delusions that heād actually read it. I mean, itās Bryan fucking Adams. The guy is still selling out arenas, and over the course of his more than 40-year career, has sold more than 100 million records and singles worldwide. He doesnāt have time nor the capacity to care about every little article written about him.Ā Ā
āOh dear,ā he says jokingly, as I blather away nervously, telling him about my article and swearing to him that it wasnāt a hit piece. āOh dearā¦ā he jokes again.Ā
But Adams does care. Not only does he ask me to send him my article, but heās polite and gracious with his answers to my questions. And heās patient with me as I work to fend off my unusually nervous energy becauseā¦itās Bryan fucking Adams.
And then, he says something that makes me realize that, for Adams, his career has never been about publicity or the cool factor or ego.Ā
āIāve done what lots of musicians have done over the years. Iām not that special,ā he says. āYou know, Iām just another one of the guys that went out and wrote some songs and went on tour, and Iām still doing it because I kept it simple. Good tunes, man. Itās all about the music.ā
Itās his humility, his incredible modesty, thatās helped him stay grounded during the course of his career, despite having one of the most successful singles of all time with āEverything I Do (I Do It for You),ā his triple-platinum theme to 1991ās Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves, a song that reached No. 1 on music charts in 19 countries, spending 17 weeks on Billboard Hot 100ās sales-only chart.Ā Ā
While Adams is a certifiable rock star, heās not a rock star in the classic sense; the kind whoās fashion-forward, who epitomizes cool by wearing sunglasses indoors, or seeks the limelight by any means necessary, especially if it involves some sort of debauchery. Even now, he possesses an āaw shucks,ā attitude. He genuinely seems like the kind of guy you could have a beer and an easy conversation with.Ā
While he attributes his longevity to the quality of his songs, he also credits something else: loyalty.Ā
Adams and guitarist Keith Scott have known each other since they were 16 years old, playing in the same club circuit in Canada.Ā
āI can remember it very vividly,ā he says. āI knew about Keith before I actually met him because he was very renowned within the club circles where we were all playing.ā

The two were both playing gigs in Toronto on the same night, says Adams. Different bands, different clubs. The afternoon before their prospective shows, they bumped into each other while Adams was on a walk. He invited Scott for coffee, and the two got along famously. Fast forward a few years, and Adams had just recorded his second album, 1981ās You Want It You Got It. He was putting together a tour band to support the album. āI thought, āI wonder what Keithās doing,āā he says. āSo, I got in touch with himā¦been together ever since.
Thereās a sense of pride in Adamsā voice as we talk about Scott.Ā
āHeās my beautiful brother, you know? Heās one of the most unrecognized great rock guitar players ever,ā he says. āHe doesnāt get the recognition he deserves.ā
Another person Adams remains loyal to is Jim Vallance, Bryanās longtime songwriting partner. Vallance and Adams met in 1978 when 18-year-old Adamsāfresh from leaving local band, Sweeney Todd to pursue a solo careerāwas introduced to him at a music store called Long & McQuade in Vancouver. Vallance had left his band Prism and was working as a session musician. The two formed a songwriting partnership to help bolster Adamsā career, but also as a way to make some money through licensing songs to other artists, including two songs for KISS: āRock and Roll Hellā and āWar Machine.ā
While Adamsā first two albums were moderate successes, it was his third record in 1983, Cuts Like A Knife, that rocketed him to stardom, spinning off three singles, āThis Time,ā āStraight From the Heart,ā and the albumās title track. The record was certified platinum in the U.S. and triple platinum in Canada. āCuts Like a Knifeā earned Adams and Vallance a Juno Award for Composer of the Year.Ā
Many of Adamsā songs helped define the 1980s. Reckless, his fourth album, released in 1984, is by far Adamsā most successful, selling more than 12 million copies worldwide and spawning four hit singlesāāRun To You,ā āSomebody,ā āHeaven,ā and his ode to nostalgia and youthful sexual exploration, āSummer of ā69. The latter track gained renewed attention when Taylor Swift covered it during her 2018 Reputation tour in Toronto, inviting Adams onstage to perform it with her. She told her audience of more than 100,000 tweens, teens, and adults in attendance, āItās just one of my favorite songs ever written.ā
āFirst of all, she did an incredible job, thatās the main thing about it,ā says Adams, after I mention how cool it was that Swift felt a responsibility to acknowledge his place in music history. āShe loves the song, so you can see that she digs it. I sang the harmony, and one of the magic things about that song is the two-part harmony. Itās very subtle in that recording and itās subtle on my recording as well. But I really enjoyed not singing the lead vocal. I knew she was going to kill it.ā
Another tour Adams recalls fondly is Tina Turnerās 1985 Private Dancer Tour, where he was the opener.Ā
āBack in those early days, I was taking every gig and any gig I could get. But then when that tour happened, it really shifted things,ā he says.Ā
While Adams was big in North America, he still wasnāt able to break through in Europe, partly, he says, because he felt like his record label at the time, A&M, wasnāt doing enough to promote his work internationally. Turnerās tour, it just so happens, was in Europe.Ā
āItās funny, songs like āSummer of ā69ā were big in America and Canada, but they just didnāt happen anywhere else in the world,ā he says. āBut as a result of the tours, you canāt go to a pub anywhere and not hear that song. Tina helped turn things around for me and made people sit up and go, oh, maybe we should promote this album. But also, she was just such a fun person to be out with. She just was so welcoming. I really loved Tina. I was a big, big fan before I even got to record with her. So, to get to work with her every nightā¦we became friends. I sang at her wedding. She was a really special part of my life.ā
Adams has spent most of his career under the control of major labels such as A&M, Polydor, and Verve, all part of Universal Music Group. At 65, Adams is now an indie artist with his own label, Bad Records.Ā
He initially started it as a joke.
āI was doing this covers album, which I didnāt really want to do,ā says Adams. But I got talked into it by the record label, and I thought, āIām going to have some fun with it anyway, what the hell.āā
After his record contract expired a couple of years ago, Adams began thinking more about going indie.Ā
āI thought to myself, āMaybe I should actually do something with my label, like really take it seriously.ā And so I hired this guy to help me, and weāre doing it. And so in August, my first solo albumās coming out. And it really is my first solo album because itās completely independent. Weāre not on anybodyās label. Weāre not affiliated with anybody other than a distributor, and off we go.ā
Roll With the Punches might just be Adamsā most personal album yet. But itās still classic Bryan Adamsāsimple, straightforward rock and roll.Ā
āIt has to do with leaving my management and becoming an independent artist and leaving my label,ā he says.
In 2022, Adams re-recorded some of his biggest hits like āSummer of ā69,ā āHeaven,ā āPlease Forgive Me,ā and āRun To You,ā and released them as the compilation albums Classic and Classic Pt. II as a way to gain back control of his music when Universal Music Group refused to return his original masters, Ć laTaylor Swift.Ā
āIt was just a smart thing to do because those songs were recorded at a different time when I was fully locked down,ā he says. āAnything I did, I didnāt own. It was so difficult getting out of the grips of Universal. And when I finally did, it was like, okay, I never want to go through that again. That was just awful.āĀ
To boot, Adams also left his manager of 44 years, Bruce Allen, in 2023.Ā
āI donāt want to be tied to anybody like that again. I just want to be free.ā
The albumās title track says it all: āSometimes you need to fight / Stand up for what you think is right / But thereās some things you never get to choose / like when you aināt got nothinā, you aināt got nothinā else to lose.ā
While the albumās theme revolves around Adamsā move toward independence, there are songs that, depending on your interpretation, could be seen as political, such as āA Little More Understanding.ā But Adams says itās more about empathy than anything else.Ā
āThat song really is my message for the times,ā he says. āI feel that we do live in these sort of precarious days. Itās not a political song, but itās certainly a song about, perhaps if we all did understand each other a bit better, if we walked in each otherās shoes and looked at both sides, we would see that we actually do have common ground.ā
Adams tells me that as far as going āsolo,ā so far, so good. Last year, when he put out his Live At The Royal Albert Hall box set on his Bad Records label, it sold better than when he released a similar live box set under his previous label, BMG.Ā
I ask him if going out on his own makes him nervous. Adams replies, āLet me tell you something. Itās already better than everything that had been happening with the label I was with beforehand for the last 20 years.ā
As we conclude the interview, I ask him if thereās one moment he feels that has defined his career. He tells me there are too many to name, but that it all goes back to the music. āI canāt tell you what I had for dinner last Tuesday, but I can remember every single song Iāve ever written and where I was at that time. How crazy is that?ā
Bryan. Fucking. Adams.
To see our running list of the top 100 greatest rock stars of all time, click here.