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| Bryan Adams Indian
Tour ( 4 May 2001 - 6 May 2001 ) |
Bangalore May 4
'A night to remember' for the City
BANGALORE,
MAY 4. When the heavens opened on Friday evening, 35,000 hearts sank
like a stone. Then Bryan Adams came along.
Even the rain gods could not resist the Prince of Rock's gravelly
voice as he got Bangalore rocking. In Bryan's own words his ``Best
of Me'' concert was simply ``great''. ``I knew we would have a good
show, I just didn't think it would be so great,'' he told his
delirious fans.
Of course, there were the usual hiccups. The roads to Palace
Grounds were jampacked even two hours before the show was originally
to start at 7.30 p.m. And moving at a snail's pace got most of
Adam's fans in a bad mood. The result? A cacophony of shrill honks,
screams and shouts.
And as usual, the hapless photojournalists in the crowd bore the
brunt of it all. They were shooed out early into the evening. For
the luckier ones though, things only settled down around 8.30 p.m.,
for by then local fusion musicians of the ``Antaragni'' had finished
their opening performance. Bryan Adams was expected any minute. MTV
Veejay Nikhil Chinnappa did try the usual line -- of how much he
loved Bangalore and how lucky he was to be part of the City.
But the people gathered there wanted only Bryan Adams. And when
the man of the moment came on stage, everything else was forgotten.
Everything else faded out of sight. Bryan, Keith Scott (lead guitar
and vocal) and Micky Curry (drums) filled the stage.
For two hours, Bryan Adams showed just why he was so loved. His
songs, his energy, his passion, his religion -- they were all there.
From ``18 Till I Die'', to ``Best of Me'', to ``Everything I
do...'', ``Cloud No. 9'' and all the way to the ``Summer of '69'',
he sang almost without a break from 8.30 p.m. to 10.30 p.m.
In between, he invited one of the young girls in the crowd to
join him. She turned out to Ms. Kamsha from Delhi and got to sing
along with Bryan Adams. Though her effort was not exactly musical,
she had the spunk to play along.
Bryan ended with a tribute to the crowd -- ``The Way You Make Me
Feel''. At the end of it all, he had the crowd wanting more.
The concert was Bryan's second in India after a Mumbai
performance seven years ago. But it was the first time for
Bangalore. And it was truly ``...A night to remember'.
Copyrights © 2001 The
Hindu
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Mumbai May 6
I'll be back, vows Adams
MUMBAI,MAY
6. On a day like today, 15,000 Bryan Adams' fans are trying to
outbeat the 1.5 lakh watts of pulsating rhythm hitting a square 10
on the rock richter.
Who ever thought the 40-year-old Canadian rocker doesn't rule, was
never gladder to be proved wrong at the National Stock Exchange
grounds at Goregaon. Adams, whose metaphor for life is ``18 till I
die'', vent his views about his third rock concert in Mumbai.
Sporting a T-shirt, silver 'tulsi mala' and a red 'tika', Adams
looked every bit the foreign tourist than the teenage heart-throb
rocker that he is.
``Sometimes the songs come very easily and sometimes they take
longer and it actually depends on each individual song,'' said
Adams, about the evolution of his compositions. ``I don't really
concern myself with the business of music, but do my own thing,''
said the star, who has one Grammy ('Everything I Do') and several
Grammy nominees to his name.
Speaking about the rest of his band, which includes guitarist Keith
Scott, and drummer Mickey Carry, Bryan Adams was nostalgic about all
the roadshows and live gigs they had performed together. ``The best
part about live shows is that you are performing and the worst is
that you are always on the road, travelling,'' he remarked.
``I'm one of the wrong people to be asked about bootlegging and I
really hope it stops and the scene changes soon,'' Adams said, when
he was asked about the Napsterisation of music. Another issue which
received an equally tepid reply was his message to the youth
regarding drug abuse: ``I really don't know. What can I say _ just
be careful and take care of yourselves,'' he said.
Asked whether he would dole out a song for India as he had crooned
'Black Pearl', inspired by Jamaica, he told this website's newspaper
that e hd not found anything inspirational in Indi a yet. ``But
India is a great country and one day I'd love to tour the whole of
it,'' he claimed.
Adams's new album, which comprises eight hits, will be out by
October and will hit the stands soon, he promised. ``I don't really
know anything about Indian music,'' said the Robin Hood of pop.
Displaying discontent about the beaurucracy behind organising big
events like rock shows in India and not being able to perform in New
Delhi and Kolkata, he said he hoped it would be easier in a few
years for more and more artistes to get to perform in India.
But to all his fans, soon to moan 'Baby When You're Gone' as soon as
the show is over, Bryan Adams has promised he'll be back to steal
more hearts.
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