Vancouver Sun

Bryan Adams at Rogers Arena

Not many surprises at rock icon’s concert, but lots of music for the crowd to enjoy

- BY ERIKA THORKELSON Special to The Sun MORE PHOTOS AT VANCOUVERS­UN. COM/ GALLERIES

The Canadian rock icon’s return to his hometown is his chance to jump back on the stadium rock bandwagon after his recent acoustic foray.

BRYAN ADAMS Where: Rogers Arena When: Saturday night

“I hope you like screaming,” the woman behind me announces as she climbs into her seat. Then she lets out a test yelp. Moments later, when Bryan Adams takes the stage, the woman’s voice drowns in the opening notes of House Arrest. Thousands more screams join hers. House Arrest is from Adams’s 1991 album Waking Up the Neighbours. This year’s 20- date Canadian tour is nominally a tribute to that album’s 20th anniversar­y, but it’s also a chance for Adams to jump back on the stadium rock bandwagon after his recent acoustic foray.

Onstage, Adams looks a bit grizzled, freckles covering his famous chiselled jaw line. He’s dressed in his uniform of jeans and a dark long- sleeved T- shirt. His neck muscles still pop impressive­ly when he belts out the big notes.

As is often the case with these career retrospect­ive tours, the evening doesn’t promise many surprises. People are here for the hits. They want to scream and sing along to Summer of ’ 69, without worrying about any possible irony.

Adams obliges gleefully. When he moves around the stage, it doesn’t feel choreograp­hed. A camera strapped to his microphone stand projects onto a giant screen behind him an extreme close- up of a man smiling, doing the thing he enjoys most in the world. He just loves pleasing people.

It also helps that his band is unbelievab­ly tight. Guitarist Keith Scott kills in Kids Wanna Rock. Together, Adams and Scott turn the mushy ballad Here I Am from the 2002 animated movie Spirit: Stallion of the Cimarron into an unabashed power ballad. During a wild version of 1987’ s Hearts on Fire, the two have a guitar battle, which ends with Adams pretending to bludgeon Scott to death with his axe. See? Everyone is having fun.

Adams is a hometown boy and he knows his crowd. When it comes time for a shout- out to Vancouver, he does most rock stars one better and calls on specific neighbourh­oods. Surrey and Burnaby battle for loudest cheer.

During Do I Have to Say the Words?, the moody black- and- white video plays in the background, complete with footage of a younger Adams at a show much like this one. He’s consciousl­y twanging on nostalgia, and everyone seems to get it. I’m guessing that the song 18 till I Die means a lot more to much of the audience than it did when Adams first put it out.

A frenetic bucket drum solo from drummer Mickey Curry transition­s awkwardly into a lukewarm performanc­e of, hands down, the most popular teen make- out anthem of 1991. ( Everything I Do) I Do It for You was a world- shattering hit for Adams.

It earned him a Grammy and an Oscar nomination for appearing on the Robin Hood soundtrack.

But the song’s dull chord progressio­n and noodly guitar solo don’t hold up as well as his more raucous songs.

Adams takes audience participat­ion to the next level by bringing a guest onstage for the duet When You’re Gone. But before he can choose anyone, a woman jumps out of the crowd.

He gently points out that he didn’t choose her before security escorts her offstage. In the end, a woman named Kelly in a striped dress sort of singtalks affably through the part that first belonged to Mel C of the Spice Girls. She does an admirable job considerin­g the size of the audience.

The evening keeps digging through Adams’s huge repertoire, including some of the more inglorious moments of his career. Cloud Number Nine was a particular­ly unmemorabl­e song when it was released in 1999, and hasn’t got any better.

Adams’s unsuccessf­ul, short- lived attempt at being a bad boy rocker appears with The Only Thing that Looks Good on Me is You.

He manages to work up the audience with fancy lights and driving guitar riffs, but it’s hard to cover for such terrible lyrics as, “Ya it’s you — it could only be you. Nobody else will ever do. Ya baby, it’s you that I stick to. Ya, we stick like glue.”

Thankfully, he warms things again by digging further into his back catalogue with a classic rendition of Run to You from the 1984 album Reckless.

Adams returns solo for a three- song acoustic encore.

Because this is his hometown, Adams brings out his mother, who watches from behind him as he sings a pretty ballad called Vancouver Bound.

He finishes by encouragin­g everyone to wave cellphones through the air like lighters during All For Love, another of his so- so catalogue entries.

He performs it well, but it’s a shame he didn’t finish with something stronger.

At 30 songs, the set list Saturday night seemed geared toward quantity, but a shorter program that stuck to the greater stuff would have held more punch.

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 ?? ARLEN REDEKOP/ PNG ?? Hometown boy Bryan Adams showed he knows his crowd at Rogers Arena Saturday night.
ARLEN REDEKOP/ PNG Hometown boy Bryan Adams showed he knows his crowd at Rogers Arena Saturday night.
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