Bryan Adams: Waking Up The Neighbours ‎ (Cass, Album, Unofficial) A&M Records (2) 397 164-4: UK: 1992: Sell This Version: Recommendations Reviews Add Review [r8063805] Release. Once again, the ‘Mutt’ magic works its charm. Excellent, a classic Bryan Adams album.Went to see him in Gateshead on tour / promoting this album . I know that sounds odd, but if you have heard this entire album, you know what I'm talking about. The album was recorded at Battery Studios in London, and at The Warehouse Studio in Vancouver, mixed at Mayfair Studios in London, and mastered by Bob Ludwig at Masterdisk in New York City. " The drumbeat and simple riff of ‘Is Your Mama Gonna Miss Ya?’ remain a perfect way to open such a record, all these years later. ‘Depend On Me’ is another great tune with that tinge of something bigger about it. Until the cops come, that is. The record’s next tune, ‘Thought I’d Died and Gone to Heaven’ is one of the slower ballads of the whole piece but treads the line somewhere between the previous track and ‘Everything I Do…’. Find many great new & used options and get the best deals for BRYAN ADAMS Waking Up The Neighbours 180-gram VINYL 2xLP Audio Fidelity Numbered at the best online prices at eBay! ‘Vanishing’ is a kind of middle ground between ballad and rock tune once more, but the bridge is really what takes the song to a whole new level. Before I mention the other songs from this album, my favorite song on here is "Thought I'd Died and Gone To Heaven." DOWNLOAD OPTIONS download 1 file . It also hit number one on the UK Singles Charts and stayed there for sixteen weeks – the longest in British chart history. It’s an album track, sure, but a colossal opener, with all the tongue-in-cheek humour Adams can muster. There are no bad songs on this album unlike his other albums which seem to have a few fillers. Hey, NO problem! Bryan Adams drops his nostalgia bombs in Vancouver show . Lest it be 24/7 Bry. Adams and Vallance would combine for only 4 songs on this album as Bryan started a new era with Robert "Mutt" Lange (Better known as Mr. Shania Twain) as his main songwriting partner. ‘Don’t Drop That Bomb On Me’ is basically a Def Leppard song with Adams on vocals, ‘Depend On Me’ has the background shouts synonymous with glam, and the Sheffield boys in particular. The album has sold over 10 million copies worldwide. It is such a strong record with the bridges and the hanging-with-the-fellows big chorus of woooohhh, wooooooooooodhhhhhhhh. In addition, several tracks go on way longer than they need to, a common problem with many CD's released during this period (it can hold 80 minutes? Waking Up The Neighbours. Just a straight-forward rock album. comment. Released 18 October 2006 on A&M (catalog no. is a song recorded by Canadian singer and songwriter Bryan Adams for his sixth studio album, Waking Up the Neighbours (1991). If you can improve it further, please do so. After viewing product detail pages, look here to find an easy way to navigate back to pages that interest you. Consider this Bryan Adams 'Greatest Hits' package... My job affords me some truly great perks...my first introduction to 'Waking Up The Neighbors' came when my program director instructed me to play the entire album on a Friday night a week before it's release as our radio station's 'CD Preview' for that week. Something about the opening – like a rocket preparing to launch – is so 80s (remember this record was barely a 90s album) and it just sounds great. CD 505367; CD). Prime members enjoy Free Two-Day Shipping, Free Same-Day or One-Day Delivery to select areas, Prime Video, Prime Music, Prime Reading, and more. Sorry, your blog cannot share posts by email. The lyrics are simple but effective and establishes the song as a personal favourite. The mega-hit "Everything I Do (I Do It For You)" points this out pretty well, especially in the "I'd fight for you/I'd lie for you/Walk the wire for you/Yeah, I'd die for you" part. CD 505367; CD). Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email. It was released on 30 March 1987 by A&M Records as the follow-up album to the chart-topping Reckless (1984).