Previous to this writing, I had never heard of Bryan Adams. I am in the minority because Adams has created a number of beautiful, chart-topping hits that most people besides me are familiar with. “Heaven” is another song that came into my mind from someplace I can’t define. When I heard Boyce Avenue’s stirring performance of it, I fell in love with the song immediately. On July 15, 1985, “Heaven” reached #1 on the Billboard Chart. Paradoxically, it was written for a movie that flopped.
Bryan Guy Adams was born in 1959. As a teenager, he played in bands and in local studios. In 1978, he met drummer and songwriter Jim Vallance, and together they formed a partnership that lasted for decades. Their early collaboration helped Adams strike a deal with A&M Records for a reported one dollar. His debut album was released when the folk-rock genre exploded in the early eighties. The album was good enough to earn Adams a second one with A&M. It helped establish Adams as an artist on the rise. His third album, 1983’s Cuts Like a Knife, proved to be the singer-songwriter’s breakthrough effort, including three Top 40 hits.
Later that year, while working on his fourth studio album, Reckless, Adams considered including “Heaven” on it, but initially felt it didn’t live up to the quality of the rest of the album. At the last minute, however, Adams changed his mind and added “Heaven” to the Reckless tracklist.
Reckless went on to sell 12 million copies worldwide, becoming the most successful album of Adam’s career. Here’s my cover of “Heaven.”
