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27/07/96 - WEMBLEY STADIUM, LONDON ***"The
difference with Wembley is that any event staged there is a big deal, whereas
other venues are just part of a tour. I always say
that you haven't done a proper tour of England unless you've played Wembley Stadium.
For major acts it is the place to be, without doubt." - Bryan Adams*** 
Review
by Steven Stanley:
If there was ever a BA gig I'd wished I'd gone to...this is it. This is the mother
of all BA gigs, and the best he has ever done. He has said that himself in numourous
interviews since and even brought it up while playing at Wembley Arena a year
later saying it was the best gig he had ever done...to this day that is still
the case. The show went out live to 25 countries around the world and fans came
from as far as Argentina, Brazil, Holland, Germany, Scotland, Australia to see
the show. Bryan was apparently very nervous before he went onstage and during
the first half on the first song he didn't look up at the crowd! After the support
acts and a short wait Wembley errupted as the video screens came on and displayed
Bryan and the band walking to the stage. Then Mickey's drum beat started.... 'bang
bang bang bang' to 'The Only Thing' and one monster show was underway. (Below)
Bryan seconds before going onstage 
(Below)
Bryan on the b-stage 
There
is even a b-stage in the middle of the Wembley pitch near the players tunnel and
Bryan comments on it being like a marathon to get to it! When the b-stage part
is over Bryan returns to the main stage to perform the best version of 'Summer
Of '69' I think he has ever played. You can just feel the energy of the crowd
and the passion in his voice as he belts it out. At the end of the show Bryan
plays one last rocker with I Fought the Law, followed by an audience-led version
of Heaven. 
This show like so many others is available
on bootleg CD...I'm only mentioning this one in the review because it's soooo
awesome it's untrue...just get it! (It can be purchased from www.bryanadamslive.net)
The show was originally meant to be released as a live CD and video... but due
to the 'MTV Unplugged' album coming out this was shelved. Footage does exist of
the show and it's about time it was released. There is going be a new campaign
going on to get it released on DVD as it fully filmed professionally but never
released or infact shown anywhere. There was only a shortened dubbed version of
'Let's Make A Night To Remember' released from this gig along with '18 Til I Die'
that was shown on 'Channel V' in Japan....from which many of these screenshots
are taken from. Bryan has been asked recently in chat about the chance of this
show being released and infact denied even any audio having been recorded (despite
the fact that half the show was on b-sides to his singles and Bob Clearmountain
was flown in the from the US to mix the live radio broadcast which was going out
around the world). Maybe he just likes focusing on the future and not dwelling
on past successes. Either way - the audio & video most certainly exists from
this show no matter what is said and it's about time the fans got to see the greatest
show he's ever done. It would sell by the bucketload. I would have done a 10 year
anniversary petition - but with the forthcoming release of 'Waking Up The World',
theres no way Bryan, or more importantly the record company, would flood the market
with 2 BA live DVD's. When the time is right - we'll do one. 
Set
List: The Only Thing That Looks Good On Me Is You Do To You Kids
Wanna Rock Can't Stop This Thing We Started This Time 18 Til I Die
Have You Really Ever Loved A Woman? Touch The Hand Cut's Like A Knife
It's Only Love (Duet with Melissa Ethridge) Somebody Everything I Do
Run To You Summer Of '69 (member of audience) There Will Never Be Another
Tonight ***b-stage*** Seven Nights To Rock (I Wanna Be) Your Underwear
Wild Thing It Ain't A Party If...Ya Cant Come 'Round She's Only Happy
When She's Dancin' ***b-stage*** Summer Of '69 All for Love Lets
Make A Night to Remember I Fought The Law Heaven 
Review
by Sylvie Simmons (NME): THREE HOURS he played. Twenty-eight songs, most of
them anthems, just a handful of the ones that make your Granny go soppy, and which
are actually quite useful for stepping over swooning couples and getting a ton-up
at the bar. There are two things you can say about
Bryan Adams (or three, if you count the fact that he should stop buying his clothes
at Mr Byrite). Firstly, there's no one to touch him when it comes to sheer quality
of instant, sing-a-long stadium rock songs. And secondly, the word "unassuming"
was invented for him. In a near re-run of last year's 'Kerrang!' awards "where's
your pass then" episode, he was almost turned away from this gig because
security thought he was some punter. 
Which
could be why he's so good at communicating. Hardly five minutes go by where he's
not picking out someone for a natter, dragging them up onstage to sing or dance,
jumping into the pit to touch hands or - for the first of three encores - leaping
about on a little stage constructed in the middle of the crowd, doing everything
to turn a football stadium into an intimate venue and his band into an unpretentious
rock combo. Hightlights: opener 'The Only Thing That
Looks Good On Me Is You', 'All I Want Is You', '18 Til I Die', 'Summer Of '69',
'Run To You' and sleaze-pop classic 'Wild Thing', which see's the band bounding
up and down like they're suffering from an outbreak of Pat Smear-itis. Some
inflatable undies flap around in the wind at the end, but other than that and
a bit of dry ice, it's all down to the music. Class, crowd pleasing stuff. Thanks
to Helen Barton for the magazine review |