667. ‘(Everything I Do) I Do It for You’, by Bryan Adams

Oh Lordy, here we go…

(Everything I Do) I Do It for You, by Bryan Adams (his 1st of two #1s)

16 weeks, from 7th July – 27th October 1991

The 1980s gets the rep as the era of the power-ballad, when big drums and even bigger hair stalked the pop landscape. And yes, the ‘80s gave us ‘Total Eclipse of the Heart’, ‘Take My Breath Away’, ‘The Power of Love’… All gigantic anthems. All of them, to me at least, pretty good. But the 1990s was when power ballads really started to bulk up, to hit the gym, to mutate, Jurassic World-style, into the beast that stands before us now…

Everything about this record is colossal. The slow-build intro, the strained vocals, the sentiment, the production… Nothing is subtle, nothing left to chance. The title, even, tells you exactly what sort of song this will be before you even press play. The listener is not required to think; they merely have to submit to its awesome power. I bet very few of the couples who’ve chosen this as a first dance at their wedding actually like the song; they’ve just been bludgeoned into submission, a sort of musical Stockholm syndrome.

I could pick any line from ‘(Everything I Do…)’ and bask in its cliched stupidity. It’s all the sort of the stuff even a lovestruck fourteen-year-old would think was too overwrought. Take me as I am, Take my life, I would give it all, I would sacrifice… Bryan Adams growls. I get that we live nowadays in a more cynical age, but did anyone actually take this seriously at the time?

Well, probably. Because a record this overblown couldn’t just have a couple of weeks at #1. Not even a couple of months would suffice. No, ‘(Everything I Do) I Do It for You’ needed sixteen long weeks at the top to get its message across. It famously holds the record for the most consecutive weeks at number one (though not the most weeks in total: Frankie Laine’s ‘I Believe’ racked up eighteen over three different runs in 1953). And the UK wasn’t alone in suffering through a summer (and autumn) of Adams. It was #1 for seven weeks in the US, nine in his homeland of Canada, eleven in Australia, and twelve in Sweden.

But there’s a reason why this record, despite its success, has been semi-forgotten, and earlier power ballads by Bonnie Tyler and co remain well-loved. ‘(Everything I Do)…’ just isn’t fun. There’s nothing here that isn’t full-on, one-hundred percent sincerity. And for a power ballad to truly work, you need to feel that the singer is aware, on some level, that what they’re singing is ridiculous. And yet here’s this behemoth, with all the charm of a constipated brontosaurus. Adams isn’t an insufferable guy – he’s recorded plenty of fun, upbeat songs – but this one…? It’s way too earnest.

It’s also probably an indicator of where we are, in pop music terms. The fun of glam metal has fizzled out, and grunge hasn’t quite broken through yet. (Symbolically, ‘Nevermind’ was released right in the middle of this record’s long, long run at the top…) Glam metal hadn’t made much impact at the top of the British charts (neither would grunge for that matter), but it did mean that guitars slowly returned to the mainstream and allowed huge hit singles like this. (Compare this with a power-ballad from the mid-eighties, and it’s much more ‘rock’.)

This single was of course from the soundtrack to ‘Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves’, the ginormous box-office hit of that summer. Chart-toppers from movie soundtracks have been around since the dawn of the charts, but it does feel as if they are taking over in the early nineties. Of the last five #1s, all have been from soundtracks (if we count stage shows as well as films). And this won’t be the last theme song to make it to double-figures at the top of the charts. We’ve got plenty more of these mutant power-ballads to come soon… Brace yourselves.

(For some reason, the single-edit version of the video to ‘(Everything I Do)…’ seems to have been erased from history in favour of the six and a half minute album version.)

9 thoughts on “667. ‘(Everything I Do) I Do It for You’, by Bryan Adams

  1. I haven’t had any issues playing it, thanks…I didn’t try. (Apologies to everyone else for getting to that one first). The ironic thing is that we probably wouldn’t mind this record so much if it hadn’t stuck to the top like superglue and become so unavoidable. Still, at least he gave us ‘Run to You’ and ‘Summer of ’69” as well – and had the guts to admit in an interview that the latter was nothing to do with the year 1969.

    • Goodness! I did not know that about ‘Summer of ’69’… : ) And yea I did wonder how many people would think enough time had passed and actually click the video… Not many, I’d wager.

  2. Well…in America it is played, and played, and played…etc. STILL. If you walk into a grocery store here…odds are you are going to hear it. It’s not a bad song but just overplayed…but thats not his fault. The one song I really like by him is The Summer of 69.

    Speaking of grocery stores…I actually heard a Muzak version of I Am The Walrus in one the other day. I stood there transfixed waiting for the world to end.

    • I guess it is still played, but it’s not as loved as some other classic power ballads of the time… ‘Summer of ’69’ is good, and I like ‘Run to You’. And we can’t forget his duet with Mel C from the Spice Girls! This record, though… It’s just too big and bloated.

      • I do agree it is boated…I can hear a decent love song in there but yea…the production was too huge.

  3. Rating: 3.5/5

    Bryan Adams is such a polarising artist for me. I absolutely hate “Summer of ’69”, his most famous song, but I really dig “Run to You” and “Heaven” (US No. 1). His strained vocals aren’t my cup of tea either, especially on repeated listen.

    This song, I will admit that I wasn’t born until well after it’s chart run, so I was able to avoid the overplay and overexposure, but I like this song a lot. I have a soft spot for power ballads, especially the hair metal ones (this isn’t one of those). This hits all the right notes for a cheesy power ballad.

    Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves is a mediocore movie though.

    • It just lacks what, for me, every good power ballad needs… Self-awareness. It’s a ridiculous sub-genre of rock music, and you need to feel like the singer knows it. (That’s why ‘Total Eclipse of the Heart’ is probably the best power-ballad of all time.) Bryan Adams is just far too bloody earnest here…

  4. I took a lot of convincing to buy this one – but it got through to me in the end, and not because of the rubbish movie. And then the world got sick of it. I’ll take Heaven if I have to have a Bryan ballad, or his new single is pretty good, very John Lennon/Beatles (What If There Were No Sides At All), He’s also someone who’s good in concert Ive seen a couple of times, and someone whos not afraid to dabble with dance and pop – his best tracks though are Run To You, When You’re Gone and a dance track you will be getting round to down the line.. 🙂

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