| • Science | • People | • Locations | • Timeline |
| Waking Up the Neighbours | ||
|---|---|---|
| CD by Bryan Adams | ||
| Released | September 24 1991 | |
| Recorded | 1990- 1991 | |
| Genre | Rock | |
| Length | 74 min 52 sec | |
| Record label | A&M Records | |
| Producers | Bryan Adams, Mutt Lange | |
| Professional reviews | ||
| RollingStone review | 4/5 | link |
| Bryan Adams Chronology | ||
| Into the Fire ( 19871987 is a common year starting on Thursday. Events January January 1 Nunavut's capital changes it name to Iqaluit from Frobisher Bay. January 3 Aretha Franklin becomes the first woman inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. January 4 An Amtrak train) | Waking Up the Neighbours ( 1991) | So Far so Good ( 19931993 is a common year starting on Friday and marked the Beginning of the International Decade to Combat Racism and Racial Discrimination (1993-2003 Events January January 1 Czechoslovakia divides. Establishment of independent Slovakia and Czech Republic.) |
Waking Up the Neighbours is a rock album by CanadianCanada historically the Dominion of Canada is the second-largest, and northernmost, country in the world. It is a decentralized federation of 10 provinces and 3 territories, governed as a constitutional monarchy, and formed in 1867 through an act of Confe singer/songwriter Bryan Adams released in 1991. The album was recorded at Battery Studios ( England) and The Warehouse Studio ( Canada), mixed at Mayfair Studios (England) and mastered by Bob Ludwig at Masterdisk ( New York City). Everything I Do... was notably at Number 1 in the British charts for a record-breaking 16 weeks.
The album was also notable in Canada for creating controversy around the system of Canadian content. Although Adams was Canada's biggest recording star at the time, his collaboration with the British Robert "Mutt" Lange meant that under the rules in force until 1991, Waking Up the Neighbours did not qualify as Canadian content.
In September of that year, the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission announced that the Canadian content rules would be changed to allow collaborations with non-Canadians.