Canada's
Sweeney Todd is the glam-like outfit that gave rise to the peculiar pop skills of electric dreamer
Nick Gilder, a towering magical imp, and meat-and-potatoes professional
Bryan Adams. Born in London and raised in Vancouver,
Gilder joined
Rasputin with high school friend and guitarist
Jim McCulloch. The band evolved into
Sweeney Todd, an obviously theatrical para-pop
10cc-type-unit that quickly ensnared a local following. Producer
Martin Shaer caught the act at a high school gymnasium and soon London Records signed and released
Sweeney Todd in 1975. Thanks to the delectable groupie-ode "Roxy Roller," written by
Gilder and
McCulloch,
Sweeney Todd quickly ruled the Great White North. Chrysalis Records wooed
Gilder and
McCulloch to Los Angeles and the duo bolted, leaving
Sweeney Todd without a creative impetus.
Clark Perry took over the lead role and the band recorded a different rendering of "Roxy Roller" before
Perry was replaced by a 15-year-old
Bryan Guy Adams who had pestered
Shaer into an audition.
Adams sang on yet another "Roxy Roller" and accepted a Juno on behalf of the
Gilder version.
Sweeney Todd's
If Wishes Were Horses features the earliest
Bryan Adams' songs, as well as holdovers from
Gilder and
McCulloch (including the excellent "Tantalize"). "Song for a Star" details
Adams' attempts at mimicking the
Bolan-like-brainiac
Gilder: "Stepping in time with your pace, though we never yet met face to face."
Gilder released a fourth rendition of "Roxy Roller" on his solo debut,
You Know Who You Are. His second LP, the legendary
City Nights, yielded the immortal one-hit-wonder "Hot Child in the City." Meanwhile,
Adams fell out of favor with
Sweeney Todd after exhaustive touring in support of
If Wishes Were Horses, and split to return to high school. A year later, in 1978,
Adams happened upon his soon-to-be songwriting partner,
Prism's
Jim Vallance, in a music store. The duo penned songs for a plethora of established stars until
Adams reached solo superstar status in the mid-'80s.
Sweeney Todd labored on with new manager
Ron Wright until 1978.
Gilder re-formed the band in the late '90s.
–
Doug Stone, Rovi