As a young child, Ryan was known to be obsessed with poetry and cult fiction, enjoying the works of Edgar Allan Poe, Hubert Selby and Henry Miller. When his parents brought him an electric guitar for his fourteenth birthday he played it constantly and ended up joining a local band called Blank Label. Adams dropped out of school at an early age and went to live with bandmate Jere McIlwean, he was intent on pursuing his music career and played with two live bands at the time, Ass and The Lazy Stars and The Patty Duke Syndrome. After the split of the latter, Adams went on to form Whiskeytown with Caitlin Cary, Eric "Skillet" Gilmore, Steve Grothmann and Phil Wandscher. This is the time in which he developed his alt country style, the band released three albums together and achieved moderate success.
In 2000, Ryan Adams pursued a solo career with the release of his debut LP 'Heartbreaker' which was produced by Ethan Jones and gained the singer a nomination for the Shortlist Music Prize. His second album 'Gold' was received positively by fans and critics, yet Adams was adamant he did not want to promote the album through conventional methods such as radio interviews and meet & greets and instead opted for live dates and further recordings. For the follow-up to this Ryan was frozen out by his record label who hand picked tracks from four demo albums that were never released to create 'Demolition' and although this was a critical success, it did not sell as well as its predecessor 'Gold'.
In 2005, Adams joined rock band The Cardinals to release a couple of albums with them in the same year, both of which made the top thirty on the US Billboard charts. He also released a solo album titled '29' which was a momentous failure, charting at #144. His next release though 'Easy Tiger' managed to break the top ten due to his new found exposure with The Cardinals, during the heights of his fame Adams was scheduled to play Stonehenge when the Stonehenge society had to cancel the gigs to an overwhelming response to email or call-in for free tickets. They were highly concerned that the highway would have to be shut down during the performance due to the demand for tickets. Adams continued to steadily release solo material, with his 2014 self titled release achieving his highest charting places on both the US billboard charts and the UK charts.
I wish I had a work ethic that was even half as ferocious as Ryan Adams. Since leaving Whiskeytown in 2000 and making his solo debut with the classic Heartbreaker, he’s produced no fewer than fourteen solo records, both on his own and with The Cardinals, and another, self-titled effort is lined up for later this year. Accordingly, his live shows have varied dramatically over the years; some completely solo and acoustic, others with The Cardinals backing him, all of them delivered with the conviction of an artist who isn’t just happy to experiment stylistically; it genuinely appears as if he needs to do so, to continue as a musician. His most recent UK show, at the Royal Albert Hall last year in support of Ashes & Fire, saw him opt for a set that spanned much of his most personal work; as well as a slew of cuts from his latest album, he dropped a number of Heartbreaker tracks, too, including ‘My Winding Wheel’ and a solo version of the gorgeous ‘Oh My Sweet Carolina’. We can probably expect future UK shows to follow a similar tack, flitting between full band and acoustic efforts; with any luck, he might include the devastating solo piano version of ‘New York, New York’ that he played on Letterman last year, too.