Bret Michaels is an American musician associated with the glam metal band Poison
@Singers, Career and Facts
Bret Michaels is an American musician associated with the glam metal band Poison
Bret Michaels born at
Bret Michaels once dated Pamela Anderson. He had been in an on-again, off-again relationship with actress Kristi Lynn Gibson since 1996. She gave birth to their daughters, Raine Elizabeth, born on May 20, 2000 and Jorja Bleu, born on May 5, 2005. Michaels and Gibson got engaged in 2010, after he proposed to her during the filming of his show ‘Bret Michaels: Life As I Know It’. However, in 2012, he announced that they had separated.
In the mid-1990s, Michaels was almost killed when the Ferrari he was driving crashed into a telephone pole.
Michaels successfully sued the Tony Awards and CBS for damages after he was injured by a large portion of the descending set at the 63rd Tony Awards on June 7, 2009. They eventually settled for an undisclosed amount.
Bret Michaels was born on March 15, 1963 in the city of Butler, Pennsylvania, as the son of Wally and Marjorie Sychak. He and his two sisters, Michelle and Nicole, grew up in Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania.
An ideal representative of American diversity, he is of Carpatho-Rusyn (from his paternal grandfather), Irish, English, German, and Swiss ancestry. When he was six year old, he fell seriously ill and had to spend three weeks in a hospital. He was later told that he had Type 1 diabetes.
Bret Michaels became interested in music early in his life, and by the time he was a teenager, he was already playing guitar like a professional. Michaels, along with drummer Rikki Rockett, bass player Bobby Dall and guitarist David Besselman formed a band, in which Besselman served as the creative force. However, Besselman, who had originally introduced Michaels to Rockett and Dall, left the band soon after and another guitarist named Matt Smith was brought in.
In 1983, while the group was in Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania, they picked “Paris” as the name for their band. They performed at numerous venues in Pennsylvania that year, before moving to Los Angeles in early 1984. They changed their name to “Poison” and became a regular performer in the Sunset Boulevard scene. During this period, Michaels met his future muse, 16-year-old Tracy Davis.
The band suffered a setback when Smith, frustrated that they had not achieved success yet, left the group. Brooklyn-based guitarist C.C. DeVille was hired to replace him. In the coming years, he and Michaels would become close friends and eventually, opposing sides in a major conflict.
They garnered a small but loyal following in Los Angeles, and it led to a contract with Enigma Records. On August 2, 1986, their first album, ‘Look What the Cat Dragged In’ was released. In time, it reached the No.3 position on the US Billboard 200 and by 1990, was certified 3x Platinum by RIAA. It was also picked as the No.2 in Rolling Stone magazine's list of 50 Greatest Hair Metal Albums of All Time.
In March 1987, while headlining a show at Madison Square Garden, Michaels collapsed on stage. Initially, there were speculations of drug overdose but he revealed to the public that he was a Type 1 diabetic and the collapse was caused by insulin shock.
Michaels began his solo career in 1998. His first album ‘A Letter from Death Row’ was created as a soundtrack for the film of the same name, which he wrote, directed, and starred in.
Subsequently, he released studio albums ‘Songs of Life’ on April 22, 2003, ‘Freedom of Sound’ on January 1, 2005, ‘Custom Built’ on July 6, 2010, and ‘Jammin’ with Friends’ on June 25, 2013; compilation albums ‘Show Me Your Hits’ in 2000, ‘Ballads, Blues & Stories in 2001, ‘Rock My World’ on June 3, 2008, and ‘True Grit’ on May 5, 2015; and extended plays ‘Country Demos’ in 2000 and ‘Bret Michaels: Acoustic Sessions’ in 2008.