Ryan Peake
- Post-grunge
- hard rock
- pop rock
- alternative rock
- alternative metal
- Musician
- singer
- songwriter
- Guitar
- vocals
- keyboards
- piano
Ryan Anthony Peake (born March 1, 1973)[1] is a Canadian musician, singer and songwriter who is best known as the rhythm guitarist, keyboardist, and backing vocalist of the Canadian rock band Nickelback. He has been with the band since their inception and is best known for his prominent vocals on the Nickelback songs "Savin' Me", "Hollywood", and "Gotta Be Somebody". He has performed lead vocals on a range of different cover songs at live Nickelback concerts such as "Saturday Night's Alright for Fighting", "Use Somebody", "I Ran", "Everlong" and "Super Bon Bon". When Nickelback performs Chad Kroeger's solo hit "Hero" live, Ryan sings the vocal parts originally performed by Josey Scott.[2] Peake has writing credits for several Nickelback songs such as "Someday", "Savin' Me", "Miss You", and "Edge of a Revolution". Peake's instruments have included Gibson Flying Vs, Gibson Explorers, and Gibson Les Pauls.[2][3] When Nickelback performs their song "Photograph", he uses an acoustic guitar once owned by his father.[2]
Peake "grew up with solid metal", listing such bands as Anthrax, Megadeth, and Metallica as early favorites.[4] He subsequently grew interested in Canadian country rock group Blue Rodeo, mentioning that their music "really got me thinking about what fits together. Chord-wise, melody-wise, where harmonies feel good and feel right."[4] Along with brothers Chad and Mike Kroeger, Peake cofounded Village Idiot, a cover band with a playlist consisting primarily of Metallica songs. The band mostly played in bars in and around Peake and the Kroegers' hometown of Hanna, Alberta, Canada. Later, the group reformed as Nickelback and Peake was responsible for the early funding of the band, borrowing $30,000 from a local bank on a line of credit.[5] Early in his career, Peake primarily played Fender Telecasters.[2]
Peake is married to Treana Peake, a Mount Pleasant, Vancouver-based fashion designer and philanthropist, actively involved in her charity-based fashion company, Obakki.[6] The couple met in high school and have two children together.[6][7] Peake tests new music he's working on with his wife, son, daughter, and brother.[4]
Discography
References
- ^ Apar, Corey. "Ryan Peake". AllMusic. Retrieved March 3, 2015.
- ^ a b c d "Ryan Peake, Nickelback". EMG Pickups. EMG, Inc. Retrieved March 5, 2015.
- ^ Erickson, Anne (March 4, 2015). "Nickelback's Ryan Peake Says Reliability is Key with Gibson". Gibson Guitar Corporation. Retrieved March 5, 2015.
- ^ a b c Book, Ryan (February 25, 2015). "Nickelback's Ryan Peake on Dodging Wikipedia, Building 'Circles of Doom' and Battling U2 for Most Loathed". Music Times. Retrieved March 5, 2015.
- ^ Paynter, Ben (November 8, 2012). "Genius: The Nickelback Story". Bloomberg Business. p. 2. Retrieved March 5, 2015.
- ^ a b Rino, Luisa (September 1, 2011). "Designer Spotlight: Treana Peake". Vancouver Magazine. Archived from the original on April 2, 2015. Retrieved March 5, 2015.
- ^ Talmazan, Yuliya (March 31, 2013). "Vancouver fashion label Obakki turns 100 per cent humanitarian". Global News. Retrieved March 5, 2015.
External links
- Ryan Peake at IMDb
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- Chad Kroeger
- Ryan Peake
- Mike Kroeger
- Daniel Adair
- Brandon Kroeger
- Mitch Guindon
- Ryan Vikedal
- Curb (1996)
- The State (1998)
- Silver Side Up (2001)
- The Long Road (2003)
- All the Right Reasons (2005)
- Dark Horse (2008)
- Here and Now (2011)
- No Fixed Address (2014)
- Feed the Machine (2017)
- Get Rollin' (2022)
- Hesher (1996)
- Three #1's + The First One Live (2002)
- "Leader of Men"
- "Breathe"
- "How You Remind Me"
- "Too Bad"
- "Never Again"
- "Someday"
- "Figured You Out"
- "Feelin' Way Too Damn Good"
- "Because of You"
- "Photograph"
- "Animals"
- "Far Away"
- "Savin' Me"
- "Rockstar"
- "If Everyone Cared"
- "Side of a Bullet"
- "Gotta Be Somebody"
- "Something in Your Mouth"
- "If Today Was Your Last Day"
- "I'd Come for You"
- "Burn It to the Ground"
- "Never Gonna Be Alone"
- "Shakin' Hands"
- "This Afternoon"
- "When We Stand Together"
- "Bottoms Up"
- "This Means War"
- "Lullaby"
- "Trying Not to Love You"
- "Edge of a Revolution"
- "What Are You Waiting For?"
- "Million Miles an Hour"
- "She Keeps Me Up"
- "Satellite"
- "Get 'Em Up"
- "Dirty Laundry"
- "Feed the Machine"
- "Song on Fire"
- "After the Rain"
- "The Devil Went Down to Georgia"
- "San Quentin"
- Live at Home (2002)
- Live at Sturgis 2006 (2008)
- Awards and nominations
- Discography
- Songs
- Hate to Love: Nickelback
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