In the early '90s, American music industry executives strongly advised him to change his name in order to avoid any confusion with new rap artists
Ice-T,
Ice Cube and
Vanilla Ice. However, with a strong gay following, Bedard decided to keep using his stage name, performing notably at the 1992
Los Angeles Gay Pride, the notorious
Whisky a Go Go, as well as
Prince’s Glam Slam, backed by dancers
Viktor Manoel (from
David Bowie’s 'Glass Spider' tour), Luca Tommassini and
Carrie Ann Inaba (from
Madonna’s 'Girlie Show' tour). He also performed acoustic sets with American actor
Robert Consoli on guitar. Ending a series of concerts with a five-piece rock band at
The Roxy Theatre in Los Angeles, Bedard’s actual last appearance under the name Norman Iceberg was on the syndicated TV show ''Sheena Metal's Freakin' Rock Review'' in 1993. He also recorded as Norman Joseph in 1994 before deciding to go back to using Norman Bedard, his last birth name. Committed to his craft, and now on his own, Norman Bedard continued writing songs, working with collaborators such as Kevin Komoda (Rational Youth,
Sarah McLachlan), and self-produced several pre-prod albums not available commercially, which revealed a more subdued side. Bedard’s newer material, recorded in various studios, offered the sound of a simple and mature man embracing life. With his goal of easing our souls, he termed his new music "zen pop". In November 2007, Norman announced via his website that a brand new album scheduled for release in 2008 was in the works. The album was confirmed to be titled
Vital on March 9, 2009, with a release date set for Spring 2009.
Vital, and a remastered version of
We Act were both released simultaneously on July 15, 2009. "Wonderful" was the first single from
Vital, released on March 2, 2010. Also released on the same date was Norman Iceberg's "Crawl" (Alternate Version), originally recorded in the 1990s at
Men Without Hats’ home studio. On June 1, 2010, Bedard released the second single from his
Vital album, "A Day With My Self", described by Richard Morris of
Pink Paper as a "folky ditty". It was followed with the release of Norman Iceberg's
1+1=2, also recorded in the 1990s at Men Without Hats’ home studio and newly remastered in 2010. The following single, "Thank You", was released on October 4, 2010. Following this, Bedard gave us "Sleepytime". Adrian Cooke, in a review for
Maverick, called "Sleepytime" "a pop-flavoured song", saying "this is a gentle lullaby with sensitive vocal assisted by ethereal harmonies. Quality stuff". Norman's next single "Space" was released on February 8, 2011. Writer Jack Foley of
IndieLondon called "Space" a "chilled pop record" and "the sort of offering that has an instant catchy appeal to it". ==References==