‘Yeah, I’m theatrical and I’m proud of it’
Filed Under (interview,tour news ) by Admin on Wednesday, October 20, 2010
Posted at : Wednesday, October 20, 2010
Honolulu, prepare for a glitter tsunami. Adam Lambert, whose performances have been described as brilliant madness, is sweeping into the Aloha State with his Glam Nation Tour.
Honolulu, prepare for a glitter tsunami. Adam Lambert, whose performances have been described as “brilliant madness,” is sweeping into the Aloha State with his Glam Nation Tour. Expect plenty of the aforementioned glitter. And dancing. And smoke and lasers. And most of all, expect to be seduced by a performer whose motto is “More is more.”
No, Lambert is not known for subtlety.
He might also be the busiest man in the universe, as I found while trying to pin down an interview. He is young, just 28, and his life has literally exploded since his attention-grabbing run on American Idol just a year ago. He did not win. It doesn’t matter.
His freshman album, the eclectic pop/rock For Your Entertainment, has sold more than 1 million copies worldwide. His critically acclaimed concert is selling out everywhere he goes. Despite his punishing schedule, when we finally connected via phone Lambert was gracious, articulate and down-to-earth.
“It’s a show, people!”
Lambert arrives in Honolulu smack dab in the middle of the international leg of his tour. He has dazzled audiences across the U.S. Mainland as well as Singapore, Japan, Malaysia, Australia, New Zealand and Hong Kong. After Hawaii, he takes the Glam to Europe.
Lambert had a hand in every part of its creation, he says: “I wanted it to reflect different parts of me.”
And it does. I saw the show in Seattle, and the Glam Nation experience is aurally sumptuous, visually arresting and emotionally exhilarating. Loosely divided into three “acts,” the first pulses with themes of obsession, dominance, sexuality and heartbreak. The second act is an acoustic tour de force, exploring vulnerability, self-awareness and acceptance. His (and our) journey culminates in a beat-driven celebration of music, joy and love. It is, quite simply, a love fest.
What ties it all together is Lambert’s greatest asset - his voice. And it is extraordinary. Critics have described Lambert’s octave-defying voice as operatic, powerful and even sublime.
That voice sets Lambert apart from his contemporaries in the competitive pop world. What propels him even further is his supreme confidence on stage. Lambert exudes a rare combination of vulnerability and alpha-male sex appeal. Beauty and beast combined.
His fans love it. They scream at every hip thrust and shriek approval when he smooches his cute bassist Tommy Joe Ratliff. It’s aggressive, suggestive, but Lambert is the first to tell you he does it with a wink and a nod.
“What I do on stage, it is sexual, but it’s a performance, it’s a show. And women like it,” he says, a hint of bemusement in his voice.
Not just women. Robert Sorenson dragged his wife from Canada to Seattle to see the show: “I made her come here. Oh, I think he’s fantastic, a real showman. I love his voice.”
What I found interesting in Washington was the diversity of Lambert’s fans - teens and grandmas, hipsters and bikers, Goth kids, glittered-up “Glamberts,” military dependents - all mingling and screaming together.
Thirteen-year-old Jaycee gushes, “Adam is a sexy beast and I love him. He means the world. And if I met Adam, I think I would die.”
Next to her, 40-year-old Michelle Deeyoe says, “He seems like a real genuine person, He does-n’t walk over people. I think he’s brave.”
“Don’t worry friends: I’m still gonna be me. Always. Without apologies.”
Lambert may be living the life of a rock star, but in person he is the boy next door. (Well, OK, a glammed up version of the boy next door.) He’s sweet and polite, quick to credit his parents for shaping the values that guide him. Leila and Eber Lambert gave their son a precious gift - an emotional underpinning of acceptance and love that gives him the personal resiliency he draws on to deal with the knocks that come with fame.
“My mother is ... I guess you’d call her a social butterfly,” he says. He learned from her how to deal with people and situations gracefully and with humor. His father, Lambert says, is charismatic and clever, and can walk into a room and command attention. But more importantly, the father was always 100 percent supportive of his son, not a small thing for a boy who realized he was “different” when he was 12 years old.
And that, of course, leads us to what Lambert once jokingly referred to as the “pink elephant in the room.”
“My dreidel spins the other way.” -Adam Lambert on “The View”
Lambert has been “out” since he was 18, and has never concealed his sexual orientation. The speculation while he was on Idol amused and mystified him. But he’s clear about one thing. “I’m not the ‘gay’ singer. I’m a singer.”
But he also understands that he is in a position to help not just kids who are gay, but anyone who feels different or lonely or alienated. He willingly speaks up if he thinks it will help.
I read him the words of the mother of a gay son who e-mailed me a day after Gov. Linda Lingle vetoed Hawaii’s civil unions bill (I’ve changed the name and some of the wording to protect this family’s privacy):
“This week has been very difficult for our family. Our son, Alex, is witty, intelligent and creative. Tonight during the dinner, Alex said that he is a second-class citizen. He left the table. I can’t find words to explain our heartache.”
Short silence, and then Lambert replies: “Well, it is about being second-class citizens. And it is about equality.” Lambert says he fails to understand how people cannot see something so obvious. And while he generally avoids getting involved in politics, he recently recorded a YouTube message for gay teens. The “It Gets Better” site was created in response to the recent rash of teen suicides. His message? Believe in yourself and focus on the positive.
Lambert believes he is making the strongest statement of all by living his life openly, honestly and without apologies. Lambert lives what others preach.
It’s made him a hero to 17-year-old Kris Farrell.
“It’s really important to me because I’m gay. He can show the world, ‘This is who I am, this is me.‘And I can look at that and I can be like, I can do that, too.”
“I don’t know the secret for success, but the secret for failure is to try and please everybody.”
Lambert has said he wants longevity in the music business. But during our conversation he says he wants more ...
“I want to be a game changer.”
He’s about to start work on a new album, and is savvy enough to understand he has to make smart business decisions in order to carve a place for himself on the pop charts.
But, for him, artistic expression - and the music - come first. He has ideas for songs that will “show more sides of myself, more vulnerability.”
There is one thing he will never give up in the name of success. Lambert insists on keeping his life, his relationships and his music as authentic - as real - as possible. That authenticity is what may finally catapult him from successful pop singer to cultural touch-stone.
There is a point of revelation in the concert where Lambert, accompanied only by an acoustic guitar, sits on a darkened stage and sings. Stripped of the plugged-in cacophony of electronics and drums, his voice - unadorned - rings out exquisite and pure into the night.
He wrote the song, Aftermath, about finding love and strength within yourself.
“Wanna scream out, no more hiding,
Don’t be afraid of what’s inside.
Gonna tell ya you’ll be alright
In the Aftermath. Anytime anybody pulls you down, anytime anybody says you’re not allowed,
Just remember you are not alone
In the Aftermath ...”
It is an authentic moment - and beautiful. It says a lot about Adam Mitchell Lambert. He wants to be a game changer. And he will do it honestly, without fear, and by being himself.
Adam Lambert’s Glam Nation Tour at Blaisdell Concert Hall, Oct. 25 and 26. As of this printing, the Oct. 25 show is sold out.
SOURCE
Writer: Jade Moon
Thanks to Glitz and Sparkles for the tip!
Honolulu, prepare for a glitter tsunami. Adam Lambert, whose performances have been described as “brilliant madness,” is sweeping into the Aloha State with his Glam Nation Tour. Expect plenty of the aforementioned glitter. And dancing. And smoke and lasers. And most of all, expect to be seduced by a performer whose motto is “More is more.”
No, Lambert is not known for subtlety.
He might also be the busiest man in the universe, as I found while trying to pin down an interview. He is young, just 28, and his life has literally exploded since his attention-grabbing run on American Idol just a year ago. He did not win. It doesn’t matter.
His freshman album, the eclectic pop/rock For Your Entertainment, has sold more than 1 million copies worldwide. His critically acclaimed concert is selling out everywhere he goes. Despite his punishing schedule, when we finally connected via phone Lambert was gracious, articulate and down-to-earth.
“It’s a show, people!”
Lambert arrives in Honolulu smack dab in the middle of the international leg of his tour. He has dazzled audiences across the U.S. Mainland as well as Singapore, Japan, Malaysia, Australia, New Zealand and Hong Kong. After Hawaii, he takes the Glam to Europe.
Lambert had a hand in every part of its creation, he says: “I wanted it to reflect different parts of me.”
And it does. I saw the show in Seattle, and the Glam Nation experience is aurally sumptuous, visually arresting and emotionally exhilarating. Loosely divided into three “acts,” the first pulses with themes of obsession, dominance, sexuality and heartbreak. The second act is an acoustic tour de force, exploring vulnerability, self-awareness and acceptance. His (and our) journey culminates in a beat-driven celebration of music, joy and love. It is, quite simply, a love fest.
What ties it all together is Lambert’s greatest asset - his voice. And it is extraordinary. Critics have described Lambert’s octave-defying voice as operatic, powerful and even sublime.
That voice sets Lambert apart from his contemporaries in the competitive pop world. What propels him even further is his supreme confidence on stage. Lambert exudes a rare combination of vulnerability and alpha-male sex appeal. Beauty and beast combined.
His fans love it. They scream at every hip thrust and shriek approval when he smooches his cute bassist Tommy Joe Ratliff. It’s aggressive, suggestive, but Lambert is the first to tell you he does it with a wink and a nod.
“What I do on stage, it is sexual, but it’s a performance, it’s a show. And women like it,” he says, a hint of bemusement in his voice.
Not just women. Robert Sorenson dragged his wife from Canada to Seattle to see the show: “I made her come here. Oh, I think he’s fantastic, a real showman. I love his voice.”
What I found interesting in Washington was the diversity of Lambert’s fans - teens and grandmas, hipsters and bikers, Goth kids, glittered-up “Glamberts,” military dependents - all mingling and screaming together.
Thirteen-year-old Jaycee gushes, “Adam is a sexy beast and I love him. He means the world. And if I met Adam, I think I would die.”
Next to her, 40-year-old Michelle Deeyoe says, “He seems like a real genuine person, He does-n’t walk over people. I think he’s brave.”
“Don’t worry friends: I’m still gonna be me. Always. Without apologies.”
Lambert may be living the life of a rock star, but in person he is the boy next door. (Well, OK, a glammed up version of the boy next door.) He’s sweet and polite, quick to credit his parents for shaping the values that guide him. Leila and Eber Lambert gave their son a precious gift - an emotional underpinning of acceptance and love that gives him the personal resiliency he draws on to deal with the knocks that come with fame.
“My mother is ... I guess you’d call her a social butterfly,” he says. He learned from her how to deal with people and situations gracefully and with humor. His father, Lambert says, is charismatic and clever, and can walk into a room and command attention. But more importantly, the father was always 100 percent supportive of his son, not a small thing for a boy who realized he was “different” when he was 12 years old.
And that, of course, leads us to what Lambert once jokingly referred to as the “pink elephant in the room.”
“My dreidel spins the other way.” -Adam Lambert on “The View”
Lambert has been “out” since he was 18, and has never concealed his sexual orientation. The speculation while he was on Idol amused and mystified him. But he’s clear about one thing. “I’m not the ‘gay’ singer. I’m a singer.”
But he also understands that he is in a position to help not just kids who are gay, but anyone who feels different or lonely or alienated. He willingly speaks up if he thinks it will help.
I read him the words of the mother of a gay son who e-mailed me a day after Gov. Linda Lingle vetoed Hawaii’s civil unions bill (I’ve changed the name and some of the wording to protect this family’s privacy):
“This week has been very difficult for our family. Our son, Alex, is witty, intelligent and creative. Tonight during the dinner, Alex said that he is a second-class citizen. He left the table. I can’t find words to explain our heartache.”
Short silence, and then Lambert replies: “Well, it is about being second-class citizens. And it is about equality.” Lambert says he fails to understand how people cannot see something so obvious. And while he generally avoids getting involved in politics, he recently recorded a YouTube message for gay teens. The “It Gets Better” site was created in response to the recent rash of teen suicides. His message? Believe in yourself and focus on the positive.
Lambert believes he is making the strongest statement of all by living his life openly, honestly and without apologies. Lambert lives what others preach.
It’s made him a hero to 17-year-old Kris Farrell.
“It’s really important to me because I’m gay. He can show the world, ‘This is who I am, this is me.‘And I can look at that and I can be like, I can do that, too.”
“I don’t know the secret for success, but the secret for failure is to try and please everybody.”
Lambert has said he wants longevity in the music business. But during our conversation he says he wants more ...
“I want to be a game changer.”
He’s about to start work on a new album, and is savvy enough to understand he has to make smart business decisions in order to carve a place for himself on the pop charts.
But, for him, artistic expression - and the music - come first. He has ideas for songs that will “show more sides of myself, more vulnerability.”
There is one thing he will never give up in the name of success. Lambert insists on keeping his life, his relationships and his music as authentic - as real - as possible. That authenticity is what may finally catapult him from successful pop singer to cultural touch-stone.
There is a point of revelation in the concert where Lambert, accompanied only by an acoustic guitar, sits on a darkened stage and sings. Stripped of the plugged-in cacophony of electronics and drums, his voice - unadorned - rings out exquisite and pure into the night.
He wrote the song, Aftermath, about finding love and strength within yourself.
“Wanna scream out, no more hiding,
Don’t be afraid of what’s inside.
Gonna tell ya you’ll be alright
In the Aftermath. Anytime anybody pulls you down, anytime anybody says you’re not allowed,
Just remember you are not alone
In the Aftermath ...”
It is an authentic moment - and beautiful. It says a lot about Adam Mitchell Lambert. He wants to be a game changer. And he will do it honestly, without fear, and by being himself.
Adam Lambert’s Glam Nation Tour at Blaisdell Concert Hall, Oct. 25 and 26. As of this printing, the Oct. 25 show is sold out.
SOURCE
Writer: Jade Moon
Thanks to Glitz and Sparkles for the tip!
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25 comments:
Tonight I'm going to pour myself some wine and raise my glass to author Jade Moon. This may be the best article I've read on Adam Lambert ever... Jade Moon not gushing, not snarky, but rather, to use the word Jade so fittingly applied to Adam, AUTHENTIC, reporting authentically, how very refreshing.
MGF
@MGF. I couldn't agree more. This was a PLEASURE to read. I just love it!! Go Jade!!!
We should comment on the SOURSE. I am going to now.
IF
Ditto, excellent, me, too! Thank you, Jade! TE
It would appear we're all in agreement. Much thanks, Jade Moon
Finally - someone gets it. They get Adam Lambert. I am so proud of him and proud to be a forever fan. Thank you Jade Moon!
nancdruuu2
OK, so I may be JUST a bit biased - but this was the BEST article I've ever read on Adam. Truly. This woman gets it. She captured everything about him in a un-biased, balanced way...and it's obvious she appreciated his undeniable talent!!!!!!!
THANK YOU!!!!!!!!
- Adam Fix
What a wonderful article. Reading the words from Aftermath brought tears to my eyes. I would love for Adam to do an acoustic version of this song.
Best article ever. Agree completely with everything written! So thrilled to read positive reviews about Adam! Adamluv
Bravo, Jade Moon!
Kentucky Fan
Oh what a lovely article :D. She really understands what Adam is all about :). Love it!
I read it this morning and it made my day. So good! And the australian article about Adams concert and tounge diving was humorous and easy going(is that the right expression?). They didn´t seem to think he offended anyone and there was no outrage. Bless you Australia! Has anyone seen any reaction from the US? Or do they pretend he doesn´t excist as usual?
Eva
perfect!
Thank you Jesus! Finally an article that is poignant and spot on.
I'm with you MGF, wine it is!
As a former Hawaii resident, I am proud of Jade and her very exquisite writing. I am however, saddened by Gov. Lingle's vetoing the civil union bill (she is an "elephant" after all).
This article makes me sad I'm missing the Hawaii shows.
PRS
Jade Moon, you are so right! And I'm so glad you wrote this amazing article, giving to sweet Adam all the credits he deserves! Thank you so much!
I loved the «beauty and beast combined», yeahhh, THE whole package of umbelievable singing quality!!!!! That's my Diamond Boy who you are talking about!
Fan4fun
Jade Moon has so eloquently said what we have all been saying in bits and pieces since day one. She captured his uniqueness and personality. Thank you Jade Moon for your lovely words.
All I can say is that I agree with all of you that this is the best ever article. I have tears in my eyes. Thank you Jade Moon and 24/7 for posting. Does anyone know how to personally thank Jade Moon?
Click on SOURCE above her name in this article.
This will take you to the Mid Week Magazine or go directly to: http://www.midweek.com/content/story/midweek_coverstory/Adam_Lambert/
You should be able to comment there. When I got my copy of this week's magazine, I was ecstactic over her article and proud that she is from our beautiful state. She did such a great job.
i am almost in tears and having goose pimples while reading this article, well written and full of facts. adam, i love you more and wish you all the best in your endeavor to spread equality, acceptance and love throughout the entire universe. it will not be easy but you are brave, sincere and honest, surely, you will get there.
Oh my goodness that was an amazing article written about my hero Adam Lambert. He is a hero in a sense that he moves mountains with his voice and his kindness, also with his strength and tac. The person that wrote this has my respect, my gratefulness, my tears of joy, my hope for a better tomarrow. God Bless you and may your voice be heard by so many with open arms. Cheers to a better day today and tomarrow!
It is unfortunate that we need mountain movers in this day and age, but we do. Adam is making us aware, and at times it is difficult to take it in, but he will continue to shine that beacon of light into our eyes until we all believe. Thank you Ms. Moon.
Finally an article that mentions the lyrics of the song "Aftermath" ... that is so relevant to the recent teenage bullying problems... Very nice and inspiring article... Usually Adam Lambert does not really talk about the people in his close environment in interviews... Maybe there is something about the interviewer that he likes. Maybe her questions, maybe something else...And I think he will like the interviewer even more if he reads her article...
A big Mahalo to Jade Moon. We adore Adam in Hawaii and in this culture, we accept our gay men and women. No one ever makes a fuss.
I am going to the Honolulu show and will watch Adam get LEI'D. They will shower him with flower lei as we do everyone that comes to our state. We will show him Aloha like he's never seen.
Jade, thank you for your intelligence and heart!!!
Aloha nui loa!!!!! Can't WAIT for Adam!!!!!
Totally agree with everyone here. Another excellent article from someone who has experienced a GNT and who understands Adam.One that acknowledges the VOICE and Adam's dedication to his craft.Very factual and certainly not condescending.
A big hug to Jade Moon! Thank you so much.
Bing
Ditto to all of you.
The best article ever.
And the "Beauty and beast combined" part took my breath away......so true....makes me think of the ending of that gorgeous and haunting Stevie Nicks song "Beauty and the Beast":
"...my beauty, my beauty, my beautiful, beautiful, beautiful, beautiful beast..."
That's my beloved Adam all right....
:)
Sweetie
Finally, the best article ever written about adam. Thank-you so much Jade! There wasn't anything you left out about Adam, you truly get it!
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