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"Should I give up/or should I just keep chasing
pavements/Even if it leads nowhere" "Chasing
Pavements"
The minute you hear that voice, the hair stands up on
the back of your neck and you realize this is someone
special.
She's just 19, but Adele Laurie Blue Adkins-you can call
her simply Adele-sings like a woman three times her age,
a soul sensation in her native U.K. who is poised to conquer
America with 19, her debut album, which comes out in the
States on XL /Columbia Records after debuting at #1 in
the British charts.
The first single, "Chasing Pavements," a #2
hit in the U.K., characterizes her autobiographical approach,
written after a brawl in a London club with her boyfriend,
which sent her fleeing out the door onto Oxford Street.
"I hate making people feel awkward and I hate feeling
awkward, so I just left, but he didn't follow me,"
she explains. "I was running down these gigantic,
wide sidewalks that stretch for miles, thinking to myself,
'Where are you going? What are you doing? You're just
chasing pavements…that you're never going to catch.' Then,
I went straight home and wrote the song."
Brash, wise beyond her years, but down-to-earth and focused,
Adele was raised by a single mom to whom she's devoted
in the racially mixed, working-class London neighborhoods
of Tottenham and Brixton, where she worshiped pop idols
like Backstreet Boys, the Spice Girls, Take That and Britney
Spears, not daring to dream one day she might follow in
their footsteps to stardom herself.
"I didn't realize this was something I could do
until I got my record deal," Adele admits. "I
taught myself how to sing by listening to Ella Fitzgerald
for acrobatics and scales, Etta James for passion and
Roberta Flack for control."
You can hear Ella's scats in "My Same," Flack's
flair for sensuous melody in Adele's version of Bob Dylan's
"Make You Feel My Love" from his Grammy-winning
Time Out of Mind and James' slow-burning urgency in "Melt
My Heart to Stone." But there's also plenty of Adele
in songs like "Tired," where she reveals an
otherwise hidden working-class British accent, "When
I don't get nuffin' back."
Although she went to the same performing arts school
in Croydon that Amy Winehouse, Leona Lewis and Kate Nash
did, Adele is no pop tart, one-hit wonder, American Idol
finalist or the puppet of some svengali producer. She's
an original, with a vocal style and personal charisma
that is all about human warmth, honesty and embracing
the audience.
"I have to believe what I'm singing about,"
she says. "That's how you connect with songs. And
that's what seems to have paved the way for me in the
U.K. and Europe. People can relate to me. They believe
me. I'm not some sort of concoction. I'm accessible. You
can come up to me and go, 'Hi,' and I'll be, like, 'Hi'
back."
Together, the songs on 19 compose a diary of a year in
Adele's life, one that began with her deciding to stay
in London rather than attend university in Liverpool,
which led her to write "Hometown Glory," a paean
to the city and her cherished memories of growing up there.
And while insistent she knows little about politics, the
verse, "I like it in the city when two words collide/You
get the people and the government/Everybody taking different
sides," was about her taking part in a post-9/11
protest march against the Iraq war.
"It was just such a moment, to see all these people
come together to stand against something," she says.
"There were these mohawk punks next to rude-boy kids
in hoodies. It was great to be a part of."
"Hometown Glory" was the first song she wrote
for the album and it came after an argument with her mother
about whether to leave London for Liverpool-which her
mom thought best to teach her to stand on her own-or remain
home, where she was surrounded by things that made her
feel comfortable.
"The song is about wherever you're from, being able
to walk past a bus stop, a clothing store, a restaurant,
a bar or a coffee shop and have your memories of them,"
she says.
"Daydreamer" tells the story of her falling
in love with a longtime friend she knew was bisexual.
"I had no problem with that," she laughs. "But
I get so jealous anyway and I can't fight off girls and
boys. When I told him that, he said not to worry. Two
hours later, he was kissing my gay best friend next door."
Adele calls "Melt My Heart to Stone" her favorite
song on the album. "I just love singing it. When
I wrote it, I was crying," she explains. "The
song is about breaking up a relationship."
Her manager, a Dylan fan, tried to get her to cover "Make
You Feel My Love" for a year before she agreed, eventually
coming to believe it was written for her. "The song
is so convincing," she says. "But when I first
heard it, I couldn't understand the lyrics. When I finally
read them, I thought they were amazing. The song just
kind of sums up that sour point in my life I've been trying
to get out of my system and write into my songs. It completes
the shape of the album, which is not sad, but bitter."
The latest in the current spate of talented female singer-songwriters
emerging from the U.K. scene, Adele was the first recipient
of the Brit Awards' newly inaugurated Critics Choice prize
last December even before her debut album was released.
She was also honored as the winner of BBC Music's Sound
of 2008 poll of music critics, editors and broadcasters,
as the most promising new musical artist likely to emerge
this year.
Her first U.S. performances in New York and Los Angles
this spring sold out just on the basis of a mention on
her MySpace page, which has received more than 2 million
profile views and 2.2 million plays since it was launched
on New Year's Eve 2004.
And while American success is important to her, Adele
insists it doesn't mean more than winning over audiences
around the world.
"I want as many people as possible to hear my music,"
she says. "I want to do well in Europe, Asia and
Australia. It's so weird to come all this way to do shows
and have them sell out. It's ridiculous and amazing how
many people want to talk to me."
Adele admits she's the kind of person who feels incomplete
without a relationship, but for now, she's burying her
sorrows in between performances with soda and Cheetos…
and refuses to obsess over her weight, either.
"I love food and hate exercise," she laughs.
"I don't have time to work out. Go buy my record;
then I'll be able to lose weight. I actually don't care.
I don't want to be on the cover of Playboy or Vogue. I
want to be on the cover of Rolling Stone or Q. I'm not
a trend-setter… I'm a singer. I never want to be known
for anything else. I'd rather weigh a ton and make an
amazing album then look like Nicole Richie and do a shit
album. My aim in life is never to be skinny."
Don't expect Adele to fall into the trap of living the
blues to sing them, though.
"With this album, I had to be feeling quite sorry
for myself to be creative," she says. "When
I tried to write about fictional stuff, made-up stories
or other people's problems, I couldn't do it. But who
knows? My second album might be really happy."
All you need to know about Adele can be learned from
her live performances, accompanied by just a piano or
an acoustic guitar, with a one-of-a-kind voice that conveys
a rainbow of emotions, from sorrow to triumph, longing
to sensuality, solitude to solidarity, a blues-soul hybrid
steeped in the past, yet fully alive in the moment.
"I get really scared right before I go on-stage,
but as soon as I'm there, I love it," she says. "I
feel more at ease performing then when I'm walking down
the street. I love entertaining people. It's a huge deal
that people pay their hard-earned money, no matter how
much or little, to spend an hour of their day to come
and watch me. I don't take that responsibility lightly."
Remember the name: Adele. After listening to her debut
album 19, you won't forget the voice.
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