Birthname: Adele Laurie Blue Adkins
Nationality: English
Born: May 05 1988 (24 years old)
Nationality: English
Born: May 05 1988 (24 years old)
Community
Adele is the latest graduate from the BRIT School for performing arts
in London, which has so far spawned successful singers such as Amy
Winehouse, Leona Lewis and Kate Nash. After Winehouse’s huge success,
Adele was fast-tracked to the charts thanks to her similar
soul-influenced sound.
London-born Adele Adkins was singing and
writing songs from a young age, making her an ideal applicant for the
BRIT School. Thanks to the international success of Amy Winehouse in
2007, similar singers such as Adele and Duffy were soon sought by record
labels, leading to Adele earning a contract with XL. Her first single,
“Hometown Glory”, reached the Top 40, but her profile earned a massive
boost when a BBC-run critics poll to find the stars of 2008 put Adele at
the top. She also won a BRIT Award that was specially created to
recognise up-and-coming stars. Subsequently, her second single “Chasing
Pavements” reached No.2 on the UK charts, and her debut album 19 reached No.1.
Artist
In 2009, the British singer-songwriter-performer Adele took home a
pair of Grammy Awards--including Best New Artist--for 19, a highly
acclaimed debut album of songs which introduced a new and authentic
young voice to the world, expressing the bittersweet turbulence of
adolescence awakening into adulthood.
With 21, one of 2011's most
anticipated releases, Adele comes of age with her second album, a
collection of deeply personal songs, finely wrought and powerfully
delivered, which communicate the power and glory of real love and real
heartbreak through a range of musical moods and settings.
From the
album's first single, "Rolling In The Deep," co-written with producer
Paul Epworth and described by Adele as "a dark bluesy gospel disco
tune," through the fiery rumble of "Rumour Has It" to the orchestral
builds of "Turning Tables," the mysterious pop imagery of "Set Fire To
The Rain," the gospel-tinged "One and Only" and the tear-stained
resignation of "Someone Like You," co-written with Grammy-winner and
track-producer Dan Wilson, Adele's 21 is a musical and emotional tour de
force, a portrait of the artist as a young woman coming into her own.
All
of the album's tracks, with the exception of a cool acoustic guitar
rendition of The Cure's "Lovesong," were written by Adele over the
course of a year, with the help of her musical collaborators: Paul
Epworth ("Rolling In The Deep," "He Won't Go," "I'll Be Waiting"), Ryan
Tedder ("Rumour Has It," "Turning Tables," ), Dan Wilson ("Don't You
Remember," "One and Only," "Someone Like You"), Fraser T. Smith ("Set
Fire To The Rain"), Francis White ("Take It All"), and Greg Wells ("One
and Only"). The main of 21 was cut in Malibu with producer Rick Rubin
(Johnny Cash, Jay Z, Red Hot Chili Peppers) and in Kensal Rise in London
with Paul Epworth (Plan B, Bloc Party, Florence and the Machine).
Among
the strengths and allure of 21 is the chance to get closer to the real
Adele. "I think I come across moody and serious with my music," she
says, "but, in real life, I'm sarcastic and very cheeky. I really
wanted at least one song on this album that was representative of me as a
girl, as a person. I don't think the playful me came across on the
first album. It's important to show growth and development."
Drawing
inspiration from her own life, Adele says, "I had the most poignant
relationship in between these two records. I feel really blessed and
lucky I was given that relationship and able to have it. Sometimes when
I meet artists, they don't seem to have any reality in their lives.
It's completely in a bubble that's not allowed to be burst. I'm just
screaming for my bubble to be burst. I met him and he was brilliant, it
was a really great relationship and it went sour, obviously, because I
made a bitchy record about him (laughs). He made me really passionate
for myself, for him, for love, for life, for food, for wine, for film,
for politics, architecture, traveling which I hate--I hate flying and
stuff like that. He made me really really interested in just being
alive, which I hadn't felt yet. It was incredible. When I was
promoting 19, I thought, 'What the hell am I going to write about?
Hotels? Air miles? I was very very lucky that life intervened."
As
much as 21 is about love's rocky road, it's also about finding peace in
life's turmoil’s. "That's what the record is about," says Adele, "and
I'm just more forgiving because of it."
Adele loved working with
the top-flight producers, including Rick Rubin, who helped her create
21. "In the studio it was brilliant," she says, "the band Rick put
together was amazing. It's all about the song. We could've been in
1920 or we could've been in 2060. It was all about the music, all about
the song. We weren't referring to anything that was going on that was
popular or successful or relevant at that particular moment in time. It
didn't even occur to us about the glitter that you pour on something
afterward or how you're going to market and promote it and the video or
the styling or the remixes or duets or something, It was just about the
music which is completely overwhelming to be given the opportunity to
make a record like this so early on in my career."
Adele began
prepping for 21 during her American tours promoting 19. Her tour-bus
driver turned her on to a deep well of Americana, music from Nashville,
"amazing country and blues and rockabilly and bluegrass and gospel."
Adele was introduced to the music of Wanda Jackson who had a "massive
effect, couldn't help it, it rubbed off on me" and the electrifying
echoes of the "Angel with the Dirty Mouth" can be heard reverberating
through Adele's "Rolling In The Deep" and "Rumour Has It."
Adele
began to trace American country music past the obvious mainstream into
more esoteric nooks. "Country is not a big deal in England," she says.
"It's more of a niche thing.”
Adele, who used to "put on a song
to cry to or laugh to or get ready to go out to," began to listen to
music in a new, more profound sense. "I was literally swimming in music
for a whole solid month," she admits. "Locked myself in my flat and
just listened to music for the first time. Etta James and stuff like
that. . I became obsessed with hip-hop, rappers and MCs and lyrical
poets...manipulate words and make them rhyme or make a really mundane
thing seem like the most incredibly exciting euphoric thing, you know
what I mean?"
Between 19 and 21 lies a lifetime of experiences for Adele. "So much happened in my career," she says. "It shattered all my expectations. No one was really expecting anything when I was signed, so that everything, whenever something happens, it surpasses what I was expecting."
Born in London on May 5, 1988, Adele (née
Adele Adkins) released her first single in October 2007. "Hometown
Glory," a song she'd written at age 16 in response to her mother's
suggestion she leave London to attend university, would go on to earn a
Grammy nomination.
In December 2007, Adele became the first
recipient of the Brit Awards' newly inaugurated Critics Choice prize,
presented to the year's most significant artist who, at that time, had
yet to release an album. She was also honored as the winner of BBC
Music's Sound of 2008 poll – a consortium of UK music critics, editors
and broadcasters – as the most promising new musical artist likely to
emerge in the upcoming year.
The early predictions of Adele's
success were superseded by the chart success and sales performance of 19
and its hit singles -- "Chasing Pavements," "Hometown Glory," "Cold
Shoulder," and her version of Bob Dylan's "Make You Feel My Love" -- and
sold-out concert performances including a headline slot at the
Hollywood Bowl in front of 19,000 fans.
The line between 19 and 21
is crucial juncture in most lifetimes and we are fortunate to have an
artist of Adele's acuity and grace on-hand to give voice to those
universal transformations. "To me," she says, "music is all about
relating. I would never dare write a song about success or anything to
do with my career, because it doesn't happen to many people. What I
love about music is when I'm totally convinced that someone has written a
song about me even if it was written 80 years before I was born. I
would love it if someone felt that about one of my songs and I love it
when people go 'I thought you were inside my heart or inside my head,
you know exactly what I'm feeling."
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