Archive for category Interviews

Adam Lambert – ‘Idol Supernova’ interview to MSN Music

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Adam gave an interview to MSN Music recently, the subject was mainly his new album. Fragments below, the full interview is under this link.

MSN Music: What do you want people to learn about you from listening to this album?

Adam Lambert: I want people to realize that I don’t always take myself that seriously and that I have a good time, and that music should be fun and delightful and [make you want] to play dress up and feel sexy and flirt and feel good about yourself. There are other tracks on the album that are vulnerable and personal that I wrote from experience and that, hopefully, are an insight to who I am as a person.

How important was it to you that people see you as a songwriter, not just as a singer?

It is really important. Obviously, it adds a lot of credibility to what we do. Doing musicals onstage is great, but I have nothing to do with the actual writing of it or the choices that were being made. I really wanted to have my own art and something that I could interpret at will. When you write your own song, it’s like “This is me. This is Adam. This is not some character that I’m playing.”

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Adam Lambert on PopLab – interview will air 12/7/2009 – excerpts

NewNowNext

According to Logo Online/NewNowNext’s gay blog, Adam made recently an interview for PopLab, which will be aired on the 7th of December at 7 pm. (As non-US person, I have no idea however on which US channel it will air…)
Excerpts from the interview:

Lambert explained how he’s feeling about the current fuss about his allegedly oversexed TV performance. You’ll have to watch PopLab on Monday, December 7th at 7pm for the full deal, but basically Adam said: “The AMA show was meant to be fun, and the song’s about sex, so why not go for it.” Ya dig?
“The show wasn’t meant to piss people off, it was just meant to be outrageous,” Lambert said. “Why do people take it seriously? Obviously, I didn’t.”
But more importantly, Lambert stressed that gay performers are held to a weird double-standard where they’re not allowed to get sensual or sexual on stage, in a way that even female performers like Madonna, or Christina or even Britney Spears can. “Because I’m a gay guy, I can’t do that? It’s discrimination.
Go Adam. Tell it!!!

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Adam Lambert interviewed to TV Guide Magazine – video

Adam about all the current topics: ‘For Your Entertainment’ album, Lady Gaga, Ellen as judge in American Idol, himself as a possible mentor on the show…

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Adam Lambert and Kris Allen on the cover of Billboard magazine 11/28/09

The next issue of Billboard Magazine will feature Adam Lambert and Kris Allen on the cover as well as inside the magazine.
We read that there will be ‘special feature on Adam Lambert (…) plus, extra features on American Idol winner Kris Allen and contestant Allison Iraheta.’
Clearly, the press does not even hide that they are concentrating on Adam and nobody seems to remember that Danny Gokey was actually at the 3rd place…

billboard

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Adam under making the video to ‘For Your Entertainment’ – coverage by AccessHollywood

Just for the record, as I believe all have already seen it…
Adam under making music video to ‘For Your Entertainment’ featured by Nancy (Shoe Size) O’Dell:

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Adam Lambert, ‘I’m not saying, ‘Do what I do.’ I say, ‘Do what you do.’ – feature by USA Today

This article has been published on 20 11. 2009 and written by Dan MacMedan in USA Today.
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About RCA and making album

“RCA and 19 were supportive from the get-go and let me steer the ship,” he says. “I’ve seen Idols make albums that didn’t resemble what they did on the show at all. I didn’t want to make that mistake. It was important that we incorporate glam rock and a lot of ’70s stuff, but I wanted to mix in contemporary pop-electronica elements, too.”

About the 70′ies

“People had a good time in the ’70s,” he says. “They were dancing and partying and loving on each other. There was a positive energy, and the music reflected that. And from a technical standpoint, I’m one of those singers. I know my voice is a throwback.”

and further we read that ‘whether Lambert connects with today’s pop and rock fans remains to be seen. “Glambert,” as Perez Hilton dubbed him (wait! it is not quite true, as Perez was not the author of Adam’s nickname, but the very first group of fans at americanidol.com!), fills celebrity blogs and magazines and has sold 997,000 tracks since his Idol rise, according to Nielsen SoundScan.

Ryan Tedder about Adam Lambert

he fills a void with “glam rock, the whole Depeche Mode/Ziggy Stardust kind of vibe,” says OneRepublic singer/songwriter Ryan Tedder, who co-wrote and produced the album’s Sleepwalker. “If he plays his cards right, he could be the male Lady Gaga. But it doesn’t mean anything if he doesn’t have hits. With the Idol machine, once the artists get off tour, they have two months to put together a debut. It’s such a time crunch. But Adam has a vision, and he handpicked every song. He does have hits.”For lack of a better term, he has the X factor. I think Adam is a star.”"


About possible difficulties with being a gay star

“People who can’t appreciate an entertainer because of his sexual preference are ignorant, so I don’t care,” he says.

“I decided to own that. That’s me. I’m not ashamed. But I didn’t want to label myself yet. I didn’t want to feed the fire and have it become so sensationalized. I wanted the focus on my entertainment value, not my personal life. It was scary. I had never been on national TV.”
I don’t want to be a gay poster child, but I am by default, because there aren’t that many. Like it or not, it’s projected on me. I’m not saying, ‘Do what I do.’ I say, ‘Do what you do.’ “


About his selv-esteem problems in High School

“I never wore full-on eyeliner in high school, but I wanted to,” he says. “I wanted to wear nail polish so bad, but I was afraid to. I was afraid to express myself for a while. I didn’t feel attractive in high school. I had self-esteem issues into my early 20s. I was a little overweight, I had skin problems. As I learned to feel attractive from the inside out, my self-worth got better.”

Greg Wells about Adam

“Adam definitely did not fall off the potato truck,” says Wells, who produced and co-wrote several Entertainment tracks. “He’s a breath of fresh air. There hasn’t been anyone who’s brought that ’70s eccentric over-the-top operatic thing to a stage in a while. A lot of people on the charts are stylists but not great singers. He’s lucky to be both.”
“He’s already become iconic to so many kids,” Wells adds. “When I was in high school in the mid-’80s, I used to get beat up just because my best friend was obviously gay. Had there been someone like Adam on prime-time TV, it would have changed the playing field. To kids who feel they’re different, straight or gay, it has to be so inspiring to see someone like Adam triumph in such a big and cool way. I’m rooting for him.”

Inspiring others

“Even though it’s called For Your Entertainment, there are tracks meant to inspire and heal,” he says. “Even Strut, which is campy, is about owning your own beauty, walking your own walk. When you learn to let it all hang out, that’s how you find love. Aftermath is similar: Don’t be afraid of who you are or of what people say. Broken Open is a recurring theme in my life. I’ve known people who were cool socially, but when we got close, they’d fall apart. I’d think, am I a therapist? I guess I was offering some safety. The song says it’s OK, break apart, be a wreck, I’ll hold the pieces together.”


About his personal life

“My life has changed so much, I’m not sure what my needs are anymore,” he says. “At the moment, it’s probably difficult to have a relationship. I’m going to be doing a lot of growing in the next couple years. I’ve only been in two relationships, and really, really in love just one time. That’s one part of my life I’m learning about – my heart.”

Adam’s favorites (collected by Edna Gundersen):
Film: Todd Haynes’ Velvet Goldmine

Books: Michael Chabon’s The Mysteries of Pittsburgh and The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay; Bret Easton Ellis’ Glamorama

TV addictions: Weeds, Californication, Dexter, True Blood

Hippest designer: Britain’s avant-garde Gareth Pugh, (“He does really punk-Goth spacey
stuff with metal and spikes. It looks fun to wear.”)

Top shops: J. Ransom, American Rag, Diesel

Finest cuisine: Thai, sushi, Mexican (“I love all food!”)

Coolest cocktail: Vodka martini with a twist

First celebrity crush: Leonardo DiCaprio in Romeo + Juliet

Fantasy destination: Greece

Dream collaborator: Prince or Madonna

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Adam Lambert at AMAs 2009 – behind the scenes compiled coverage

Adam excercising his steps with the group of dancers before AMAs go on air tomorrow, 22 Nov 2009.
The vid from 18 Nov.

Another video,

and the one made by ET.com, where he also comment on the recent controversy with ‘Out’ magazine

and the AMAs interview with Adam after the rehearsal

amas reh

and some press:
USA Today:

Lambert, 27, said he’s eager to see how the star-studded crowd responds to his provocative performance, a sexed-up rendition of For Your Entertainment, the first single off his upcoming album of the same name.
“I can’t wait to see people I look up to as artists in the audience watching. I think that will be a trip, and exciting and motivating all at the same time,” he said after his rehearsal.
“It will be really interesting to see what kind of reaction the number gets. It’s different. It really does have an edge to it.”
The performance is heavy on leather and chains and includes Lambert dragging a woman across the stage.

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‘Dear Mr. Aaron Hicklin…’ an open letter from an Adam Lambert’s fan

Following the publication of interview with Adam Lambert in the special edition of ‘Out’ magazine, Aaron Hicklin published a letter in which he described the circumstances around Adam’s appearance in ‘Out’ as well as criticized the ways of dealing with Adam’s sexuality by his management.
The letter is seen below.

Adam himself reacted yesterday on twitter by saying:

Dear Aaron, it’s def not that deep. Chill! Guess ya gotta get attention for the magazine. U too are at the mercy of the marketing machine.

dear aaron

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As a reaction to the Aaron Hicklin’s letter, I received an open letter from an Adam Lambert fan asking me to publish it at this site in order to start a dialog.
All others open letters are welcomed to be published at this site – views and content are the author’s own.
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Dear Mr. Hicklin,

I have thought long and hard about what I wanted to say in this letter, and finally
just decided to write and see what came out instead of continuing to kick it around
in my brain, so here goes.

First of all, I want to say that I am an openly Lesbian 38 year old Social Worker
from Eastern Kentucky. I am an activist who has worked in the gay rights movement in
Kentucky where we have passed an albeit small amount of local ordinances protecting
people from discrimination in the areas of housing, accommodations and employment. I
have participated in cultural diversity workshops, written my legislatures, marched
in the streets and fought one on one with people to have the right to love freely
without fear.

However, with all of this behind me, I still have to disagree with your recent
tactics towards Adam Lambert and/or his management.
What I see here is a simple case of a generation gap. Our generations, yours and
mine, grew up in a totally different world. We have lived in our closets, struggled
to breathe amidst the air of hatred and violence, and have had to fight for every
step we have taken towards some semblance of equality. Adam and his generation grew
up in a climate of social change. They have reaped the benefits of what we sowed by
having positive role models in the media and on TV, and by having people like Harvey
Milk, Ellen DeGeneres and Melissa Etheridge who paved the way for them to be free of
the labels and social constraints that you and I still chafe against.
His generation is living in a time where labels and battle lines are blurred and is
THAT not what we have been fighting for all of these years? Also, asking Adam to
buck his management at this point in his career is in my opinion asking too much too
fast. He is not yet a Elton John or George Michael with 25+ albums under his belt,
millions of dollars in the bank and enough real estate holdings to hide out in when
the Conservative Right takes up their proverbial pitchforks and torches to run him
out of Hollywood. Aaron while I do understand your desire for Adam to pave the way
for others to follow, we fought for his ability to do that on his own terms. We made
it possible for him to come out in Rolling Stone Magazine and we did so by forging
our own path through the muck and the mire, and not by dragging our fellow family
members through it. This generation is what we made them, and we have to trust that
they will do what is right under the circumstances that we created for them.

I admit, that when I first saw him on American Idol, my gaydar went off and when
those pictures of him kissing his ex-boyfriend came out I was chomping at the bit
for him to come out and be our knight in glitter armor. However, after much thought
and a few talks with people from his age group I soon realized that it wasn’t right
for me to ask him to take up that torch. We have no right to push our values on him
just the same as the conservative right has no right to push theirs on us.

I also was shocked when he came out in Rolling Stone instead of Out or The Advocate,
but in the end, I felt pride that he came out before his first album hit store
shelves and even before he jacked off his first mic stand on the American Idol
summer tour. THAT took courage, THAT was a huge step towards fighting for his
individuality as a music artist, and while it wasn’t the path that I would have
chosen, it was Adam’s choice and he made it based on what he thought was right for
his career, not our political agenda. His coming out was a huge process that he
fought for and did with grace and eloquence setting such a positive example for
those younger than him. In his own way, he is the Ellen of his generation, and who
are we to question the way that he went about it. In the End Aaron, the important
thing is that he is being true to himself, being an openly gay man, but more
importantly a very talented singer in the music industry.

So no, I don’t agree with your asking him to take up our torch. It has become an
antique, and it is time that we step aside and allow the new generation to create
their own way to light their paths.

Sincerely Your Sister in the Struggle
Rebecca R. Lyon, BSW

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Adam Lambert in ‘Out’ Magazine, interview part 1 & 2: highlights, links and controversy

Despite the fact that Adam gave a long and detailed interview to the special 100 issue of gay ‘Out’ magazine, the controversy is huge since Aaron Hicklin, Editor-In-Chief of the Magazine published the open letter in which he described the behind the scene circumstances connected with Adam’s appearance in ‘Out’ and his view on those.
I will describe this issue in my next post, where I will let the discussion flow.

Here, I would like to concentrate on the interview itself, made by Shana Naomi Krochmal

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Part 1.
Highlights:

Out: Let’s start off by talking about Lady Gaga.
Adam Lambert:

I saw those pictures in Out, the Halloween pictures. They were incredible! I’m so refreshed by her. I think she’s finally taking risks. Like where are those people? You know what I mean? I’m inspired by it. I’m like, “Yeah, fuck yeah. Let’s take risks.”

I think for a lot of people, no matter how out you’ve been, you have these moments where you’re like, “How are people going to react?”

To be honest with you, it was a really weird moment, because I’ve been living in L.A. for eight years like, yeah, I’m gay. I go out to gay clubs and bars and I go out to straight clubs and bars too. I don’t think twice about it. And it was the first time since I’d come out of the closet at 18 that I had to think about it.

You’ve said it was your choice how to handle that. Even the most savvy gay people I know are dubious about you having that much control. How did it happen? Did you get called into a meeting?

Literally, the minute the pictures came out, the publicist for the show called me up and was like, “So? Did you hear about these pictures?” And I was like, “Yeah.” And she goes, “What do you want to do about it?” She was really cool.

This is the publicist from Fox?

The publicist from Fox, [Jill Hudson]. She was like, “You know, stuff like this has happened before, and this is usually what happens…” And I was like, “Jill, I don’t want to deny it, and I’m not ashamed of it. And I don’t want to seem like I’m ashamed of it. Because that’s not me. That’s just not how I am. But, at the same time I really want this opportunity and I want to stay on the show as long as possible. So, I kinda have to come up with a compromise.” And she was like, “Well, is it a big deal to you?” And I’m like, “No.” And she’s like, “Well, then let’s not make a big deal out of it.” And that’s what we did. She was like, “You know, own it. Tell them who you are, and just move forward.” And that’s what we did. And I’m glad that I handled it that way, because I think that had I immediately said the words and labeled myself — you know, said “I am gay” — I think that it would’ve been more about that, initially, than anything else. And the fact that we didn’t come out and make a big announcement or anything like that — that doesn’t make any sense to me anyway. It’s not an announcement. It’s just, it’s part of who I am. But because our nation is the way it is, it’s an announcement. And also, there are very few gay celebrities. [Long pause.] It’s really cool, now, looking back, because I think that without saying it, and making that part of my identity, I think I allowed viewers to be more open to me. I think, had I put it out there that I was gay right off the bat, I think that people would’ve closed their minds right away.

But wouldn’t you say that it was a minority of people who were actually surprised that you were gay?

Yeah, I would hope. If somehow this can open people’s minds or whatever, then great. I’m not sitting here thinking about ways to open people’s minds. That’s the thing people have to understand.

How do you describe your sexuality?

I think one of the things about the gay community that’s really interesting is that while people own their homosexuality, there is a strange aversion to letting the masculine and the feminine exist within you in a balanced way. And for me, personally, I feel I have a very strong masculine side, and I also have a very strong feminine side. And a lot of people are scared to live in that gray area. There’s boys out in Boystown that are either really fem or really butch. It’s at the extremes. I love when I meet people that are just kind of comfortable being both. And they don’t have to identify being really butch or really fem. Why? Why would you have to?

(…)
Have you ever had any sex with a girl?

Oral.

You went down on her?

Uh-huh.

Was it gross, or it was just not what you wanted?

It was a little gross because I don’t think she was as clean as she could’ve been. It wasn’t the act of it that really turned me off. I don’t really remember. I was 18 and I was drunk. Or maybe I was 17… The point of the matter is that I would not rule it out. The idea is intriguing.

Part 2
Highlights

It’s nice to meet a gay man who enjoys drugs that aren’t meth or coke.

I stay very far away from those things. It’s funny too because I remember after that [Rolling Stone] article, my mom was like, “I don’t know if you should have said all that stuff about drugs, Adam. You know there’s a lot of kids…” And I said, “But that’s life, that’s real.” I just wanted to be careful that it didn’t turn into a fucking pageant. It doesn’t have to be goody two-shoes. I’m not. I can fake it sometimes. Maybe. There is an element of responsibility. I’m not a jackass. There are kids exposed to things. I don’t want to fuck up some kid’s life or something, or make a parent’s job really difficult. But at the same time, it’s like —

What are you doing that would do that?

I don’t know. To some people, me being sexual is really offensive because I’m gay. They’re like, he’s being really gay. And I’m like, actually, no, because there’s no other guys up here. I’m just being sexual. And male sexuality is frightening to America. Female sexuality — it might not be the best example of it, but it’s all over the place. Overt female sexuality might be degrading. It might not be the most feminist type of sexuality, unless you look at it like the woman’s in control, so she’s got the power. Sexuality is just — people are so freaked out by it. The double standard is that a woman can get away with it but a man hasn’t been able to yet.

How famous is too famous?

I don’t know. I really think it’s relative. The hardest thing to do in this situation — but the best thing to do — is to not take it too seriously. By doing that you don’t let it run your life and freak you out. It’s all kind of ridiculous, if you put yourself outside of it and try to look at it as objectively as possible. It’s all ridiculous. The whole thing. It’s crazy. It’s hilarious. It’s funny. It’s great. It’s really positive. And when you start letting the pressure get to you — our job as entertainers is to not let the pressure get to us. Our job as entertainers is to be like, OK, I’m just going to keep doing what I do. And obviously I’m being an idealist right now — but I kind of have to be, or how else am I going to last?

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Adam Lambert on the cover of December2009 /January 2010 edition of OUT Magazine – photos

Ok, I agree, I am seriously late with this one, but for those who haven’t seen it yet, another cover of the magazine with Adam on it ( is anybody counting the covers?), with the good company of Wanda Sykes, Cindy Lauper, LT. Dan Choi and Rob Marshall.

Scans found on idolforums.com, enjoy!

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