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Post by adamrocks on Jun 27, 2017 19:02:51 GMT -5
mmadamimadamm @mmadamimadamm 10s11 seconds ago More mmadamimadamm Retweeted TALCvids All good things are worth waiting for! TALCvids @talcvids Vid Update: Due to slow Internet, our Q A L vids are still loading. We have a full set for V E G A S and L A 1. Thanks for your patience
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marionm
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Post by marionm on Jun 27, 2017 19:04:49 GMT -5
Craazyforadam that video is from the Jimmy Kimmel mini-concert performance which actually was on the 22 second a day before Phoenix...have fun catching up...it's a WILD ride oh and those wondering about the missing f-word...Mason was there too...not just Riff...
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Post by adamrocks on Jun 27, 2017 19:05:29 GMT -5
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Post by adamrocks on Jun 27, 2017 19:08:44 GMT -5
Shirley Halperin's review of Two Fux...or...if you prefer... Two F's!VarietyVerified account @variety 8m8 minutes ago More Song Review: Adam Lambert’s ‘Two Fux’ Song Review: Adam Lambert’s ‘Two Fux’Shirley Halperin Executive Editor, Music @shirleyhalperin Adam LambertREX/SHUTTERSTOCK JUNE 27, 2017 | 04:59PM PT Mere days after debuting a new song with Queen, Adam Lambert’s “Two Fux” has an official release date — June 30. And for fans of The “American Idol” season eight runner-up, Friday couldn’t come soon enough. Lambert’s last recording for Warner Bros. Records was the 2015 album “The Original High,” which yielded the radio hit, “Ghost Town.” A dance-heavy collection recorded mostly in the dead of winter in Sweden, the music had a darkness about it, both lyrically and sonically, which Lambert credited to feeling vulnerable — and likely c0ld — at the time it was written (Max Martin and Shellback served as executive producers). For “Two Fux,” the singer comes back around to his sweet spot — vocal falsettos and mid-tempo pop hooks — with the confidence of someone who seems, musically, at least, finally content with his life. Or at least that what the line “Namaste right here” suggests. It’s a pride song, appropriately released during Gay Pride month, in which the lyrics confess: “No one gets me but myself / I’ve been this way since I was 12.” They also deadpan: “People think that I’m from Mars / Whatever,” Lambert sings. “Got that magic called ADD / Rep for them aliens / Different like me,” he later snaps as part of the overall theme of not giving “two fux.” Production credits have yet to be revealed yet, but as far as the music is concerned, the cheeky title sits comfortably among a waltz-like clicking piano that drives the melody. And hat-tip to the guitar solo two-thirds of the way through. Might it be Queen’s Brian May, who played the part on “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” last week? We’ll update as soon as more info is available. In the meantime, watch fan video of Lambert performing the song on June 22.
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Post by 4EverAdam on Jun 27, 2017 19:18:01 GMT -5
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Post by adamrocks on Jun 27, 2017 19:25:53 GMT -5
✨Stefanie ✨ @glamtwin 10m10 minutes ago More This moment💙✨#bohemianrapsody #Queen #adamlambert @hollywoodbowl @queenwillrock @adamlambert… http://instagr.am/p/BV3NwVshIBB
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Post by adamrocks on Jun 27, 2017 19:29:54 GMT -5
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Post by adamrocks on Jun 27, 2017 19:37:56 GMT -5
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Post by Craazyforadam on Jun 27, 2017 19:53:00 GMT -5
Craazyforadam that video is from the Jimmy Kimmel mini-concert performance which actually was on the 22 second a day before Phoenix...have fun catching up...it's a WILD ride oh and those wondering about the missing f-word...Mason was there too...not just Riff... Ah. That is the answer. Of course. gosh another performance I need to go see and totally forgot about...off to youtube. Btw, I think he held back on the f-word usage for media possibly TV sake. Not for his own family or even Riff or other kids. Riff grows up in a rather liberal artist world. He gets to hear the f-word, I bet. From my experience with other artist - free spirit circles. They tend to teach kids to talk situation specific, i.e. you cannot use this in school, etc, rather than not use it in their own world. (works until you deal with a seriously disabled child that cannot learn social coding...and then that changes you as a person, and all of a sudden you learn to see things differently....but anyways, my experience in artsy liberal lgbt circles is that swearing is prolific.) Obviously, this is me projecting onto his world, but I don't think I am wrong. Adam's dad uses the f-word quite generously, based on rather limited video experience, but still. So does Neil. Did not make Adam confused on how to navigate the real world he grew up in. But then Adam is one smart cookie, and does not have the troubles above. Life can be soooo confusing.
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Post by adamrocks on Jun 27, 2017 20:06:08 GMT -5
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