9.30.20 Adam News and Info
Sept 30, 2020 21:18:51 GMT -5
Post by pi on Sept 30, 2020 21:18:51 GMT -5
ET Interview
< Video >
Adam Lambert couldn't be happier to be working alongside Queen members Brian May and Roger Taylor. The singer began touring with the original band members in 2011, and have since formed Queen + Adam Lambert. While chatting with ET's Keltie Knight, Lambert opened up about the trio's new album, Live Around the World, as well as gave an update on May after he suffered a heart attack earlier this year.
"I talked to him the other day and I think he is doing better, which is awesome," Lambert shared, also noting that the band was supposed to go on tour this summer. "That kind of thing takes a minute to recover from, but I am so glad that he is OK. It is interesting timing. Who knows if we would have been on the road. That would have been very difficult, and I know that he got the medical attention that he needs and is fit as a fiddle."
Back in May, the lead guitarist shared on his Instagram that he had a "bizarre garden accident" which hurt his back, and then suffered a "small heart attack." “I say ‘small’ -- it’s not something that did me any harm. It was about 40 minutes of pain in the chest and tightness and that feeling in the arms and sweating," the musician noted at the time.
"One of the things about being on tour is that it is like a battery, and even though it requires a lot of energy it can be draining," Lambert explained about the toll touring takes on one's body. "It also gives you a lot of energy, [but] every time I am done with the tour and I come home, I almost always get a cold and am really tired because your body [shuts down]."
Queen + Lambert had to postpone their summer tour amid the coronavirus pandemic. The cancelation of the concerts inspired their latest live album.
"We had to postpone our tour…We started talking and we are like, Why don't we take all of this archived audio and video we have been collecting over the past seven years and put an album together as a way to say thank you to all the fans who have always been supportive of us. Who are waiting for us for the quarantine to lift or the vaccine to get out there until we are all back to normal," Lambert explained. "We love everybody out there. We thank you and hopefully next year will happen."
More.. www.etonline.com/adam-lambert-gives-health-update-on-queen-guitarist-brian-may-exclusive-153970
< Video >
Adam Lambert couldn't be happier to be working alongside Queen members Brian May and Roger Taylor. The singer began touring with the original band members in 2011, and have since formed Queen + Adam Lambert. While chatting with ET's Keltie Knight, Lambert opened up about the trio's new album, Live Around the World, as well as gave an update on May after he suffered a heart attack earlier this year.
"I talked to him the other day and I think he is doing better, which is awesome," Lambert shared, also noting that the band was supposed to go on tour this summer. "That kind of thing takes a minute to recover from, but I am so glad that he is OK. It is interesting timing. Who knows if we would have been on the road. That would have been very difficult, and I know that he got the medical attention that he needs and is fit as a fiddle."
Back in May, the lead guitarist shared on his Instagram that he had a "bizarre garden accident" which hurt his back, and then suffered a "small heart attack." “I say ‘small’ -- it’s not something that did me any harm. It was about 40 minutes of pain in the chest and tightness and that feeling in the arms and sweating," the musician noted at the time.
"One of the things about being on tour is that it is like a battery, and even though it requires a lot of energy it can be draining," Lambert explained about the toll touring takes on one's body. "It also gives you a lot of energy, [but] every time I am done with the tour and I come home, I almost always get a cold and am really tired because your body [shuts down]."
Queen + Lambert had to postpone their summer tour amid the coronavirus pandemic. The cancelation of the concerts inspired their latest live album.
"We had to postpone our tour…We started talking and we are like, Why don't we take all of this archived audio and video we have been collecting over the past seven years and put an album together as a way to say thank you to all the fans who have always been supportive of us. Who are waiting for us for the quarantine to lift or the vaccine to get out there until we are all back to normal," Lambert explained. "We love everybody out there. We thank you and hopefully next year will happen."
More.. www.etonline.com/adam-lambert-gives-health-update-on-queen-guitarist-brian-may-exclusive-153970