A talented musician and singer like Adele knows that for a song to really connect to the listeners, she has to believe in it and feel what she's trying to make her audience feel. After all, how can she expect to move people with her music if the emotions laced within it are not authentic?
In an interview published on Nov. 12, Adele reveals that we're not the only ones crying to her songs because, before they even reach our ears, she already cried from creating and singing them. That's right, Adele gets overwhelmed with all the emotions she packs into the songs that she has to take a moment and cry in the studio and it is normal for the singer because that's how she gauges her songs and gains confidence in them.
"That's how I know that I've written a good song for myself - it's when I start crying... in the vocal booth or in the studio, and I'll need a moment to myself," she admitted.
She also said in the interview that she originally didn't plan on making a new album because of the success of "21" and thinking that it's better for her to make her exit from the music scene while everyone is happy with her and she's at the top.
"21" was full of heartbreaking music that showed Adele's emotional state at that time and she admitted that when she wrote the songs for that album, she felt horrible, angry, bitter and miserable and that she had given up on love. "But I'm not willing to feel like that to write a song again. I'm not," she stated.
The Grammy award winning singer said that it was motherhood had changed her. "I haven't got time to fall apart. I'm the backbone for my kid, and I want to be there for him," she said.
"She's the sharpest, most instinctive artist I've ever worked with. She's pure gut, pure intuition," Paul Epworth said of the singer. Epworth wrote and produced songs with Adele on both "21" and "25."
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