“STOP!”
Adele is celebrating in Munich: she has scheduled up to ten concerts in the German city during the month of August. At the first of them, which took place this Friday, the British singer shouted at security guards while performing a song.
Adele defines herself as “a gay man” and as a “depressed person”
Adele is back in Europe. This Friday and Saturday, the artist held her first two concerts in Munich, where she will perform eight more shows during the month of August.
The British singer is proving, once again, that she is the queen of ballads. Her voice is in top form and Adele is performing the greatest hits of her professional career with excellence.
But, in addition to projecting her vocal show to the 80,000 attendees, the singer is also giving free rein to her humor and personality. In her first concert, she has defined herself ironically as “a gay man trapped in the body of a heterosexual woman”, referring to the fact that when she was young she listened to many female artists.
Also this Friday, while performing her song Rumour Has It (2011), Adele verbally confronted security guards after seeing them asking part of her audience not to get up and to sit in their seats.
“Stop telling my fans to sit down!” the artist shouted. “Stand up if you want!” she said, addressing her followers.
Other highlights from Adele at her second concert in Munich
On Adele’s second date with her audience in Munich, the British singer was up to her old tricks again. At one point during the concert, she stopped the show to project the Paris 2024 Olympic Games on her huge screen.
The public was able to watch the women’s 100m final live. Julien Alfred ultimately took victory, becoming Saint Lucia’s first Olympic medallist.
One of the most exciting moments of this Saturday’s show came with the performance of Someone Like You (2011). While the audience sang along at the top of their lungs to her beautiful ballad, Adele could not contain her emotion.
The night before, Adele had explained how important this song had been to her personal life. “This song changed my life for the better, and I wish someone had told me that when I was 21; that people were going to sing this song one day,” she said.