Adele ¦ 30

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2021

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30 is the fourth studio album by the English singer and songwriter Adele. It was released on 19 November 2021 by Columbia Records. Her first studio album in six years following 25 (2015), 30 was inspired by Adele's experiences and anxiety following her divorce and its impact on her son's life, along with motherhood and fame. Adele had begun working on the album in 2018 and collaborated with producers such as Greg Kurstin, Max Martin, Inflo, Tobias Jesso Jr., Ludwig Göransson, Shawn Everett, and Shellback. Musically, 30 is a pop, soul, and jazz album, which incorporates dance-pop, gospel, and R&B elements. The album was promoted with the television specials Adele One Night Only and An Audience with Adele. Three singles were released from the album. The lead single, "Easy on Me", reached number one in several countries, including the US and UK. The follow-up singles, "Oh My God" and "I Drink Wine", charted in the UK chart's top five simultaneously with it.

30 received acclaim from music critics, who emphasized Adele's vocal performance as well as the lyricism and subject matter. Media outlets included it in their lists of the best albums of 2021. The album was nominated for two Grammy Awards, including Album of the Year, and it won the Brit Award for British Album of the Year at the Brit Awards 2022, making Adele the first solo artist in history to win the award three times, having won previously for 21 and 25.

30 reached number one in several countries. In the UK, it achieved the highest first-week sales for any album by a female artist since Adele's third studio album, 25 (2015). It spent five weeks at number one there and six in the US. 30 was the best-selling album of the year in both countries, as well as worldwide, with 5.54 million copies sold.

Background

During the conception of her third studio album, 25 (2015), Adele wrote enough material for what she believed could be three or four albums. She later revealed that she had four or five songs that she might revisit at a later date, among them a Greg Kurstin-produced song that she felt was more appropriate once she was older.[1] In 2018, mainstream media outlets reported that Adele was working on her fourth studio album.[2] Drummer Matt Chamberlain confirmed that he had been in the studio with her for her fourth studio album, along with Rick Nowels, John Legend and Raphael Saadiq, in hopes of crafting an album "full of soul, with a more eclectic sound."[3][4]

Following Adele's marriage to Simon Konecki in 2018,[5] she filed for divorce in 2019.[6] She began taking therapy sessions and mended her estranged relationship with her father.[6] Adele experienced anxiety which, along with her separation from Konecki and the scrutiny of fame and motherhood, inspired 30.[6] The divorce's effect on her son plagued Adele during the following years. She decided to have regular conversations with him, which she recorded following advice from her therapist.[7][6] These inspired Adele's return to the studio, and the album took shape as a body of work that would explain to her son why she left his father.[6]

Early on in the promotion for 25, Adele revealed that she planned to stop naming albums after her age.[8][9] However, on her 31st birthday, Adele published a rare social media post in which she – seemingly jokingly – referred to her next album as 30, alluding to the theme of her previous three albums' titles.[6] On 15 February 2020, Adele announced at a friend's wedding that her fourth studio album would be out by September 2020.[10] However, she would later confirm that the album's production and release had been delayed due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[11]

On 18 October 2020, Adele confirmed she would be hosting the 24 October episode of Saturday Night Live, reinvigorating fans' hope that new music would be imminent.[12] However, during the episode, Adele confirmed that her fourth studio album was not yet finished.[13] She later hinted via an Instagram post that she would be returning to music in 2021.[14] Comedian Alan Carr, a close friend of Adele's, also hinted that the album would be released in 2021, describing the material he had heard from the album as "amazing" during an interview with Grazia's UK edition.[15]

Writing and recording

Previous collaborators Greg Kurstin, Max Martin, and Shellback (pictured left to right), also served as producers on 30.

Using music as an outlet post-divorce, Adele went to the studio describing it as "basically running away".[16] Similarly to Adele's previous albums, the vocal tracks used on 30 are original demos.[17] Adele wanted to create a "safe space" during the album's recording and opted to work with fewer people than on her previous project 25.[18] Choosing producers Adele felt comfortable with influenced her choice in collaborators. Adele reunited with Kurstin, a long-time collaborator and friend, which allowed her to feel as though she "could say anything, sing anything, and they wouldn't judge me."[19] Together Adele and Kurstin worked on six songs; "Easy on Me", "My Little Love", "Cry Your Heart Out", "Oh My God", "I Drink Wine" and "All Night Parking".

Originally a 15-minute song, inspired by Elton John and Bernie Taupin, "I Drink Wine" was written by Adele to express her remorse for not being present for a close friend and was later cut short following label feedback.[20] "All Night Parking" posthumously credits American jazz pianist Erroll Garner as a featured artist, making it the first song on a standard Adele album to have a featured artist credit. Adele worked with previous collaborators and Swedish producers and songwriters Max Martin and Shellback, and Canadian singer-songwriter Tobias Jesso Jr. "Oh My God", produced by Kurstin, was written during a period of time when Adele's anxiety was subsiding.[21] Referencing dating post-divorce, Adele wrote the song inspired by her first time flirting after her split with Konecki.[21]

Adele also worked with producers for the first time, including Swedish composer Ludwig Göransson, and British producer Inflo (of the music collective Sault).[6][22] Heavily inspired by the Judy Garland biopic,[23] Adele was attracted to the new sounds, chords and cadences Göransson introduced to her which led to the song "Strangers by Nature".[19] Adele immediately gravitated towards Inflo, due to their similar age and both being raised in North London. The pair's recording sessions would often start with extensive conversations, before pin-pointing an emotion they wanted to write about.[18] Together they wrote and produced three songs, "Woman like Me", "Hold On" and "Love Is a Game". The latter was inspired by Breakfast at Tiffany's, which was played on mute during the recording sessions.[6] "Hold On" was written by Adele regarding the numerous times she lost hope during her divorce and features backing vocals from her friends. Recalling writing the track Adele said; "I remember I didn't belly laugh for about a year. But I didn't realize I was making progress until I wrote 'Hold On' and listened to it back. Later, I was like, 'Oh, fuck, I've really learned a lot. I've really come a long way.'"[23] By February 2020, 30 was mostly completed, except for some orchestral elements and backing vocals.[16]

Composition

I just felt like I wanted to explain to him, through this record, when he's in his 20s or 30s, who I am and why I voluntarily chose to dismantle his entire life in the pursuit of my own happiness. It made him really unhappy sometimes. And that's a real wound for me that I don't know if I'll ever be able to heal.

— Adele on her son and 30, Vogue[6]

Stereogum described 30 as a pop, soul, and jazz record.[24] It also contains elements of R&B,[25] gospel,[26] and dance-pop.[27] The album incorporates choir vocals, harmonies, voice notes, violins, strings, organs, and horns.[28] Thematically, the album addresses Adele's divorce, anxiety, and motherhood. During an Instagram Live on 9 October 2021, Adele reiterated that 30 would centre on her divorce.[29] Adele noted that 30 is more introspective than her previous efforts. "I feel like this album is self-destruction, then self-reflection and then sort of self-redemption", she said. "I really want people to hear my side of the story this time."[29][30]

The album opens with "Strangers by Nature", a cinematic song featuring organs, strings and mournful lyrics. The song closes with the line "All right then, I'm ready", before leading into "Easy on Me".[31] The latter is a piano torch ballad,[32] on which Adele addresses her divorce and pleads for forgiveness and understanding from her son,[33][34] ex-husband,[35][36] and herself.[37] "My Little Love" is a jazz,[38][39] R&B,[38][40] and soul song,[41] which incorporates voice notes of Adele's conversations with her son as she explains the effects of her divorce on his life and apologizes.[42] The album's fourth track, "Cry Your Heart Out" is an uptempo piano-driven song, contrasting with its lyrics about depression and anxiety, but also the feeling of relief.[43] The production of "Oh My God" incorporates claps, keys, the organ, and bass along with an R&B groove and dance-pop–electropop sample.[44] It lyrically details Adele's first time being flirted with after her divorce.[45] "Can I Get It" is an upbeat acoustic guitar-driven track with a whistled chorus. Lyrically, the song is about love and desiring a true and lasting relationship.[24] "I Drink Wine" is a gospel-oriented power ballad, addressing Adele's divorce and shedding her ego before regaining the ability to love again.[46]

"All Night Parking" is an interlude that features Garner. The song is built around a sample of Joey Pecoraro's "Finding Parking" (2017), which in turn samples Garner's "No More Shadows" (1964). The song is about falling in love in a long-distance relationship and the excitement that comes with it.[47] "Woman Like Me", the album's ninth track, has an acoustic instrumental. The song is about a partner who is not willing to move on from his previous relationship and lets it cloud his current one. Adele calls him out for his laziness and self-doubt.[48] "Hold On" is a gospel-tinged song, with Adele backed by a choir. The song describes her feelings about her divorce and telling herself to stay hopeful for the future.[49] "To Be Loved" is also a piano ballad, on which Adele explains her divorce to her son and hopes to find a path to true happiness.[50] The album's closer, "Love Is a Game", is a cinematic jazz-influenced song that lyrically details finding love again and navigating a romantic relationship.[51]

Release and promotion

On the weekend of 1 October, a series of advertising hoardings and projections displaying the number "30" appeared in various locations across the globe, with reports that it could be tied to Adele's forthcoming studio album, 30.[52] On Monday, 4 October, Adele's social media accounts and website were updated to match the blue colour from the advertisements.[53] The next day, Adele officially announced a 15 October release for the album's lead single, "Easy On Me", with a clip of its music video on her social media accounts.[54] Later that week, Adele became the first person to simultaneously appear on the covers of both British and American Vogue publications in the same month.[55] On 13 October 2021, Adele officially announced the album title as 30 and 19 November 2021 as the release date.[56] The track-listing of 30 was revealed on 1 November 2021. A preview of "Hold On" was featured in an Amazon television commercial entitled "Kindness, the Greatest Gift", portraying anxiety among young adults associated with the pandemic and premiered on 8 November 2021.[57]

On 4 November, Consequence reported that the production of vinyl records for 30 had contributed to "a major delay" in the vinyl industry. More than 500,000 vinyl LPs of 30 were manufactured in the months leading up to the release, as Sony Music removed other albums from its overseas pressing plants, which was a factor along with the pandemic.[17][58] Adele received criticism for this, however, subsequent reports stated it "probably wasn't [Adele's] fault".[59][60] Unlike 25, 30 was made available on streaming services the same day as its release on physical formats.[17] Columbia Records, which previously only handled Adele's releases in North America, promoted the album worldwide.[61] The Target-exclusive deluxe edition adds two bonus tracks and a duet version of "Easy on Me" with American singer-songwriter Chris Stapleton.[62][63] The vinyl variants were sold through digital retailers while cassette tapes were available on Adele's webstore.[64][65]

30 was promoted with television specials. The CBS special Adele One Night Only, which featured Adele's interview with Oprah Winfrey along with performances of previously released material and 30 tracks, aired on CBS on 14 November 2021.[66][67] It drew 11.7 million viewers.[68] The ITV1 special An Audience with Adele, which was filmed at the London Palladium, aired on 21 November.[69] Adele also announced a Las Vegas concert residency, Weekends with Adele, which was initially scheduled to begin on 21 January 2022 and run for 24 concerts.[70] Adele delayed it, citing production delays and COVID-19.[71] It was eventually rescheduled to begin on 18 November 2022, and after a pair of extensions is now scheduled to end in June 2024.[72][73] Adele also performed two concerts at British Summer Time Hyde Park, London, on 1 and 2 July 2022.[74]

30 was promoted with three singles. "Easy on Me" was released on 15 October 2021.[75] Upon release, it became the most streamed song, both in a day and a single week on Spotify.[76] The song topped the charts in various countries, including the UK Singles Chart and the US Billboard Hot 100.[77][78] Its duet version with Stapleton was promoted to US country radio stations on 19 November 2021.[79] "Oh My God" was released as the second single on 29 November 2021.[80] It debuted at number two on the Official Singles Chart, behind "Easy on Me", and number five on the US Billboard Hot 100.[81][82] The Sam Brown-directed music video for the song was uploaded on Adele's YouTube channel on 12 January 2022.[83] "I Drink Wine" was sent for radio airplay in Italy on 4 November 2022, as the album's third single.[84] Its release was accompanied by a music video directed by Joe Talbot.[85]

Critical reception

Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
SourceRating
AnyDecentMusic?7.9/10[86]
Metacritic88/100[87]
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[33]
And It Don't StopA–[88]
The Daily Telegraph[89]
Entertainment WeeklyA−[40]
The Guardian[90]
The Independent[91]
NME[39]
Pitchfork8.2/10[37]
Rolling Stone[92]
The Times[93]

Upon the announcement of 30 and the release of the lead single "Easy on Me", James Hall of The Daily Telegraph wrote that "a new Adele album isn't just a release − it's a global cultural event".[94] Media outlets and fans dubbed 30 as part of a 2021 music trend called "Sad Girl Autumn" or "Sad Girl Fall", which refers to the release of melancholic and introspective music by female artists during autumn.[95] Spotify removed the "shuffle" button for its Premium users as Adele proposed and commented that "Our art tells a story and our stories should be listened to as we intended." ABC News called her proposal "an example of her power in the music industry".[96]

30 received acclaim from music critics,[97] many of whom dubbed it as Adele's best album yet.[98][99] On Metacritic, which assigns a normalised score out of 100 to ratings from publications, the album received a weighted mean score of 88 based on 23 reviews, indicating "universal acclaim".[87] It is Adele's highest-rated album on the site.[100] Critics praised the rawness and intensity of the subject matter and the lyrical themes about hope and acceptance.[89][101][102] Neil McCormick of The Daily Telegraph believed it features "powerhouse" songs, "intense" emotions and "bravura" performances.[89] Kate Solomon, writing for i, said that 30 was a "reverent and messy, polished and painful" album from a "woman in turmoil, from raging wine-fuelled nights to quiet teary moments".[102]

Comparing with Adele's previous albums, veteran critic Robert Christgau described 30 as a "breakthrough" and thought Adele subtly veered into new territory on the album, which is "a step up variety-wise from its predecessors".[88] The Independent critic Annabel Nugent thought it was distinguished because of its inclusion of optimistic love songs, unlike her previous albums.[91] The Guardian's Alexis Petridis thought 30 was monotonous musically and lyrically in comparison, but its tracks which veer from Adele's usual formula are the best ones.[103]

Adele's vocal performance on 30 also received praise, with Rolling Stone's Rob Sheffield describing it as "even more expressive" than her previous releases and "a tank division that can tap dance".[92][41] Commenting on the production, Sheffield described it as "deft",[92] and Pitchfork's Jillian Mapes called it "nuanced".[37] David Cobbald of The Line of Best Fit complimented the theatrical essence of 30 and the use of electronic instruments and synthesisers but was less impressed by its upbeat songs.[104] Likewise, NME's El Hunt appreciated the incorporation of new sounds but disapproved of "Hold On", "I Drink Wine", and "Can I Get It" as jarring.[39]

The A.V. Club considered 30 Adele's homage to Amy Winehouse and a "thank you" for her impact: "As Winehouse did on Back To Black, here Adele also navigates the grief that comes with breaking the ties of love, washing herself in heartache."[105] The Ringer's Justin Charity opined that the people's interest in Adele was sustained purely because of her vocal prowess, which set het apart from other artists.[106] Time praised Adele for "remaining relevant while blatantly ignoring trends", called her "a master of turning life into art" who "comes off alternately as unreachable and relatable" and "responds winkingly to headlines in a way that creates more headlines".[107] 30 was regarded as one of 2021's greatest pop culture moments.[108][109][110]

Year-end lists

Select year-end rankings of 30
PublicationListRankRef.
BBCThe 21 Best Albums of 202110[111]
BillboardThe 50 Best Albums of 2021: Staff List
4
[112]
ConsequenceTop 50 Albums of 2021
20
[113]
Entertainment WeeklyThe 10 best albums of 2021
5
[114]
Los Angeles TimesThe 10 best albums of 2021
7
[115]
The New York TimesLindsay Zoladz's Best Albums of 2021
1
[116]
NPR MusicThe 50 Best Albums of 202114[117]
PitchforkThe 50 Best Albums of 2021
32
[118]
Rolling Stone50 Best Albums of 2021
2
[119]
VarietyChris Willman's Top 10 Albums of 2021
5
[120]

Accolades

Adele received four nominations at the Brit Awards 2022, winning three: British Album of the Year for 30, Song of the Year for "Easy on Me", and Artist of the Year.[121] She became the first solo artist in history to win British Album of the Year three times.[122] Adele also received four nominations at the iHeartRadio Music Awards,[123] winning two for 30 with Best Comeback Album and Pop Album of the Year.[124] "Easy on Me" won the Grammy Award for Best Pop Solo Performance at the 65th ceremony, furthering Adele's streak for the most wins in the category, with four.[125]

YearCeremonyCategoryResultRef.
2022American Music AwardsFavorite Pop AlbumNominated[126]
ARIA Music AwardsBest International ArtistNominated[127]
Billboard Music AwardsTop Billboard 200 AlbumNominated[128]
Brit AwardsBritish Album of the YearWon[129]
Danish Music AwardsInternational Album of the YearWon[130]
Gaffa AwardsForeign Album of the YearWon[131]
iHeartRadio Music AwardsBest Comeback AlbumWon[132]
Pop Album of the YearWon
Juno AwardsInternational Album of the YearNominated[133]
Kids' Choice AwardsFavorite AlbumNominated[134]
LOS40 Music AwardsBest International AlbumNominated[135]
MTV Video Music AwardsAlbum of the YearNominated[136]
2023Grammy AwardsAlbum of the YearNominated[137]
Best Pop Vocal AlbumNominated

Commercial performance

Three weeks before its release, 30 became the most pre-added album ever on Apple Music and achieved the largest number of pre-adds in a single day.[138] On 22 November 2021, the Official Charts Company reported that 30 logged more sales than the rest of the chart's top 40 combined within just the first half of its opening week.[139] The album achieved the biggest opening week of 2021 and the biggest by a female artist since 25.[140] It debuted at number one with 261,000 copies sold, while Adele charted three of its tracks on the Official Singles Chart's top five simultaneously.[81] 30 spent five consecutive weeks atop the Official Albums Chart, tying Olivia Rodrigo's Sour as the longest-running number one album of 2021.[141] Ranking as the top album of 2021 in the UK, 30 exceeded 600,000 units in total activity, with 502,000 coming from pure sales.[142] 30 debuted at number one in Germany, and with "Easy on Me" being at number one on the German Top 100 Singles chart, Adele became the first female artist to occupy the number one slots on the single and album charts thrice there simultaneously.[143] In Ireland, 30 debuted at number one, outselling the rest of the top 10 combined.[144] 30 debuted at number two in France[145] and reached the top spot in its fifth week, achieving a double platinum certification less than two months later.[146][147] Debuting at number one in the Netherlands, 30 became the best-selling album of 2021 in the country. It marked Adele's sixth time doing so, and also made her the first artist to have the top-selling album in six different years there.[148] 30 additionally topped the charts in Austria,[149] Belgium,[150] Denmark,[151] Finland,[152] Greece,[153] Iceland,[154] Lithuania,[155] Norway,[156] Scotland,[157] Spain,[158] Sweden,[159] and Switzerland.[160]

In the United States, 30 became the top-selling album of 2021[161] within its first day.[162] 30 achieved 2021's biggest opening week,[163] debuting atop the Billboard 200 with 839,000 album-equivalent units, including 692,000 pure album sales. It achieved the fourth-biggest streaming debut week for an album by a woman in 2021 and surpassed the sales of any album in the previous 11 months combined.[164][165] 30 also outsold the other 100 best-selling albums that week combined, as well as the other top 10 best-selling albums that week combined and tripled.[166] All 12 tracks from 30 charted on the Billboard Hot 100 following its release, with six of them in the top 40. Adele's sum of chart entries rose from 14 to 25, tying her with Billie Eilish as the female artist with the third-most entries on the chart in 2021.[167] 30 also scored the biggest second-week sales of the year and the largest second-week total since 2018.[168] Midway through its third week, 30 had sold over a million pure copies in the US, becoming the first 2021 album to reach the milestone.[169][170] During its fourth week, 30 became the best-selling vinyl album of 2021.[171] The album spent ten total weeks at number one.[172] 30 was certified 4x platinum by the RIAA for selling of 4 million units in the US.[173] 30 was 2021's year-end best-seller with 1.990 million copies—1.219 million physical copies and 845,000 digital downloads—the only album to sell a million copies. This marked Adele's fifth time with the year's best-selling album. 30 was the fourth-most consumed album of 2021 and second among women, and Adele was the second best-selling artist of 2021.30 was also the top-selling digital album, CD and vinyl LP of 2021.[174][175] CNN reported that 30 contributed largely to rise of both vinyl sales and CD sales, and they were reported to be up for the first time in 17 years.[176][177][178] 30 ranked at number two on the 2022 Billboard 200 Year-End chart, as well as number one on the 2022 Billboard Top Album Sales Year-End chart.[179][180] The International Federation of the Phonographic Industry reported that Adele was the world's second best-selling female artist of 2021.[181] 30 was the best-selling album of 2021 worldwide, topping the Global Album All-Format Chart, Global Album Sales Chart, and the newly created Global Vinyl Album Chart.[182][183] The Wall Street Journal believed that 30 "largely came and went" compared to Adele's previous albums.[184]

30 debuted atop the Billboard Canadian Albums Chart with 70,000 units in its first week, marking Adele's third number one album there. For 2021, 30 was Canada's top-selling album across all formats—digital, CD and vinyl LP. In total, the album spent six nonconsecutive weeks at number one.[185][186][187] The album topped Australia's ARIA Albums Chart for seven consecutive weeks.[188][189] It debuted at number one on New Zealand Albums Chart and was certified gold within its first week, spending seven additional consecutive weeks in the position.[190][191] In Japan, 30 debuted at number five on the Oricon Japanese Albums chart and number four on the Billboard Japanese Albums Chart, while reaching number sixty-eight on the Gaon Album Chart in South Korea.[192][193][194]

Track listing

Standard edition[195]
No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
1."Strangers by Nature"Göransson3:02
2."Easy on Me"Kurstin3:44
3."My Little Love"
  • Adkins
  • Kurstin
Kurstin6:29
4."Cry Your Heart Out"
  • Adkins
  • Kurstin
Kurstin4:15
5."Oh My God"
  • Adkins
  • Kurstin
Kurstin3:45
6."Can I Get It"
  • Martin
  • Shellback
3:30
7."I Drink Wine"
  • Adkins
  • Kurstin
Kurstin6:16
8."All Night Parking" (with Erroll Garner) (Interlude)
  • Adkins
  • Garner[a]
2:41
9."Woman Like Me"Inflo5:00
10."Hold On"
  • Adkins
  • Cover
Inflo6:06
11."To Be Loved"
6:43
12."Love is a Game"
  • Adkins
  • Cover
Inflo6:43
Total length:58:14
Target edition bonus tracks[196] & Japanese edition bonus tracks[197]
No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
13."Wild Wild West"
  • Adkins
  • Göransson
Göransson3:46
14."Can't Be Together"
  • Adkins
  • Kurstin
Kurstin4:18
15."Easy on Me" (with Chris Stapleton)
  • Adkins
  • Kurstin
Kurstin3:44
Total length:70:02

Notes

  • ^[a] "All Night Parking" is built around the musical base of "Finding Parking" (2017) by Joey Pecoraro, which in turn samples the song "No More Shadows" (1964) by Erroll Garner.

Personnel

Musicians

  • Adele – vocals (all tracks), voice notes (3), tambourine (5), stomps (6), handclaps (6, 12)
  • Ludwig Göransson – piano, bass, rhodes, mellotron, synth programming (1)
  • David Campbell – strings (1, 3, 7, 10, 12–15)
  • Serena Göransson – strings (1)
  • Greg Kurstin – bass, piano (2–5, 7); kick drum (2), mellotron (3, 4, 7), steel guitar (3), handclaps (4, 5), guitar (4), hammond B3 organ (4, 5, 7), drum programming, keyboards (5); percussion (5, 7), orchestron, rhodes (7)
  • Angelo Adkins – voice notes (3)
  • Chris Dave – drums (3–5, 9), percussion (3, 9, 12), bongos, vibraslap (4)
  • Max Martin – piano, programming, keyboards, background vocals (6)
  • Shellback – drums, bass, guitar, percussion, programming, whistle, keyboards, stomps, handclaps (6)
  • Joey Pecoraro – drums, additional piano, trumpet, violin (8)
  • Erroll Garner – piano (8)
  • Inflo – bass (9, 10, 12), guitar (9), electric guitar, drums, piano, organ, percussion (10, 12); wurlitzer, handclaps (12)
  • Tobias Jesso Jr. – piano (11)
  • Chris Stapleton - vocals (15)

Technical

  • Randy Merrillmastering
  • Matt Scatchell – mixing (1–4, 7–12)
  • Tom Elmhirst – mixing (1–4, 7–12)
  • Şerban Ghenea – mixing (5, 6)
  • John Hanes – mixing (5, 6)
  • Riley Mackin – engineering (1)
  • Steve Churchyard – engineering (1, 3, 7, 10, 12–15)
  • Alex Pasco – engineering (2–5, 7)
  • Greg Kurstin – engineering (2–5, 7, 14, 15), vocal engineering (8)
  • Julian Burg – engineering (2–5, 7, 14, 15), vocal engineering (8)
  • Lasse Mårtén – engineering (6)
  • Michael Ilbert – engineering (6)
  • Sam Holland – engineering (6)
  • Inflo – engineering (9, 10, 12)
  • Matt Dyson – engineering (9, 12)
  • Todd Monfalcone – engineering (9)
  • Tom Campbell – engineering (10)
  • Ivan Wayman – engineering (11)
  • Shawn Everett – engineering (11)
  • Ryan Lytle – engineering (12), engineering assistance (9)
  • Bryce Bordone – engineering assistance (5, 6)
  • Brian Rajaratnam – engineering assistance (10)

Charts

Certifications and sales

Certifications for 30, with pure sales where available
RegionCertificationCertified units/sales
Australia (ARIA)[263]Platinum70,000
Austria (IFPI Austria)[264]Platinum15,000
Belgium (BEA)[265]Platinum20,000
Brazil (Pro-Música Brasil)[266]2× Platinum80,000
Canada (Music Canada)[267]Platinum114,000[note 1]
Chile (IFPI Chile)[268]Gold3,500[note 2]
Denmark (IFPI Danmark)[270]Platinum20,000
France (SNEP)[272]3× Platinum300,000[note 3]
Germany (BVMI)[273]Platinum200,000
Hungary (MAHASZ)[274]Platinum4,000
Italy (FIMI)[275]Platinum50,000
Mexico (AMPROFON)[276]Gold70,000
New Zealand (RMNZ)[277]2× Platinum30,000
Poland (ZPAV)[278]3× Platinum60,000
Portugal (AFP)[279]Gold7,500^
Spain (PROMUSICAE)[280]Platinum40,000
Sweden (GLF)[281]2× Platinum60,000
Switzerland (IFPI Switzerland)[282]Platinum20,000
United Kingdom (BPI)[283]2× Platinum600,000
United States (RIAA)[173]3× Platinum3,000,000
Summaries
Worldwide (IFPI)5,000,000[note 4]

^ Shipments figures based on certification alone.
Sales+streaming figures based on certification alone.

Release history

Release date and format(s) for 30
RegionDateFormat(s)LabelRef.
Various19 November 2021Columbia[285]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Canadian pure sales as of January 2022[185]
  2. ^ Chilean pure sales as of December 2021[269]
  3. ^ French pure sales as of July 2023[271]
  4. ^ Global pure sales by December 2021[284]

References

  1. ^ Hiatt, Brian (30 November 2015). "17 Things You Learn Hanging Out with Adele". Rolling Stone. Archived from the original on 22 November 2017. Retrieved 25 December 2021.
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    2. "Adele 30 CD". Adele | Official Store. Archived from the original on 14 October 2021. Retrieved 14 October 2021.
    3. "Adele 30 Digital Download". Adele | Official Store. Archived from the original on 16 October 2021. Retrieved 14 October 2021.
    4. "Adele 30 Double LP". Adele | Official Store. Archived from the original on 14 October 2021. Retrieved 14 October 2021.

Artist(s)

Veröffentlichungen von Adele die im OTRS erhältlich sind/waren:

19 ¦ 25 ¦ 21 ¦ 30

Adele auf Wikipedia (oder andere Quellen):

Adele (2021)

Adele Laurie Blue Adkins MBE (* 5. Mai 1988 in London, England), besser bekannt als Adele [əˈdɛl], ist eine britische Pop-, Soul-, Jazz- und R&B-Sängerin sowie Songwriterin.

Die Oscar-, Golden-Globe- und sechzehnfache Grammy-Gewinnerin[1][2] hat bislang mehr als 100 Millionen Tonträger verkauft, womit sie zu den erfolgreichsten Sängerinnen des 21. Jahrhunderts zählt.[3] Adeles im Jahr 2011 veröffentlichtes Album 21 ist mit über 31 Millionen verkauften Exemplaren das weltweit meistverkaufte Album des 21. Jahrhunderts.[4]

Leben

Adele wuchs als Einzelkind bei ihrer alleinerziehenden Mutter in Tottenham im Norden Londons auf.[5] Ihr Vater hatte die Familie verlassen, als Adele drei Jahre alt war.[5] Sie hat einen jüngeren Halbbruder väterlicherseits.

Seit dem Alter von vier Jahren war Adele von Singstimmen fasziniert.[6] Die Spice Girls bezeichnete sie als einen wichtigen Einfluss in Bezug auf ihre Liebe und Leidenschaft zur Musik.[7] Sie sang als Kind Lieder der Band auf Dinnerpartys.[8] Im Alter von neun Jahren zog sie mit ihrer Mutter nach Brighton.[9] Zwei Jahre später zogen sie nach London zurück, zuerst nach Brixton,[9] danach nach West Norwood im Süden Londons.[10] Nach diesem Umzug interessierte sie sich für Musikerinnen wie Pink, Aaliyah, Destiny’s Child und Mary J. Blige.[11]

Im November 2011 wurde Adele in Boston an den Stimmbändern operiert. Ein Polyp hatte für Blutungen gesorgt, die mikrochirurgisch behandelt wurden.[12]

Von Herbst 2011 bis April 2019 führte sie eine Beziehung mit dem Geschäftsmann Simon Konecki. Am 19. Oktober 2012 wurde der gemeinsame Sohn Angelo geboren.[13] Nach fünfjähriger Verlobungszeit bestätigten Adele und Konecki im März 2017, dass sie geheiratet hatten.[14] Kurz darauf kaufte das Paar ein Haus in East Grinstead in der südenglischen Grafschaft West Sussex.[15] Im April 2019 gab ihr Management bekannt, dass sich das Paar getrennt habe.[16]

Musikalische Karriere

2006: Anfänge und erste Auftritte

2006 schloss Adele die BRIT School for Performing Arts ab – wo sie mit Leona Lewis und Jessie J in einer Klasse war – und tourte danach mit verschiedenen Musikern durch Großbritannien. Große Popularität erreichte sie durch die Webseite Myspace, bei der sie bereits seit dem 31. Dezember 2004 angemeldet ist. Eine von einem Freund dort eingestellte Demoaufnahme mit drei Liedern führte zum Angebot eines Plattenvertrags durch XL Recordings Ende 2006.[17][18]

Es folgten Fernsehauftritte in Großbritannien, unter anderem bei Later with Jools Holland bei BBC Two und Friday Night with Jonathan Ross bei BBC One.

2007–2009: Debütalbum 19 und Durchbruch

Adele (2009)

Mit der Veröffentlichung der Single Hometown Glory wurde im Herbst 2007 ein größeres Publikum auf sie aufmerksam. Im Dezember erhielt sie den erstmals verliehenen Kritikerpreis Critics’ Choice der BRIT Awards, mit dem vielversprechende Nachwuchstalente ausgezeichnet werden. Bei der renommierten BBC-Sendung Sound of …, die alljährlich prognostiziert, welche Künstler im Folgejahr den Durchbruch schaffen, wurde sie bei Sound of 2008 auf Platz eins gewählt. Die zweite Single Chasing Pavements startete im Januar 2008 auf Platz zwei der britischen Charts und konnte sich dort drei Wochen halten. Ihr Debütalbum 19, ein Hinweis auf ihr Alter, stieg bis an die Spitze der britischen Albumcharts. Innerhalb weniger Wochen wurde die Single daraufhin in weiteren europäischen Ländern veröffentlicht und stieg in vielen davon in die Charts ein. In Norwegen gelang Chasing Pavements Mitte März 2008 der Sprung auf Platz eins. Ihre Lieder handeln meist von Gefühlen, Enttäuschungen und Gedanken aus ihrer letzten Beziehung.

Adele erhielt 2009 die Grammys als „Bester neuer Künstler“ und „Beste weibliche Gesangsdarbietung – Pop“ für Chasing Pavements. Nominiert war sie mit diesem Titel darüber hinaus als „Song des Jahres“ und „Single des Jahres“.

Im Juni 2009 erschien das Album Love & War des australischen R&B-Sängers und Songwriters Daniel Merriweather, mit dem Adele das Lied Water and a Flame aufgenommen hatte. Im Februar 2010 stieg in Deutschland der Titel My Same auf Rang 61 der Charts ein. Auslöser war Lena Meyer-Landruts Auftritt bei der Castingshow Unser Star für Oslo, bei welchem sie diesen Titel sang.

2011: Studioalbum 21

Im Februar 2011 erreichte Adele mit ihrer Single Rolling in the Deep und ihrem zweiten Studioalbum 21 in derselben Woche Platz eins der deutschen Charts. Ende August 2011 wurde das Video mit drei MTV Video Music Awards ausgezeichnet.

In ihrer Heimat Großbritannien waren ihre Veröffentlichungen am 20. Februar 2011 zweimal in den Top 5 der Singlecharts vertreten:

Someone like You auf Platz eins und Rolling in the Deep auf Platz vier; sowie zweimal in den Top 5 der Albumcharts (21 auf Platz eins und 19 auf Platz vier). Das war zuletzt den Beatles im Jahr 1964 gelungen.

Als erste Solokünstlerin konnte sie sich mit ihrem Album 21 über insgesamt 24 Wochen an der Spitze der Albumcharts halten. Nach einem Auftritt bei den MTV Video Music Awards 2011 wurde Someone like You Adeles zweiter Nummer-eins-Hit in den Vereinigten Staaten. Die dritte Singleauskopplung Set Fire to the Rain erreichte allein aufgrund von Downloadverkäufen Platz sechs in Deutschland, Platz fünf in Österreich, Platz vier in der Schweiz und Platz eins in den Vereinigten Staaten. Damit ist sie die erste britische Solokünstlerin, die es geschafft hat, mit drei Singles eines Albums die Spitze der Billboard-Charts zu erreichen. Someone like You wurde auch in Deutschland und Österreich ein Top-fünf-Hit, in der Schweiz wurde das Lied nach Rolling in the Deep zu Adeles zweitem Nummer-eins-Hit.

Im November 2011 wurde bekannt, dass 21 mit über 140.000 Downloads das bis zu diesem Zeitpunkt meistheruntergeladene Album in Deutschland war.[19] Dazu ist Adele die erste britische Künstlerin, die im Vereinigten Königreich innerhalb eines Jahres mit 21 drei Millionen Alben verkaufen konnte.[20] 21 ist außerdem das meistverkaufte Album des 21. Jahrhunderts in Großbritannien.[21] In den Vereinigten Staaten wurde das Album über zehn Millionen Mal verkauft (Stand November 2012).[22]

2012–2017: James-Bond-Filmmusik Skyfall, Auszeit und Studioalbum 25

2012 sang Adele das Titellied zum 23. James-Bond-Film Skyfall. Das Lied erschien am 5. Oktober 2012 – genau 50 Jahre nach der Uraufführung des ersten Bond-Filmes – um 0:07 Uhr britischer Sommerzeit. Das Lied konnte den ersten Platz der deutschen und schweizerischen Singlecharts erreichen. Adele und ihr Co-Writer Paul Epworth gewannen für Skyfall einen Golden Globe, einen Oscar und einen Grammy für den „Besten Filmsong“.

Im Oktober 2012 kündigte die Sängerin an, sich in den nächsten Jahren hauptsächlich ihrem Privatleben widmen und vorerst kein neues Album veröffentlichen zu wollen.[23]

Adele (2017)

Am 20. November 2015 kam ihr drittes Studioalbum 25 heraus, dessen Titel sich wieder auf das Alter der Sängerin bezog.[24] Am 23. Oktober erschien mit Hello die erste Single daraus, das Lied stieg direkt auf Platz eins in zahlreichen Ländern ein, so unter anderem in den Vereinigten Staaten, England und Deutschland. Mit über drei Milliarden Aufrufen (Stand: Oktober 2022) zählt das offizielle Musikvideo zu der Liste der meistaufgerufenen YouTube-Videos. Nach Hello folgten mit When We Were Young, Send My Love (To Your New Lover) und Water Under the Bridge weitere Singleauskopplungen, die vor allem in den britischen Charts erfolgreich waren.

In dem persönlichen Lied River Lea geht es um den River Lea, der sich in der Nähe von Adeles Geburtsort Tottenham, ein Stadtteil im nördlichen London, befindet.[25][26] Obwohl der Albentitel nicht als Single erschien, stieg er für eine Woche in die deutschen Singlecharts ein und belegte dabei am 27. November 2015 Rang 97.[27] Darüber hinaus erreichte er Rang fünf in Finnland sowie Rang 80 in Frankreich und erzielte mit 200.000 Tonträgerverkäufen Silber-Status in Großbritannien.[28] Neben River Lea erschienen auch die Albentitel Million Years Ago, Love in the Dark, Remedy und All I Ask nicht als Single, wurden aber durch das Album zum Herunterladen und Streamen bereitgestellt und konnten somit ebenfalls eine Chartplatzierung erlangen und Musikverkäufe erzielen.

In den Jahren 2016 und 2017 ging Adele auf Welttournee, unter anderem nach Deutschland. Nach 121 Konzerten dieser Tour sagte sie die letzten zwei (von vier) geplanten Auftritten in Wembley wegen Problemen mit ihren Stimmbändern auf ärztliches Anraten ab.[29]

Seit 2021: Studioalbum 30

Am 1. Oktober 2021 tauchten Projektionen und Plakate der Zahl 30 auf bedeutenden Wahrzeichen und Gebäuden in verschiedenen Städten auf der ganzen Welt auf und nährten Spekulationen, dass Adele dafür verantwortlich sei und dass 30 der Titel ihres vierten Studioalbums sein könnte. Bald darauf entsprachen Adeles Website und Konten in den sozialen Medien der Ästhetik der Projektionen und Werbetafeln, was darauf hindeutete, dass ihr neues Album den Titel 30 tragen würde, was später bestätigt wurde. Der Albentitel 30 bezieht sich wie ihre drei Vorgängeralben abermals auf ihr Alter, als sie mit der Arbeit am Album begann.

Am 7. Oktober 2021 veröffentlichte die Vogue in ihrer Novemberausgabe ein Interview mit Adele.[30] Am 15. Oktober 2021 erschien die Lead-Single Easy on Me, die sich wie das am 19. November veröffentlichte Album 30, weltweit auf Platz eins platzieren konnte.

2024 wurde bekannt, dass für Adele im August des Jahres zehn Open-Air-Konzerte in München geplant sind. Diese werden in einer eigens für sie gebauten Open-Air Arena gespielt, welche Kapazitäten bis zu 80.000 Fans der Künstlerin Adele pro Show bietet.[31]

Rezensionen

„Adele ist […] eines der größten Talente, die das Insel-Königreich in diesem Jahrtausend zu bieten hat. Sie kann fabelhaft singen und noch viel bessere Songs schreiben.“

Christoph Dallach: KulturSPIEGEL[32]

„Die junge Londonerin überzeugte nicht nur durch ihre kräftige Stimme, die geschmeidig das Timbre und den Tonfall variierte. Auch das Repertoire und die Arrangements waren bemerkenswert.“

Ueli Bernays (ubs.): Neue Zürcher Zeitung[33]

Der Satirepolitiker Lord Buckethead propagiert als zentrale Forderung seiner Partei die Verstaatlichung von Adele.[34]

Diskografie

Studioalben

JahrTitel
Musiklabel
Höchstplatzierung, Gesamtwochen, AuszeichnungChartplatzierungenChartplatzierungen
(Jahr, Titel, Musiklabel, Plat­zie­rungen, Wo­chen, Aus­zeich­nungen, Anmer­kungen)
Anmerkungen
 DE AT CH UK US
200819
XL Recordings (Indigo)
DE15
Platin
Platin

(106 Wo.)DE
AT29
(46 Wo.)AT
CH15
Platin
Platin

(86 Wo.)CH
UK1
Achtfachplatin
×8
Achtfachplatin

(223 Wo.)UK
US4
Dreifachplatin
×3
Dreifachplatin

(222 Wo.)US
Erstveröffentlichung: 28. Januar 2008
Verkäufe: + 7.079.709
201121
XL Recordings (Indigo)
DE1
Achtfachplatin
×8
Achtfachplatin

(170 Wo.)DE
AT1
Platin
Platin

(156 Wo.)AT
CH1
Siebenfachplatin
×7
Siebenfachplatin

(219 Wo.)CH
UK1
18-fach-Platin
×18
18-fach-Platin

(412 Wo.)UK
US1
Diamant + Vierfachplatin
Diamant + Vierfachplatin
×4
Diamant + Vierfachplatin

(… Wo.)Template:Charttabelle/Wartung/vorläufigUS
Erstveröffentlichung: 19. Januar 2011
Verkäufe: + 30.521.734
201525
XL Recordings (Indigo)
DE1
Sechsfachplatin
×6
Sechsfachplatin

(98 Wo.)DE
AT1
Dreifachplatin
×3
Dreifachplatin

(96 Wo.)AT
CH1
Sechsfachplatin
×6
Sechsfachplatin

(157 Wo.)CH
UK1
13-fach-Platin
×13
13-fach-Platin

(335 Wo.)UK
US1
Diamant + Platin
Diamant + Platin
Diamant + Platin

(223 Wo.)US
Erstveröffentlichung: 20. November 2015
Verkäufe: + 21.300.263
202130
Columbia Records (Sony)
DE1
Platin
Platin

(29 Wo.)DE
AT1
Platin
Platin

(30 Wo.)AT
CH1
Platin
Platin

(38 Wo.)CH
UK1
Doppelplatin
×2
Doppelplatin

(66 Wo.)UK
US1
Dreifachplatin
×3
Dreifachplatin

(69 Wo.)US
Erstveröffentlichung: 19. November 2021
Verkäufe: + 4.917.500

Preise und Auszeichnungen

Im Juni 2013 erhielt Adele die britische Auszeichnung Member of the Order of the British Empire.[35]

Grammy

JahrKategoriefürResultat
2009Best New ArtistAdelegewonnen
Record of the YearChasing Pavementsnominiert
Song of the Yearnominiert
Best Female Pop Vocal Performancegewonnen
2010Best Female Pop Vocal PerformanceHometown Glorynominiert
2012Album of the Year21gewonnen
Best Pop Vocal Albumgewonnen
Record of the YearRolling in the Deepgewonnen
Song of the Yeargewonnen
Best Short Form Music Videogewonnen
Best Pop Vocal PerformanceSomeone like Yougewonnen
2013Best Pop Solo PerformanceSet Fire to the Rain (Live at the Royal Albert Hall)[36]gewonnen
2014Best Song Written for Visual MediaSkyfall[37]gewonnen
2017Album of the Year25gewonnen
Best Pop Vocal Albumgewonnen
Record of the YearHellogewonnen
Song of the Yeargewonnen
Best Pop Solo Performancegewonnen
2023Album of the Year30nominiert
Best Pop Vocal Albumnominiert
Record of the YearEasy on Menominiert
Song of the Yearnominiert
Best Pop Solo Performancegewonnen
Best Music Videonominiert

Billboard Music Awards

JahrKategoriefürResultat
2012Top Artist of the YearAdelegewonnen
Top Female Artist of the Yeargewonnen
Top Billboard 200 Artist of the Yeargewonnen
Top Digital Songs Artist of the Yeargewonnen
Top Radio Songs Artist of the Yeargewonnen
Top Hot 100 Artist of the Yeargewonnen
Top Digital Media Artist of the Yeargewonnen
Top Pop Artist of the Yeargewonnen
Top Streaming Song of the Year (Video)Rolling in the Deepnominiert
Top Digital Song of the Yearnominiert
Top Streaming Song of the Year (Audio)gewonnen
Top Pop Song of the Yearnominiert
Top Alternative Song of the Yeargewonnen
Top Hot 100 Song of the Yearnominiert
Top Radio Song of the Yearnominiert
Top Billboard 200 Album of the Year21gewonnen
Top Pop Album of the Yeargewonnen
19nominiert
Top Pop Song of the YearSomeone like Younominiert
2013Top Billboard 200 Artist of the YearAdelenominiert
Top Female Artistnominiert
Top Pop Artistnominiert
Top Billboard 200 Album of the Year21nominiert
Top Pop Albumgewonnen
2016Top ArtistAdelegewonnen
Top Female Artistgewonnen
Top Billboard 200 Artistgewonnen
Top Song Sales Artistnominiert
Billboard Chart Achievement Awardnominiert
Top Billboard 200 Album25gewonnen
Top Hot 100 SongHellonominiert
Top Selling Songgewonnen
Top Radio Songnominiert
2017Top ArtistAdelenominiert
Top Female Artistnominiert
2022Top Billboard 200 ArtistAdelenominiert
Top Female Artistnominiert
Top Songs Sales Artistnominiert
Top Billboard 200 Album30nominiert

Weitere Auszeichnungen

Weblinks

Commons: Adele – Sammlung von Bildern

Einzelnachweise

  1. Dan Cairns: Blue-eyed soul. In: The Sunday Times Culture’s Encyclopedia of Modern Music. 1. Februar 2009, abgerufen am 9. August 2011 (englisch).
  2. Winners for the 6th Annual Urban Music Awards Announced. In: The Official World Urban Music Awards Website. 16. November 2008, archiviert vom Original (nicht mehr online verfügbar) am 8. Februar 2009; abgerufen am 9. August 2011 (englisch): „Best Jazz Act: Adele“
  3. Cheap Adele Tickets in Nashville at Bridgestone Arena: Ticket Down Slashes Adele Concert Ticket Prices at Bridgestone Arena in Nashville, TN. In: State Journal. 18. Dezember 2015, archiviert vom Original am 21. Januar 2016; abgerufen am 9. Februar 2016 (englisch).
  4. Adele, Ed Sheeran Have Biggest-Selling Albums Of 21st Century, Official Charts Company Says forbes.com
  5. a b Adele’s Father ‘Devastated’ After Singer Said She Would ‘Spit In His Face’. In: Huffington Post. 18. Februar 2012, abgerufen am 19. März 2012 (englisch).
  6. Adaora Otiji: Singing Stronger Every Day: Adele (Memento vom 30. April 2011 im Internet Archive), Washington Post (express, night-out), 15. Januar 2009; abgerufen am 8. Januar 2018.
  7. Adele: I love the Spice Girls! nowmagazine.co.uk, 2. März 2011
  8. Jon Bream: Music: Chasing Adele (Memento vom 17. Oktober 2012 im Internet Archive), StarTribune, 15. Januar 2009; abgerufen am 8. Januar 2018.
  9. a b Teenage mum, cramped flats and truancy… the truth behind Adele’s brave struggle to stardom
  10. Sophie Heawood: Adele ation starts here. In: thetimes.co.uk. 28. Dezember 2007, abgerufen am 16. März 2024.
  11. bluesandsoul.com
  12. Adele an den Stimmbändern operiert. diepresse.com, 8. November 2011, abgerufen am 16. November 2011.
  13. Brett Malec: Adele’s Baby Boy Angelo: See Photos of His Adorable Face! E!, 26. Juni 2013, abgerufen am 27. Dezember 2015 (englisch).
  14. Adele confirms she is married to Simon Konecki. bbc.co.uk, 5. März 2017
  15. Adele’s £4million pop star mansion in … East Grinstead! Singer and husband choose a deliberately ‘unflashy’ to live a normal life with son Angelo. dailymail.co.uk, 2. April 2017
  16. nis/AP: Adele und Simon Konecki haben sich getrennt. In: Spiegel Online. 20. April 2019, abgerufen am 13. Mai 2020.
  17. Nicole Frehsée: Meet Adele, the U.K.’s Newest Soul Star. Rolling Stone, (1070):26, 22. Januar 2009.
  18. Clark Collis: Spotlight on… Adele. Entertainment Weekly. (1026):62, 19. Dezember 2008.
  19. Adele stellt Download-Rekord auf. In: Pressemitteilung der Media Control, 30. November 2011.
  20. Adele breaks official charts history with 3 million album sales (Memento vom 28. Juni 2012 im Internet Archive), officialcharts.com; abgerufen am 8. Januar 2018.
  21. Adele’s 21 is now the biggest selling album of the 21st century. (Memento vom 9. Dezember 2011 im Internet Archive) In: theofficialcharts.com (englisch)
  22. USA: Adeles „21“ knackt Zehn-Millionen-Marke. In: musikmarkt.de. 28. November 2012, archiviert vom Original (nicht mehr online verfügbar) am 22. Dezember 2012; abgerufen am 21. Februar 2013.
  23. Adele: Kein neues Album in den nächsten Jahren. In: ok-magazin.de. 18. Oktober 2012, abgerufen am 25. Februar 2013.
  24. Neues Album von Adele: „Sorry, das Leben ist dazwischengekommen“. spiegel.de, 21. Oktober 2015
  25. Is “River Lea” Real? Adele Sings About An Important Location On ‘25’? In: bustle.com. 20. November 2015, abgerufen am 1. August 2023 (englisch).
  26. Adele: 25 Review—A River Runs Through It. In: The Guardian. 22. November 2015, archiviert vom Original (nicht mehr online verfügbar) am 3. Oktober 2022; abgerufen am 1. August 2023.
  27. Adele – River Lea. In: offiziellecharts.de. GfK Entertainment, abgerufen am 2. August 2023.
  28. Adele – River Lea. In: ifpi.fi. IFPI Finnland, abgerufen am 2. August 2023.
  29. Stimmprobleme: Adele bricht Welttournee kurz vor Ende ab. orf.at, 1. Juli 2017; abgerufen am 1. Juli 2017.
  30. Adele, Reborn The British Icon Gets Candid About Divorce, Body Image, Romance & Her “Self-Redemption” Record, Vogue November 2021
  31. Adele in München: Zehn Konzerte im August – Ticket-Vorverkauf mit 2,2 Millionen Registrierungen. In: Der Spiegel. 6. Februar 2024, ISSN 2195-1349 (spiegel.de [abgerufen am 6. Februar 2024]).
  32. Christoph Dallach: Fabelhafte Songs. In: KulturSPIEGEL. 27. Dezember 2010, abgerufen am 28. April 2011.
  33. Ueli Bernays (ubs.): Adele als Wuchtbrumme. In: NZZOnline. 21. Januar 2011, archiviert vom Original (nicht mehr online verfügbar) am 12. Februar 2012; abgerufen am 9. August 2011.
  34. Patrick Lion: Theresa May’s rival Lord Buckethead ran on Katie Hopkins and Adele policies. 9. Juni 2017; (englisch).
  35. Adele erhält britischen Verdienstorden. n-tv.de; abgerufen am 15. Juni 2013
  36. grammy.com
  37. grammy.com

Same album, but different version(s)...

Adele ¦ 30
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