當當看來真的是引起很多話題
去年澳男唱Queen的歌曲都沒有這麼紅(澳男:躺著也中槍XD)
After Adam Lambert’s killer performance with Queen
on Wednesday night’s season finale of American Idol,
rumors flew that he had already been offered a job
singing with the band. That’s slightly premature,
according to the band’s guitarist, Brian May.
“Amongst all that furor, there wasn’t really a quiet
moment to talk,” May tells Rolling Stone in an e-mail
interview. “But [drummer Roger Taylor] and I are definitely
hoping to have a meaningful conversation with him at
some point. It’s not like we, as Queen, would rush into
coalescing with another singer just like that. It isn’t
that easy. But I’d certainly like to work with Adam.
That is one amazing instrument he has there.”
May, whose band recently ended a four-year-long partnership
with singer Paul Rodgers, is comfortable with Idol as
a launching point for the careers of rock singers. “You’d
have to define ‘legitimate’ first,
” he writes. “The long-term answer has to be that, if you
have enough talent and enough will to succeed, you will
get there by whatever route presents itself. Once you
have scaled the castle walls, with the sword in your hand,
it matters little how you got there. I’ve not always been
positive about shows like this, but there is no doubt that
it offers a door to some real genuine talent along the way.”
“Both those boys are well worthy of big success,”
May continues, in regard to Lambert and Idol winner Kris Allen.
“So it’s pointless for someone like me
to stand on the sidelines jeering. I’m confident
Adam will make great use of this wonderful opportunity.
I hope I’m there to see it.”
--
去年澳男唱Queen的歌曲都沒有這麼紅(澳男:躺著也中槍XD)
After Adam Lambert’s killer performance with Queen
on Wednesday night’s season finale of American Idol,
rumors flew that he had already been offered a job
singing with the band. That’s slightly premature,
according to the band’s guitarist, Brian May.
“Amongst all that furor, there wasn’t really a quiet
moment to talk,” May tells Rolling Stone in an e-mail
interview. “But [drummer Roger Taylor] and I are definitely
hoping to have a meaningful conversation with him at
some point. It’s not like we, as Queen, would rush into
coalescing with another singer just like that. It isn’t
that easy. But I’d certainly like to work with Adam.
That is one amazing instrument he has there.”
May, whose band recently ended a four-year-long partnership
with singer Paul Rodgers, is comfortable with Idol as
a launching point for the careers of rock singers. “You’d
have to define ‘legitimate’ first,
” he writes. “The long-term answer has to be that, if you
have enough talent and enough will to succeed, you will
get there by whatever route presents itself. Once you
have scaled the castle walls, with the sword in your hand,
it matters little how you got there. I’ve not always been
positive about shows like this, but there is no doubt that
it offers a door to some real genuine talent along the way.”
“Both those boys are well worthy of big success,”
May continues, in regard to Lambert and Idol winner Kris Allen.
“So it’s pointless for someone like me
to stand on the sidelines jeering. I’m confident
Adam will make great use of this wonderful opportunity.
I hope I’m there to see it.”
--
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