Queen and Adam Lambert to bring Rhapsody Tour back to North America
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[March 25, 2023]
By Alicia Powell
NEW YORK (Reuters) - British rockers Queen and U.S. singer Adam Lambert
are heading out on the road again, bringing their updated and expanded
Rhapsody Tour back to North America after four years.
Guitarist Brian May, drummer Roger Taylor and Lambert announced on
Friday they would return this autumn to the region where they first
launched the tour in 2019.
The 14-date swing begins on Oct. 4 in Baltimore and wraps up in Los
Angeles on Nov. 11.
"It's evolved, is the way I would say it. I was tempted to call this
'The revved up Rhapsody tour' because it's a little different from the
way you saw it last time," May told Reuters in a joint interview with
Taylor and Lambert.
"We've been all around the world with it. All kinds of stuff has
happened. Different songs, different production. We're always putting
new stuff in. So, now you look at it and it's hardly recognisable from
the way it started out."
The new dates follow a UK and European tour last year, with a 150-minute
set list including Queen classics like “We Will Rock You”, “Don’t Stop
Me Now” and “Somebody To Love” against a backdrop of dazzling special
effects.
"We like to try and introduce different songs, so deeper cuts in amongst
the big hits, just to keep ourselves fresh and to (give) the show a
little bit more depth. It won't be the same as people saw before,"
Taylor said.
"It's nice to give a visual context to these songs that people know so
well. And...it changes some of the perception of what the song is about
or the feeling of the song when you put it next to another one, when the
background is a certain environment," Lambert added.
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Brian May, Adam Lambert and Roger Taylor
of Queen attend a news conference ahead of the Rhapsody Tour at the
Conrad Hotel in Seoul, South Korea, January 16, 2020. Chung
Sung-Jun/Pool via REUTERS
In October, Queen released
rediscovered song "Face It Alone" featuring late frontman Freddie
Mercury, which was originally recorded in the late 1980s during
sessions for the band’s chart-topping album "The Miracle" but didn't
make the cut.
Asked if might be any future such releases featuring Mercury, May
said: “Hard to answer...There are a few little bits and pieces with
Freddie on but it's getting harder and harder to find anything that
hasn't been heard."
May, 75, was at Buckingham Palace last week to receive his
knighthood for services to music and charity from Britain's King
Charles.
"We've had quite a bit of contact with King Charles over the years
so it was nice to see him, we had a nice little chat," May said,
adding the monarch asked him about his knees when he had to bend
down as part of the ceremony.
"It was very intimate, (I) had my family there. He put the sword on
both sides and asked me about my knees...We talked about this
(knees) because we're of an age. I'm actually a year older than
him."
(Reporting by Alicia Powell; writing by Marie-Louise Gumuchian;
editing by Mark Heinrich)
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