Adele Pranks Adele Impersonators by Performing as an Adele Impersonator and It

Target is promoting an exclusive version of "25" with three extra songs.

What do you expect?

It has been nearly five years since Adele released her last album, 21, so as you can imagine - we have had the album on repeat ALL. DAY.

In the video she tells the rest of them that she is a full time nanny and a part time Adele impersonator. "Being so honest, and being a bit more immature then than I am now, I was like, "I don't care, like, he broke my heart, whatever", and stuff like that".

"There's a rumor going around that I turned Beyoncé down, which I would never be so disrespectful as to do", she said.

As well as performing and chatting with Graham Norton during her TV special, Adele filmed a comedy sketch, donning a prosthetic chin and nose to subtly alter her appearance for the audition.

Most sites where you can buy the album, like , let you listen to 30 seconds of every song. (River Lea is the only song that can legitimately be played at a Karaoke bar). "When I was a child I grew up by the River Lea / There was something in the water, now that something's in me." .

A surprise outlier is "Million Years Ago", an intimate, Edith Piaf-meets-"Nature Boy" meditation on the passage of time, with simple acoustic guitar accompaniment. Max Martin, who has created pop anthems for Katy Perry, Britney Spears and Taylor Swift, sounds unrecognizable on "Send My Love (To Your New Lover)", which has Adele on guitar. Who cares? Many expected this to be a tortured song about getting left behind, but in actuality, it's an anthem for anyone who is ready to get on with their own damn life. So, Adele had to go back to the drawing board and start again, so if it wasn't for that reason, we may have had the album sooner. "I'm giving you up / I've forgiven it all." . If you're walking down the street and listening to this and feel the urge arise, please avail yourself of one of these locations, though.

Adele, her soaring but soulful voice possessing the same power, retraces the memories of her working-class childhood around London as she reflects from her new, uncomfortable perch. If you take into account the rise of streaming (which isn't counted in album sales), Adele's numbers would far surpass Dion's.

The "Someone Like You" hitmaker recently confessed she's "scared of looking into the future" now that she's a mother.

The album's final track, the celebratory "Sweetest Devotion", signifies what comes next.


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