Adele Refuses to Buy an Artist's Music "If I Think You're a Bastard"
"It's a bit ridiculous. I'm not even from America," she said in an interview with TIME. "Maybe they think I'm related to the Queen. Americans are obsessed with the royal family."
As a very private mother to her 3-year-old son Angelo, the British beauty also finds the realm of celebrity social media equally as bizarre.
"It's ridiculous that high-profile people have that much access to the public," she added. "How am I supposed to write a real record if I'm waiting for half a million likes on a photo? That ain't real."
The" Water under the bridge " singer also sounded off on her own process for selecting musicians to support. Spoiler alert: her standards are high on a personal level.
"Some artists, the bigger they get, the more horrible they get, and the more unlikable," she admitted. "I don't care if you make an amazing album—if I don't like you, I ain't getting your record. I don't want you being played in my house if I think you're a bastard."
However, if a musician does pass the Adele Adkins quality test, the songstress will happily shell out a pretty penny for their record.
"I don't use streaming. I buy my music. I download it, and I buy a physical [copy] just to make up for the fact that someone else somewhere isn't," said Adele, who famously refused to share her latest album on classic free platforms like Spotify when it debuted.
"It's a bit disposable, streaming," she argued. "I know that streaming music is the future, but it's not the only way to consume music."
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