Adele has had nearly five years to savour the massive success of her last album but, on a release that could be even bigger, she is looking back wistfully on what once had been.
On Adele’s third album 25, which came out Friday, the singer has little interest in gloating about fame or experimenting in style, instead returning to the emotional depths that have so resonated with her vast fan base.
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.
“I feel like my life is flashing by / And all I can do is watch and cry,” she sings to a delicate, Spanish-tinged guitar on Million Years Ago.
“I miss the air, I miss my friends / I miss my mother / I miss it when life was a party to be thrown / But that was a million years ago.”
Adele’s last album, 21, was led by the raw intimacy of the heartache songSomeone Like You. But the man who broke Adele’s heart — whoever he was — is long gone, and Adele has since become a mother and found new love.
Yet romantic tumult clearly still has a hold over Adele. All I Ask, one of the most emotionally searing songs on the album, intimates at a future rather than a past breakup.
In a booming voice sure to leave many listeners in tears or at least with goose bumps, Adele sings over the piano, “All I ask is / If this is my last night with you / Hold me like I’m more than just a friend / Give me a memory I can use … ‘Cause what if I never love again.”
Adele — who, despite the album’s title, is 27 — has described 25 as a look at her life “teetering on the edge of being an old adolescent and a fully fledged adult.”
She owes her success in no small part to her unpretentious, non-rock star image. She is not known to shake her body on stage or trash hotel rooms and is marking Friday’s release by singing at Joe’s Pub, a cozy club in New York’s Greenwich Village.
Yet Adele nonetheless is carrying the hopes of the music industry. 21 was the top-selling album in the United States for two consecutive years and, by a comfortable margin, the biggest release in Britain so far this century.
The music industry, which has been stagnant after stemming years of heavy losses, believes 25 could be the most successful album in more than a decade.
In the United States alone, Adele’s label has shipped 3.6 million physical copies to stores, according to industry journal Billboard.The shipment numbers are the highest since No Strings Attached by boy band NSYNC in 2000, which was the year before Apple’s iTunes shook up the music business by mainstreaming digital sales.
In a sign of confidence in 25, the album will not be available on streaming sites such as Spotify, making Adele one of the rare artists along with Taylor Swift to resist the fast-growing sector of on-demand online music.