Adam Lambert Pays Tribute to David Bowie Onstage

Publish Date
Friday, 15 January 2016, 9:14AM

Adam Lambert was just a child when he first discovered David Bowie and he knew then that Bowie was something special.

"Foremost is the music, but the first thing that I saw as a spectator was how he looked and his image and his styling and his concepts that he pushed forward that were so out of the box and so forward-thinking," he told Billboard on Monday, the day Bowie's death at age 69 was announced. "I loved how he challenged people as far as what he thought of how gender was represented. I love that he borrowed from the mime culture in some of his early stuff and how he reinvented himself decade by decade. I think he really inspired a lot of pop artists that way."

Lambert also said he learned a lot about Bowie's artistry when he performed with Queen and was particularly interested in the crafting of the single "Under Pressure," which Bowie recorded with late singer Freddie Mercury. "That song was based mostly on them freestyling on ad libs, and then they sort of stitched together a song out of it, which was kind of fascinating," he said. "They didn’t write the song in the traditional sense, which is the proof of Bowie and Mercury’s genius and how much they were the music."

Bowie's final album, Blackstar, is a testament to Bowie's artistry, Lambert says. "It is really beautiful. I think he knew that he was sick and kind of timed it to be a sort of farewell to his fans, and I think that is so beautiful that he treated his departure like a work of art. That’s fantastic, and it’s so him."

Lambert paid tribute to Bowie with a cover of his favorite song -- "Let's Dance" -- at a show in Osaka, Japan, on Monday night. "I loved him so much," he says onstage.

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