Adele Credits Amy Winehouse With Inspiring Her To Become A Singer/Songwriter... But Admits Fame Terrifies Her

Adele Credits Amy Winehouse With Inspiring Her... But Admits She Finds Fame 'Terrifying'
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Adele has revealed it was Amy Winehouse who inspired her to ‘pick up a guitar’ and start writing songs in a revealing new interview.

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The singer, who released her first single, ‘Hello’, in two years last week, also admitted she felt ‘uncomfortable’ watching the recent ‘Amy' documentary because she felt it was ‘intrusive’.

She added: "Contrary to reports, me and Amy didn't really know each other, we weren't friends or anything like that. I went to Brit School and she went for a little while. But a million percent if I hadn't heard 'Frank' this wouldn't have happened. I adored her."

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Adele is this month's i-D cover star

Adele says she wasn’t initially going to watch the documentary film about Amy’s life but was swayed by the positive reviews it received.

"I got super emotional with the funeral footage. But I wasn't really that into the saved voicemails and stuff like that. I felt like I was intruding so I actually felt a little bit uncomfortable and that ruined it for me.

“I love watching her, but I kind of wish I hadn't seen it. But you know, I love Amy. I always have, I always will."

Story continues after the video...

The 27-year-old also admitted she fears fame could ruin her life, in the same way it robbed Amy of hers.

"Frightened of it destroying me and it ruining me, and me getting lost and turning into some of the people that I love with my whole musical heart.

Despite being the biggest female singer on the planet, Adele has managed to live a low key life out of the public eye since having her son, Angelo, but admits it’s not easy avoiding the paps.

"It's definitely harder to avoid it than it is to give into it,” she explains. “I think most people tend to give into it because it is easier, but I just can't."

"Me being photographed in Waitrose is being famous for no reason and that is something that I am not up for and I will not stand for, for myself.

"It's not me trying to be like f****** anti-famous c***, I just want to have a real life so I can write records," she said. "No one wants to listen to a record from someone that's lost touch with reality. So I live a low-key life for my fans."

Read the full interview with Adele in the latest issue of i-D, out now.

Adele's new album '25': What we know so far
What is the new album called?(01 of04)
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In the least surprising music news of the year, the singer confirmed her third album will be called ‘25’, which follows the tradition of her first two albums being named after the age Adele was when she wrote and recorded them. (credit:XL Recordings)
When is it released?(02 of04)
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Adele’s third album has a release date set for 20 November 2015. Just in time for Christmas. (credit:i-D)
What can we expect?(03 of04)
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If ‘19’ and ‘21’ were break-up records, this is (in her words) Adele’s ‘make-up’ album. She’s in a very different place since she released the 30 million-selling ‘21’ in 2011. Four years on and she’s given birth to her son Angelo and hibernated to spend plenty of QT with him and her partner (and Angelo’s dad), Simon Konecki. So there’s been no heartbreak (as far as we know) but plenty of growing up, as Adele so beautifully put in her open letter to fans, which she shared on social media on 21 October...
Has anyone heard the entire album yet?(04 of04)
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Well Adele most certainly has. And a select few senior record company peeps, but that’s pretty much it. No one wants to risk what is going to be the biggest album of the next few years leaking, so security around this release is tighter than Amanda Holden’s forehead. Even Adele’s famous mates haven’t heard it, although Ed Sheeran recently claimed he knew friends who had and they were ‘really complimentary’. The same can’t be said for Damon Albarn. The Blur frontman worked on five tracks for the album at Adele’s request, none of which have reportedly made the final cut. He later described what he had heard as ‘very middle of the road’. Sour grape anyone? (credit:Drew Gurian/Invision/AP)