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Adele reportedly recording new music in London for an "English-sounding" album
30 is really different than her previous ones
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Adele reportedly recording new music in London for an "English-sounding" album
something like 19 maybe? idk
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Adele reportedly recording new music in London for an "English-sounding" album
so true ππ
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Adele reportedly recording new music in London for an "English-sounding" album
35β¦.
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Adele reportedly recording new music in London for an "English-sounding" album
lol
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Adele reportedly recording new music in London for an "English-sounding" album
@anti-***** come on!
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Adele reportedly recording new music in London for an "English-sounding" album
According to the British press, Adele has been busy writing and recording new music for the past few weeks at Church Studios in Crouch End, North London. A source revealed that she is spending at least a fortnight in London keeping a low profile, adding: "She feels safe at Church Studios and it's where Paul is based, so it made sense to travel over for the sessions, rather than work somewhere else in LA." Insiders also note that this move is an attempt to develop a more "English-sounding" album. Notably, Church Studios is the exact same location where Adele previously recorded parts of her diamond-certified album, 25.
- Anitta & Shakira - "Choka Choka"
- Anitta & Shakira - "Choka Choka"
- Adele's "25" crowned fastest-selling album in a single week by Guinness World Records
- Adele's "25" crowned fastest-selling album in a single week by Guinness World Records
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Adele's "25" crowned fastest-selling album in a single week by Guinness World Records
Adele's (UK) third studio album, 25, reportedly achieved global equivalent album units (physical sales and digital downloads) of 5.7 million in the week of its release on 20 November 2015, despite initially being unavailable for streaming and without the luxury of having 38 editions of the album available (27 physical and 11 digital), as was the case with the multi-faceted sales approach adopted by 25's closest challenger, Taylor Swift's The Life of a Showgirl. According to Republic Records, Showgirl amassed 5.5 million equivalent album units worldwide on 3β9 October 2025, falling just shy of Adele's mark, although the two albums represent two contrasting sales strategies across two different eras of music consumption that are somewhat difficult to compare like for like. The Life of a Showgirl racked up 1.5 billion global streams in its first week (representing the largest album debut of 2025), with "The Fate of Ophelia", "Opalite" and "Elizabeth Taylor" proving to be the most popular tracks. 25 took a different approach, driving more fans into record stores to buy physical copies of the album without the ability to stream it at home or on the move. In the US alone, Showgirl's 4.002 million equivalent album units β the biggest week since Billboard's Luminate sales-tracking era began in 1991 β comprised 3.479 million traditional album sales (across all 38 available editions) and 522,600 streaming equivalent albums, equating to 680.9 million on-demand official streams. By comparison, 25 did 3.482 equivalent album units and 3.378 million in traditional sales. https://www.guinnessworldrecords.com/world-records/780173-fastest-selling-album-worldwide-by-equivalent-album-units
- Adele
- Adele
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Adele
Adele is now officially in the streaming era. The 30 era, at the very least, helped integrate her into this environment. 30 was her first album released entirely within the streaming model. If we look at other legacy artists who didn't start in this era, all of them had a relatively lower initial performance with their first few streaming-era albums. Then, their audience adjusted, and they managed to win over new demographics. I believe the same thing will happen with Adele in her next era.