Texarkana Gazette

Queen and Adam Lambert “Live Around the World” (Hollywood)

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Adam Lambert is not Freddie Mercury. Nor, to his credit, does he try to be. What he is, though, is the perfect successor to the iconic Queen vocalist, seemingly predestine­d to revive the supergroup with his own impossible vocals.

“Live Around the World,” culled from every tour they’ve done over the last six years, shows the “American Idol” runner-up breathing new life into some of the greatest rock songs ever written, and putting them across just as boldly and fabulously as Mercury did.

But Lambert is no human photocopie­r; on song after song, he brings his own sensibilit­y and finely-calibrated vocals, unlocking possibilit­ies that had lain hidden for decades. “Don’t Stop Me Now,” which was a minor hit for Queen in the ‘70s but has exponentia­lly grown in popularity since then, finds Lambert teasing the audience by comedicall­y stretching out a note as the audience is ready to charge ahead.

Campiness aside, Lambert may just have the best voice in rock music today, and yes, let’s just say it: There are times he hits notes Mercury dared not, at least not onstage, where Mercury often relied on drummer Roger Taylor as a stunt vocalist to hit the highest notes to help preserve his own voice for the grueling year-long tours the band did.

Taylor is exquisite in the David Bowie role on the “Under Pressure” duet, and guitarist Brian May provides the unmistakab­le Queen sound with every note and power chord.

They also do two Mercury solo tracks, “Love Kills” and “I Was Born to Love You,” adding a new element to the show and keeping Mr. Mercury front and center even in absentia. — Wayne Parry, Associated Press

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