
Photograph by Matthew Rolston
"Right after the finale, I almost started talking about it to the reporters, but I thought, 'I'm going to wait for Rolling Stone, that will be cooler,' " he tells us. "I didn't want the Clay Aiken thing and the celebrity-magazine bullshit. I need to be able to explain myself in context.
"I'm proud of my sexuality," Lambert adds. "I embrace it. It's just another part of me." Ultimately, however Lambert tells RS contributor Vanessa Grigoriadis that there are other parts of his life that he's trying to keep front and center. "I'm trying to be a singer, not a civil rights leader," he says. It was that mission — and his Burning Man "psychedelic experience" — that lead him to Idol after years in musical theater. "I knew that it was my only shot to be taken seriously in the recording industry, because it's fast and broad," he tells RS. (See photos of Lambert's remarkable American Idol run here.)
He details his experience on Idol, his true thoughts on winner Kris Allen and how his sexuality impacted his Idol run in our cover story, "Wild Idol: The Psychedelic Transformation and Sexual Liberation of Adam Lambert," which hits newsstands this week.
In case you missed it above, here's our exclusive video from Adam Lambert's cover shoot:
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