Queen and Adam Lambert perform with Philadelphia Eagles cheerleaders – WATCH entire song
QUEEN and Adam Lambert performed Fat Bottomed Girls with the Philadelphia Eagles cheerleaders this weekend. Watch it here.
Queen + Adam Lambert perform 'Bohemian Rhapsody' in San Jose
The iconic band and singer collaboration are now over halfway through the North American leg of their Rhapsody Tour. And this last Saturday, Queen and Adam Lambert performed at Wells Fargo Centre Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. During a rendition of Freddie Mercury’s Fat Bottomed Girls, the Philadelphia Eagles cheerleaders joined Adam Lambert, Brian May and Roger Taylor on stage to dance along to the song. The entire performance has been shared by the official Queen music channel and can be viewed below.
Queen and Adam Lambert pulled off a similar stunt in July when playing in Dallas, Texas.
Last night, Queen and Adam Lambert played Mansfield’s Xfinity Center in Massachusetts and will now head south to New York City.
There they’ll perform at Madison Square Garden for two nights from August 6-7.
The collaboration will be headlining the 2019 Global Citizen Festival, which “encourages global citizens to power the movement to end extreme poverty, calling on world leaders to fight diseases including HIV and AIDS and polio, empower women and girls, combat plastic pollution and provide quality education for all.”
Global Citizen’s charity event takes place in New York City’s Central Park on September 28 and also features Pharrell Williams, Alicia Keys, OneRepublic and more.
Tickets are free, but they must be earned through acts of community service.
During their Rhapsody Tour, Queen guitarist Brian May has asserted they are not a tribute band without Freddie Mercury.
May wrote on his Instagram: “We are proud of what we are, an ouvre we have worked for nearly 50 years to create and constantly update.
“I have to say that being called a ‘tribute band’ by some half-a**ed critic in the local paper is an insult I will not quickly forget.
“We don’t need your condescension, Sonny Jim. That’s my life’s work you’re dismissing there.”