Queen + Adam Lambert Return to North America with The Rhapsody Tour
Rock royalty is back. Brian May and Roger Taylor of Queen are reuniting with powerhouse vocalist Adam Lambert for their first North American tour in four years—a 14-date trek set to ignite arenas this fall.
A Long-Awaited Return
Titled The Rhapsody Tour, the run kicks off October 4 in Baltimore and closes November 11 in Los Angeles. The set promises a 150-minute spectacle of Queen’s greatest hits—“We Will Rock You,” “Don’t Stop Me Now,” “Somebody to Love,” “Radio Ga Ga”—alongside deep cuts for die-hard fans.
“The magic isn’t just in the music—it’s in the people,” May, 75, shared. “Every night belongs to the audience. We give them everything we’ve got. The rush is incredible, and if it ever stopped being fun, that’s when we’d stop doing it.”
Lambert: “The Audience Is the Fuel”
For Lambert, 41, the thrill of performing with Queen never fades. “Seeing thousands of people singing their hearts out—it’s electric. It charges you. Honestly, it’s addictive,” he said.
Taylor, 73, joked about his own pre-show ritual: “No fancy warm-ups—just a splash of Irish whiskey and a Diet Coke. Adam’s vocal exercises are impressive, though. I’m happy to cheer him on from the side.”
A Legacy Reimagined
Since their last North American outing, the trio has kept busy: May reissued solo projects, Taylor released his first solo album in nearly a decade, and Lambert dropped High Drama, a genre-blending covers album. But returning to the stage together carries a deeper meaning.
“After Freddie passed, we thought Queen was finished,” May reflected on Mercury’s death in 1991. “We never looked for a new singer—it didn’t feel possible. Then Adam appeared, almost out of nowhere.”
That “nowhere” was American Idol in 2009, where Lambert stunned with his soaring range and theatrical flair. “His voice is extraordinary,” May said. “And the glam, the sparkle—he was born to wear diamonds.”
Importantly, Lambert doesn’t try to mimic Mercury. “He honors Freddie, as we all do, but brings his own interpretation. That’s the magic—he makes the songs new again,” May explained.
Lambert echoed the sentiment: “Freddie laid the foundation. I don’t try to replace him—I just exist in the space he created, and have fun with it. From what I’ve heard, he loved a bit of mischief too.”
Chemistry On and Off Stage
The camaraderie between the three is clear. “Adam’s kept us young,” May joked. Lambert shot back: “I’ve introduced them to eyeliner and high heels.”
Taylor, more serious, praised Lambert’s presence: “Having a voice like Adam’s at the front—it gives us confidence. We can trust him to carry these songs and make them soar.”
No Plans to Stop
As for retirement? May is definitive: “No way. To still be doing this at this level, and loving it—it’s a blessing. I’ll probably keep doing it until I drop.”
Queen + Adam Lambert — The Rhapsody Tour (North America 2025)
Oct 04 – Baltimore, MD – CFG Bank Arena
Oct 08 – Toronto, ON – Scotiabank Arena
Oct 10 – Detroit, MI – Little Caesars Arena
Oct 12 – New York, NY – Madison Square Garden
Oct 15 – Boston, MA – TD Garden
Oct 18 – Philadelphia, PA – Wells Fargo Center
Oct 23 – Atlanta, GA – State Farm Arena
Oct 25 – Nashville, TN – Bridgestone Arena
Oct 27 – St. Paul, MN – Xcel Energy Center
Oct 30 – Chicago, IL – United Center
Nov 02 – Dallas, TX – American Airlines Center
Nov 05 – Denver, CO – Ball Arena
Nov 08 – San Francisco, CA – Chase Center
Nov 11 – Los Angeles, CA – BMO Stadium