Interview: Jude Adams talks about being an openly gay singer and living with ME

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Openly gay singer/songwriter Jude Adams always loved singing, but kept this love a secret until she performed for the first time on her 50th birthday.

Soon after she first started performing publicly, though, she was diagnosed with ME, threatening to end a career which had only just begun.

We talked to Jude about her music, the health issues sheā€™s faced over the years and why she decided to be open about her sexuality from the very start of her music career.

PinkNews: Hi Jude, thanks for speaking with me today! So tell me, how did you get started playing music?

Jude: Well, when I was young I only ever sang in my bedroom on my own, literally behind closed doors.

My friends were in choirs, bands, sang in public and all that ā€“ but not me. I really just didnā€™t have the confidence, I think in my head I thought that I would have to be better than I was or maybe I was just worried that other people would be better than me.

But after I had worked in the fitness industry for 21 years, and then retrained as an interior designer, I started singing again to satisfy a need I had, and just as a hobby really.

I didnā€™t sing in public at all until my 50th birthday in front of 100 friends and family, which was slightly terrifying! After that, I started getting more into singing, doing little pieces here and there, eventually finding Janette Mason who went on to produce and arrange my album. The rest snowballed from there.

PinkNews: How has being an openly gay woman affected your work?

Jude: Itā€™s funny, I sometimes wonder if subconsciously I chose to work with Jeanette Mason because I knew she was also openly gay and so she might be more sensitive to the material than a male producer would be.

My songs are quite openly about other women, so not every producer is going to be on board with producing a woman singer, let alone a woman singing about another woman!

Interview: Jude Adams talks about being an openly gay singer and living with ME
Jude Adams

PinkNews: Were you hesitant about writing so openly about your sexuality?


Jude: No, quite the opposite actually, I was pretty feisty about that aspect of it.

My wife and I both agreed that the song ā€œThis Girl, This Womanā€, should be the title track, because it is not only about me transitioning from being a closeted singer as a girl through to realising these unimagined dreams in my 50s, but it is also about me and my sexuality.

I felt it was really important for me to put my stamp on the album as a gay woman. When I started really getting into my music, I never thought I shouldnā€™t be open about my sexuality.

But I do think, if I had started my music career earlier, I could possibly have been more hesitant about being so open.

PinkNews: Have you always been out in your professional life?

Jude: No, not really, I wasnā€™t open for a long time when I was working in the fitness industry.

I actually helped to run a gym a the House of Commons when I was in my 20s, and I was a victim of sexual discrimination there ā€“ they basically gave a promotion I was owed to a man who had just joined and was far less qualified than me.

So I was worried to come out, because I thought, well if they treated me this way because Iā€™m a woman, God knows how they will treat me if they know Iā€™m gay.

I did choose to hide my sexuality then, but I donā€™t see it as a weakness, it was what I had to do to protect my professional standing. It wasnā€™t until I was in my 30s and had moved to a different company that I felt more comfortable being open.

Interview: Jude Adams talks about being an openly gay singer and living with ME
Jude Adams

PinkNews: How did you meet your wife?

Jude: We actually met in 1995 at a hen party! She hadnā€™t had a girlfriend before, and I was just coming out of a long-term relationship myself, so it had to be a bit of a slow-burner.

But weā€™ve been together for 22 years now, and had our civil partnership in 2006 and in 2015 converted that to marriage.

Ordinarily marriage wouldnā€™t have been a burning issue for me, but I think being gay it was more important because I wanted to make a stand.

We didnā€™t need to get married in order to recognise our love and commitment to one another, but the point is we had the choice, and itā€™s being able to have the choice thatā€™s really important.

PinkNews: You were diagnosed with ME (Myalgic Encephalopathy) just a few years after you started singing publicly. How did that affect everything?

Jude: Well, towards the end of 2011 I had become very unwell, and had just accumulated all these symptoms.

I had to cancel a lot of shows and rehearsals just because I would be too tired or ill for some reason.

But I had no idea what it was for a long time ā€“ I had flu-like symptoms almost permanently, and I would have these periods of extreme exhaustion, like my batteries had run out. Itā€™s a neurological illness as well as a physical thing.

I also had periods of paranoia and neuroses at times.

Over the last 6 years, Iā€™ve tried lots of different therapies ā€“ my partner and I started researching different methods as soon as I found out what I had, so now I am almost recovered, but I still have my vulnerabilities.

PinkNews: How did you get into songwriting?

Jude: Well, when I was ill I went through CBT (Cognitive Behavioural Therapy), and my therapist actually wanted encouraged me to write down what I was feeling in a journal, so a lot of material came from that.

I took some online songwriting courses, just to get the hang of how to construct a song, and eventually sought out Jeanette just to help me bring things all together.

When I contacted her though, I didnā€™t expect her to even respond to my request because I thought she was way out of my league! But she did and what started out as me thinking I would maybe just record a couple of songs, or maybe make an EP, became a full album.

It became a much bigger project than I could have anticipated.

PinkNews: Which artists influence you?

Jude: I love Amy Winehouse, she without a doubt influenced my song ā€œThatā€™s What The Whiskeyā€™s Forā€. I think Melody Gardot is a goddess, and Paolo Nutini I love as well.

PinkNews: What are your plans for the future?

Jude: Well, right now Iā€™m in planning mode. Next year I really want to perform more, now Iā€™m in better health.

I donā€™t think Iā€™ll be able to do a full tour or anything, but right now Iā€™m planning on performing at different cultural and womenā€™s festivals next year.

Iā€™m also going to be writing a memoir which will have songs to go with it, and I want to bring that out in the year of my 60th birthday, so thatā€™ll be in 2019.

Iā€™m hoping to also record a few more songs that have been left on the back burner over the last few years, so I may make an EP out of them or something, just looking forward to getting some new material out there!

Judeā€™s album This Girl, This Woman is available at judeadamssings.net.