Demi Lovato shows everyone how it's done. The singer made her own cover of Adele's "Hello" and blew everyone's socks off.
In an article by US magazine, the 25-year-old did a show for Seattle's Fall Ball over the weekend and delivered a very emotional performance of Adele's newest hit "Hello." The "Cool For The Summer" impressed the crowd, hit all the high notes as seemingly close to tears.
It wasn't the first time that Lovato became emotional during a performance. In fact, the singer always did a great job at putting raw emotions whenever she sings slow ballads. Lovato who just released her album "Confident" last month also just recently opened up about her relationship with her father Patrick Lovato. One of the songs in the album with the title "Father" mirrored the complicated relationship she had with her estranged father who died in 2013.
Lovato confessed how she felt when her father passed away saying that she was "conflicted" because he was "abusive" and "mean." To be able to cope and process the whole thing, Lovato said that she decided to write about it.
"I was very conflicted when he passed because he was abusive," the "Cool for the Summer" singer explained in a recent behind-the-scenes video. "He was mean. He wasn't capable of raising a family, and it was because of his mental illness. To know that it wasn't fully his fault really was saddening to me, and I wanted to write about it. I wanted to process it."
Lovato did an interview before and opened up about her bipolar disorder. In 2011, the singer was diagnosed with bipolar disorder and entered a rehab facility. She suffered and struggled through years with cutting, bulimia and drug addiction. Now, on her successful road to recovery, Lovato became the spokesperson of the campaign "Be Vocal: Speak Up for Mental Health."
Women's Health magazine reported that the campaign aims to raise awareness regarding mental illness and encouraging other people to speak up about it. It also hopes to change the way people see the disease and eventually break down the stigma that is built around it.
"It's a passion of mine-mental health advocacy-and I've decided to partner up with Be Vocal because it's something that's really powerful when it comes to not only informing people about what mental illness is but also what you can do to get help," Lovato said. "It's possible to live well, feel well, and also find happiness with bipolar disorder or any other mental illness they're struggling with."