Wednesday, September 7, 2011

IS THIS THE REAL LIFE?

QUEEN: A NIGHT AT THE OPERA




Queen's fourth album, A Night at the Opera, was originally released in December of 1975. This was the band's "last chance" album, the label expecting the band to deliver of the promise of the success of the "Killer Queen" single. Had the album flopped the label would have probably dropped the band.


When this album was released, it went to #4 in the US and became Queen's first million seller, and the rest, as they say, is history. Although lead singer Freddie Mercury died in November 1991, and the band's popularity had lagged in the 1980s, sales of Queen albums went up dramatically in 1992, the year following his death. In fact, half of the 32.5 million Queen albums sold in the United States have been sold since Mercury's death.

Not a bad legacy for Farrokh Bulsara from Zanzibar!

The surviving members of the band and the label have gone all out on the 2011 edition of this classic Queen album. The audio is crisp and deep - the quiet passages are actually quiet instead of being filled with hiss and digital noise like on the original EMI imports. More to their credit, they didn't mess with the mixes, song lengths, or do any of the other shenanigans that bands/labels often do when they do this kind of comprehensive update of their back catalog.

The album holds up well, kicking off rocking hard with "Death on Two Legs (Dedicated to...)," an ode to an ex-management company, lightening up with the vaudevillian sounding "Lazing on a Sunday Afternoon," before thundering into Roger Taylor's superb rocker "I'm In Love With My Car."

John Deacon's ballad "You're My Best Friend" slows things down, a song written for his wife that was a US Top 20 hit in the summer of 1976 (peaking at #16).

The album's biggest hit and Queen's arguable greatest moment, is the nearly six minute "Bohemian Rhapsody." The song is Mercury's magnum opus, a song unlike any in rock history, with an operatic section achieved by overdubbing voices until the master tape almost deteriorated. This song would be Queen's first US Top 10 hit (reaching #9 in 1976, and later reaching #2 in 1992 thanks to being featured in "Wayne's World".

There is a bonus CD, and one could argue the merits of the additional disc when the extras could have easily fit onto the main disc.

 
DEATH ON TWO LEGS
 
 
 
 
YOU'RE MY BEST FRIEND
 
 
 
I'M IN LOVE WITH MY CAR
 
 
 
 
 
BOHEMIAN RHAPSODY
 
 

3 comments:

  1. I always liked "Lazing On A Sunday Afternoon" and, of course, "You're My Best Friend" - those are the two songs from this set that I can still enjoy listening to today.

    "Death On Two Legs" is now too raucous for my old ears, and "Bohemian Rhapsody" too overproduced or bombastic - if it's opera I want to listen to, I'd prefer to listen to a .38 Special going off in my ear.

    To me, then as now, the single greatest, shining moment on that album is found in the song "I'm In Love With My Car". As a song, I always did find it kind of unmusical, but there is one fabulous line that I still occasionally find me singing to myself:

    Told my girl I'll have to forget her
    Rather buy me a new carburetor


    Yeah, it's only a "near rhyme", but it is so cutting and Testosteroney that it still appeals to me, even though I never was a "manic mechanic" (to steal a phrase from Tom Waits).

    ~ D-FensDogg
    'Loyal American Underground'

    ReplyDelete
  2. I have always enjoyed Queen's music, I think Brian May is a top guitarist, comparable to any other. I don't know what he is up to nowadays but I wish him well, along with the other members of Queen.

    ReplyDelete
  3. I have always enjoyed Queen's music, I think Brian May is a top guitarist, comparable to any other. I don't know what he is up to nowadays but I wish him well, along with the other members of Queen.

    ReplyDelete

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