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This band has done a lot for Rock music history, they provided a unique
sound wich has set the base for many Classic-Rock songs. In 1973, Trident and EMI signed a contract for a recording deal for Queen
and July of that year, saw the release of the band's eponymous debut album
which reached the top 30 of the British chart. Towards the end of the
year, the group were offered a big break, their first major tour as support
band to Mott The Hoople. 1975 was a phenomenal year for Queen, in January the band embarked on their very first U.S. headlining tour. Ticket sales exploded and demand was so high that they had to add more shows, doing two shows in one day at some venues, both shows being sold out. Their first Canadian gig was in Edmonton in April, where they were joined on stage by support act Kansas. Two weeks later Queen made their first-ever visit to Japan, when they arrived at the airport, there were over three thousand fans there to greet them, as "Sheer Heart Attack" was #1 in Japan at the time. Queen was preparing to work on its fourth album when Freddie Mercury first introduced a song to his band mates from ideas written on pieces of paper: "Bohemian Rhapsody", now widely regarded as one of the most significant Rock songs in history. EMI, was hesitant to release it as a single because of its nearly six-minute length; the band refused to edit it. When the British D.J. Kenny Everett played an advance copy of the song on his radio program 14 times in two days, audience demand intensified. Eventually the unedited single was released. In November 1975, "Bohemian Rhapsody" topped the British Pop chart and stayed there for nine weeks, cementing the band's superstar status. The full-length "A Night At The Opera" came out the same month, going straight to #1 in U.K. rocketing up the U.S. Pop Albums chart and eventually peaking at #4. "Bohemian Rhapsody" was also a big smash for the group in the U.S. where it grabbed the ninth spot on the Pop Singles list. The lovely, shimmering "You're My Best Friend" followed, reaching #16 on the same chart and helped push the album's sales into the triple platinum range. Prior to the December 1976 release of their next LP, "A Day At The
Races", a sequel album to the previous "A Night At The Opera",
Queen staged a huge free concert in London's Hyde Park. The crowds were
estimated at between 150 and 200 thousand people, the largest audience
Queen had played to up to that time and to date still the highest-ever
attendance record for a concert in Hyde Park. "A Day At The Races"
debuted at #1 on the British Albums chart and at #5 in U.S. highlighted
by the monster hit single "Somebody To Love", which climbed
into the top 3 in U.K. and rose to #13 on The American Top 40. The album
album featured another mid-sized U.S. hit with the opening "Tie Your
Mother Down" and the British top 20 hit, "Good Old Fashioned
Lover Boy". November 1978 saw the release of Queen's seventh album: "Jazz", they recorded it in Montreux and France, the first time they had ever recorded outside Great Britain. The album debuted at #2 in U.K. and at #6 in U.S. spawning another powerful double-A single, "Fat Bottomed Girls" / "Bicycle Race" which held top 10 positions on several European charts and reached #24 on the American Top 40. Queen rented Wimbledon Stadium for a day in 1978 to shoot the video for this single and 65 naked girls were hired to stage a nude bicycle race. The Freddie Mercury penned "Don't Stop Me Now" was the second single to be lifted from the album and a top 10 hit in Britain. The following year they released their first live album, a double-LP
called "Live Killers" and while writing and recording the next
studio album, Queen were asked by renowned movie director Dino de Laurentiis
to provide the soundtrack for his upcoming sci-fi epic, "Flash Gordon".
The band accepted and promptly began working on both albums simultaneously. In April 1981, Roger Taylor released his first solo album, titled "Fun In Space"; in October of the same year, Queen put out "Greatest Hits", a collection that gathered their biggest U.S. and U.K. hits from 1973 to 1981; the set deduted at #14 on the Billboard's Top 200 LPs & Tapes chart helped by the fact that the U.S. edition included a new song recorded in collaboration with David Bowie, "Under Pressure"; this was the band's first British #1 single since "Bohemian Rhapsody" and in the U.S. it rose to #7 on The Mainstream Rock chart. The band's twelfth studio record, "Hot Space", was by far the
most controversial album Queen ever released; the disc which consisted
mainly of Dance, Disco and Funk-oriented songs, stalled at #4 in Britain
and at #22 on the Pop Albums chart Stateside upon its May 1982 release.
The first single, "Body Language", peaked at #11 on the U.S.
Pop chart and at #19 on The Mainstream Rock Tracks; "Put Out The
Fire" followed closely on its heels reaching #15 on The Rock airplay
list and "Calling All Girls" inched into the top 40 on the same
chart. In the U.K. "Hot Space" generated three top 40 singles:
"Body Language", "Las Palabras De Amor" and "Back
Chat". In February 1984, the release of "The Works" put the band back on track; although the album only peaked at #23 on the American Billboard 200 chart, it was a top 10 hit in just about every other area of the world. "Radio Ga Ga", the first single taken from the album, became a worldwide hit, climbing into the top 20 of The Billboard Hot 100, hitting #2 in U.K. and reaching #1 in nineteen different countries. The second single, the uplifting "I Want To Break Free", was another top 3 smash in Great Britain and reached the #45 position on The Billboard Hot 100. "The Works" spun off two more U.K. top 20 hits in the politically conscious rocker "Hammer To Fall", which dealt with the danger of nuclear weapons and the love song "It's A Hard Life", the latter of which inched into The Billboard Hot 100. The following year marked another turning point for Queen, in fact 1985
was the year of "Rock In Rio", it was billed as the biggest
Rock festival to be held anywhere in the world and Queen were headlining
the event. Freddie Mercury's first solo album, "Mr. Bad Guy",
was released in April whilst the band was on tour in Australia. On July
13, 1985, Mercury and company performed at the Live Aid concert at London's
vast Wembley Stadium, Queen were just one of a multitude of top bands
who all performed a short, 20-minute set, they were unanimously voted,
by press and public alike, as the band that stole the show. The group
then went on to record and release a new single, "One Vision",
which hit the top 10 in U.K. and inched into the top 20 of the U.S. Mainstream
Rock Tracks. After another break for solo projects, Queen reunited for what was to
be one of their most inspired albums, "The Miracle"; it was
released in May 1989 and quickly rocketed to become #1 on several European
Pop sales charts. Five singles were lifted off of the album: "Breakthru",
"The Invisible Man", "Scandal", the title-track and
"I Want It All", all five managed to finish in the top 30 of
the British Singles chart with the latter reaching the top 3; "I
Want It All" also hit #3 on the U.S. Mainstream Rock Tracks propelling
"The Miracle" to a #24 position on The Billboard 200 Albums
list. On November 23, 1991, Freddie Mercury announced to the world that he
had AIDS. He sadly passed away the next day at his London home. The world
was in shock. Freddie had kept his illness very private and only those
closest to him had been aware of just how close to the end he really was. After four years in the making, November 1995 saw the worldwide release
of "Made In Heaven", Queen's fifteenth studio album. Begun in
April 1991, the album was the last work to be recorded by the band with
Freddie Mercury, his fellow band members have got together one last time
to make a Queen album, using recordings Mercury made during his last illness.
The disc topped the charts in Western Europe, with its first single, "Heaven
For Everyone", hitting the U.K. top 3, while in the U.S. it was on
and off the charts within weeks and only reached #58 on The Billboard
200. "Made In Heaven"'s lyrics were imbued with life-and-death
issues from the two singles "Too Much Love Will Kill You" and
"Let Me Live" with the latter making it to #9 on the British
Pop chart; the album contained three more singles including the worldwide
top 10 smash "Heaven For Everyone", the U.K. top 10 hit "A
Winter's Tale" and the European sizeable hit "You Don't Fool
Me". Queen returned to the musical world, when Brian May and Roger Taylor announced a 2005 reunion tour, with former lead singer for Free and Bad Company, Paul Rodgers; John Deacon decided to stay retired and the band, now billed as Queen + Paul Rodgers, released the live double-CD set "Return Of The Champions" that September. September 2008 saw Queen + Paul Rodgers unleash their first studio album, "The Cosmos Rocks"; it includes the hit single "C-lebrity".
Queen biography is an exclusive of 100xr.com |
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more Queen photos, news and other stuff HERE » |
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Queen(1973) |
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Queen II(1974) |
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Sheer Heart Attack(1974) |
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A Night At The Opera(1975) |
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A Day At The Races(1976) |
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News Of The World(1977) |
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Jazz(1978) |
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The Game(1980) |
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Flash Gordon
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Greatest Hits(1981) |
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Hot Space(1982) |
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The Works(1984) |
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A Kind Of Magic(1986) |
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The Miracle(1989) |
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Innuendo(1991) |
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Made In Heaven(1995) |
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Queen + Paul RogersThe Cosmos Rocks(2008) |
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Queen discography - an exclusive and detailed creation of 100xr.com
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