(Only taken me three years to publish this...) Teddy recently had the opportunity to do something that for me, was pretty amazing. He met Brian May. Brian was recently in Bristol, visiting the Royal West of England Academy to launch an exhibition of Victorian stereo photographs. Brian has revived a series of 59 Victorian stereoscopic photographs originally taken by victorian photographer Thomas Richard Williams (1825-1871). He also designed and produced a focusing stereoscope (called The Owl) that brings the images into 3D...
It wasn't an overly publicised event, so fortunately there were only a couple of hundred people there. At 4pm Brian emerged to a great reception. Teddy was one of the last to arrive in the room, in which we had all neatly shuffled ourselves into. When Brian entered the room it was from the back, so Teddy became a front row spectator! Cue some frantic (and pretty amateurish) photography on a crappy Blackberry smart phone!
Brian spoke for about 15 minutes about his book, why he chose to develop it and the journey that it led him on to hunt down the photographs and locations where they were taken. He also spoke about his support and passion for animal welfare. He then invited any questions from the audience, which were initially about the book, but then of course people couldn't resist a few questions about Queen! This was before Sonisphere with Adam Lambert had been announced, but Brian made a cryptic reference to "big things" happening later in the year...
Thursday, May 7, 2015
Thursday, April 11, 2013
10 Facts You Might Not Know About Bohemian Rhapsody
The masterpiece that is Bohemian Rhapsody is closing in on being 40 years old (well alright it's 38 at the time of writing this). This six-minute long piece of artistry propelled Queen into one of the biggest bands in the world and Freddie Mercury became an overnight superstar. It's a song that most will know, and even love, although there is a lot of interesting history surrounding it. Here are some entertaining facts you possibly never knew about the song:
1) Does the piano solo sound familiar to you? Well, not so much the piano solo, but the piano it was played on - Freddie Mercury used exactly the same piano as Paul McCartney used to record Hey Jude.
2) The song wasn't quite as successful in the United States. The original in 1975 climbed no higher than No.9. However, its re-release in 1992 (as part of Wayne's World) saw it reach the heady heights of No.2. In fact, the only reason it failed to make No.1 was due to the not so world famous tune of "Jump" by KrissKross!
3) Whenever Queen performed Bohemian Rhapsody live they would actually use recordings of what they liked to call the "fiddly bits" of the song.
4) At 5 minutes and 55 seconds long many experts believe the song went on too much to be a hit. If we consider Hey Jude once again, that happened to be seven and a half minutes long!
5) Some of the more famous covers of the song have been performed by Elaine Page, G4 and who could forget the delightful renditions made by Rolf Harris and Weird Al' Yankovic!
6) Freddie Mercury was once asked what the song means. His answer, "it means whatever you want it to mean".
7) Freddie Mercury actually wrote the song on scraps of paper and old telephone directories.
8) Kenny Everett was the first DJ to play Bohemian Rhapsody on the radio.
9) The song spent a total of 9 consecutive weeks at number one in the UK after its original release in 1975. This, at the time, was the third longest ever a single had ever been at number one in the UK charts.
10) The opera parts of the song took over 70 hours to edit and add to the original parts of Bohemian Rhapsody. That is amazing for a piece of music that is just six minutes long.
Wednesday, April 10, 2013
Queen at the Movies
Two classic 1980s cult movies featured soundtracks from Queen. Let's look back at the band's contributions to Flash Gordon and Highlander...
It wouldn’t be quite right to say "there can be only one" – in fact, Queen made two movie soundtracks, both of them in the 80s, and both of them for science fiction films. The genre suited Queen’s music. Their hard rock edge could easily give way to a lighter, even operatic sound, and after years of proclaiming proudly that they never used synthesisers, by the 80s, Queen had embraced the more challenging noises that could be produced electronically to great effect.
In fact, Queen songs have been hijacked wholesale by a number of genres. Films with a gooey centre use the gospel element of Somebody To Love (Ella Enchanted and Happy Feet, for instance) while We Will Rock You turns up in adventure films with rousing crowd scenes; in particular, it’s used to great effect in the gleefully anachronistic A Knight’s Tale. There are loads of examples – some of my favourites are Don't Stop Me Now in Shaun of the Dead, We Are The Champions in High Fidelity and, of course, Bohemian Rhapsody in Wayne’s World. But only Flash Gordon (1980) and Highlander (1986) boasted a series of songs by the band. Here’s a look back at both of them.
Queen were a perfect fit for this film, for the simple reason that both the script and the band were tongue-in-cheek. The producer, Dino De Laurentiis, asked Queen to produce a soundtrack over which they were given complete control. They came up with a great theme song that pretty much everyone around the world recognises, and they also made some amazing incidental music that still turns up in movies today.
Flash Gordon is an iconic hero. He started life as a comic strip back in 1934 and was played by Buster Crabbe in a number of serial films from 1936 to 1940 that were fast, fun and thrilling. By the time he was revived, to be played by Sam J Jones in 1980, he was a cultural icon, representing everything good about America – brave, adventurous, handsome, great at sport, and always going to get the girl. This film version didn’t mess with any of those assumptions, and instead turned the whole thing up to 11, going large on the spectacle of meteor storms, space flight and crash-landings on strange planets.
Everything was just so huge that Sam J Jones is often accused of getting a bit lost amongst it, but there’s something solid and grounded about his performance. He doesn’t ham it up or beat his chest in manliness, which is a relief in a film that includes some of the most bombastic actors to be found. Brian Blessed turns up with his enormous voice, a spiky golden helmet and a pair of wings, and blasts his way through the script in such memorable fashion that he was instantly recognisable when he reprised his role as Prince Vultan in Family Guy episode Road To Germany in 2008. Topol played Dr Hans Zarkov with enthusiasm, and Melody J Anderson was an excellent Dale Arden, particularly when she got to share the screen with the magnificently creepy Max Von Sydow as Ming the Merciless.
Such performances suited Queen’s music. Some of the best moments in the film are when the incidental pieces chime in perfectly with the grandeur of the actor – for instance, to the sound of Vultan’s Theme (written by Freddie Mercury) Brian Blessed flies through the sky with his Hawk Men and says, “Who wants to live forever?” before giving a barrel laugh and screaming, "Dive!" to join the attack against Ming’s forces. Does that sound manic? It is. But it’s also loads of fun to watch.
With the success of Star Wars and Superman as its model, De Laurentiis may have thought he was on to a winner, and yet Flash Gordon was only a modest success worldwide (it did great business in the UK though) upon release. Over the years it’s become a cult classic and has seeped into public consciousness, to the extent where films such as Ted and Blades Of Glory can reference it without losing the audience. The music is a huge part of that notoriety. One of the first times that a rock band was asked to compose and perform a score for a high-budget production, it showed how a great marriage of sound and vision could come from allowing the artists to retain control of what they do best – writing music.
Okay, so it’s a cheat to claim that Queen did the whole soundtrack for Highlander. In fact, the original orchestral score was composed by Michael Kamen, who also did amazing scores for films such as Brazil and Die Hard. Queen contributed a number of complete songs to the film and they fit perfectly with Kamen’s score to give Highlander a hard edge when it is needed, and quiet moments of sadness in juxtaposition.
Highlander was written by Gregory Widen, who sold the script when he was still an undergraduate in the Screenwriting program at UCLA. Based on the idea that immortal warriors have been fighting through the ages in order to claim an unspecified ‘prize’ (well, until the end of the movie, at least), Christopher Lambert plays Connor MacLeod, born in the Scottish Highlands and educated by Egyptian immortal Juan Sanchez Villa-Lobos Ramirez, played by Sean Connery. Yes – they did set a film in the Highlands and then cast Sean Connery as an Egyptian, but they also cast the wonderful Clancy Brown as The Kurgan, so it’s not all bad. The Kurgan, much like Ming the Merciless, is a villain you can enjoy. He’s horrifying to look at, and yet he has a great sense of dark humour that’s evident in his leer and his sheer pleasure in blaspheming and generally terrorising people.
One of the strongest musical moments of the film revolves around The Kurgan; he kidnaps MacLeod’s girlfriend (played with attitude by Roxanne Hart) and bundles her into a car, playing chicken with oncoming traffic and mocking her screams. The scene starts with the song Don’t Lose Your Head and then morphs into an ironic version of New York, New York that The Kurgan sings along to. With the fast-paced cutting and the blinding lights of the traffic, it’s a riot on the senses.
At the other end of the spectrum, there’s the use of Who Wants To Live Forever? (this time not being screamed out by Brian Blessed, which would ruin the mood somewhat) to represent the dual edge of the sword of immortality. MacLeod must continue to fight, but watch all those mortals he loves die. The soft, haunting music is used to great effect as he realises this.
The film shares another similarity with Flash Gordon; it also wasn’t well received in the US upon release, and did better in the European markets initially until it gained cult status. Highlander has spawned four sequels so far along with live-action and animated television series; many of these stuck to one of the great strengths of Highlander and used Queen’s music. Currently, a reboot of the original has been languishing in development since 2008, with Ryan Reynolds confirmed to play MacLeod since 2012.
Both Flash Gordon and Highlander would not be the recognisable and enduring films that they are without the musical input of Queen. They’re just like the band – the critics may not have ever loved them, but the audience does. Whenever I switch channels and come across Vultan swooping for victory, or see MacLeod running along the beach at full sprint, I end up watching to the end. And whenever a Queen song comes on the radio I end up singing along. In this age where recognition is the thing we’re all striving for, isn’t that as good as it gets?
Flash Gordon
Queen were a perfect fit for this film, for the simple reason that both the script and the band were tongue-in-cheek. The producer, Dino De Laurentiis, asked Queen to produce a soundtrack over which they were given complete control. They came up with a great theme song that pretty much everyone around the world recognises, and they also made some amazing incidental music that still turns up in movies today.
Flash Gordon is an iconic hero. He started life as a comic strip back in 1934 and was played by Buster Crabbe in a number of serial films from 1936 to 1940 that were fast, fun and thrilling. By the time he was revived, to be played by Sam J Jones in 1980, he was a cultural icon, representing everything good about America – brave, adventurous, handsome, great at sport, and always going to get the girl. This film version didn’t mess with any of those assumptions, and instead turned the whole thing up to 11, going large on the spectacle of meteor storms, space flight and crash-landings on strange planets.
Everything was just so huge that Sam J Jones is often accused of getting a bit lost amongst it, but there’s something solid and grounded about his performance. He doesn’t ham it up or beat his chest in manliness, which is a relief in a film that includes some of the most bombastic actors to be found. Brian Blessed turns up with his enormous voice, a spiky golden helmet and a pair of wings, and blasts his way through the script in such memorable fashion that he was instantly recognisable when he reprised his role as Prince Vultan in Family Guy episode Road To Germany in 2008. Topol played Dr Hans Zarkov with enthusiasm, and Melody J Anderson was an excellent Dale Arden, particularly when she got to share the screen with the magnificently creepy Max Von Sydow as Ming the Merciless.
Such performances suited Queen’s music. Some of the best moments in the film are when the incidental pieces chime in perfectly with the grandeur of the actor – for instance, to the sound of Vultan’s Theme (written by Freddie Mercury) Brian Blessed flies through the sky with his Hawk Men and says, “Who wants to live forever?” before giving a barrel laugh and screaming, "Dive!" to join the attack against Ming’s forces. Does that sound manic? It is. But it’s also loads of fun to watch.
With the success of Star Wars and Superman as its model, De Laurentiis may have thought he was on to a winner, and yet Flash Gordon was only a modest success worldwide (it did great business in the UK though) upon release. Over the years it’s become a cult classic and has seeped into public consciousness, to the extent where films such as Ted and Blades Of Glory can reference it without losing the audience. The music is a huge part of that notoriety. One of the first times that a rock band was asked to compose and perform a score for a high-budget production, it showed how a great marriage of sound and vision could come from allowing the artists to retain control of what they do best – writing music.
Highlander
Highlander was written by Gregory Widen, who sold the script when he was still an undergraduate in the Screenwriting program at UCLA. Based on the idea that immortal warriors have been fighting through the ages in order to claim an unspecified ‘prize’ (well, until the end of the movie, at least), Christopher Lambert plays Connor MacLeod, born in the Scottish Highlands and educated by Egyptian immortal Juan Sanchez Villa-Lobos Ramirez, played by Sean Connery. Yes – they did set a film in the Highlands and then cast Sean Connery as an Egyptian, but they also cast the wonderful Clancy Brown as The Kurgan, so it’s not all bad. The Kurgan, much like Ming the Merciless, is a villain you can enjoy. He’s horrifying to look at, and yet he has a great sense of dark humour that’s evident in his leer and his sheer pleasure in blaspheming and generally terrorising people.
One of the strongest musical moments of the film revolves around The Kurgan; he kidnaps MacLeod’s girlfriend (played with attitude by Roxanne Hart) and bundles her into a car, playing chicken with oncoming traffic and mocking her screams. The scene starts with the song Don’t Lose Your Head and then morphs into an ironic version of New York, New York that The Kurgan sings along to. With the fast-paced cutting and the blinding lights of the traffic, it’s a riot on the senses.
At the other end of the spectrum, there’s the use of Who Wants To Live Forever? (this time not being screamed out by Brian Blessed, which would ruin the mood somewhat) to represent the dual edge of the sword of immortality. MacLeod must continue to fight, but watch all those mortals he loves die. The soft, haunting music is used to great effect as he realises this.
The film shares another similarity with Flash Gordon; it also wasn’t well received in the US upon release, and did better in the European markets initially until it gained cult status. Highlander has spawned four sequels so far along with live-action and animated television series; many of these stuck to one of the great strengths of Highlander and used Queen’s music. Currently, a reboot of the original has been languishing in development since 2008, with Ryan Reynolds confirmed to play MacLeod since 2012.
Both Flash Gordon and Highlander would not be the recognisable and enduring films that they are without the musical input of Queen. They’re just like the band – the critics may not have ever loved them, but the audience does. Whenever I switch channels and come across Vultan swooping for victory, or see MacLeod running along the beach at full sprint, I end up watching to the end. And whenever a Queen song comes on the radio I end up singing along. In this age where recognition is the thing we’re all striving for, isn’t that as good as it gets?
Queen: News Of The World
...the last of the classic-period Queen albums?
Queen's varied palette of styles was none more apparent than on their sixth studio album, News Of The World, recorded over summer 1977 at various locations in London. Released at a time when punk was breaking across the UK music scene (prompting the delicious exchange when Freddie Mercury met Sid Vicious: "ah, Mr. Ferocious, how are you?"), the album showed the group, for many the ultimate in musicianship, both out-of-kilter, yet strangely in step with the times.
In step was the football-terrace proto-rap “We Will Rock You”, the anthemic Mercury special “We Are The Champions” and the full-on assault of the Roger Taylor/Mercury duet “Sheer Heart Attack”. Out of kilter with the times was the ornate, fussy balladry of John Deacon’s “Spread Your Wings” or Mercury’s bluesy “My Melancholy Blues”. Elsewhere, the heavily strutting “Get Down Make Love” acts as something of a bridge between the earlier “Seven Seas Of Rhye” and the “Another Ones Bites The Dust” funk-isms that lay ahead.
News Of The World was the last of the classic-period Queen albums, and heralded a spell in the relative doldrums before 1980's The Game. The album was a huge hit in America, something the group could never take for granted; and went four times platinum, largely as a result of their lengthy tour with Thin Lizzy earlier in the year. What News Of The World demonstrates perfectly is Queen’s unerringly ability to sound absolutely like no-other group – even when parodying other musical styles.
Queen's varied palette of styles was none more apparent than on their sixth studio album, News Of The World, recorded over summer 1977 at various locations in London. Released at a time when punk was breaking across the UK music scene (prompting the delicious exchange when Freddie Mercury met Sid Vicious: "ah, Mr. Ferocious, how are you?"), the album showed the group, for many the ultimate in musicianship, both out-of-kilter, yet strangely in step with the times.
In step was the football-terrace proto-rap “We Will Rock You”, the anthemic Mercury special “We Are The Champions” and the full-on assault of the Roger Taylor/Mercury duet “Sheer Heart Attack”. Out of kilter with the times was the ornate, fussy balladry of John Deacon’s “Spread Your Wings” or Mercury’s bluesy “My Melancholy Blues”. Elsewhere, the heavily strutting “Get Down Make Love” acts as something of a bridge between the earlier “Seven Seas Of Rhye” and the “Another Ones Bites The Dust” funk-isms that lay ahead.
News Of The World was the last of the classic-period Queen albums, and heralded a spell in the relative doldrums before 1980's The Game. The album was a huge hit in America, something the group could never take for granted; and went four times platinum, largely as a result of their lengthy tour with Thin Lizzy earlier in the year. What News Of The World demonstrates perfectly is Queen’s unerringly ability to sound absolutely like no-other group – even when parodying other musical styles.
Friday, July 20, 2012
I Stole Freddie Mercury's Birthday Cake...
Read on to learn how one man and his naked balloon-dancing pals swiped Freddie Mercury's £4,000 birthday cake.
Thursday, July 19, 2012
'We Are The Champions' Named The Most Patriotic Pop Song
Rockers Queen have been crowned top of the patriotic pops in a survey of 100,000 music fans.
The band's anthem We Are the Champions was named number one by fans who were asked what song made them proud to be British.
The track, which got to number two in 1977, picked up 13,000 votes in the survey carried out among users of the Lucky Voice karaoke website.
It was followed by the Oasis hit Wonderwall which was nominated by 11,000 karaoke singers and then Let It Be by The Beatles which got 10,000 votes.
Elton John's Candle In The Wind and London Calling by The Clash rounded off the top five.
Lucky Voice boss Nick Thistleton said: "It seems the great British public are quite a sentimental crowd, with so many people opting for solid ballads over rock anthems. But you can't beat the feel good factor of We Are the Champions - especially when sung with your mates at high volume.
"We need all the help we can get this summer to give the UK a massive boost and we urge everyone out there to get into the patriotic spirit, show their support and help by singing our way to success."
Source of original article: http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk
Tuesday, June 19, 2012
Finally: Robots Perform "Bohemian Rhapsody"
The Poor Bots, From a Poor Family
No one—not even robots—can resist “Bohemian Rhapsody.” These robotic heads come from the Korea Institute of Science and Technology’s Center for Intelligent Robotics, where they were created to entertain the elderly through song. The performance gets more complex—and more bizarre—as the song goes on, and the bots are surprisingly good at conveying that certain feeling of despair. (Enjoy, elderly!) By far the hardest thing to understand, though, is why four heads would stop at the exact moment when everybody head-bangs to “Bohemian Rhapsody.” Talk about a missed opportunity.
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