Wednesday 15 December 2010

Queen - Innuendo (Promo Version)



Promo version of Innuendo, an edit from the album version. Released on the 'Hints Of Innuendo' promo cassette tape shortly before the release of the album.

Freddie Mercury - Love Kills



Since some people have asked what is this version and where to find it. It is simple one of the multiple remixes of the song. It is not a live version, meaning it was not performed in concert. It comes in the Freddie Mercury Solo Collection in the Disc labeled "Other Sessions".

Saturday 13 March 2010

Queen - Party (Unreleased eYe Mix)

Unreleased eYe mix of Party intended for the eYe video game and 5 CD eYe mix set, but was not released in the end and remained shelved. Remixed in 1997 by former drummer of The Cross, Joshua J. Macrae. Joshua remixed all of the mixes for The eYe.

Monday 23 November 2009

Roger Taylor - The Unblinking Eye (Everything Is Broken)

Roger Taylor - The Unblinking Eye (Everything Is Broken) - The New Single - OUT NOW!

Tuesday 10 November 2009

Defying Gravity - Kerry Ellis

We Will Rock You and Wicked star Kerry Ellis performs and records the track 'Defying Gravity'. Produced by Queen's Brian May.

Queen - Absolute Greatest TV Advert

Queen Absolute Greatest TV Advert

Tuesday 1 September 2009

Queen - Somebody To Love (Subtitulada en espaƱol)

"Somebody to Love" is a song English rock band Queen. Written by singer Freddie Mercury, the track featured on their 1976 album A Day at the Races, from which it was also released as the lead single.

Like "Bohemian Rhapsody", the major hit from Queen's previous album A Night at the Opera (1975), "Somebody to Love" has a complex melody and deep layering of vocal tracks, this time based on a gospel choir arrangement. It was the first single off the album A Day at the Races. It is a rock ballad on which band members Freddie Mercury, Brian May and Roger Taylor multitracked their voices to create the impression of a 100-voice gospel choir. The lyrics, especially combined with the gospel influence, create a song about faith, desperation and soul-searching; the singer questions both the lack of love experienced in his life, and the role and existence of God. Staying true to Queen's guitar-driven style, it was also filled with intricate harmonies and a notable guitar solo by Brian May, and it went to number 2 on the UK charts and number 13 on the U.S. singles chart. The song requires many high notes, ranging from a C5 in full voice to an A♭5 in falsetto.

A promotional video was made combining a staged recording session at Sarm East Studios (where the A Day at the Races album was recorded) and film footage of the band's performance at Hyde Park that September. The song was included on their first Greatest Hits, released in 1981.