QUEEN TRILOGY Mix of Show Must Go On, Who Wants to Live Forever & Bohemian Rhapsody by niKos Fusion

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  • Опубликовано: 14 окт 2024
  • Special Edited & Extended Versions of three iconic Queen Songs; incorporating additional orchestral & operatic accompaniments, mood/audio enhancements, appearances from well known actors and a special guest - Mahammad Ali.!
    The Show Must Go On featured as the twelfth and final track on Queen's 1991 album, Innuendo. It is credited to Queen, but written mainly by Brian May. The song chronicles the effort of frontman Freddie Mercury continuing to perform despite approaching the end of his life, although his diagnosis with HIV/AIDS had not yet been made public in spite of ongoing media speculation claiming that he was seriously ill. When the band recorded the song in 1990, Mercury's condition had deteriorated to the point that May had concerns as to whether he was physically capable of singing it. May recalls; "I said, 'Fred, I don't know if this is going to be possible to sing.' And he went, 'I'll fucking do it, darling'-vodka down-and went in and killed it, completely lacerated that vocal".
    Who Wants to Live Forever is a power ballad and is the sixth track on the album A Kind of Magic, which was released in June 1986 written by lead guitarist Brian May for the soundtrack to the film Highlander. The song peaked at No. 24 in the UK charts. In 1991.
    Since its release, the song has been covered by many artists and in 2014, Rolling Stone readers voted it their fifth favourite song by Queen.
    Bohemian Rhapsody was a song released as the lead single from Queen's fourth studio album, A Night at the Opera (1975). Written by lead singer Freddie Mercury, the song is a six-minute suite, notable for its lack of a refraining chorus and consisting of several sections: an intro, a ballad segment, an operatic passage, a hard rock part and a reflective coda. It is one of the few progressive rock songs of the 1970s to achieve widespread acclaim and commercial success and appeal to a mainstream audience.
    Mercury referred to "Bohemian Rhapsody" as a "mock opera" that resulted from the combination of three songs he had written. It was recorded by Queen and co-producer Roy Thomas Baker at five studios between August and September 1975. Due to recording logistics of the era, the band had to bounce the tracks across eight generations of 24-track tape, meaning that they required nearly 200 tracks for overdubs. The song parodies elements of opera with bombastic choruses, sarcastic recitative, and distorted Italian operatic phrases. Lyrical references include Scaramouche, the fandango, Galileo Galilei, Figaro, and Beelzebub, with cries of "Bismillah!"
    Although critical reaction was initially mixed, retrospective reviews have acclaimed "Bohemian Rhapsody" as one of the greatest songs of all time and is often regarded as the band's signature song. A Rolling Stone readers' poll ranked Mercury's vocal performance as the greatest in rock history.

Комментарии • 4

  • @jumedas
    @jumedas 5 месяцев назад +2

    fantastic M A S T E R P I E C E 👍

  • @tmay6489
    @tmay6489 5 месяцев назад +1

    Magic is what this band did, this mix has again captured….Magic.

  • @heikoallewelt5632
    @heikoallewelt5632 6 месяцев назад +2

    This is fun!
    Nicely done!
    Dankeschön ✨

  • @Algarot
    @Algarot 3 месяца назад

    En éstos casos es muy difícil mejorar lo original, tú lo consigues, enhorabuena 👍