
And for such a kick-ass song, it was a surprisingly big hit, reaching number 11 on the UK chart. Now I’m Here was built around one of Brian May’s greatest riffs. Rock Icons: Freddie Mercury by Taylor HawkinsĪfter a first major hit with a pop song, Killer Queen, the follow-up single was a reaffirmation of the band’s heavy rock credentials.Freddie Mercury's Massive Moustachioed Birthday Party.The 10 best Queen songs Freddie didn't sing.It was only when Queen got balls-deep into funk on their 1982 album Hot Space that they almost killed their career.

Another One Bites The Dust topped the US chart in October 1980, and lit up dancefloors all over the world. Queen’s biggest selling single wasn’t a rock song, and it wasn’t written by Freddie Mercury. And in the video for Crazy Little Thing Called Love, Freddie preened in black leathers like the Elvis of the 1968 Comeback Special. It was Freddie’s homage to Elvis Presley, a pure rock’n’roll number, written off the cuff one day on tour, when he jumped out of the bath, wrapped himself in a towel and strummed out the chords on an acoustic guitar. And in it one were two lines that Freddie always sang to his audience with love: “ You brought me fame and fortune and everything that goes with it/I thank you all.” 8. We Are The Champions has become the soundtrack to countless sporting triumphs across the years. There are power ballads, and then there is this – Freddie Mercury’s monument to self-belief and self-aggrandisement. And when Freddie sang, “Heap big woman, you made a bad boy out of me”, he never sounded more convincingly heterosexual. But no matter: the song is one of Brian May’s best, a hard rocking humdinger. Fat Bottomed GirlsĮven in the late 70s, before political correctness was a generally accepted concept, Fat Bottomed Girls was a risqué title. For all that, Freddie sang it beautifully. He wrote it for his wife Veronica Tetzlaff, and played it on a Wurlitzer electric piano – described by Mercury as “a horrible instrument”. In the 80s John Deacon wrote the huge hits Another One Bites The Dust and I Want To Break Free, but You’re My Best Friend was his first song that was released as a single, in 1976. As a single it was not a hit, but it’s one of the definitive early Queen songs. The oldest track on Queen’s Greatest Hits originally appeared on the band’s self-titled debut album in 1973, as an instrumental, and again on 1974’s Queen II as a fully formed song.

WHAT SONGS ARE ON AEROSMITH GREATEST HITS 1980 MOVIE
The soundtrack album that the band made for the sci-fi adventure movie Flash Gordon was erratic, as most soundtracks are, but this single – an edited version of album opener Flash’s Theme – is a mini-masterpiece of high-camp rock theatre, featuring lines of dialogue including Brian Blessed’s hammy intonation: “Gordon’s alive!” 14. With its stupidly brilliant hook line – “Flash! Ah ah!” – this is surely the most ridiculous song that Queen ever recorded.
