Nostalgic News Of Queen's World
By popular demand, Circus magazine digs into the archives once
again and brings you an exclusive interview with Queen's Freddie
Mercury and Brian May.
Not since the death of John Lennon has a rock star been eulogized
with so many kind words. Yet all the praise heaped upon Freddie
Mercury since his death from AIDS last November has obscured an
important point: Queen was not Freddie Mercury's band, but the sum of
four very unique and talented individuals. Our second Queen Classic
reprint begins by addressing this issue. Taken from the January 19,
1978 edition of Circus magazine, it finds our boys preparing for a
tour on the heels of their News Of The World album.
Freddie Mercury is no longer the leader of Queen. Has he been
fired, you ask, or is he off to pursue a solo career? No. It's simply,
with the advent of the News of the World LP (Asylum) the personality
of the music and of Brian May, drummer Roger Taylor and bassist John
Deacon have come across more strongly than ever before.
Those who have seen them on the recent US tour notice more than
ever before that they're a group comprised of four separate
identities, not just a lead singer and background band. Freddie
Mercury is delighted to hear it. "I've never considered myself
the leader anyway," says irrepressible Freddie. "The most
important person, perhaps." And guitarist May agrees.
"Our separate entities do come to the fore on this album, on
which every cut is completely different from the one before it and
there's no concept at all. Apart from each having contributed two
tracks to the album, Roger and John have been much more involved in
the playing. Roger plays rhythm guitar on some of his cuts
["Sheer Heart Attack" and "Fight from the Inside"]
which makes sense, because he had a better idea of how he wanted it to
go. John plays acoustic guitar on one of his as well ("Who Needs
You"]. I played maracas on it. While we may not do it that way on
stage, in the studio that makes more sense."
Brian also does a lot more singing of his own songs on News, but
he's content to let Freddie do the singing on stage.
"He's a natural performer," asserts Brian. "He acts
on stage as if he was born doing it. That's great for us. We wouldn't
want it any other way."
As May and Mercury emphasize, it's not just musically that shifts
occur in the group.
"John keeps a very close eye on our business affairs,"
says Freddie. "He knows everything that's going on and shouldn't
be going on. If God foresakes us now the rest of the group won't do
anything unless John says it's all right.
"Roger is very important to us in a different way. He's always
been an out-and-out rock & roll fan with no time to stop and think
about music and that's very good for us. Instinct. He's also the one
who is most aware of facets in music, and that's essential in the
band.
Freddie said he never considered himself a leader. "The most
important person, perhaps."
If you listen to 'Sheer Heart Attack' on the new album you'll see
what we mean. It sounds like a punk, or 'new wave' song, but it was
written at the same time of the Sheer Heart Attack LP. He played it to
us then but it wasn't quite finished and he didn't have time to
complete it before we started recording. That was three years ago and
now... almost all these records you hear are like that period."
And Roger now? "He was into punk for a long time, but he's tired
of it." More about the album later.
But if you still don't believe no crown of leadership rests on the
mercurial head of Freddie, it's worth repeating his comment about the
composition of the group.
"If anyone left Queen, any one of the four, that would be the
end of Queen. We are four equal, interwoven parts. And the others just
couldn't function the same without each quarter."
Queen have just finished a special tour of the states. Not the
longest they've ever undertaken, by any means, but special
nevertheless.
"It was the first tour we've ever done without the support
band," Freddie explained. "There was so much going on on
stage that I doubt there would have been room for another band anyway.
We have so much material we want to play for people now that it would
have been far too long a concert. It's hard enough anyway to know what
to leave out: we'd like to play all the new material, but there are
some things we just would not dare leave out or I think the fans would
lynch us."
It was the sort of tour most rock bands dream of doing. Brian
agrees:
"We've managed to get some of the most sought after halls
there are, even though the tour was short. Most of them are places
we've played before. In some cities we had to settle for second,
alternative choice auditoriums— the thing was set up so fast. It was
also a very compressed tour—35 dates in six weeks. We did very large
halls because we wanted to do a fuller show and our rig was about
twice as big as ever we used before.
"It provided a complete stage environment, with an extension
stage,
three trailers and an enormous lighting gimmick not just for New
York and Los Angeles. That's why we booked big halls, so that we could
give everybody the complete show. We first used our crown centerpiece
at London's Earl's Court concert over the Jubilee. At the time, we
didn't envisage being able to take the crown on tour with us, but we
managed to have it demounted into a portable object. And so we had it
for all the gigs. It made the most ambitious backdrop we've ever
attempted, but it was worth it. The fans seemed to enjoy it and they
are what matter."
That last remark of Brian's is typical of the group's attitude
towards their fans, for they have one of the closest rapports with the
fans of any in the business. The same cannot be said for their
relationship to the music press, however, especially in Britain. In
fact, many people thought the chart-topping single, "We Are the
Champions," was Queen's way of telling the press in no uncertain
terms that they've made it without them. Others thought it an arrogant
statement about their rock supremacy. But how do they feel? First
Freddie, who wrote the song:
"Certainly it's a relationship that could be, but I was
thinking about football when I wrote it. I wanted a participation
song, something the fans could latch on to. It was aimed at the
masses.
I thought we'd see how they took it. It worked a treaty When we
performed it at a private concert in London, the fans actually broke
into a football chant between numbers. Of course, I've given it more
theatrical subtlety than an ordinary football chant. You know me.
"I certainly wasn't thinking about the press when I wrote it.
I never think about the British music press these days. It was really
meant to be offered the musicians as the fans.
"I suppose it could also be construed as my version of 'I Did
It My Way.' We have made it, and it certainly wasn't easy. No bed of
roses as the song says. And it's still not easy."
Brian concurs, "You know, songs aren't always about what the
words say. Messages in songs can appear different. I always see that
as the difference between prose and poetry. Prose can mean exactly
what it says, while poetry can mean the opposite. That goes for this
song. Freddie's stuff is often tongue-in-cheek anyway, as you know.
This song is very theatrical. Freddie is very close to his art. You
could say, he's married to his music, whether it's 'I Did It My Way'
or his "There's No Business Like Show Business.' I must say, when
he first played it for us in the studio we all fell on the floor with
laughter. So many of the people in the press hate us because we've
side-stepped them and got where we have without them.
"But there's no way the song says anything against our
audiences. When the song says 'we,' it means 'us and the fans.' When
we did that special concert, the fans were wonderful. They understood
it so well. I know it sounds corny, but it brought tears to our
eyes." Freddie and Brian are unanimous on that: the spontaneous
responses to "We Are the Champions" really move them. But
that is the kind of general response News of the World has received
because, as Brian May says, "It's a spontaneous album. I think
we've managed to cut through to the spontaneity lacking in our other
albums. I have no apologies to make for any of our previous albums.
We're proud of them and wouldn't have let them out if we weren't. But
I now feel some may have been over-produced, so we wanted to go with a
more spontaneous,
rock & roll based album. It was nice to do something that
didn't need such intensity. For example, with 'Sleeping on the
Sidewalk' we did it in one take because it just seemed right the first
time. We like to think of the album as a window on an unguarded
moment, not a set piece. Each cut seems to do that, from the
participation songs to Freddie's mood pieces. Even his numbers on the
album are different, from his heavy 'Get Down, Make Love' to 'My
Melancholy Blues,' which is just what it says."
Brian admits that his own material is different too. But he still
tries to keep his private life separate and out of songs as much as
possible.
"If you don't keep something back, it can be very bad for
you."
But for the band both the album and the tour are in the past and
they have to look at the future. They got back to England on Christmas
Eve.
'My mother would have killed me if I wasn't home for Christmas. I
haven't missed one yet," says Freddie. And the others felt the
same.
"It's time for some stock-taking. We've all become
businessmen," admits Freddie, "even though it's against our
better judgement. It's something that always happens if you get
successful. Being a musician is not just cutting discs, unfortunately.
I wish it was. We've all got companies now, some connected to music,
others not. I'm producing Peter Straker, I have my car company.. .and
lots of other fingers in other pies. We mast take some time off to get
things in perspective, or things will start to go wrong.
"Then there's been talk of doing a big world tour—Britain,
South America, Japan, and of course the States as well as lots of
other places. But that won't be until later in the year."
So, American fans will have a chance to see Queen in 1978.
"You must tell them not to be too greedy, though," warns
Freddie. "They've already seen more of us than any other
country."
And what about a message for the American fans, Freddie?
"They know we love them. Apart from that, oh, say something
outrageous for me." |