Queen is one of those bands that can be easy
to overlook.
They’re the kind of band you take for granted,
because you can't remember a time when they
weren't there - so there’s often a lot that
most people don’t know about them.
With that in mind, here’s a deep-dive into
one of history’s most ubiquitous rock’n’roll
acts.
Freddie’s beginnings
Shocking though it might be, Freddie Mercury
wasn't the given name of Queen’s frontman.
He was actually born into a devout Zoroastrian
family to parents from India.
His birth name?
Farrokh Bulsara.
He was actually born in Zanzibar but spent
a good chunk of his childhood at a private
school in India, where he started going by
Freddie.
“I’ll always walk around like a Persian
popinjay.
And no one’s gonna stop me, honey.”
However, he didn't actually change his last
name until around the time that Queen was
founded.
Luckily, his chosen moniker tends to roll
off the tongue a little easier than the one
he was born with.
Royal start
Although their name is one of the most famous
in rock history, Queen wasn't always called
Queen.
In their pupal state, when the band consisted
of Brian May, Roger Taylor and Tim Staffell,
it was actually known as Smile.
In 1970, however, Staffell left the group
to join another band, the delightfully-named
Humpy Bong, and Smile’s remaining members
took on one of their fans as lead singer,
leading to a name-change in the process.
That fan was one Farrokh Bulsara and their
new name was ‘Queen’.
Feeling the pressure
"Under Pressure" was the result of a winning
combination of David Bowie, hard drugs, and
failure.
In July 1981, Bowie went into the studio to
record backup vocals for a Queen song called
"Cool Cat."
Unable to get that particular song to work
and despondent at their lack of success, Queen
and Bowie fell into their back-up plan: drinking
wine and doing cocaine.
“Not a good thing to say in this country.
Sorry, I didn’t say that.”
As the evening progressed, something that
could generously be referred to as ‘creativity’
began to take hold.
Queen and Bowie started messing around with
a completely different song, written by Queen's
drummer Roger Taylor and tentatively titled
"Feel Like."
In a burst of creative hedonism, the song
metamorphosed into something amazing.
The bass line came together, the duet was
improvised, and "Under Pressure" as we know
it was born.
A kind of science
Brian May might not necessarily be a household
name, but you'd struggle to find someone who
isn't familiar with his work.
As guitarist for Queen, he wrote "Brighton
Rock," "Fat Bottomed Girls," and "We Will
Rock You."
That would be more than enough accomplishments
for most people, but, as the years grew on,
he just kept on going.
May had dropped out of college back in the
'70s to pursue a career in music.
Although that panned out a little more than
alright, he nonetheless decided to go back
to school over 30 years later to wrap up his
doctoral thesis in astrophysics.
Since then, he’s worked with NASA on a number
of projects and even has an asteroid named
after him.
Amped up
Queen's bassist John Deacon has been a lot
of things.
On Queen’s first album, for example, he
was ‘Deacon John', because the other band
members thought it sounded more interesting.
He’s also a trained electronics engineer,
and without him, Queen wouldn't sound the
way they do.
Deacon was the creator of the legendary Deacy
Amp, the sound system that gave Queen their
trademark orchestral tones.
It's a piece of equipment that enthusiasts
and engineers spent years trying to replicate,
but with limited success.
It wasn't until 2008, when a group of engineers
tore the original machine apart, that they
managed to find some semblance of an understanding
of its inner workings.
Even more impressively, Deacon created the
original Deacy Amp out of pieces he found
in the trash.
Bohemian Rhapsody
With all of the glamour, fame and jet-setting
hedonism that Queen enjoyed throughout their
career, it doesn’t seem like much of a surprise
that the band’s story has been turned into
a movie.
But it's been a long road to getting a Queen
movie made.
The first shot at one was announced in 2010,
with Sacha Baron Cohen attached to play Freddie
Mercury.
Three years later, and with nothing filmed,
Cohen left the project, citing a number of
reasons for exiting the film, the most crucial
being creative differences with the surviving
band members.
Cohen had wanted to make a gritty, adult-oriented
look at the life and death of Freddie Mercury,
while Brian May and Roger Taylor instead wanted
a more family-friendly vibe, with half the
movie focused on how Queen had kept going
after Mercury's death.
From there, the project continued to hit further
speed bumps, burning through actors and directors
before Rami Malek was eventually confirmed
as the star and Bryan Singer came in to direct.
“Can you go a bit higher?"
“If I go any higher only dogs will hear
me."
“Try.”
After one last controversy, the firing of
Singer and his replacement by Dexter Fletcher,
Bohemian Rhapsody finally secured a November
2018 release.
