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Queen For An Hour
1989 Radio 1 Interview
'Queen For An Hour' was the name of an hour
long interview which was broadcast on Radio 1 on Easter Bank
Holiday Monday, on 29 May 1989. The whole band gave a rare
interview together with Mike Read (which is the correct spelling
of his surname), to promote the just released album 'The
Miracle'. Unsurprisingly, the interview concentrates on the
album, discussing all of the tracks (with the exception of
'Scandal'), as well as influences, solo projects, the decision to
tour, and the future. Some of the band's diplomatic responses
about touring are particularly interesting, given what is
obviously now known about Freddie's health at the time.
The straight interview, lasting 54:44 (although it is evidently
edited in a couple of places) was released as a bonus disc in the
'Queen
Collection' US boxed set in 1992, while short snippets were
also used for the 1991 track 'Queen Talks'. The
broadcast programme edited some sections of the interview, to
make room for various tracks from the album, and some of the
band's favourites.
The transcription below contains the full interview, with the
approximate differences between the two versions shown. I haven't
actually heard the broadcast version, so the differences are
based on a transcription I found online, which omitted some brief
sections and acted more as a summary than a definitive
transcription. As such, the broadcast version may include more
dialogue than that shown below. The dialogue in red is omitted
from the broadcast version, while the dialogue and song titles in
blue are added. However, very little was added for the broadcast,
it is more a case of some elements being restructured, or
re-ordered, rather than added.
For the transcription, some minor contributions, such as simply
saying 'yes' to agree, are omitted, as are some occasions when
two people talk over each other and it's difficult to tell who
says what.
Mike: Hello, this
is Mike Read, with the bank holiday special - Queen For An Hour
[A montage of Queen hits is played - 'Killer Queen', 'Seven Seas
Of Rhye', 'Radio Ga Ga', 'Another One Bites The Dust', 'Crazy
Little Thing Called Love', 'Bohemian Rhapsody', 'Somebody To
Love', 'Flash', 'I Want To Break Free', 'We Are The Champions']
Mike: Some of the great hits from Queen that have kept the band
at the top for over eighteen years, and with me in the studio are
the four members of the band, Brian May, Freddie Mercury, Roger
Taylor and John Deacon, who've just released their sixteenth
album 'The Miracle'. Good to have you here chaps, the first time
you've all been publicly together since August 1986, that was
when you did your last gig at Knebworth, and Brian, did you
actually break up after that gig, or did you just drift apart?
Mike: Are you rolling in there? So August 1986 saw the last Queen
gig, at Knebworth, did the band actually break up after that, was
it a sort decided thing between you, you thought right we will
split, or did it just drift?
Brian: No, we didn't split up at all, in fact, we just said, we
want a rest, for the last, er, whatever it was, fifteen years,
we've been racing around the world, and then coming back, and
making an album, and racing around the world again. So we thought
we'd just take a break, but still exist as a band, really
Mike: Did you decide that before Knebworth, Brian, or did you
decide after the gig, let's, let's give it a rest for a while?
Brian: I think during that tour we thought, we decided that, is
that right? If we can remember back that far.
Roger: Yeah, Roger, here, no, we, we, just sort of thought it was
a natural sort of flow really, it was a very big tour, and it was
very successful, and it was a natural sort of comma, so we rested
really for a while, 'cos we thought after this, wow, let's take a
risk, and it was a sort of unspoken agreement, wasn't it?
Freddie: Yes, absolutely, Freddie here (laughter)
John: I agree as well
Brian: He agrees, he's John Deacon
Roger: And that must be John, yeah
Mike: So, Freddie, the album 'A Kind Of Magic', did you think at
the time we've gone as far as we can go for a while?
Freddie: Yes, absolutely, we wanted, ha, ha, ha, yes I think, um,
maybe this sort of long, sort of layoff probably stemmed from me,
and I, I just decided myself that I think if I sort of come out
with it and say 'look let's have a rest', and by that I meant
that, not just a little rest and then we go back into the
studios, we wanted to sort of change the whole sort of format of
things that we were doing and also give us time to do certain
solo stuff, basically
John: You were singing with that big lady, weren't you
Freddie: Well I wasn't then, as you know (laughter) and it just
sort of happened, really I mean, when were actually doing the
sort of Magic Tour, I mean I had no inclination that I was doing,
that I was going to do a solo, solo, sort of project with
Montserrat, but I did have in the back of mind that I wanted to
do, do something by myself, and I think, so did the other lads
Roger: Mmm, we'd had so many years, you know, doing the same
things, yeah
Freddie: Yeah, yeah, yes, and so it was just a sort of breather,
it was just a breather, and to do some things that we wanted to
do without each other, but it wasn't a split, wasn't it
Mike: It's very, it's very lucky that you were all in agreement,
because obviously with any band, the vocalist, at least for the
media, tends to be a sort of focal point ish, and, with some
groups it's difficult to maintain that balance, I mean, you're
lucky the other guys didn't say, 'oh come on Freddie, for
goodness sake, we want to carry on'
Freddie: It's because I think, I think we know each other quite
instinctively now after all these years, and there wasn't
anything like 'oh I want to go and further my career without
you', it wasn't that sort of thing, just, just something that um
John: Space to do something else
Freddie: Yeah, I mean, we've been together now how, eighteen
years I would say, seventeen or whatever
Brian: Oh my God
Freddie: I really think that if egos had sort of, if egos came
into it they would have done that a long time ago, and we would
have gone our separate ways and all that, I think it's just,
after a while we get, we get, bored with each other, and sort of,
we need
Brian: Need a bit of space
Freddie: We need a bit of space
Brian: I think we've learned to give each other our space
(Freddie: yeah) which helps, which keeps the balance of the band,
it's very hard to stay together all that time really, in fact
that's the number one trick, in a way, it's the secret, if you do
stay together and you can still use each other's talents, but at
the same time give each other some space to be individuals, I
think that's the secret
Mike: John, are you, are you in sort of musical harmony, the four
of you, do you all think the same, or?
John: No, not at all, no we all have different ideas, which is
why we all bounce off each other in a way, we all
Mike: Do you use them all, or I mean, do you still have to fight
each other a little?
John: We do, but I don't know, we, we, we bounce off each other
in the studio, don't we, I mean, all different ideas
Roger: Each other and the walls (laughter)
Freddie: We bounce each other off, yes
John: No, very different, you know, so that's what makes it
interesting, I think
Brian: That's right
Mike: So John, what have, what have you been doing, since the
demise of Queen, you're probably the quietest one
John: Demise? There, there is no demise of Queen
(Laughter)
Brian: Oh dear, we better not talk about that
John: It's a hiatus, a hiatus, perhaps?
Roger: A mere comma
Mike: We'll do it, we'll do it again, so it's slightly, it's, what
have you been doing over the last couple of years, John?
John: Not a lot really, I've been on holiday a couple of times
Brian: We'll rephrase that won't we
Roger: I don't like that phrase, word, demise, do you?
John: No, I don't like that word demise, no, strike that, strike
that demise, we'll have that out
Mike: The six demises have all gone, so
John: Er, I've had a, not a lot really, a couple of videos for
Morris Minor And The Majors, and that's about it
Mike: And a big hit
John: Yeah, one of them was, yeah, The Stutter Rap one did well
for them, yeah, and that's about it
Mike: Do you find other people coming to you to do things, I
mean, being a member of Queen and
John: They usually want the money, that's what they're after
Mike: Do they want to be associated with you?
John: Yeah, if I, if, yes, possibly yes, sometimes
Mike: Brian, you've been ah, working with Anita Dobson (Brian:
yes), um, a lady with, with a good voice, I mean, people
obviously know her through Eastenders, and then thought, here's
Brian May, musician, working with her, but she is a good singer
though
Brian: Yeah, I've done a lot of things which people have raised
eyebrows about, I'm afraid, but I've believed in all of them,
yeah I did Anita's album, which I think is very, very musically
good, and I did, I produced the Bad News album, which I thought
was very significant in it's way
Roger: Very musically bad
Brian: Very musically awful, but totally right, I thought, and
I've done, I've played with a lot of people, um, which previously
I didn't have the time to do, because Queen's been a very closed
unit over the years, so I found myself, you know, playing with
Black Sabbath, and, jamming around with Def Leppard and people
like that, which I've really enjoyed, and um, but for the time
being I, my opinion is that I shouldn't be a producer, you know,
I've, I've done a lot of producing, but I prefer to play and um
Mike: Is that where your main buzz comes, playing on stage?
Brian: Yeah, if I produce people I end up playing anyway, so
there's always that thing, and I think that's what I do best, so
I'm very happy to get back to that, and when the group started to
make the album again, it was, it's nice to be back part of that
team, there's, there's definitely a good feeling about it, and
there's a lot of, we do have very different ideas, but there is a
balance, and we argue and all that stuff, but out of it comes
something pretty good, I think, always
Mike: When Bad News were around, a lot of people were saying that
that was a sort of English version of Spinal Tap
Brian: There's a lot of parallels, there's, there's some
differences as well, yeah, but I just think they have, well I
don't want to get heavily into it, but I think they're very
talented people, in the same way as I think our group is, you
know, as a bunch of um, comedians who actually have something to
say, so, I, I, it was a great project for me
Mike: Do you still experiment with guitar sounds, I remember a
few years ago, doing a TV show with you, and you were playing
with different coins to get cello sounds on your guitar, do you
still do that?
Brian: Yes, um, yeah, but I still use the basic guitar setup, I'm
not heavily into guitar synthesisers and all that stuff, the
modern technology. We're into technology in the way that we put
it on tape but I like the way the guitar sounds, and I suppose
I'm more into the natural guitar sound than I, than I was in the
past
Mike: Who are some of your heroes?
Brian: Um, well, it's gotta be Jimi Hendrix, and probably still
Jeff Back, um, Clapton I think is very, very wonderful, a lot of
people, I listen to everybody (Mike: OK), and Mr Van Halen, I
think is, you know, of the modern guys, is exemplary
Mike: While you've been doing that, Roger's been working very
closely with The Cross, with your band The Cross
Roger: Yes, it, that was really when we decided to, to take a bit
of a pause, um, I thought I'd like to get involved with another
band, but in a different capacity, so I'm, I'm the sort of singer
of The Cross, and it's actually, they're developing now into a
very much democratic group, but um, but of course always, you
know, Queen does take priority over everything, which is why it
was nice to get back in the studio again and make an album with
the four old (John: men) men
Brian: Four old hags that we call Queen, yes
Mike: You're, you're
Roger: This is the BBC's now, can't say
Mike: You're opening, you're opening
Roger: I like Brian calling us a bunch of comics just now
Freddie: Comedians yes
Mike: I was gonna say, your opening track on the album, er, er,
Party and Khashoggi's Ship, er, is rather unusual, and where did
the whole concept of that come from?
Roger: Well actually, that was, that was really I think, er, I
think Freddie and Brian, I think I was having a skiing holiday at
the time actually, and I came back
Brian: That's where it came from yes
Roger: I came back, and they had the ideas for, no I think
Khashoggi's we were all there, weren't we, but er, Party arose
when I wasn't actually around
Freddie: We felt that we wanted to, and I remember, in fact, the
first couple of tracks, the, 'Party' and 'Khashoggi's Ship'
you're talking about, is something that we just came into the
studio, and things just evolved, naturally, straight away, so we
were hungry for it.
['Party' is played]
Mike: So the, the album, Freddie, is called 'The Miracle', the
track 'The Miracle' lyrically very interesting, I mean was that
an idea of yours?
Freddie: Um, the lyrics no, actually, actually I think that's one
of the songs where we all contributed, and um, wouldn't you say?
I think, I think on this album, um, it's the closest we've ever
actually been in terms of actually writing together and that's
quite true. Before we've actually had individual songs, that we
sort of, um, put about and bring to the other people, and the
other, I mean, you know, the, the others would sort of, put their
sort of bits in it, but I think from the start, these sort of
tracks have sort of actually emerged by the four of us, so I
mean, I think, it is, that's why I think this album's got nearly
all tracks written by Queen, um, but lyrically going back to 'The
Miracle', I think the four of us really put everything into it,
because I mean, somebody would come in with one line and say 'oh
that's, that's terrible' and change it, and so, in fact, I mean,
in one way I hate that because I have to keep singing (John: the
different lyrics) the different lyrics every day, until, until we
sort of agree on, on, on the final one, but um, I'd say lyrically
'The Miracle' is, is a definite four, four way split, wouldn't
you say?
John: Um, yes, yes, on this album, it's the most that I think
we've ever done together in terms of music and lyrics really,
isn't it?
Brian: Um, that's right
Mike: Was that deliberate, or has it just happened?
Roger: It was a sort of pre-agreed thing so, Roger here, um we
did actua-, that was the idea, we weren't sure whether we could
actually do it like that, but it did turn out pretty much that
way
Brian: It was a major decision in fact on this album, which we've
never ever done before really. I, I guess we decided fairly early
on, you know, that if we were all gonna contribute to the songs,
we would say in the end it was Queen that wrote everything. And
that, that doesn't sound like a very big thing, but it makes
quite a big, big difference in the studio, because, you er, you
have a tendency to get very possessive about your own songs if
your name's on it somehow, and from the, from the start we said
we're chucking everything in the pool, and it's all gonna be
written by Queen, and so we probably, you know, as the others
have said, you know, we actually got more into writing as a team
than ever before
['The Miracle' is played]
Mike: Is this gonna set a, a trend for future albums, did it work
as well so you'll say let's do it again?
Brian: I think so
Roger: It's, it's very satisfying isn't it, because, ego,
ego-wise, it, it sort of helps, I mean, because you know, you're
not sort of saying 'oh, I want this one because I think my song's
better', because if you're, if you're, sharing everything I mean,
it's, it's more democratic in a way
Freddie: Also staying away from each other for a couple of years
helps, you see, that's the reason, I mean, we, it didn't feel
like, like sort of, work in a way that, because after we took
this long sort of, holiday, or doing our solo stuff, we decided
that we'd only come back together if we really wanted to, and we
felt that we really wanted to, and I, I remember, in fact, some
of first, the first couple of tracks, the, 'Party' and
'Khashoggi's Ship', you're talking about, is something that we
just came into the studio, and things just evolved, naturally,
straight away, so we were hungry for it. And it felt like the
early days to us, and that's how we got very sort of excited, and
saying 'ooh yes this is going to be a good'... and out came a
whole load of tracks which we had to, in fact I, I think I seem
to remember that we, we had to choose from something like thirty
tracks to get down to this last ten, which is quite good, it's a
good year, a good crop
Mike: So what do you
John: Good vintage
Freddie: Good crop
Mike: What do you do with the twenty tracks left over?
Freddie: Well, they're still running about, I mean (laughter),
they're there, but I mean I think, in one way it was, it was
quite hard to, to sort of sift through all of them and actually
decide, in fact that's where all the rows came in, but I mean
that's good, so we had to decide, a lot of people had individual
tracks that they, they liked, and in the end we had to sort of
say, um, because we, the one thing I didn't want to do was
actually work on all, all thirty tracks, and I mean, it's so
funny, I mean, Paul McCartney happened to be next door, and he
sort of had a very similar situation, he said he literally had
about thirty tracks, but he said he'd worked on virtually all of
them, I thought my, that's a very painstaking way, I'd rather
sort of do a little bit on all of them, and then sort of say,
'OK, we'll just work on these ten', and so it's basically making
the decision earlier on, and I think that's what we did, but I
mean that's not to say that the others are sort of sub-standard,
I think there's, they might come across later
Mike: Do you keep those ideas around, and then when the next
album comes up say, if we don't have better ideas, we use the
good ideas we have?
Freddie: We tend to say that at the, at the time, but I think, I
mean, it depends when we actually go back in the studio, but I
mean like, we had ideas way before, and when we came to doing
this, we didn't touch them at all, so there, there's still
(Brian: that's right) a lot in the can from previous albums
(John: and we had a few ideas) there's some really nice ones I
think (John: some really good ones) but we just seem to, seem to
tire of them very quickly, don't we? Once
Roger: You always want to something that's fresh (Freddie: yeah)
don't you, you don't want to sort of start again each time
(Freddie: yeah, that's true)
Roger: So we've probably got an awful lot of tracks lying around
Freddie: I do feel, yes, sometimes I feel that's to our
detriment, because some, there's some great ideas that we sort of
forget, but we're always, we always seem to get very bored with
certain ideas if they're lying around
Mike: I think that's the same, virtually, with any group or any,
any act, by the time the album comes out and you've worked on
tracks, you've had enough of them, but they're fresh and new to
the public, and then you have to go round promoting them and you
think 'oh, that's following me around that album'. Is that, I
mean, is that a pain, I mean people always perceive it publicly
is that, it shouldn't be, they say 'well, you've done the songs,
you wrote the songs, you must like them'
Brian: Um, it's a double edged sword isn't it, you know, because
the things which are popular are popular, you know, and it
applies to us as well as the public in a way, I think. Am I
making sense?
Mike: You are making sense
Freddie: Not to me
(Laughter)
Roger: I didn't understand a word of it
Brian: What I mean is, what I mean is, it's um, continuing what
Freddie says, you know, we had all this, all these bits and
pieces of tracks, and some of them were half finished, some of
them were just an idea, and some of them were nearly finished,
and it sort of happened on it's own really, you know, there are
some tracks which you always want to get out and work on, and so
they get finished, and there are some tracks which you think 'oh
that's great, but I don't really know what to do with it at this
moment', so they naturally get sort of left by the wayside, so we
actually didn't have an awful lot of decision making to do, it,
it, a lot of it just happened, the tracks which are just bursting
to get out somehow get out, due to sort of public demand within
the group.
Mike: Do you have favourites on the album?
Roger: Well I suppose everybody does, I think we, hopefully we,
we, we pick the tracks that fit together best and complement each
other to make a good album, but er, I don't know if I, it's all
so fresh in my mind now I don't think I do have any particular
favourites actually
John: No, I'll tell you in two years time (laughter) when I can
look back on it
Mike: Why did you record the album in London, as opposed to going
to Montreux and doing it in your own studio?
John: Well we did a bit in Montreux
Brian: We did some in Montreux actually, yes, um, so that answers
that one doesn't it?
Roger: In fact
Mike: Why didn't you do all of the new album in your own studio
in Montreux?
Brian: Well we live in London I suppose, and it's just um
Roger: Yeah, we wanted to be at home, I think (Brian: it's a lot
easier) for a change
Freddie: And also, I think, it took a long while to, to, to get
this far, and I think we, we get very irritable when we're in one
environment, so I mean we, in fact, um, we used about three
studios didn't we, and that's, that's a short amount, that's a
small amount for us, normally we go round, I think it's, um,
Montreux was good, (Roger: it was very good actually) but it
lasted a couple of weeks and we came back
Mike: Climbing the walls
John: Yeah
Mike: What about some of your favourite songs, I mean stuff from
your collection, or things that you like. John, I believe
Veronica is one of your, your current favourite singles
John: I better choose that one because it's my wife's name, and
it's got Paul McCartney playing bass, which is quite nice
Brian: Cor
['Veronica' by Elvis Costello is played]
Mike: Was Paul your favourite bassist as you were learning?
John: No, he's, he's very good, but wasn't necessarily my
favourite when I was a young lad, no
Mike: Who were some of your bass influences?
John: Um, I actually used to like Chris Squire when I was quite
young, I used to go and see them playing with Yes, and er, who
else was there... the guy who used to play with um, Rory
Gallagher, he was quite good, Hugh McCracken
Roger: Oh yeah, yeah, yeah
Brian: Mmm, mmm
Mike: He was good actually, I saw him at the Marquee, very good
John: Yeah, but lots of different ones, Paul was very good as
well
Mike: The, the track 'Breakthru' on your album starts off as
though it's going to be maybe another 'Bohemian Rhapsody', the
big choir and the full sound, and then sort of breaks into this
sort of punchy drumming, Rog
Mike: Um (Roger: thank you) is it, is it your intention on some
of these to surprise, when people are lulled into that false
sense, the choirboys have hit you and then suddenly, in it comes
Freddie: Well, can I answer that one, yes (Roger: yes I was going
to say), it's quite, it's quite, it's quite easy, it's a prime
example of what we were talking about before, I mean, it's, the
track 'Breakthru' sort of stemmed from Roger, really, it's
basically his track, but um, the sort a-cappella vocal bit in
front was from somewhere else, and, as, like we were saying, we
had sort of thirty tracks, that was a little piece that I thought
was quite good and I didn't want it to go amiss, so I just said,
well let's just put in front of that one, put it in front of
'Breakthru', so it's basically another song, but it seemed to
sort of segueway quite nicely, so it's, it's just a snippet of
something else, isn't it, I mean that's the truth basically
Roger: But it sort of lyrically works (Freddie: but I, I don't
think it was actually, yeah) so it was nice, a nice interesting
little, just you know, mix to it
Mike: Because to anyone listening, they would think it's part and
parcel of the same thing, to you, you must think for a while,
those are those two bits put together
John: But for now it's just a whole piece
Roger: I think you know whether they work or not
Mike: Yes
Brian: Yeah, there's been quite a lot of that, because we wanted
to distil as much of the ideas that we had into the, into the
album, so it has got very compressed in a way, there's quite a
few examples of that, and obviously you only put things together
when they make sense, but strangely enough, if you're all
together working on particular ideas, the ideas do tend to mix
very well, because I suppose, you know, you're talking about it
and things come out of that
['Breakthru' is played]
Mike: So the album is very Queen as well, I mean in the last two
years, you haven't really allowed too many outside influences
from anyone else to come into the album, it's very much a Queen
album, isn't it
Roger: I think it would have been very silly if we'd tried to, to
sort of say, end up sounding like Prince or whatever's happening
at the time, I mean I think we have to stick to our guns, and um,
I think, and really make an album of the kind that we feel that
people wanted from us, um, you know, we are there to sort of
please people with, with the music, and I, I think this is that
kind of album, um, so no it's not fashionable really, and it's
not, er, it's not heavily influenced by outside sources, I think
it's, it's very us, and, and it goes right back to our beginnings
in many ways, you know, and there's a lot of guitar on it
Brian: Oh yes
Roger: Brian's playing better than ever actually, a lot of real
playing, you know, back, back to live playing in the studio
Mike: OK, I'll come back to the album in, in a moment. Freddie,
Montserrat Caballe, you had great success there, um, one always
got the feeling that although you're enjoying it, and you
obviously like opera, that you're also having a wonderful laugh
inside as you're doing it and thinking this is outrageous but I'm
enjoying every moment of it
Freddie: Ha, ha, ha, quite true actually. It's like a tidal wave,
hoo, hoo, hoo. It was, it's quite ridiculous wasn't it, actually
at that point I wanted to do something totally different, and I
think it all sort of, it snowballed, really, because I really
didn't think that she was going to, sort of, accept my sort of
offer, as it were, and to cut a long story short, at first I
actually thought it was only going to be the one track, but she
said let's make an album, and I thought my God, what am I going
to do now? And so I was sort of stuck and I thought, you know,
you, you don't just turn the super diva down, you know, and um,
so in one way I think it was good, because I didn't have that
much time to think about it, but then having said that, I spent a
year trying to make sure that, um, and I was very nervous, I must
say, and sort of, you know, she put me about, ha, ha, and ah, but
it was such a different thing to do, for me to do, and I'm glad I
did it, because I mean it's, sort of, very nerve wracking,
totally different, totally un-rock 'n' roll, and, and something
that really required a lot of discipline, but I'm glad it's over
actually, and don't ask me if I'm gonna do another, another
album, because I'm not
Mike: I wasn't, what I was, what I was going to say was, do you
need the, the discipline, do you feel that you're liable to get
undisciplined, you need that to peg you down, to keep you pushing
yourself?
Freddie: Yes, well you do, because it's a kind of discipline that
was totally different to me, was totally new to me, I mean you
have to sort of, I mean you can't, I mean I had to write all the
pieces, with Mike Moran, and it was different, I mean, I, I
didn't know her way, I didn't know er, what, what she was used
to, and, and she's coming from a totally different world, and so
I had, I realised that I was learning so much while I was
actually sort of with her, and so I had to do things in a very,
very different way, it's very hard to sort of explain, but, it's
not like rock 'n' roll, I couldn't work with her instinctively,
because I mean, I, with Roger, Brian and John, I mean, I know
over the years, you know certain things, and it's easier, but it
was total, totally new sort of box of tricks for me, and so I, I
was sort of feeling my way at the same time, as well as, sort of,
trying to understand how she recorded, how she works, how she
breathes, and how she, what kind of stuff she likes, so I mean
while I was writing away I was sort of trying to find my way, to
make sure that she liked the pieces, and if she didn't like it,
she'd tell you, so I.
Roger: You, you taught her some things though, didn't you?
Freddie: Well yes, I mean there was sort of, the recording
techniques were different, I mean she was used to just coming in,
sort of, doing her bit and running off, and I said, no, no, no,
you don't do that anymore, and she said well I'm not used to that
way, and I said well, and so I was teaching her sort of, that no,
you can, you can sort of, sing differently, and, she, it's a
different world she comes from.
['Barcelona' is played]
Mike: So no touring the country with her in a fifteen hundred
weight Commer van, or anything like that?
(Laughter)
Freddie: For my dresses, yeah? (laughter) no, no
Mike: Have you got any, any ideas to, is there anybody else along
those lines you think as a real flyer, I'd like to do something
with them?
Freddie: Er, you mean, um, to do duet with somebody else?
Mike: Yes
Freddie: Well Aretha Franklin was one, but I mean, she's, I can
still, um, she's still, I can still see her as part of my world,
but I mean with Montserrat, I mean I just didn't know where to
start, basically, I mean. I, I must say, it was something, it was
like a flippant gesture from me to start it off with, and I, I
really thought it would never come to any sort of fruition, and
when she accepted I just, I was dumbfounded, so then I thought my
God I'd better put my money where my mouth is,and, but I'm glad
that I did it, it was a, a totally different adventure, you know,
which I don't think would, will ever happen to me. I'd like to
see, see, I'd like to, see, um, other rock and roll singers try
things like that, you know, and see if they can get away with it.
Mike: They probably couldn't get away with it Freddie, but you
did
Freddie: There you are, I'm wonderful, aren't I?
Mike: Yes, absolutely (laughter). The visuals for that of course
were absolutely, er, stupendous and over the top, as they have
been for various Queen videos and things in the past. For the new
album, do you have any over the top visual ideas? You must do,
obviously
Brian: Well, I think, probably yes, but for the time being, the
first video is, is meant to be very un-gimmicky, we wanna just be
a band out there and be seen as a band again, which we thought
was important, so the, I think the gimmick store, I don't know if
gimmick is the right word, I think the um, the large spectacle
stuff will be absent from the first video we do, we just wanna be
a band on stage
Freddie: You don't know yet, Mallet's doing it
Brian: Mind you, with David Mallet, yeah, what can you say? Cast
of millions it could turn into
Freddie: He's fab
Roger: You're expecting the Cavern, and you get the Place De
L'Concorde or something else
John: We have a strong visual for the cover of the album
Mike: Which is what?
Freddie: Well the radio listeners will have a good time here
(laughter)
Mike: Well we'd like to hear your description of the cover, John
John: Oh, I can't describe it, no I can't, but it is unusual, and
different, and you'll have to buy it to find out
Freddie: Good one
Mike: Ooh, very sneaky
Brian: I could describe John Deacon's hat to you at this moment
Mike: Talking of rhythms, as we were, earlier, the um, on, on
'Rain Must Fall', very much a sort of Latin feel, that sort of
Samba come funk feel, Roger.
Roger: Yes, that's, that's a sort of a bit of a mixture, that's
a, a mish-mash really, there's sort of quite machine like in some
ways, but with sort of African overtones
John: And a lot of overdubs on top
Roger: Yeah, there's a lot, there's a lot of sort of percussion
on top that I did, on top of that one, so there's all sorts of
things happening, but they made me take most of it out of course,
to make room for the guitars
(Laughter)
John: And the vocals
Roger: And the vocals, yeah, yeah
['Rain Must Fall' is played]
Mike: The, er, going back to your group, The Cross, um, December
'88, big party at Hammersmith Palais, where you played
Roger: Oh yes, yes, in fact that was a sort of Queen Fan Club,
um, Christmas do, yes, it was a sort of, er, party, and we just,
we sort of went on and did a fairly spontaneous sort of forty
minute set, just short set, it was good fun actually, and then
Brian came on, and er, and er, we did a sort of blues set, it was
good fun all round, yeah
Brian: Great fun, yeah
Mike: So you have to let off steam in some ways when you're not
working
Roger: Yeah, oh yes, I mean that was just, that was just purely
letting off steam, and er, we thought everybody would, maybe
enjoy it, and have a good time
Mike: Do you do that at home, when we see the album coming out
and all the rest of it, I mean, do you get together privately? I
mean, obviously you all, you all get on very well, I mean you're
obviously soul brothers that need to spend a bit of time apart,
but like each other underneath, do you get together socially at
all and play, or jam?
Brian: We get together socially, we don't often play together to
be honest, we more often play with other people strangely enough,
but I suppose that's normal in a way, no, we see quite a lot of
each other socially, yeah, probably more than we did in the sort
of mid-period where we drifted apart, I'd say, I think we're very
much back together, and it's, it's very corny, but is like a sort
of like a family in a way, and particularly when you, you know,
you go through dodgy bits of your life, sometimes the group is
the, what you regard as the centre, you know
Roger: Yes, it seems to be a sort of anchor, in, in, well in my
life, in our lives maybe, you know, it's always been there, for,
for so long now, eighteen years or something, as Freddie was
saying, and it's, I don't know quite what life would be without
it, you know, as a sort of, fulcrum or something. But we don't
really jam when, when, if we do see each other, you know, 'cos
that would be like sort of like getting back to work, you know,
so it is either work or sort of social, I suppose
Mike: While you've sort of had a couple of years sojourn and
doing other things, er, have there been anyone when you're
listening to the radio, or listening to new records, that you've
thought 'hey, they've come through and they are great, I love
this group', I mean, as you've become maybe radio, radio
listeners, record buyers, whatever?
John: Bananarama
(Laughter)
Mike: Yeah, was it the harmonies that appeal to you John is it?
Their three part harmonies?
John: Well it could be, yeah those vocal unisons are something
that are
Mike: It's quite incredible to get three people to sing in unison
on a record isn't it? I hear an enormous edit, but never mind
(Laughter)
Mike: We can use that for the Bananarama special (laughter) the
Bananarama special
Brian: This is our tribute to Bananarama
Mike: What about some of your favourite songs, I mean stuff from
your collection, or things that you like. John, one of your
favourites is 'Veronica' maybe I suspect not because of the song,
but because you ought to like it
John: No, no, no, no, no, no, the reason for this is I was told
before we came in today we had to choose a song, and I said well
I don't know what to choose as a favourite song (Roger: the
rolling pin for you mate) so I said well I better choose that one
because it's my wife's name, and it's got Paul McCartney playing
bass, which is quite nice
Brian: Cor
Mike: Was Paul your favourite bassist as you were learning?
John: No, he's, he's very good, but he wasn't necessarily my
favourite when I was a young lad, no
Mike: Who were some of your bass influences?
John: Um, I actually used to like Chris Squire when I was quite
young, I used to go and see them playing with Yes, and er, who
else was there... the guy who used to play with um, Rory
Gallagher, he was quite good, Hugh McCracken
Roger: Oh yeah, yeah, yeah
Brian: Mmm, mmm
Mike: He was good actually, I saw him at the Marquee, very good
John: Yeah, but lots of different ones, Paul was very good as
well, not bad, you know
Mike: So Veronica, just so we can get it clean because we're
gonna play the track anyway, er, I believe 'Veronica's one of
your, your current favourite singles
John: Well yes, it could be, yeah, they play it on the radio at
the moment, I've heard it
Mike: And because it's your wife's name
John: It is yes
Mike: That'll edit really badly, but never mind, I'm sure we'll
play the song anyway
Producer: Mike, Mike, can you get Freddie to say his one when you
come back from the
John: Can we have a break?
Mike: Yeah, well we (producer: can you do Freddie, and then)
yeah, well we'll, yeah well we'll do them all
Freddie: Well carry on, well I might change my mind by the time
it comes round
John: I know
Mike: That's right. So talking of all time favourite singles and
singers, Freddie, Aretha Franklin, would one of her singles be
one of your all time favourites?
Freddie: Yes, I think, 'Natural Woman', I mean she's got so many
singles and tracks that, that I like, I love the 'Amazing Grace'
album, I don't know if you know it, it's a double sort of gospel
one, which I play from time to time, which I get loads of
inspiration from, from that, but 'Natural Woman', anything by her
really is great
['(You Make Me Feel Like A) Natural Woman' by Aretha Franklin is
played]
Freddie: And that's, I'm mad that George Michael did a duet, I
could have done it better
(Laughter)
Brian: Ooh
John: Oooh
Roger: Course you could
Brian: What, you and George Michael
Freddie: But no I think she has, mind you, having said that,
having said that, I think George Michael has a very good voice, I
think he's one of the other, sort of, singers that I like, Robert
Plant is the other one, but um, so I mean it's either Aretha
Franklin, um, 'Natural Woman' or even, or George Michael with
'Careless Whisper', yeah, lovely track
Mike: How would you, if you wanted to do something with Aretha,
how would you approach her, because the man in the street would
think, well Freddie, get on the phone and say 'Hi Aretha, Freddie
here, how about singing together' but obviously it doesn't work
like that?
Freddie: No, after Montserrat, I think those big mammas, I mean
I'll sort of leave them (laughter) I should leave them for a
while, I mean I'm glad to get back to the rock and roll bit with
Queen, but I think um, I don't know how I, I mean I, you know,
mean I'd, you know, I do my best, and just sing, I mean with
Aretha, I'd do something, sort of, gospelly, 'cos I mean we do, I
like to do certain, which we have done, you know with Queen, sort
of gospel overtones, I mean, 'Somebody To Love' had that say. I'd
love Aretha to sing 'Somebody To Love', actually, that would be a
nice thing, if somebody approached her and said try that. But,
um, no I mean, I mean, trying to sing with her, um, I don't know,
she hasn't approached me yet
Mike: I'm sure she will. Brian, what about your favourites?
Brian: Um, well there's loads of guitar stuff that I would cite,
I suppose, you know, but um. You want me to say the favourite
record?
Mike: Well, you can, you can lead round to it
Brian: Sorry, deathly silence there
Mike: You can, you can ramble round to it, ramble round to it and
end up with that one, I think that's probably a good idea
Brian: Well, well I'll wrap it up in the right things, um, yes my
favourite record when I was growing up was, was a Smoky Robinson
record and the, 'Tracks Of My Tears', The Miracles, and I think
it probably still is, because um, um, to me it doesn't matter
what the record is, is made up of, it's whether it grabs you or
not, you know, and that for some reason just has it you know, the
way he reaches out and sort of grabs hold of your heart is, to
me, what pop records are all about, and so I would still say that
one really.
['Tracks Of My Tears' by Smokey Robinson & The Miracles is
played]
Mike: Roger, I believe one of your favourites is one John Lennon
wrote, that was inspired by a two-tone police siren
Roger: Yeah, that's right, that, dee-dee-dee, that's the, yeah,
um, I don't know, I just find that 'I Am The Walrus' by The
Beatles is, it's very difficult to name one song, but I think
that's a sort of surreal masterpiece in song, and what he did
with the lyrics, with those sort of Lewis Carrol type in many
ways, but with those lyrics was marvellous, and the, and the
sound textures on the record are wonderful, and it's got hidden
depths, and I still hear different things in, in the record each,
each time I hear it
Mike: You turn the end up just to catch the spoken word to see
how far it goes
Roger: That's right, that's right, catch the Radio Four play at
the end which comes in, yeah, as they go down the radio bands
yeah, it's a wonderful record
Mike: OK, going back to the album, and the track 'My Baby Does
Me', which we can play next, how did this one, I mean how does a
song like 'My Baby Does Me', and a sound, how it does it start?
Brian: You have to look over to that part of the table to, to
find out, the is one from Freddie and John
Mike: Freddie, how does, I mean 'My Baby Does Me', where does
that sort of emerge from, you've got nothing at all to start with
Freddie: Well
John: You came up with the bassline, which you made me play, yes?
Freddie: No I thought, I thought you did it
John: No, you came up with it
Freddie: Oh, well, I think that song stems from John and myself,
and I'm Freddie by the way (laughter), um, it was just something
I, I seem to remember that we, we were trying something, I wanted
something a little more relaxed, and the way the other songs were
going, and I thought we're getting so involved and they're very
heavy, and there was so much sort of, there was a lot of guitar
input in some songs, and I, I felt that we, we didn't have
something that was quite sort of, a little bit more pristine, a
little bit more, sort of, clear headed, and, and not too
involved, and so we decided, I, I thought let's just go for
something quite straightforward, and something that's, that we
hadn't, that we hadn't got in, in, in the batch. Am I making
sense? No I'm not actually
John: It is very different from other tracks on the album
Freddie: Yeah, so we, we decided that we should, we should have
something with just a very easy backbeat, and something very
listenable, and I don't think it was going to go on the album at
first, we just decided that that would be a nice breather at the,
at the end of the second side
Mike: It's probably the most basic song
Freddie: Yeah, that's, that's the word I was looking for, and so
we kept that in, but um, apart from that there's no sort of,
wonderful, um, idea behind it
['My Baby Does Me' is played]
Mike: How did you decide on 'I Want It All' for the first single,
again, is that democratic, do you all sort of write on a piece of
paper
Freddie: It's a huge shit fight
Brian: As I say, out of the whole process of making an album,
choosing the first single is probably the hardest bit of all,
it's always really dreadfully difficult to know what to put out,
yeah, I mean it's really difficult, so I suppose yes it was
democratic, we also tried to get a few other people's input, you
know, people in the business, friends, people in the record
companies that we work with the whole time. And in the end you
never know if you've made the right decision really, you probably
never know, you know. Um, we just got some feedback, I suppose
first of all from America, that maybe that would be the right
thing for America, and Germany, um, I think the, the territory we
were least sure about was England, because you have this thing
where um, you know, Radio 1 has a certain sound, and if you don't
fit into it, you can be worried that you, you don't get, get, get
a look in, you know, so we, we still
Mike: Yes, that can certainly be a negative thing with, with
radio that, that dominates a country, where you've got one
national pop station, um, which it does, yeah, (John: radio)
Radio 1, yeah, that's what I'm saying (John: plug) if you are
(Brian: which we are on, I have to say), there's no need to plug
our own station, um, no, where, where do you get that trouble of
Roger: We play the jingles all the time
Mike: Of a station getting a sound, um, I think it can be quite
worrying because if you're making your own music, you don't want
to tailor it to fit into that, into that sound, (Brian: mmm,
yeah, that's right) yet at the same time you want it to reach
people
Brian: Yeah, we always had the idea that we really wanted to, to
lead people to somewhere new, rather than fit into what was going
on, but it's always a risk, and so, I mean there are other tracks
on the album which would more easily fit into, for instance,
Radio 1 programming, but we felt we would rather put forward a
certain atmosphere first
John: It's very difficult, we all had different ideas of what the
first single should be
Brian: Yeah, it's not easy
['I Want It All' is played]
John: Yeah
Roger: Yeah, though I think
Mike: It's very, it's very sad hearing someone say 'fit into
Radio 1 programming', because it (Brian: well you are kind), yes
I know but I mean, I always think that, if the music's good it's
good, if it's not it's not, wherever it comes from
Roger: Unfortunately I don't think that's the case though in this
country, I mean it, the music might be good, but I think the
quality of the music doesn't seem to bear any relationship to
whether it, it gets played or not (Mike: I agree) quality is not
the, the, the thing it's judged, the yardstick it's judged by, as
Brian said it's got to fit into that kind of thing, and strangely
enough, the record we chose for our first single doesn't really,
it isn't, it's certainly not Stock, Aitken and er, thingy, um
Brian: And we may be making a huge mistake folks
Roger: But it's very us, but it's very us, and it might be a
mistake, you know, and we will know if it's a mistake if it's not
a hit
Brian: Who knows
Freddie: You can't, you see, you can't please everybody (Roger:
no you can't) and that's what we want to do, it's to please as
many people as possible with just the one single, and that's why
I mean, I think Queen have always been, you know, versatility
that, that we like, and there's, and we have four sort of
songwriters, and we all write very different songs, and I think
the only way to get that is by buying the album, and then when,
when, when we're left with the choice of one, it's very
difficult, and I think that sometimes we seem to do it in a way
that we have like four singles all ready to go out, and they're
all sort of different, one after the other, and that's how, I
think, one would say that in the end the way to get across that
is to have four singles, one after the other, and then you'll get
the idea, but I think basically, I would say, it's the album that
one should listen to, and I think (Roger: yes, yeah, yeah, yeah),
I think that it's, this is just breaking the ice, it's just, in
the end you have to just say let's go with the first single, and
then, and then, out will come the other three.
Brian: It's funny, it brings back memories of years and years
ago, because we always did say that, you know, people asked us
what we were about, and we used to say, you have to really listen
to the whole album, because that's what we're about, and we
always were a sort of album group I suppose (Roger: yeah), in the
very, very early days, we used to say please, you know don't
judge us by a single, listen to the album and, and find out the
whole balanced picture of what we're doing.
Roger: But I remember lots of people telling us not to release
'Bohemian Rhapsody' because it was commercial suicide, because
one it would never get played on the radio, because it wasn't
suitable, and two it would never get played on the radio, because
it was too long, and we stuck to our guns, and we didn't cut it
down, and we released it as it was, and luckily it sort of went,
the story went the right way, but um, it could have gone the
other way, you know, I mean we could have disappeared
Mike: I'm sure most people would be surprised to think that, that
you're actually still worried about it, being a major band for so
long, they would assume that you'd be blasé and think, 'well, we
hope the album goes to number one, we expect the single will be a
hit', er, but seemingly not, because you must be worried about
it, you're obviously worried about it to a certain extent.
Brian: We care a lot, still, it's just the same as the early
days, it's just the same, you know, you want people
Roger: Maybe that's why we are still going
Brian: That's right, you want people to hear what you've been
doing, you know, it matters a lot, yeah
Mike: Roger, I believe one of your favourites is one John Lennon
wrote, that was inspired by a two-tone police siren
Roger: Yeah, that's right, that, dee-dee-dee, that's the, yeah,
um, I don't know, I just find that 'I Am The Walrus' by The
Beatles is, it's very difficult to name one song, but I think
that's a sort of surreal masterpiece in song, and what he did
with the lyrics, with those sort of Lewis Carrol type in many
ways, but with those lyrics was marvellous, and the, and the
sound textures on the record are wonderful, and it's got hidden
depths, and I still hear different things in, in the record each,
each time I hear it
['I Am The Walrus' by The Beatles is played]
Mike: OK, the song 'Invisible Man', was any one of you
Brian: Ask Roger, yes
John: Roger
Mike: Roger, are you 'The Invisible Man'?
Roger: No, no, um, I wish I was, er, sometimes I wish I was, um
no I'm to blame for that one, sort of, but then everybody came in
and that went through quite a few changes, due to everybody else
putting in different bits, and restructuring it, etc, etc
Mike: Did the idea of the lyric come from anywhere?
Roger: I, do you know I can't remember, somebody was asking me
the other day, and I, I, couldn't, can't remember where the idea
did come from, I think it came from a book I was reading, but er,
and it just seemed to fit in with a sort of, a, a, a rhythmic
pattern I had in mind, and er, it sort of came there, from
nowhere really
['The Invisible Man' is played]
Mike: OK, and 'The Miracle'
Brian: You told me you were in the bath one day and, and singing
it and there it was, Rog
Roger: No, I think that was Fred's line about something else
Brian: No, you said, in the bath you said
John: That's Killer Queen wasn't it?
Roger: That was Crazy Little Thing, wasn't it?
Freddie: Crazy Little Thing, that's, true story
Mike: We seem to have fairly extensively covered the album, their
own tracks, we have enough there I think easily for an hour, I
think maybe a little, a little trailer from everybody saying 'hi,
this is Bob', 'hi this is' you know, 'Stephen'
Producer: That'd be great for the programme, yes, OK, and your
favourites, and er, wonderful stuff I must say
Producer 2: And we've let it run on a bit.
Producer: Just, do you wanna keep on, on going, sort of, you
know, just chat, about plans for the future, (Mike: we'll talk
about other groups) plans for the future, and whatever you know,
and let's just go, go for it (Mike: yeah, OK, alright), good
momentum building up actually
Mike: Is it, oh golly, we'll keep going then, oh, oh, don't let
it go now, we might win something
Producer: Champagne will open in a minute
Mike: Oh, fine OK
Freddie: There are other tracks, I mean
John: You've missed the last one
Mike: I mean, it's an hour special
Roger: Yeah, I was gonna say that
John: You haven't mentioned 'Was It All Worth It'
Roger: 'Was It All Worth It'
Mike: No but, we can, we can only get so many tracks in 60
minutes. Let's chat, your favourite songs, and a little medley at
the beginning. Which is, we'll mention it, we can always change
tracks. Which is your favourite track from the album, John?
John: This one, I don't know, it's difficult to say at this point
because we've just finished
Mike: No, we haven't the tape's still rolling
John: No, we've just finished making it (laughter) we've just
finished making the album, and at this point, you cannot
Mike: What was the one you were just about to mention was one you
liked?
John: Oh, was it, Was It All Worth It?
Freddie: You do like that one
John: I do like that one, yes, it's, it's the last track on the
album
Brian: That's why he likes it
John: Well yes, it has a semi-autobiographical feel about it
Mike: Whose autobiography?
John: Well the band's
Roger: Ours really
Mike: All of you?
Roger: Yeah
Freddie: You included if you want
(Laughter)
Mike: Thank you. What about plans for the future, are you going
to tour?
Roger: (laughs) I'll pass this on to the next person
Mike: Have you asked each other yet whether you're gonna tour?
Would any, listen, would any of you like to tour?
Freddie: Well I wouldn't, I know they're waiting for me to say. At
the moment, I don't think I'd like to tour, it's, it's going in,
oh dear, it's going back to the thing about, I wanted to, to
break the format, and, and, as far as I'm concerned, I've been in
the studio for two years, I mean having done the Queen album, and
just before that, the Montserrat album, and I just think it would
be, for me, it just wouldn't be right, I just feel it would be
back to exactly what we said we wouldn't be doing, and I think
it's just a matter of time, I think we've just gotta wait and
see, and then if, if, if something comes up and then we decide
that we want to tour, we will do it, but I didn't want,
personally, to tour on the same pretext as before, that here
comes an album, so we go, besides, I mean, we've just as far as
I'm concerned, we've done all those big venues and everything,
we've got to think of something different.
Mike: What is the new, I mean everyone tours, and then they stop
touring and then they make albums, er, so, is it time for people
to sit down and come up with a new concept of putting yourself
over to people?
Freddie: Well I think it's up to the individual, and I, I think
as far as Queen is concerned, my, um, outlook on it is, is, is,
is that, is that we have to think of something new, and at the
moment nobody's come up with anything
Mike: The nearest being Jean Michel Jarre, maybe?
Freddie: Well, I don't mean that way, it could, it could mean, it
means
Brian: Who?
John: What does he do?
Freddie: It just means stepping outside of Queen, (John: Lights,
and fireworks and things) and things like that, which is what I
did, I mean, OK, and I wanted to, I mean otherwise
Brian: Oh that guy who mimes, with lasers
John: That's the one, yeah
Roger: Actually that
Freddie: Anyway, otherwise we'll grow to old, you know and I'm,
going back to the Montserrat thing, I'm glad I did that, I would
never have had that chance if, if, if, if we'd kept the ball
rolling, and it kept turning, 'cos at the moment, I mean, over
the last years, all we've done is a, is a studio album, or an
album, per year, and then you tour, and you go round the world,
and then by the time you come back you think of, of the next
album, you've got to, I think, for us to get to this level, for
us to actually sit here and talk to you about this new album, I
think we would never have sort of arrived at that if we hadn't
taken that two year off, I think, those two years off (Roger: um,
yes, it probably wouldn't have happened), I really do, it's
actually, sort of stepping outside of Queen, doing something, and
saying we miss Queen, and that, that we want to come back and do
something, is, is why I think this album sounds so fresh
Mike: While you all still look much as you did when you started,
I mean none of you have aged an awful lot since you started
Brian: Oh, Mike, you're so kind
John: Oh, Mike, oh
Mike: I'm lying (laughter), no, while you look much the same as
you did when you started, have you thought about doing a
definitive film, the Queen story?
Brian: Well, there is a thing out there, there is a whole sort of
video anthology of sort of the history of Queen out there in
three extremely long volumes (Roger: Meryl Streep in it)
Mike: Yes, I mean as an actual film
Brian: And Jack Nicholson plays me (laughter)
Freddie: Do you mean that, that we actually participate actually
in the acting
Mike: Yes, that you, that you play yourselves in the story of
Queen
Freddie: Oh, how boring
Roger: Oh, no, I think that would be absolutely horrendous
Freddie: Start taking acting lessons and things like that
Mike: What, to be yourself
Freddie: No, in being a sort of, you know, actually go and, what
to be directed by, I don't think anybody, none of us have any
sort of big ideas, I personally don't want to be a film star, and
things like that, I mean, I know (Roger: snap) there's Sting and
people like that, I mean if we wanted to that, we would have done
that a long time ago
Mike: What do you want to do?
Freddie: Well, I just want to be a boring old fart and carry on
like we are (laughter)
Roger: Actually, it might sound strange this, because I know, I
think, we've built a lot of our reputation on our live stage act,
but I think until we are ready to sort of, ah, to, to, to maybe
perform again, you know, so that all of us are ready, that is you
know, maybe, we won't, but hopefully we will, at some point, I'm,
I'm waffling aren't I?
(Laughter)
Freddie: It's, it's, it's a delicate subject
Roger: I, I, know it sounds a little odd because, and we know
there's a big demand there for it, but I think the time will
come, and we'll choose the right time, hopefully
Mike: Do you need to be hungry to do it, or not?
Brian: No, I don't think it's a question of that really
Freddie: I need to be, this is Freddie talking, you see, this is
it, you, you're talking to four people who have very different
ideas, and very strong individuals, and I, and it does need four
people to actually want to do it, and if one person doesn't want
to do it then you can't, and I'm afraid, I think I'm the actual
spanner in the works at the moment, and I'm being very honest in,
in saying so
Mike: What, the others would like to tour?
Freddie: Yes I think so, yes, I'm the one that doesn't want to
Mike: Do you they hate you for it?
Freddie: I dunno, I don't give a damn actually, what, what they
think, it's just that I don't want to do it, and I don't think
I'm letting them down or anything, it's just, I think after all
these years, I think you have to sort of believe in, between the
four of us you have to believe in each other, and if one person
doesn't want to do it for something, and if he has a grievance
about it, I think one, I'd, I'd, I'd do the same if say Brian
suddenly didn't want to it, I mean if one of them didn't want to
do this album we'd have to agree, because I mean there's no point
forcing somebody, especially after (Roger: it wouldn't have
happened), especially after these years, it would be so awful,
it's like you say, are you hungry, and I, I agree, you have to be
hungry, especially after all, all these years to do whatever
we've done all these years, otherwise we'd be, I hate, I don't
want to bring up any names, but I'd hate to do that sort of
slogging thing for the sake of doing it, I mean we don't need any
more money, actually to be honest, so we don't do it for the
money, but I think we do it for the music, which is, I know it's
a boring thing to say, but, because we still have the music in
us, and I think, every now and again if you stay away from it you
think my God, I wonder how people, are they still going to accept
us, and things like that, that's still there, so the hunger has
to be there, and I really don't think this album would have come
about if we weren't still hungry for our own music, so I think we
have to be interested in our own thing, I mean we're, we're very
happy with the way things have come out, and I think we, we would
only have done it, there was a time when I just thought after
about two or three months, I thought it was all going to disband,
meaning, come to pieces, and we were going to disband this
project, but, we, we carried on. So I think, from my point of
view, I think, and it's much, it's harder now, than it ever was,
I think we really have to want to do these sort of things.
Mike: So how do the rest of you get rid of the frustrations, as
the three of you maybe would like to tour, do you then think, oh
we'll have to go and play somewhere else
Freddie: Well he has
Mike: Yes well you're playing with The Cross
Roger: Well I mean, I, I've sort of played with The Cross, and I
really do enjoy that, that's a real outlet for me, and it's also
different, as I say, I'm not the drummer in that band, so that's
very interesting. I mean, I can, I can live with that, and er,
you know everybody has their own way of thinking, we, we've
always done things that we've all wanted to do, and we can't, you
know, possibly go on tour if one of us isn't keen, you know it
wouldn't, it would be us cheating, really, so, there we go, you
know.
Mike: So what, what about future projects for you Roger, anything
coming up?
Roger: Yes I hope to do another Cross record at some point, um, it's,
not sure exactly when, and ah, we'll see what happens there, but
in the meantime, you know, I hope, that this Queen record is well
accepted, and er, it'll be interesting. This a very funny stage,
we've just finished the record, and so we don't really know,
we're a little bit shell shocked, you know, we've been in the
studio for a year, and er, so, it's probably not the best time to
sort of ask us, because we've got no retrospect on it, no
perspective on it.
Mike: What about you Brian, plans for the future, anything that
you want to get your teeth into?
Brian: Um, well, I've, I've had a solo record on the cards for a
long time, I've done a lot of stuff for a solo record, I just
haven't quite got it in the shape that I want it yet, and um, I
suppose I've got a taste for um, for um, for being a front man
as, as well as a, a guitarist, I mean, um, I enjoy it, I mean I
found when we got up and, you know, with, with Roger and John at
the Queen convention thing I got up, and I just enjoyed being
able to sing a bit, as well as to play. I'm not a singer, but to
have the freedom to be able to put ideas forward with the voice
as well as the guitar was a good feeling, you know,so I don't
expect to play Madison Square Garden or Earl's Court or wherever,
but if, but I would quite enjoy just doing some clubs, um,
singing and see what happens, you know, because I feel like I've
got something to say on my own, as well as with the group.
Mike: Do you ever have any feelings towards getting a small blues
band together, for example?
Brian: Well I suppose I've come close, some of the stuff that
I've done for the solo project is like a kind of blues band, it's
funny you should say that, yeah, and I suppose I'm a bit closer
to blues than er, than maybe the rest of the band, I don't know,
I, I get a, a kick out of that, I feel sort of close to home
doing that sort of stuff, so we'll have to see you know, and I'm
a great admirer of what Eric Clapton has done with his, with his
career, and he's managed to get all his playing, er, ability into
the stuff that he does, and he has a lot to say, you know, so I
think as a model I couldn't choose someone better than Mr Clapton
Mike: Right, John, any more Morris Minors in the pipeline, or?
John: Yes, there is one, I'm afraid, um, yeah, er, but apart from
that, er, I have no plans at the moment. We've just spent a whole
year in the studio, we're absolutely, I actually feel quite
exhausted by it. I mean, it's been a long hard slog, and even
doing this interview is worse, but
Mike: Come on, you've had a nice skiing holiday in between
John: Ah well, it was five days, six days
Mike: Ooh, hoo
John: That was more exhausting than being in the studio, um, so
at the moment, I, it's like take a break, going away for Easter
with the family, and then see what happens, but I have no plans
at all after that.
Mike: John has no plans
John: Well, no not really no
Mike: Oh right, nice
John: I'm open for offers, I've got an ad in the Melody Maker
Mike: Well you should have said it's classified (laughter). John
Deacon, seeks gig, (producer: hi Paul, can you hear me?) no
hippies, no buskers.
[Edited here]
Roger: Individually, or?
Mike: Well, just, just, a load of waffle, and then Paul can spend
a week cutting the trailer up. OK. Well, normally of course, I
don't like Mondays, but this Bank Holiday Monday is going to be
an exception, because, ah, we have four Queens for an hour, and
they are
Roger: Roger Taylor here
Brian: Brian May
John: John Deacon
Freddie: And Freddie Mercury
Mike: There we are, told you
Roger: Join us.
Brian: The boys from the Queen
Mike: Er, we'll do a few more bits
Producer: Just, once more please, what you were saying, 'the boys
from the Queen'
Brian: What's the er, title of the show again?
Roger: Queen For An Hour
Mike: Queen For An Hour
Brian: Queen For An Hour
Mike: Normally of course, I don't like Mondays, but this Monday
is going to be different, because we have four guys who are going
to be Queen for an hour, and surprisingly they are
Roger: Roger Taylor, drums
Brian: And er, Brian May
John: John Deacon
Freddie: Freddie Mercury
Mike: Told you
Mike: Trust me!
Brian: Ha, ha, ha. That's got you ain't it
Mike: Go on, Freddie, say something
Freddie: Oh I see, I thought you were going to lead me in
Mike: No, no, no, you just, you just go in your own time there.
We can use all this. Go on Freddie, say something
Freddie: Hello
Mike: Oh sorry, sorry, sorry, go on Freddie say something
Freddie: Hello this is Freddie Mercury, I hope you like some of
our new tracks from an album called 'The Miracle'.
John: Hello, this is John Deacon, you're listening to Radio 1,
and we are with Mike Read
Brian: Who is going to be Queen for an hour, this is Brian May
Roger: And this is Roger Taylor, join us, on bank holiday
Mike: I'm not the Queen for an hour, but they are
(Laughter)
Mike: Which is your favourite track from the album, John?
John: Was It All Worth It
Freddie: You do like that one
John: I do like that one, yes, it's, it's the last track on the
album
Brian: That's why he likes it
John: Well yes, it has a semi-autobiographical feel about it
Mike: Whose autobiography?
John: Well the band's
Roger: Ours really
Mike: All of you?
Roger: Yeah
Freddie: You included if you want
(Laughter)
Mike: Well, thank you
['Was It All Worth It' is played]
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