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Post by anotherroger on Apr 11, 2020 18:28:13 GMT
I have two moments that both come from 1995. As I got aware of Queen around 1993 I never experienced a Queen album while Freddie was alive. I remember when I got Greatest hits 2, and kind of discovered the band, I got so sad when my cousin told me that the singer had just died. By then I just ruled out any new releases. How could that happen without their singer?
1. I listened to the radio some time in 1995. And suddenly they introduced a new Queen single called "Heaven for Everyone". I had never heard about this. At this point I hardly knew how the band looked like because of no internet. I had seen pics of them in the booklet of GH2. Oh the feeling when I heard Freddies voice on this new song. I will never forget it! I remember going to the record shop asking for this single. And the guy behind the desk asked if I was going to have the album when it came out. Another big shock for me. AN ALBUM? I could not believe it! And I can not believe how badly informed I was at that point. But at the time it felt like magic. How could they release an album With Freddies voice when he was gone? My lack of knowledge actually made this a much bigger event for me.
2. I really longed to see some footage of the band. The only thing I had seen at this point was the "Living on my own" video that I later discovered was FM. I noticed when I got GH1. When I looked at the cover I immediately saw that it was the "Living on my own" singer. It was a weekend and a cold winters day with clear sky. In the moring the program schedule rolled over the screen on the state channel NRK. And to my enormous surprise I saw the title "Queen - Phenonomona". What a long wait it was during that day. And I had to attend some kind of local show that evening. I remember walking to this while thinking of this documentary I was going to watch later in the evening. I was walking home with my friends on this crystal clear cold evening. Full of anticipation. I dont think I have ever watched a program with such joy before. I even get chills when I think of it now. This documentary just pushed me even further into the Queen universe. And I never got out.
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Post by Chief Mouse on Apr 11, 2020 18:49:48 GMT
I haven't been a fan for a very long time. Only started getting into them in about 2010. Damn, that actually sounds like a long time ago now. Anyway, I got the Wembley DVD set that was released in 2011 and I happened to check out the first night. I was mesmerized just what a powerhouse singer and frontman Freddie was. My favourite songs live at that point were AKOM and UP. And I still think those are great in that gig. Then I checked out Montreal, since it was in HD and I am a video freak, I loved that. Of course I knew some songs here and there but I pretty much started to get into albums backwards. So one of the first ones was MIH which I listened to a lot in summer of 2012 while I was hired by my relatives to paint a wall of large poppy flowers in their bedroom. So to me songs like Heaven For Everyone associates with peaceful summer sunshine. Either before that or after that I got into Innuendo. It might have been my first album actually because I loved TSMGO and since Freddie passed a year later I was naturally curious about the rest of the album. A year later is when I joined Queenzone in Spring 2013. That summer I had already got into some 70s stuff which I loved, like The Prophet's Song, It's Late. I'm not really sure if it was a one moment. More like a gradual event that happened to suck me in.
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Post by angusscrimm on Apr 11, 2020 19:19:09 GMT
I've mentioned several times before that my parents owned a fair few albums on vinyl, and so I had always been brought up around Queen's music. One of my earliest memories is dancing to IWTBF, broom in hand, dressed in a vest and jeans. I was 3 or 4. But I wasn't a "fan" - I was just a kid - and there was more to life than music: there was He-Man, Thundercats, Ghostbusters and The Turtles lol.
I remember being upset when Freddie died, however. I had just turned 11. A local toy shop I visited that day gave me a figure I had wanted for a long time to cheer me up.
But I didn't get into Queen properly until 1996 when a friend gave me a copied cassette of MIH. I wasn't quite 16 yet. I was mesmerised, and soon became hooked. Queen were like a drug, and I needed more and more.
At the same time, I got my first girlfriend and it was a stunner of a summer. I spent a lot of time with her, and her parents had a lovely chalet in a beautiful part of the country. Everything seemed magic around that time, and I now associate MIH with the warm feelings and experiences of the time.
Life has taken all sorts of twists and turns since then, but I still feel the magic and feel the rush of memories and feelings of that time when I hear MIH . So I'd say MIH is the Queen moment that's had the biggest impact on my life.
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Lord Fickle
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Post by Lord Fickle on Apr 11, 2020 20:36:53 GMT
I'm lucky (?) to be old enough to have got into the band when I first heard Seven Seas Of Rhye on the radio (in 1974!), and I remember seeing them perform it on Top Of The Pops here in the UK. I was into glam rock at the time, so Sweet, Slade, Mud, Suzi Quatro and Showaddywaddy (!) were my favourite bands, and SSOR fitted quite nicely into that genre. I kind of went off Queen when Killer Queen came out, as it was so different to the hard rock of SSOR, but then Now I'm Here reasserted the rock style, so I was back on board. I never really got fully into them until I first heard Bohemian Rhapsody, at which point I thought the first part of it was a radio commercial, but after that stuck with me (I remember being most upset when Mamma Mia by Abba knocked it off the Number 1 slot after 9 weeks), I stuck with them ever since. The first album I had of theirs was ANATO, followed by QII, then SHA. I don't think I got the first album for a while after that, but I do remember it had various different coloured sleeves, presumably depending on the country of manufacture. I remember getting ADATR on it's release date, and being a little disappointed at first, but now it's my favourite Queen album, then along came NOTW, which contained my favourite ever Queen track, It's Late. That's about it - a potted history of my teenage introduction to Queen.
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Post by Mr Mercury on Apr 11, 2020 21:02:47 GMT
I'm lucky (?) to be old enough to have got into the band when I first heard Seven Seas Of Rhye on the radio (in 1974!), and I remember seeing them perform it on Top Of The Pops here in the UK. I was into glam rock at the time, so Sweet, Slade, Mud, Suzi Quatro and Showaddywaddy (!) were my favourite bands, and SSOR fitted quite nicely into that genre. I kind of went off Queen when Killer Queen came out, as it was so different to the hard rock of SSOR, but then Now I'm Here reasserted the rock style, so I was back on board. I never really got fully into them until I first heard Bohemian Rhapsody, at which point I thought the first part of it was a radio commercial, but after that stuck with me (I remember being most upset when Mamma Mia by Abba knocked it off the Number 1 slot after 9 weeks), I stuck with them ever since. The first album I had of theirs was ANATO, followed by QII, then SHA. I don't think I got the first album for a while after that, but I do remember it had various different coloured sleeves, presumably depending on the country of manufacture. I remember getting ADATR on it's release date, and being a little disappointed at first, but now it's my favourite Queen album, then along came NOTW, which contained my favourite ever Queen track, It's Late. That's about it - a potted history of my teenage introduction to Queen. Crikey Simon, that almost mirrors my reasons for getting into Queen. But the thing that finally nailed it was the 1975 Hammy Odeon concert and actually watching it as it went out. That and my brother and me listening to ANATO at four in the morning on Christmas Day. Great memories indeed.
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Lord Fickle
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Post by Lord Fickle on Apr 11, 2020 21:19:50 GMT
I'm lucky (?) to be old enough to have got into the band when I first heard Seven Seas Of Rhye on the radio (in 1974!), and I remember seeing them perform it on Top Of The Pops here in the UK. I was into glam rock at the time, so Sweet, Slade, Mud, Suzi Quatro and Showaddywaddy (!) were my favourite bands, and SSOR fitted quite nicely into that genre. I kind of went off Queen when Killer Queen came out, as it was so different to the hard rock of SSOR, but then Now I'm Here reasserted the rock style, so I was back on board. I never really got fully into them until I first heard Bohemian Rhapsody, at which point I thought the first part of it was a radio commercial, but after that stuck with me (I remember being most upset when Mamma Mia by Abba knocked it off the Number 1 slot after 9 weeks), I stuck with them ever since. The first album I had of theirs was ANATO, followed by QII, then SHA. I don't think I got the first album for a while after that, but I do remember it had various different coloured sleeves, presumably depending on the country of manufacture. I remember getting ADATR on it's release date, and being a little disappointed at first, but now it's my favourite Queen album, then along came NOTW, which contained my favourite ever Queen track, It's Late. That's about it - a potted history of my teenage introduction to Queen. Crikey Simon, that almost mirrors my reasons for getting into Queen. But the thing that finally nailed it was the 1975 Hammy Odeon concert and actually watching it as it went out. That and my brother and me listening to ANATO at four in the morning on Christmas Day. Great memories indeed. Long time no see!
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Post by Mr Mercury on Apr 11, 2020 21:31:08 GMT
Crikey Simon, that almost mirrors my reasons for getting into Queen. But the thing that finally nailed it was the 1975 Hammy Odeon concert and actually watching it as it went out. That and my brother and me listening to ANATO at four in the morning on Christmas Day. Great memories indeed. Long time no see! You too mate, How are you these days?
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Lord Fickle
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Post by Lord Fickle on Apr 11, 2020 21:34:18 GMT
Much the same, only with less time on my side.
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Post by Mr Mercury on Apr 11, 2020 21:44:01 GMT
Simon, Ha Ha same here Stir Crazy and loving it lol
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BrƎИsꓘi
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They called it paradise, I don't know why...You call some place paradise, kiss it goodbye.
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Post by BrƎИsꓘi on Apr 11, 2020 21:55:26 GMT
Like LF I'd heard SSOR back in '74 on TOTP (i don't think they were even supposed to be on - wasn't Bowie unwell?). as much as i liked it, i never really thought i'd hear any more from the mysterious band. so many bands back then were so good but never really made the big time. I'd been at Grammar School a few months and all my new friends were into bands like Genesis, Yes and Floyd with a few opting for our local band Zeppelin.
Later that year I heard Killer Queen and that was the first time i thought this might be a band to get into. Bo Rhap a year later proved I'd chosen well. Fast forward to early winter '76 (and this one is very vivid - even now), doing some late night (after 10pm school night) revision and on the radio - immediately after a song by Archie Bell & The Drells (really) came Somebody To Love. Just wow! - Even now, this song is still in my top 5 songs of all time.
My aunt worked at EMI's warehouse in London and the following Spring she brought me a "employee freebie" copy of ADATR.
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Lord Fickle
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Post by Lord Fickle on Apr 11, 2020 22:05:42 GMT
My aunt worked at EMI's warehouse in London and the following Spring she brought me a "employee freebie" copy of ADATR. My Uncle worked for Philips which, I think, had something to do with Chrysalis Records, the label Genesis were on in the 70s. He brought me an "employee freebie" copy of The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway, which he later confessed to have snuck out under his coat!
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BrƎИsꓘi
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They called it paradise, I don't know why...You call some place paradise, kiss it goodbye.
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Post by BrƎИsꓘi on Apr 11, 2020 22:07:52 GMT
haha^
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moonhead
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Post by moonhead on Apr 12, 2020 7:42:23 GMT
I Want It All, the video, i was nine and it was a revelation.
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tom
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Post by tom on Apr 12, 2020 8:38:40 GMT
Ahoy Rotterdam 1977....just to begin with. I was very 'into' Freddie as a singer per se. But it was Brian who was bloody fantastic that evening.
Tom
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Steve
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Post by Steve on Apr 12, 2020 8:59:19 GMT
I've been a fan since 1988, but by far, echoing Angus and another roger, the biggest moment for me was the album, Made In Heaven. Innuendo was also a huge moment, but the painstaking process that went into putting MIH together coupled with the beautiful music is my number 1 wow moment. I was taken aback.
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Post by Black Wings on Apr 12, 2020 12:56:02 GMT
I will say the first time I saw and watched Bohemian Rhapsody in 1992. It was and still is unlike anything I've seen before...or since.
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Makka
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Post by Makka on Apr 12, 2020 13:26:05 GMT
When News Of The World was released is when I really noticed I liked their music. I was only 7 when it came out and my older brother bought the album. I remember we used to sit outside with the parents at night on hot nights and play the album on a little portable record player. It was probably when I turned 11 or 12 when I started to really 'listen' to music and relate to it and Queen was always and the fore. But watching Live Aid live on TV was when it clicked how good of a live band they were.
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kosimodo
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Post by kosimodo on Apr 12, 2020 20:02:24 GMT
Seeing Boh Rhap in early 76 on TV for the first time.
Seeing Queen live for the first time..
Freddies passing away.. First returned back to work after New Year..
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mike71
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Post by mike71 on Apr 12, 2020 22:35:21 GMT
Hearing Queen2 and Sheer Heart Attack got me hooked. Really the first 4 albums hit me fast.
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Post by sms1970 on Apr 12, 2020 22:44:59 GMT
There was no actual defining moment for me as such to begin with. My dad was (and still is) a Queen fan and in the very early 80's when I wasn't into music at all there was one thing that stood out more than anything else - a song with the lyrics "Mamma, just killed a man....". My curiosity found his audio cassette collection and I pretty much stole his tapes to listen to. Queen were my introduction to music. FULL STOP! I was a big enough fan in 1984 when The Works came out and listened to it constantly. When my dad went to see them at the NEC I wasn't happy he didn't ask me if I wanted to go. Apparently he didn't realise how much I was a fan! Luckily for me a couple of years later, and after purchasing the A King of Magic album, I had a little money thanks to working for the local milkman. So at age 15 (nearly 16!) on Friday 11th July 1986 I travelled to London with a friend to see Queen live! After about 5 years of becoming a Queen fan I got to see them them live - not knowing that this would be the last time Freddie would tour. As we arrived we ended up standing slap bang in the middle of Wembley Stadium near the scaffold tower. I felt overawed at the impressive setting that Queen had chosen for their show. The place summed them up perfectly. After INXS, The Alarm and Status Quo I had worked my way almost to the front, enough to have to look up at the stage. For 2 hours this electrifying - and soakingly wet - experience made me realise just how special Queen were - and how privileged I was to be a fan. I am still proud to be a fan. I have since seen The Cross, Roger, Brian and QPR live and as much as I enjoyed these I will never forget Wembley Stadium 1986.
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Post by fmforever on Apr 13, 2020 1:45:34 GMT
As a teenager growing up in the 70’s really loved British bands and went to many concerts including Queen in ‘77 at Festival Hall Brisbane (Australia). Had a 45 vinyl copy of Killer Queen and BoRap but wasn’t really into albums then. Fast forward many years, a child, grandchildren, living overseas etc and what got me back into Queen music was watching many times “And the band played on” . I am interested in the history of AIDS and so have read most of the bios of deceased celebrities. That got me back to Freddie, bought my first biography, all the albums, dvds, lots more books on band and Freddie (thank you Amazon). I am making up for all the lost years reading everything I can and enjoying all the great info that was on QZ. My favourite Queen music is 70’s obviously. Hoping to learn a lot more on this forum. Thank you.
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victorvil
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Post by victorvil on Apr 13, 2020 2:34:32 GMT
My uncle David got the original VHS of Wembley, and I was hooked in the spot. After that, my cousin had the 2 wembley cassetes, he borrowed the to me. And in 95, I bought Live Killers, at the same time I started playing guitar. Everything came into place.
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Jake12
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Post by Jake12 on Apr 13, 2020 3:38:28 GMT
I had gotten into vinyl when I was 13 and my parents gave me their record collection and one of the albums was The Game! I had NO idea who queen were but growing up I listened to mainly 70’s, 80’s and early to late 90’s so I knew the big classic hits during those times! I was a huge (still am) ac/dc fan at the time so when given the record collection I was searching for those albums until my parents said it was too heavy for them so I went thought until I hit The Game. I saw that Another One Bites The Dust and Crazy Little Thing Called Love was on this album and I said to myself “hey! I know those songs!” Put the needle to the recorded and BOOM I was hooked! To this day The Game has a special place in my heart! After that I think I went on iTunes to look at what other songs I like and just basically picked and chooses what sounded cool and bought one song at a time until I had nothing left to buy! Haha! 12 years later Queen has taken over my life! Have a room filled with CDs, dvds, vhs, reel tapes, 8track, cassettes.. memorabilia.. you name it!
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Post by redspec71 on Apr 14, 2020 9:42:12 GMT
Bit of a long post, be warned!
Finding records in the days before the internet was fun. It felt like a real quest for the holy grail. I have a memory of staring at the inner sleeve of Queen's Greatest Hits, looking longingly at the images of the then unheard albums, wondering what they sounded like. Making a secret pact with myself that I would own them all one day.
I'd listen to that record on a radiogram that I'd bought from my Brother. It was a stereo one that had two speakers mounted on the front, designed more to be a piece of furniture than a hi-fi system. I used to lie on the floor with the back of my head propped against the gap between the two speakers and listen to Bohemian Rhapsody whizzing around my head from left to right. These days I listen to the 5.1 surround mix, the sound is literally flying around the room. But back then, the sheer over the top awesomeness just went straight through me and consumed me. It also drove my passion for better sounding equipment.
I live in New Zealand, and in the 80’s trying to obtain Queen II or Flash Gordon seemed to be impossible. When I found Queen's first album I felt so elated, and treated it with the utmost reverence, even writing a poem on the plastic inner sleeve warning of how incredibly rare it was, and providing instruction on how to handle it. I had similar issues trying to track down Flash Gordon on video a few years later. You just could not find it anywhere, so I naturally assumed at the time that because I couldn't find it, that it was impossible to find, and therefore, extremely rare. It added to the aura of mystery that surrounded it and just made it that much more exciting a task to thumb your way through the record bins.
The inner gatefold of Jazz is another record that takes me back. I got my copy from L D Nathans, which used to be Woolworths, and subsequently became DEKA. I got my copy in 1987. My bedroom was small, but it got the sun. I'd stare at the picture of the band sitting in the studio for hours. Imagining that I was there. I can just about transport myself back there now. Lying on the bed, staring at the ceiling, listening to "Fun It". The sun streaming in through the windows on a lazy winter's afternoon. Joy, pure peace and joy. Alas, my copy did not have its naked Bicycle Race poster, which would have no doubt been a very interesting thing for a teenage boy to behold!
The inner sleeve of The Game holds a similar nostalgic feel too. I'd love to imagine just being there in one of the buildings in the cityscape behind them.
I also remember going to see the The Highlander. I think it may have been one of the first films I went to on my own, and there were bugger all people in the theatre as it was during the day. Probably during the August school holidays. I thought it was a really cool film, especially the way the scenes would change when going into the past. A Kind Of Magic became yet another favourite that was flogged to death. It was also one of the first CDs I ever bought. CDs were cool because you used to get extra tracks on them. I also remember there was some kind of embargo on playing music videos on NZ TV at the time, so we didn't get the official music video for this played on NZ TV, we got one made up of clips from the movie. It all tied in with the Americas Cup – Kiwi Magic, so it got played heaps on radio as well.
Thanks for the chance to reminisce. Something that you can do here...
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Steve
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Post by Steve on Apr 14, 2020 10:22:45 GMT
Great to see everyone's memories!
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Post by Mercurian on Apr 17, 2020 20:29:54 GMT
From 9 to 16, I grew up in a boarding school, at 30 km from Paris, France.
Buildings from the XVIII century, 25 hectare of woods, soccer fields ...120 kids in a old dormitory … I was thirteen … Of course it was forbiden to have a radio … a radio under my pillow.. and… a deep night of october I heard for the first time QUEEN … Champions …
it was instantly a "coup de foudre" ! I immediately became what is called a fan !
I saw Queen 4 times with Fred in Paris ... what can I say more ...
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bepina
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Post by bepina on Apr 20, 2020 18:57:16 GMT
I have two moments that both come from 1995. Mine too!! I was a fresh fan, got into Queen that year when I was 14 years old. The Queen Phenomenon was the first Queen documentary I saw - I was 15 then and due to the scarcity of the available materials on Queen back then I was aware only of 'Freddie with moustache' look. Imagine my shock when I saw the 70s footage and Freddie's look back then.. I remember that it took me some time to realize it was the same person. I taped the documentary and saw it I think a dozen times in the following month, and cried each time. Seems like another world now, when with just a click you can find literally anything, from concerts, official videos to bootlegs and interviews. Back then, it was my only source of information on Queen for a of couple of years. MIH release is also a moment I will treasure forever as it was the only Queen studio album that I experienced in real time with songs hitting the charts etc. I was too young to see Freddie onstage or witness a release of an album when he was alive, so at least I did get to buy MIH as a new studio album. I still remember buying it on cassette, and was so happy that day that my feet barely touched the ground while returning home from the shop.
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foetus
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Post by foetus on Apr 20, 2020 19:23:58 GMT
I had the two greatest hits cds since 1993 or 1994 then they started talking about Made In Heaven and released at the same time the documentary "Champions Of The World" on VHS. Even if I know it is a doc with a lot of flaws, it is really this film that made me think it was a hell of a band!
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Post by Deleted on Apr 20, 2020 19:40:00 GMT
Probably learning to play the chords of 'The Fairy Feller's Master-Stroke' and realising how harmonically interesting it was. To my teenage self, that was utter magic.
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Post by Mr Badger on Apr 20, 2020 20:58:58 GMT
Hearing Killer Queen in the car and driving straight to the record store to buy the album. The cover blew me away as did the album. Listened straight through about three times in a row that evening annoying my parents and siblings. Flick of the Wrist still haunts me- fantastic stuff.
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