In the BBC fast version of We Will Rock You, it sounds like a couple of the chorus chants of "we will rock will" are actually "we will f*#ck you". It's Roger's voice in particular that stands out. Now with the official release of this version it's clearer than ever. Has this been noticed/discussed before?
Check one of the clearest examples at 1:54 of the official release: link
@Nitroboy he says buddy at the same time for the first time this occurs but not the second at 1:54 where you can clearly hear the U vowel before he sings buddy.
vicspec wrote:
@Nitroboy he says buddy at the same time for the first time this occurs but not the second at 1:54 where you can clearly hear the U vowel before he sings buddy.
You're hearing what you want to hear, I think, and what you're hearing is influenced by the presence of Fred's 'buddy' at this point too.
Even without that 'buddy', the vowel sound in 'rock', sung in the way it is with the slight American accent, is more of an [uh] or [ah] then a straight [o].
@Bogarde incorrect. I've isolated the line on Adobe Audition and the u happens clearly and is uninfluenced by Freddie's next line. It's not psychological it's linguistics.
Why would Freddie or the rest of the band want to spoil their chance of a BBC airing with this singing ? I think Bohardy is correct.
Edit: I had the experience of hearing "bloody s**t" instead of "the blood you shed" in White Man.
tcc wrote:
Why would Freddie or the rest of the band want to spoil their chance of a BBC airing with this singing ? I think Bohardy is correct.
Edit: I had the experience of hearing "bloody s**t" instead of "the blood you shed" in White Man.
I had the experience of reading that tcc experienced having bloody shit.
edit: it was instead of his experience of mistakenly hearing bloody shit instead of blood you shed