Curse the Greatest Hits III booklet!
'You Don't Fool Me' was recorded between January and April (May?) 1991, but the booklet for Greatest Hits III says that the sound harks back to the Hot Space sessions, so that insinuates the song was started in 1982 but remained incomplete until 1991/1995.
It was not.
Whoever wrote the booklet liners should be smacked with a live opposum.
I never actually thought it was from the Hot Space sessions. What I understood from the liner notes in the booklet of GH3 is that the song was like a revisiting of the Hot Space era, because it kind of make you remember it.
Anyway, I just recently checked the meaning of the phrase "hark back" since English is not my native language.
hark_back, return, come_back, recall
go back to something earlier; "This harks back to a previous remark of his"
Even after reading it I don't really get the idea that YDFM has something to do with Hot Space other than having a similar rythm and sound. But that's the way I understood it in the first place.
Wiley
Whoever wrote the booklet liners should be smacked with a live opposum
How about a dead one...takes less then a mile on the road here to find one that met a nice car tire
Don't know what's all the fuss about either- it was plain obvious from the begining that YDFM isn't from 'Hot Space' session, it's just in similiar to this album style...
I seem to recall ages ago (1999) when I was a member of alt.music.queen, there would be periodic posts of people marvelling over this wonderful Hot Space outtake, and when asked where they heard this bit of information, the general response would be, "Greatest Hits III told us so".
*shrug* I dunno, the OP mentioned himself (herself?) that he (she) KNEW the song was recorded during Hot Space, so...
*shrugs again*
Ow, my shoulder.
Wiley wrote: I never actually thought it was from the Hot Space sessions. What I understood from the liner notes in the booklet of GH3 is that the song was like a revisiting of the Hot Space era, because it kind of make you remember it.
Anyway, I just recently checked the meaning of the phrase "hark back" since English is not my native language.
hark_back, return, come_back, recall
go back to something earlier; "This harks back to a previous remark of his"
Even after reading it I don't really get the idea that YDFM has something to do with Hot Space other than having a similar rythm and sound. But that's the way I understood it in the first place.
Wiley
Freddie's voice definitely sounds post-Innuendo. The only (released) tracks Freddie sang in mid-91 were YDFM, A Winter's Tale, and Mother Love. Perhaps there were more, but it's doubtful.