anyway, thanks for sharing ... conversation with me.
With a little luck I found the track somewhere else yesterday, and IMO this 11:44-session of "Stealin" (a very average track for me as the official relesaed three-and-a-half-minute B-Side 1989) is the best example of the vitality, the real quality and skills of this band even in a time, when commercial success was always sure. Freddies jokes, brians ideas, john's and roger's spontaneous reactions on it - this session is a masterpiece of what queen was about. In my opinion: Forget all the other (unreleased) demos of that time. Bye
crwarburg wrote: anyway, thanks for sharing ... conversation with me.
With a little luck I found the track somewhere else yesterday, and IMO this 11:44-session of "Stealin" (a very average track for me as the official relesaed three-and-a-half-minute B-Side 1989) is the best example of the vitality, the real quality and skills of this band even in a time, when commercial success was always sure. Freddies jokes, brians ideas, john's and roger's spontaneous reactions on it - this session is a masterpiece of what queen was about. In my opinion: Forget all the other (unreleased) demos of that time. Bye
okay, thank you "Going back". You've been the fastest one, I'm too late. Hope, many queen-fans will hear and enjoy this upload that includes an idea of "In charge of my heart", later used by the cross. If queen does not release box sets, we should do it by ourselves, or?
that's right, and the version of "keep passing the open windows" is interesting enough to find a place on those compilations, as we heard it on the freddie-box five years ago. thanks to the publishers and the writer of this song ...
I like this much better than the original.
The multitracked Freddies at the first little bit are an interesting omission from the finalized version.
It gives it that sorta frenetic feeling to the song, like the singer's still on the run from the feds...kinda.