AD Posted December 10, 2007 Report Share Posted December 10, 2007 In light of the excellent new DVD released this fall, Queen Rock Montreal + Live Aid, here is a well-done essay about Queen's Live Aid performance. If you haven't seen it, you're really missing out. (I might have posted this essay before, but couldn't find it using the search above). A bit sketchy with the dubious name-dropping in the final paragraph, but the sentiment is right...20 Minutes That Changed Music: Queen at Live Aid, July 13th, 1985by Ian WigleyAs a youngster my dad always used to buy every number one single, namely every record that made it to the top of the British charts each week. Back in the day, 1980-85, if you wanted a hit single, a number one, you had to sell about a million records; today it’s different, 30,000 record sales gets you to number one. My dad used to buy me Madness records, a band from London, a ska kind of band, lots of guitars and a horn section or two. I still have those records in my spare room, treasured they will be until the day I die. My dad has impeccable music tastes, heavy on The Beatles, Dusty Springfield, and lots of 60s stuff that’s above my head. He’s way too intelligent in music terms for me.In the early 80s my dad bought ‘The Works’ by Queen. Queen were a band that by all intents and purposes were past their sell-by-date, their career as 70s rock icons was done. But ‘The Works’ was a resurrection, a chance for this band to get a third chance. The singles from that record were flawless, ‘Radio Ga-ga and ‘I Want to Break Free’ speak volumes to begin with. They could sell out stadiums at the drop of a hat, the media were walking around in the palm of their hands, playing lip service to their every move, despite their bad albums a year or five before. Something new was on the horizon.In 1984 Sir Bob Geldof, tortured genius, almost-failed musician with The Boomtown Rats, and a B-list celeb, decided to try and solve Africa’s money problems through a song (‘Do They Know It’s Christmas’) with his rock star pals, and then subsequently staged a concert in England (Wembley Stadium, London) and the US (Philadelphia, JFK Stadium), to be known as Live Aid. He had a cornucopia of top-notch artists on board, Led Zeppelin, The Who, Paul McCartney, The Beach Boys, Simple Minds, everyone who was anyone in the 60s, 70s or 80s. One band Sir Bob did put on that stage in London, was Queen. Thank God.Freddie Mercury, Brian May, John Deacon and Roger Taylor, all supremely talented musicians in their own right, all worthy of the status they were given, played Live Aid as Queen, something they always had been. If you talk to anyone about Live Aid, about the global spectacle it was, the question they’ll ask you is this: “Do you remember Queen?†And we do. Live Aid was about throwing food into starving children’s mouths, about saving a continent from human disaster, that’s all it mainly was, but scratch below the surface, and it was about Queen, and those 20 minutes they played.Freddie Mercury was the ultimate frontman, better even than David Lee Roth. He steered Queen through thick and thin, note-perfect in every vocal way, a showman in a very different way to David Lee Roth – Dave had the looks and the charisma, Freddie had the talent. So, Live Aid had a few decent acts on from the start, a handful of good musicians flaunting their wares to an audience of billions, but the best was yet to come. Somewhere around 7pm we had Queen on our Wembley Stadium stage.‘Bohemian Rhapsody’, a song that is positively embarrassing, opened up the show, only to be cut short to provide an interlude to ‘Radio Ga-ga’. By this point the whole of Wembley Stadium was freaked out and rocking, it was something we’d never seen before, something we’ll never see again. Freddie single-handedly took 80,000 people out of their mundane 9-to-5 existence and shook their little worlds up. He’d got everyone just where he wanted them, the world revolved around him.Apparently a musician is ‘meant’ to walk a stage, they posses that something that makes them that ‘plus-one’—David Bowie has it, Stephen Patrick Morrissey has it, Mick Jagger has it, Michael Stipe has it, Robert Plant has it, Jarvis Cocker has it, Liam Gallagher has it, so does Frank Black, and to a certain sober extent, Ryan (not Bryan) Adams has it. It’s that intangible something that separates the greats from the average musician. Freddie Mercury had it times ten, and he proved it fifteen or twenty times over at Live Aid.So, ‘Radio Ga-ga’ went, everyone lost their minds, and then we had ‘Hammer to Fall’, an early 80s rock classic in its time. Freddie had people killing for him at 7pm on a hazy July 13th night in 1985. I was too young to appreciate it, I was only a kid, but 20 years down the line I can get the gist, and it doesn’t get much better. I spent £50 on the Live Aid DVD box-set last year, only for Queen. That might be the best £50 I ever spent. Shower praise over Freddie, by all means, he deserves it, they can never taint him in my eyes.The show slowed down after ‘Hammer to Fall’, we had ‘Crazy Little Thing Called Love’ to ground us in reality, a small anti-climax in a show-stopping performance. Then Freddie pulled out his next best stop after ‘Radio Ga-ga’ and gave us ‘We Will Rock You’ and ‘We are the Champions’ straight off the bat. He had the world (yes, the world) eating out of his hand, quite literally going stir crazy, and then he laid those two songs on us to finish his set! 80,000 people swaying in unison to that last song is enough to bring a lump to most people’s throats, but put on the stage of the world for such a humanitarian case just multiplies the whole thing.I’ve seen the cream of the crop in terms of music—Morrissey, Oasis twice, The Ramones, Aerosmith, The Kinks, Pulp, Iron Maiden, Madonna, Jane’s Addiction, AC/DC, Motley Crue, you name them, I’ve seen them all. But you show me a band that kicks it as freestyle as Queen did that day…I don’t think you can. That was it, the best 20 minutes in music we’ll ever see, Queen at Live Aid, July 13th 1985. If you’ve never seen it, buy it on DVD now, it’ll take your breath away. Music has never been the same since. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
balogna pogna Posted December 10, 2007 Report Share Posted December 10, 2007 I don't know if I'd go that far in my praise of Queen but I recently downloaded 3 or 4 shows on DVD from 1976-1986 and they are really awesome.I'll probably get the new Montreal DVD also.Wow. I'm really glad I got that off my chest...it kinda feels like I came out of the closet or something. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
AD Posted December 10, 2007 Author Report Share Posted December 10, 2007 It is a bit over the top in the glowing praise yes. But then again the Live Aid performance is awesome.Glad you made it out of the closet ok, hehe Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Hux Posted December 10, 2007 Report Share Posted December 10, 2007 Everyone should own the Live Aid '85 DVD(s) - lots of killer stuff on it. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MarcO Posted December 10, 2007 Report Share Posted December 10, 2007 not much into Queen but I agree they nailed their gig at Live Aid, just a riveting performance. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rob Not Bob Posted December 10, 2007 Report Share Posted December 10, 2007 Everyone should own the Live Aid '85 DVD(s) - lots of killer stuff on it.And some truly hilarous hairstyles! My acid test was, if your hair was worse than Bono's , you were a candidate for worst live aid hair. My vote goes to Tom Bailey from Thompson Twins.Great performance that nobody noticed : David Gilmour playing guitar for Bryan Ferry. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jaimoe Posted December 10, 2007 Report Share Posted December 10, 2007 I don't like Queen, but their Live Aid performance is one of the all-time best one-offs in the history of music festivals. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
carstairs Posted December 10, 2007 Report Share Posted December 10, 2007 Queen's performance was certainly a highlight. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jaimoe Posted December 10, 2007 Report Share Posted December 10, 2007 Looking back, most of Live Aid is laughable and dated - just check out The Boomtown Rats if you need proof. However, Queen's performance transcends the 80's, which is not an easy feat given the cheese and crap factor permeating through that decade. Their Aid gig was magical, really (other than the close-ups of Freddie's horrific teeth). Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
balogna pogna Posted December 11, 2007 Report Share Posted December 11, 2007 Their Aid gig was magical, really (other than the close-ups of Freddie's horrific teeth).I think Freddie's teeth deserve more credit. It is speculated that they wrote the first three Queen albums. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jaimoe Posted December 11, 2007 Report Share Posted December 11, 2007 Indeed. Those teeth have a life of their own. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
The Chameleon Posted December 11, 2007 Report Share Posted December 11, 2007 I agree that was a monumental performance. Although I don't like Queen I love Brian May (killer player). Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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