The first single from the record, "Bohemian Rhapsody," became Queen's signature song, and with its bombastic, mock-operatic structure punctuated by heavy metal riffing, it encapsulates their music. Queen labored long and hard over the record according to many reports, it was the most expensive rock record ever made at the time of its release. Sheer Heart Attack made some inroads in America as well, setting the stage for the breakthrough of 1975's A Night at the Opera. charts, taking the album to number two as well. The music hall meets Zeppelin "Killer Queen" climbed to number two on the U.K. Queen released their third album, Sheer Heart Attack, before the end of 1974. On the strength of their campily dramatic performances, the album climbed to number 49 in the States.
Following its release, the group embarked on its first American tour, supporting Mott the Hoople. Before its release, the band played Top of the Pops, performing "Seven Seas of Rhye." Both the song and the performance were smash successes, and the single rocketed into the Top Ten, setting the stage for Queen II to reach number five. Queen was more or less a straight metal album and failed to receive much acclaim, but Queen II became an unexpected British breakthrough early in 1974. By 1973, they had begun to concentrate on their career, releasing their debut album, Queen, that year and setting out on their first tour. Over the next two years, as all four members completed college, they simply rehearsed, playing just a handful of gigs. Within a few months, bassist John Deacon joined them, and they began rehearsing. Following the departure of Smile's lead vocalist, Tim Staffell, in 1971, May and Taylor formed a group with Freddie Mercury, the former lead singer for Wreckage. The origins of Queen lay in the hard rock psychedelic group Smile, which guitarist Brian May and drummer Roger Taylor joined in 1967. And while those records were never praised, they sold in enormous numbers, and traces of Queen's music could be heard in several generations of hard rock and metal bands in the next two decades, from Metallica to Smashing Pumpkins. In the States, their popularity peaked in the early '80s, just as they finished nearly a decade's worth of extraordinarily popular records. Despite their enormous popularity, Queen were never taken seriously by rock critics - an infamous Rolling Stone review labeled their 1978 album Jazz as "fascist." In spite of such harsh criticism, the band's popularity rarely waned even in the late '80s, the group retained a fanatical following except in America. Through his legendary theatrical performances, Queen became one of the most popular bands in the world in the mid-'70s in England, they remained second only to the Beatles in popularity and collectibility in the '90s. But vocalist Freddie Mercury brought an extravagant sense of camp to Queen, pushing them toward kitschy humor and pseudo-classical arrangements, as epitomized on their best-known song, "Bohemian Rhapsody." Mercury, it must be said, was a flamboyant bisexual who managed to keep his sexuality in the closet until his death from AIDS in 1991. For years, their albums boasted the motto "no synthesizers were used on this record," signaling their allegiance with the legions of post-Led Zeppelin hard rock bands.
Queen's music was a bizarre yet highly accessible fusion of the macho and the fey.
Embracing the exaggerated pomp of prog rock and heavy metal, as well as vaudevillian music hall, the British quartet delved deeply into camp and bombast, creating a huge, mock-operatic sound with layered guitars and overdubbed vocals. Embracing the exaggerated pomp of prog rock and heavy metal, as well as vaudevillian music hall, the British quartet delved deeply into camp and bombast, creating aįew bands embodied the pure excess of the '70s like Queen. Few bands embodied the pure excess of the '70s like Queen.