Greatest Hits I & II by Queen

Album cover for Greatest Hits I & II - Queen
1. Bohemian Rhapsody
5:58
2. Another One Bites the Dust
3:37
3. Killer Queen
3:02
4. Fat Bottomed Girls
3:25
5. Bicycle Race
3:04
6. You're My Best Friend
2:52
7. Don't Stop Me Now
3:32
8. Save Me
3:49
9. Crazy Little Thing Called Love
2:44
10. Somebody to Love
4:58
11. Now I'm Here
4:15
12. Good Old-Fashioned Lover Boy
2:56
13. Play the Game
3:33
14. Flash
2:48
15. Seven Seas of Rhye
2:50
16. We Will Rock You
2:02
17. We Are The Champions
3:02

Queen are a British rock band formed in London in 1971, originally consisting of Freddie Mercury (lead vocals, piano), Brian May (guitar, vocals), John Deacon (bass guitar, vocals), and Roger Taylor (drums, vocals). Queen's earliest works were influenced by progressive rock, but the band gradually ventured into more conventional and radio-friendly works, incorporating more diverse and innovative styles in their music. Before joining Queen, Brian May and Roger Taylor had been playing together in a band named Smile with bassist Tim Staffell. Freddie Mercury (then known by his birth name of Farrokh/ Freddie Bulsara) was a fan of Smile, and encouraged them to experiment with more elaborate stage and recording techniques after Staffell's departure in 1970. Mercury himself joined the band shortly thereafter, changed the name of the band to 'Queen', and adopted his familiar stage name. John Deacon was recruited prior to recording their eponymous debut album (1973). Queen enjoyed success in the UK with their debut and its follow-up, Queen II (1974), but it was the release of Sheer Heart Attack (1974) and A Night at the Opera (1975) that gained the band international success. The latter featured "Bohemian Rhapsody", which stayed at number one in the UK Singles Chart for nine weeks; it charted at number one in several other territories, and gave the band their first top ten hit on the US Billboard Hot 100. Their 1977 album, News of the World, contained two of rock's most recognisable anthems, "We Will Rock You" and "We Are the Champions". By the early 1980s, Queen were one of the biggest stadium rock bands in the world, and their performance at 1985's Live Aid is regarded as one of the greatest in rock history. In 1991, Mercury died of bronchopneumonia, a complication of AIDS, and Deacon retired in 1997. Since then, May and Taylor have infrequently performed together, including a collaboration with Paul Rodgers under the name Queen + Paul Rodgers which ended in May 2009.

A masterclass in enormous, dressed-to-the-nines pop hits. Rooted in rock, devoted to melody and incorrigibly theatrical, Queen’s breakthrough track “Seven Seas of Rhye” set the spectacular tone for one of the great singles bands. The quartet can be extravagantly life-affirming (“Don’t Stop Me Now”, “Bohemian Rhapsody”) and, when the pomp’s scaled back, incisively tender (“You’re My Best Friend”). Whatever the mood, every melody is indelible and, delivered by rock’s great showman Freddie Mercury, every story fascinating.