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"Battle Theme" Flash Gordon: 1980 May Instrumental [6] "Bicycle Race" ‡ Jazz: 1978 Mercury Mercury [7] "Bijou" Innuendo: 1991 Queen (May/Mercury) Mercury [4] "Blurred Vision" B-side of "One Vision" 1985 Queen Mercury (with May & Taylor) [8] "Body Language" ‡ Hot Space: 1982 Mercury Mercury [2] "Bohemian Rhapsody" ‡ A Night at the Opera ...
In the music video, a video game called "The Invisible Man" plays a large part, as a young boy is playing a game while the band (all dressed in black) are the "bad guys" and Freddie Mercury (who is their boss in the game, since he's the one who wears a virtual reality goggles, while the rest of the band didn't, but instead of them wearing virtual reality goggles like Freddie Mercury, they wear ...
There was also a video made to match the 12" inch version of the song which appears on Queen Rocks The Video VHS and Queen: Greatest Video Hits 2 DVD. An alternate version of the music video was produced splicing in scenes from the 1986 film Iron Eagle, with the standard video footage. The song was used multiple times during the training and ...
The idea for the song came from Freddie Mercury and John Deacon, who wrote the basic chord structure for the song. All four contributed to the lyrics and musical ideas, and the song was still credited to the entire band because they had agreed to do so during the album recording, regardless of who had been the actual writer.
Come On Over is the third studio album by Canadian singer-songwriter Shania Twain. Mercury Records in North America released it on November 4, 1997. Similar to her work on its predecessor, The Woman in Me (1995), Twain entirely collaborated with producer and then-husband Robert John "Mutt" Lange. With both having busy schedules, they often ...
The steam locomotive No. 3822 [8] (fired by Mark Needham) and an open platform were rented by Queen from the Didcot Railway Centre in Oxfordshire and repainted for the video. In particular, the group named the train "The Miracle Express", and this name was reflected in large red letters on the sides of the locomotive.
Later singles "It's a Hard Life", "Let Me Live" and "You Don't Fool Me" revisit the theme presented in "Play the Game", with Mercury writing from the same lover's perspective years later in the former song, and reflecting on the memories of the failed relationship in the latter. Both "Play the Game" and "It's a Hard Life" are of a similar ...
"Flash" is a song by British rock band Queen. Written by guitarist Brian May, "Flash" is the theme song of the 1980 film Flash Gordon. There are two versions of the song. The album version ("Flash's Theme") is in fact the start to the film, with all the dialogue from the first