Monday, March 29, 2021

Album Review: 03 A Royal Night At The Opera With Queen

Album Review: 03
A Royal Night At The Opera With Queen

 This review was originally posted on rateyourmusic. It was one of the reviews I was assigned in the "Go Review That Album" game on their community forums. This version of the review has had some editing and corrections.

Queen A Night At The Opera
1975 Mobile Fidelity Sound Lab UDCD 568
****.5

“I see a little silhouette of a man,
Scaramouch, Scaramouch will you do the Fandango,
Thunderbolt and lightning - very very frightening me –
Gallileo, Gallileo,
Gallileo, Gallileo,
Gallileo Figaro-Magnifco”

This is the quintessential Queen album. This album shows the band’s versatility and the wide range of their talents, especially their harmonizing. The title and some of the tracks themselves suggest that this is a concept album that the listener is attending “A Night at the Opera” a Rock Opera that is. Even though that is the suggestion it could be argued that it is not a concept album since the style of the songs is a large range, they don’t contribute to a common story and only a couple of them could be called Opera music, of course I think it is mostly because Freddy Mercury and the band were big fans of the Marx Brothers as their next album was called “A Day at the Races” According to Wikipedia they were watching “A Night at the Opera” in the recording studio while working on the album. I like my Marx Brothers fanboy angle better. I’m not sure of my first thoughts of the album the first time I heard it other than knowing the title was also the name of a Marx Brother’s movie and having heard Bohemian Rhapsody on the radio many times. I have also always thought that it possibly could be made into an opera, or at least Bohemian Rhapsody could be made into a sort of mini opera.

Well I wasn’t going to do my review like this, but I think I will give a brief track-by-track comment. This album opens in the first few notes sounding like some sort of science fiction B-grade movie with “Death on Two Legs”. The listener is then shocked a little bit with track two sounding like a 1920s tin can soundtrack to a tennis or cricket match in “Lazing on a Sunday Afternoon.” Then Drummer Roger Taylor gives what can best be called an autosexual serenade to a car on “I’m in Love With My Car”. We get back on track with typical ‘70s album oriented rock with “You’re My Best Friend” one of the tracks on the album that gets a good amount of radio airplay. Then we switch gears and styles on “‘39” an acoustic folky almost sea chantey type feel. Next we come back to modern times with “Sweet Lady” a typical Queen sounding type song.

We get really artistic with “Seaside Rendezvous” which goes back again to the early 20th century tinny (in a tin can sort of way) sounds and the extraordinary vocal talents of Roger Taylor imitating percussion instruments and Freddie Mercury imitating woodwinds. Next “The Prophet’s Song” mixes a marching sort of Native American sound with a bit of a school choir recital that flows into an Acapulco canon and then back into a modern rock band sound and back again. After the fact I can hear some of the styles that would later appear in the theme to “The Highlander” movie. The song sort of drifts from a summer cabin in the rain to the piano dependent “Love of My Life” which gives us some more of Queen’s beautiful harmonizing. Next we add a little harmonizing with a little vaudeville ukulele and a little Beatles influence sound on “Good Company”. I think as a kid I did think that song was by the Beatles.

Near the end we have the most famous song from the album the piece that is most Opera like of the whole album “Bohemian Rhapsody”. The song played a big memorable part in the movie “Wayne’s World” after having been re-released shortly after Freddie Mercury’s death. It crosses a wide range of vocal styles and musical themes exploring high and low sounds fast and slow tempos as well. Then we end the album on the Patriotic instrumental “God Save The Queen”.

The copy of the CD I have and based this review on is an “Original Master” recording (OMR) made by Mobile Fidelity Sound Labs (MFSL) pressed on a Gold CD. Most CDs of the time were from analog recordings and mixed with analog recording with digital mastering (AAD). The OMRs and especially the gold discs were ADD recordings. Back before CDs audiophiles had to get “1/2 speed” master recordings on “Virgin” Vinyl to get their pure sounding records with as little sound distortion as possible. The idea is that there are less impurities in virgin vinyl than ordinary vinyl. These OMRs usually would cost twice as much as the regular version. I started getting into OMRs in the early 80s when the prices for MFSL OMRs started getting more reasonable, just as CDs were starting to take over.

2 comments:

Ken said...

Great music. I prefer Queen's 1st album. "Keep Yourself Alive" & "Great King Rat", great hard rock songs.

Jon said...

I could go my entire life without hearing Bohemian Rhapsody again! Not a huge fan of this album either, but that CD of yours is pretty cool, you don't see those very often.