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Queen
Formed: 1971 in London, England
Disbanded: 1995
Active: '70s-2000s Major
Styles: Art Rock, Album Rock, Contemporary Pop/Rock Major
Members: Roger Taylor, Brian May, John Deacon, Freddie Mercury Representative
Albums: "A Night at the Opera", "Classic Queen", "Greatest Hits" Representative
Songs: "We Will Rock You", "We Are the Champions", "Another One Bites the Dust"

UPC Type Title
5099930919525 (i) CD Absolute Greatest-Casebound Book Version
720616200525 CD At The Bbc
603777900391 DVD Bohemian Champions-Interviews
801213016198 DVD Classic Album: Making Of A Night At The Opera
823564605128 CD Collectors Box
4988005713018 (i) CD Cosmos Rocks
602537014132 (i) CD Cosmos Rocks
602537014149 (i) CD Cosmos Rocks
720616220028 CD Crown Jewels
050087240776 CD Day At The Races
050087240783 CD Day At The Races
602527644165 (i) CD Day At The Races (Deluxe Edition)
4988005646200 (i) CD Day At The Races(Shm-Cd)
4988005692801 (i) CD Day At The Racesvv (Shm-Cd)
4988006796003 (i) CD Day At The Races (2001)
602527644172 (i) CD Day At The Races (2011 Remaster)
050087128777 Vinyl Day At The Races
801213040094 DVD Days Of Our Lives
602527885131 (i) DVD Days Of Our Lives
801213340798 Blu-Ray Days Of Our Lives
602527885148 (i) Blu-Ray Days Of Our Lives [Blu-Ray]
602527717821 (i) CD Deep Cuts 2 : 1977-82
602527800295 (i) CD Deep Cuts 3 (1984-1995)
4988005668967 (i) CD Deep Cuts 3 (1984-1995) (Shm-Cd)
4988005667960 (i) CD Deep Cuts
602527654249 (i) CD Deep Cuts 1973-76
823564900421 CD Document
823564509594 DVD Dvd Collectors Box
050087245511 CD Flash Gordon
720616120328 CD Flash Gordon
602527717708 (i) CD Flash Gordon: Deluxe Edition
4988005667922 (i) CD Flash Gordon: Deluxe Edition
4988005667939 (i) CD Flash Gordon
4988005697653 (i) CD Flash Gordon (Shm-Cd)
602527717692 (i) CD Flash Gordon: 2011 Remaster
050087146948 Vinyl Flash Gordon
5099926798516 (i) Vinyl Flash Gordon
050087245481 CD Game
720616106322 CD Game
4988005667915 (i) CD Game
4988005697646 (i) CD Game (Shm-Cd)
602527717517 (i) CD Game: 2011 Remaster
602527717524 (i) CD Game: Deluxe Edition
4988005667908 (i) CD Game: Deluxe Edition
724349230125 (i) CD Greatest Flix Iii
720616246523 CD Greatest Hits-We Will Rock You
720616126528 CD Greatest Hits
050087240141 CD Greatest Hits Ii
720616204226 CD Greatest Hits I & Ii
4988006797222 (i) CD Greatest Hits Ii (2001)
602527610399 (i) CD Greatest Hits (2011 Remasters) (Uk Edition)
050087245542 CD Hot Space
720616103826 CD Hot Space
4988005667953 (i) CD Hot Space
4988005699954 (i) CD Hot Space (Shm-Cd)
602527717586 (i) CD Hot Space: Deluxe Edition
4988005667946 (i) CD Hot Space: Deluxe Edition
602527717579 (i) CD Hot Space: 2011 Remaster
720616102027 CD Innuendo
050087250683 CD Innuendo
602527800035 (i) CD Innuendo
050087146962 Vinyl Innuendo
4988005702883 (i) CD Innuendo (Shm-Cd)
4988005668943 (i) CD Innuendo (Shm-Cd)
4988006796775 (i) CD Innuendo/2001
602527800097 (i) CD Innuendo: Deluxe Edition
4988005668899 (i) CD Innuendo: Deluxe Edition (Shm-Cd)
050087245450 CD Jazz
720616106223 CD Jazz
4988005667892 (i) CD Jazz
5099968486815 (i) Vinyl Jazz
4988005697639 (i) CD Jazz (Shm-Cd)
602527717678 (i) CD Jazz: 2011 Remaster
602527717685 (i) CD Jazz: Deluxe Edition
4988005667885 (i) CD Jazz: Deluxe Edition
720616115225 CD Kind Of Magic
050087250621 CD Kind Of Magic
602527799742 (i) CD Kind Of Magic: Deluxe Edition
4988005668875 (i) CD Kind Of Magic: Deluxe Edition (Shm-Cd)
4988005699978 (i) CD Kind Of Magic (Shm-Cd)
4988005668929 (i) CD Kind Of Magic (Shm-Cd)
766488088021 (i) CD Kind Of Magic/2001
602527799711 (i) CD Kind Of Magic
050087146955 Vinyl Kind Of Magic
720616242228 CD Live At Wembley Stadium
4988006797215 (i) CD Live At Wembley '86
720616240095 DVD Live At Wembley Stadium
602527795690 (i) DVD Live At Wembley: 25th Anniversary Edition
602527795706 (i) DVD Live At Wembley: Deluxe 2 Cd + 2 Dvd Edition
720616106629 CD Live Killers
720616126726 CD Live Magic
720616201720 CD Made In Heaven
050087250713 CD Made In Heaven
4988005702890 (i) CD Made In Heaven (Shm-Cd)
4988005668950 (i) CD Made In Heaven (Shm-Cd)
602527800196 (i) CD Made In Heaven: Deluxe Edition
4988005668905 (i) CD Made In Heaven: Deluxe Edition (Shm-Cd)
602527800172 (i) CD Made In Heaven
823564503394 DVD Magic Moments-Unauthorized
720616123428 CD Miracle
050087250652 CD Miracle
602527799841 (i) CD Miracle
4988005668936 (i) CD Miracle (Shm-Cd)
4988005702876 (i) CD Miracle (Shm-Cd)
602527799872 (i) CD Miracle: Deluxe Edition
4988005668882 (i) CD Miracle: Deluxe Edition (Shm-Cd)
050087245429 CD News Of The World
720616103727 CD News Of The World
4988005692818 (i) CD News Of The World (Shm-Cd)
602527717470 (i) CD News Of The World: 2011 Remaster
602527717487 (i) CD News Of The World: Deluxe Edition
4988005667861 (i) CD News Of The World: Deluxe Edition
4988005667878 (i) CD News Of The World
050087146931 Vinyl News Of The World
720616257222 CD Night At The Opera-30th Anniversary
050087240745 CD Night At The Opera
050087240752 CD Night At The Opera
4988006837249 (i) CD Night At The Opera
602527644226 (i) CD Night At The Opera (2011 Remaster)
602527644240 (i) CD Night At The Opera (Deluxe Edition)
4988005646194 (i) CD Night At The Opera (Shm-Cd)
4988005692795 (i) CD Night At The Opera (Shm-Cd)
050087128760 Vinyl Night At The Opera
4988006824164 (i) CD On Fire At The Bowl
720616247926 CD On Fire-Live At The
720616249098 DVD On Fire-Live At The
671734423184 CD Orb
720616236029 CD Platinum Collection
602527724171 (i) CD Platinum Collection
4988005667847 (i) CD Platinum Collection: Red Special Edition
4988005667854 (i) CD Platinum Collection
050087240653 CD Queen
050087240660 CD Queen
050087146924 Vinyl Queen
602527638799 (i) CD Queen (Deluxe Edition)
4988005646163 (i) CD Queen (Shm-Cd)
4988005689870 (i) CD Queen (Shm-Cd)
4988005689887 (i) CD Queen 2 (Shm-Cd)
4988005646170 (i) CD Queen 2 (Shm-Cd)
050087240684 CD Queen Ii
050087240691 CD Queen Ii
4988006796157 (i) CD Queen Ii
050087128746 Vinyl Queen Ii
602527642505 (i) CD Queen Ii (Deluxe Edition)
050087111083 CD Queen Rock Montreal
801213022793 DVD Queen Rock Montreal
801213022892 DVD Queen Rock Montreal
5034504966673 (i) DVD Queen Rock Montreal & Live Aid
801213331598 Blu-Ray Queen Rock Montreal
5099950404711 (i) Vinyl Queen Rock Montreal
5055396350258 DVD Queen-We Will Rock You
720616901194 DVD Queen: Greatest Video Hits, Vol. 1 [2 Discs]
720616901798 DVD Queen: Greatest Video Hits, Vol. 2 [2 Discs]
720616225023 CD Queen: Vol. 3-Greatest Hits
050087250584 CD Queen: Vol. 3-40th Anniversary Collectors Box Set
720616252623 CD Return Of The Champion
602537013876 (i) CD Return Of The Champ
4988006834781 (i) CD Return Of The Champions
4988005712912 (i) CD Return Of The Champions
720616252791 DVD Return Of The Champions
602537013968 (i) DVD Return Of The Champ
030309993994 DVD Rock In Rio
8712177055623 (i) CD Rock You From Rio
8712177055678 (i) DVD Rock You From Rio
8712177055852 (i) Vinyl Rock You From Rio
050087240714 CD Sheer Heart Attack
050087240721 CD Sheer Heart Attack
602527644097 (i) CD Sheer Heart Attack (2011 Remaster)
602527644110 (i) CD Sheer Heart Attack (Deluxe Edition)
4988005646187 (i) CD Sheer Heart Attack (Shm-Cd)
4988005689894 (i) CD Sheer Heart Attack (Shm-Cd)
050087128753 Vinyl Sheer Heart Attack
720616260628 CD Stone Cold Classics
823564510194 DVD Under Review 1946-91
823564507095 DVD Under Review 1973-1980
823564508191 DVD Under Review 1980-1991
050087241360 CD Vol. 1-Queen 40th Anniversary Collectors Box Set
050087245412 CD Vol. 2-Queen 40th Anniversary Collectors Box Set
823564902425 DVD We Thank You All
671734423252 CD Wembley Roadie Cube
050087250591 CD Works
720616123329 CD Works
5099968487317 (i) Vinyl Works
4988005668912 (i) CD Works (Shm-Cd)
4988005699961 (i) CD Works (Shm-Cd) (Shm-Cd)
602527717623 (i) CD Works: 2011 Remasters
602527717661 (i) CD Works: Deluxe Edition
4988005668868 (i) CD Works: Deluxe Edition (Shm-Cd)
823564705224 CD X-Posed

Biography: Few bands embodied the pure excess of the '70s like Queen. 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. Queen's music was a bizarre yet highly accessible fusion of the macho and the fey. 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. 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. 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. Despite their enormous popularity, Queen were never taken seriously by rock critics -- an infamous Rolling Stone review labeled their 1979 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. In the States, their popularity peaked in the early '80s, just as they finished nearly a decade's worth of extraordinarily popular records. 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.

The origins of Queen lay in the hard rock psychedelic group Smile, which guitarist Brian May and drummer Roger Taylor joined in 1967. 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. Within a few months, bassist John Deacon joined them, and they began rehearsing. Over the next two years, as all four members completed college, they simply rehearsed, playing just a handful of gigs. By 1973, they had begun to concentrate on their career, releasing their debut album, Queen, that year and setting out on their first tour. 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. 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. Following its release, the group embarked on its first American tour, supporting Mott the Hoople. On the strength of their campily dramatic performances, the album climbed to number 43 in the States.

Queen released their third album, Sheer Heart Attack, before the end of 1974. The music hall meets Zeppelin "Killer Queen" climbed to number two on the U.K. charts, taking the album to number two as well. Sheer Heart Attack made some inroads in America as well, setting the stage for the breakthrough of 1975's A Night at the Opera. 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. 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. It also is the symbol for their musical excesses -- the song took three weeks to record, and there were so many vocal overdubs on the record that it was possible to see through the tape at certain points. To support "Bohemian Rhapsody," Queen shot one of the first conceptual music videos, and the gamble paid off as the single spent nine weeks at number one in the England, breaking the record for the longest run at number one. The song and A Night at the Opera were equally successful in America, as the album climbed into the Top Ten and quickly went platinum.

Following A Night at the Opera, Queen were established as superstars, and they quickly took advantage of all their status had to offer. Their parties and indulgence quickly became legend in the rock world, yet they continued to work at a rapid rate. In the summer of 1976, they performed a free concert at London's Hyde Park that broke attendance records, and they released the hit single "Somebody to Love" a few months later. It was followed by A Day at the Races, which was essentially a scaled-down version of A Night at the Opera that reached number one in the U.K. and number five in the U.S. They continued to pile up hit singles in both Britain and America over the next five years, as each of their albums went into the Top Ten, always going gold and usually platinum in the process. Because Queen embraced such mass success and adoration, they were scorned by the rock press, especially when they came to represent all of the worst tendencies of the old guard in the wake of punk. Nevertheless, the public continued to buy Queen records. Featuring the Top Five double-A-sided single "We Are the Champions"/"We Will Rock You," News of the World became a Top Ten hit in 1977. The following year, Jazz nearly replicated that success, with the single "Fat Bottomed Girls"/"Bicycle Race" becoming an international hit despite the massive bad publicity surrounding their media stunt of staging a nude female bicycle race.

Queen were at the height of their popularity as they entered the '80s, releasing The Game, their most diverse album to date, in 1980. On the strength of two number one singles -- the campy rockabilly "Crazy Little Thing Called Love" and the disco-fied "Another One Bites the Dust" -- The Game became the group's first American number one album. However, the bottom fell out of the group's popularity, particularly in the U.S., shortly afterward. Their largely instrumental soundtrack to Flash Gordon was coldly received later in 1980. With the help of David Bowie, Queen were able to successfully compete with new wave with the 1981 hit single "Under Pressure" -- their first U.K. number one since "Bohemian Rhapsody" -- which was included both on their 1981 Greatest Hits and 1982's Hot Space. Instead of proving the group's vitality, "Under Pressure" was a last gasp. Hot Space was only a moderate hit, and the more rock-oriented The Works (1984) also was a minor hit, with only "Radio Ga Ga" receiving much attention. Shortly afterward, they left Elektra and signed with Capitol.

Faced with their decreased popularity in the U.S. and waning popularity in Britain, Queen began touring foreign markets, cultivating a large, dedicated fan base in Latin America, Asia, and Africa, continents that most rock groups ignored. In 1985, they returned to popularity in Britain in the wake of their showstopping performance at Live Aid. The following year, they released A Kind of Magic to strong European sales, but they failed to make headway in the States. The same fate befell 1989's The Miracle, yet 1991's Innuendo was greeted more favorably, going gold and peaking at number 30 in the U.S. Nevertheless, it still was a far bigger success in Europe, entering the U.K. charts at number one.

By 1991, Queen had drastically scaled back their activity, causing many rumors to circulate about Freddie Mercury's health. On November 23, he issued a statement confirming that he was stricken with AIDS; he died the next day. The following spring, the remaining members of Queen held a memorial concert at Wembley Stadium that was broadcast to an international audience of more than one billion. Featuring such guest artists as David Bowie, Elton John, Annie Lennox, Def Leppard, and Guns N' Roses, the concert raised millions for the Mercury Phoenix Trust, which was established for AIDS awareness. The concert coincided with a revival of interest in "Bohemian Rhapsody," which climbed to number two in the U.S. and number one in the U.K. in the wake of its appearance in the Mike Myers comedy Wayne's World.

Following Mercury's death, the remaining members of Queen were fairly quiet. Brian May released his second solo album, Back to the Light, in 1993, ten years after the release of his first record. Roger Taylor cut a few records with the Cross, which he had been playing with since 1987, while Deacon essentially retired. The three reunited in 1994 to record backing tapes for vocal tracks Mercury recorded on his deathbed. The resulting album, Made in Heaven, was released in 1995 to mixed reviews and strong sales, particularly in Europe. Crown Jewels, a box set repackaging their first eight LPs, followed in 1998. Archival live recordings, DVDs, and compilations kept appearing through the new millennium. The Queen name was revived in 2005, but this time with "+ Paul Rodgers" appended to it. Rodgers, the former lead singer of Free and Bad Company, joined Brian May and Roger Taylor (John Deacon remained retired) for several live shows, one of which was documented on 2005's Return of the Champions, a double-disc release issued by the Hollywood label. International touring continued, as did a new studio album featuring Rodgers' vocals. Released under the "Queen + Paul Rodgers" tag, The Cosmos Rocks appeared in September 2008, followed by an American release one month later. Reception was decidedly mixed. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, Rovi