Tuesday 1 December 2015

Brian May Presents His Latest Invention, 'Victorian Gems'

Brian May Presents His Latest Invention, 'Victorian Gems', To Introduce His Fans To A Fantasy Bygone World

Posted: Updated: 

Brian May wants to introduce his fans to another world, courtesy of his brand new box he’s designed himself.

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Somehow, between touring the world with Queen and Adam Lambert, getting ready for his stargazing confernece, saving badgers from being culled, the Queen guitarist has found the time to design what he hopes is the ultimate gift for photography enthusiasts.




Brian May's been busy again... this time with 'Victorian Gems'

He’s come up with ‘Victorian Gems’ - a magic box containing the key to a kind of virtual reality, that drove our Victorian ancestors wild.

“This 3-D starter kit will give more lasting joy than an X-box,” promises Brian of his invention. "Looking through the stereoscope, you will see an astonishingly realistic other world - it’s as if you could reach through the window and touch these subjects.

"Once the door of true stereoscopic 3-D viewing is opened up, many people find they are hooked for life.”

Included in the box are an OL - the 21st century’s most celebrated stereoscopic viewer, plus three sets of restored original Victorian stereo views - Scenes in our Village, Diableries and Poor Man’s Picture Gallery - as well as instructions on how to take and view your own 3-D views. And Brian’s looking to the future, when an OWL Smart Phone adaptor will be available next year.



Brian May and his Red Special - still loving it, four decades on

This is by no means the first time Brian, a keen astronomer as well as musician, has got creative in his down time.

He previously explained to HuffPostUK how he and his father put together his distinctive Red Special guitar, the instrument responsible for so much of Queen's unique sound.

“I was 16 at the time, and we made it because we couldn’t come close to affording a guitar,” Brian remembers.

Telecasters and Stratocasters were way in off in the stratosphere, and English copies were still beyond my budget. So we decided to make it better than anyone else’s.

“Everything I’ve ever done, with the exception of ‘Crazy Little Thing’. Every track and every concert, I’ve used it.”

Victorian Gems, designed by Brian May, £95, available to buy from www.londonstereo.com

Friday 27 November 2015

7 artists inspired by Freddie Mercury


Another one bites his style: 7 artists Freddie Mercury inspired, on anniversary of Queen icon’s death
BY MELANIE DOSTIS
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Tuesday, November 24, 2015, 6:00 AM

S


Tuesday marks the 24th anniversary of Freddie Mercury's death.

The show has gone on.

It’s been 24 years since the death of legendary singer Freddie Mercury, but his style carries on with a current worldwide Queen tour, helmed by Adam Lambert.

Tuesday marks the anniversary of the “Bohemian Rhapsody” singer’s death from AIDS-related pneumonia on Nov. 24, 1991.

And, the flamboyant crooner may have have famously said “nothing really matters,” but the artists he’s inspired would strongly disagree.

The consummate frontman’s creative power has touched genres from heavy metal to pop — and still has a lasting impact on several of today’s musicians.

Here are seven artists that probably wouldn’t exist without Mercury’s influence:

Katy Perry

The pop star listened to Freddie Mercury for the first time when she was 15.

The 31-year-old is a “killer queen” in the pop scene and she has said she owes her musical juices to an early introduction of Mercury’s music.

“Freddie Mercury was — and remains — my biggest influence,” the singer once told the Daily Star, adding praise for his sarcastic and “I don’t give a f---” approach to songwriting.

The singer almost took her adoration to permanent levels, claiming she once wanted a huge tattoo of Mercury’s face on her back.
Kurt Cobain

The Nirvana singer referenced Mercury in his suicide note.

Cobain, another musician gone too early, cited Mercury not only as an inspiration, but even referenced him in his suicide note.

The Nirvana frontman wrote “I totally admire and envy” Mercury’s love for the crowd — something the singer said he never relished.

Years earlier, a young Cobain was listening to Mercury’s voice on repeat.

“I would take a nap in the van and listen to Queen...We’d get stuck after work with a dead battery because I listened to Queen too much,” he recalled about his childhood in his documentary “Kurt Cobain: About a Son.”

Lady Gaga

Lady Gaga created her stage name from a Queen song.

Considering the pop diva’s stage name hails from Queen’s “Radio Gaga” track, it’s no surprise the “Born this Way” singer is a big fan of Mercury.

“He was not only a singer but also a fantastic performer, a man of the theatre and someone who constantly transformed himself. In short: a genius,” she toldthe Daily Record.

The 29-year-old has even joined the Adam Lambert-fronted Queen on stage, singing her rendition of “Another One Bites the Dust.”

PSY

Pop sensation PSY has said his showmanship comes from an adoration for Mercury's performances.

The Korean pop star, who emerged on the American music scene with “Gangam Style,” has said his love of music was sparked early on by Mercury.

“My lifetime role model and hero is Freddie Mercury,” he told the New York Times.

The singer became an inspiration to PSY when he saw footage of Mercury’s now-famous performance at Wembley Stadium in 1975

“His songwriting skills, I cannot even approach, but his showmanship, I learned it from his videos,” he added.

Adam Lambert

Queen guitarist Brian May and Adam Lambert perform during the opening night of their North American tour in 2014.

The “American Idol” finalist is seemingly the heir apparent to Mercury’s glittery throne, touring with the band since 2011.

And, the young star was a big fan of Mercury before trying his luck at filling the lead vocalist’s shoes.

“Everybody knows Queen peripherally, you hear them at sporting events and stadiums, my dad helped me make the connection between the music and the people making it,” he told the Telegraph.

While he says Queen is a part of his blood now, the singer stands firm that he isn’t taking Mercury’s place.

“There’s never going to be another, and I’m not replacing him...I’m trying to share with the audience how much he inspired me,” he said at a press conference in September.
Judas Priest

The band's frontman often asks "What would Freddie possibly do" when writing songs.

The heavy metal group was highly influential in their own right during the glam metal era of the 80s.

Yet, the band’s frontman, Rob Halford, still calls Mercury an inspiration.

“I’ve always thought — when I do a track, even with Priest — I’ll think, ‘Well, what would Freddie possibly do here,” he told the website loudwire.

The singer has called the Queen icon his “ultimate hero.”
Dave Grohl

Dave Grohl of the Foo Fighters performed a birthday tribute to Mercury in September.

Another former member of Nirvana has also sung his praises to Mercury.

Earlier this year, Grohl created a super rock group when he was joined by Led Zeppelin bassist, John Paul Jones, and Queen drummer, Roger Taylor, in paying a birthday tribute to Mercury with a performance of “Under Pressure”

The lead singer of the Foo Fighters has said Mercury represents a musician’s goals, having always played like it was the last night of his life.

He even told the Washington Post he pulls up an image of Mercury performing whenever butterflies kick in before taking the stage.

"Every band should study Queen at Live Aid. If you really feel like that barrier is gone, you become Freddie Mercury. I consider him the greatest frontman of all time. Like, it's funny – you'd imagine that Freddie was more than human,” hetold NPR.

Wednesday 11 November 2015

Judas Priest’s Rob Halford on Freddie Mercury: ‘He’s Still an Inspiration to Me’


Judas Priest’s Rob Halford on Freddie Mercury: ‘He’s Still an Inspiration to Me’
By Joe DiVita November 6, 2015 11:27 AM


Ethan Miller / Fox Photos, Getty Images (2)

When you’re the Metal God and have had generations of singers laud your talents, it can be easy to become jaded, but Rob Halford remains humble and appreciative. The Judas Priest frontman has been at it for over 40 years, but still finds inspiration from other singers. One of those singers is Queen‘s Freddie Mercury, who recently capped off our list of the Top 50 Hard Rock + Metal Frontmen of All Time.

Speaking with Indiepower TV, Halford, who also placed quite high on our list, discussed his admiration for Mercury, stating, “I was listening to Freddie when I was driving in my car yesterday. He still is an inspiration to me.” He continued, “You know, I’ve got a list of singers who really touch me in the purest sense, from the vocal performance as well as just the soul and spirit. So he still does that, he just belts it out with such conviction, and his voice is remarkable.”

Adding how Mercury still inspires him in the studio, Halford went on, “I’ve always thought — when I do a track, even with Priest I’ll think, ‘Well what would Freddie possibly do here,’ you know.”

While Freddie Mercury is widely regarded as the consummate frontman, Halford ranks among the elite right up there with the Queen legend. The Judas Priest frontman still taking influence from the iconic singer proves why rock and metal will never die. Anyone influenced by Halford has also, in turn, been influenced by Freddie Mercury whether they realize it or not. This cycle of influence helps the genres to feed themselves over and over as each musician tries to become the best they can be.



Read More: Rob Halford on Freddie Mercury: 'He's Still an Inspiration' | http://loudwire.com/judas-priest-rob-halford-on-freddie-mercury-still-inspiration-to-me/?trackback=tsmclip

Tuesday 10 November 2015

Brian May Remembers 'Bohemian Rhapsody' on 40th Anniversary


Party On: Queen's Brian May Remembers 'Bohemian Rhapsody' on 40th Anniversary

11_06_Brian_May_01
Queen's guitarist Brian May performs during the iHeartRadio Music Festival at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas in September 2013. STEVE MARCUS/REUTERS
FILED UNDER: CultureQueenBrian May
This article first appeared on RollingStone.com.
October 31 marked the 40th anniversary of Queen's monumental prog-opera-pop-metal hit "Bohemian Rhapsody," a tune that topped the charts in the U.K. in 1975 and then nearly repeated the feat in America in 1992 thanks to an especially iconic lip-sync in Wayne's World. Its influence cannot be overstated, practically inventing the music video seven years before MTV went on the air. But to this day nothing sounds quite like it. The band is releasing their much-bootlegged 1975 London Hammersmith BBC broadcast as Queen – A Night at the Odeon – Hammersmith this holiday season andRolling Stone caught up with Brian May to reminisce over the iconic, generation-crossing hit. 
When you were recording "Bohemian Rhapsody," did you have any idea what a big deal it was going to be?
I don't think anybody thought that. We were just thinking, "This is fun, this is interesting, this'll be something that people enjoy." Freddie [Mercury] wrote it. Of course we all interacted, we all contributed bits and pieces and argued as we always did, but it was Freddie's baby and everyone respected that in the end.
We had an unwritten law that whoever brought the song in would have the final say in how it turned out. But we weren't that shocked, because we were used to that way of working and we'd done things like "My Fairy King" on the first album, and lots of complexity on Queen II, so it wasn't unusual for Freddie to come in and have this rather baroque-sounding backing track and wondering what was going to go on top. Probably the most unusual thing was, John [Deacon] said to him, "What are you going to call it then, is it called 'Mama?'" And Freddie went, "No, I think we'll call it 'Bohemian Rhapsody.'" And there was a little silence, everybody thought, "Okaaay…" I don't think anybody said, "Why?" but there it was. How strange to call a song "Bohemian Rhapsody," but it just suits it down to the ground and it became a milestone. But nobody knew.
How did you feel about the Wayne's World scene when you heard about it?
Mike Myers phoned me up and said, "We've got this thing which we think is great, do you want to hear it?" And I said, "Yeah." And he said, "Do you think Freddie would want to hear it?" Now Freddie was really sick by that time but I said, "Yeah, I'm sure he will." Mike gave me a tape which I took 'round to Freddie and played to him and Freddie loved it, he just laughed and thought it was great, this little video.
It's odd because that was a huge thing in the States. You've got two events there—you've got Wayne's World and Freddie dying, which, looking back on it, is the oddest thing and it did become a sort of rebirth for us in the States. We have a strange history with the States. We worked there more than anywhere in the world in the early days, we'd generally tour there for months and then do a couple of months in other places, and then go back in the studio again. So life was more or less all about touring the States and recording.
And then there came a period where we really lost our contact with the States because of a number of things. There was a big backlash to our video for "I Want to Break Free," where we all dress up as women. Everyone thought it was really funny around here and Europe but in the States a lot of people did not find it funny. I remember going out with that on a little promo tour and people's faces would go ashen when they saw that we were dressed as women, because it was just unheard of. These days, you get the Foo Fighters doing something similar on "Learn to Fly" and everybody is rollicking with laughter, but in those days there was a real feeling of shock and horror in some of those media people and it absolutely damaged the record. In Europe it was huge, same in Australia. But in the States, no.
Then our [U.S.] record company at the time [Capitol] got investigated for payola. They suddenly dropped all their independent promotion people and got a massive backlash from the system and that made "Radio Gaga" drop like a stone.
And the other thing was Paul Prenter, who became Freddie's personal [manager]. We had a great relationship with radio in America; we'd get off the plane and go and do two or three or four radio stations. But this guy, whenever anyone rang up for Freddie, he'd say, "No, Freddie's not interested, he doesn't need to talk to you"—and that, in a very short time, spoiled our relationship with radio. So we lost touch with the States until the Mike Myers time.
Did you know that the movie people actually wanted Guns N' Roses in that scene, rather than Queen?
No, I did not know that. Is that right? How funny. It's a great scene. The funny thing was, we always regarded ["Bohemian Rhapsody"] tongue in cheek ourselves. If it would come on the radio, we would all be headbanging when it came to the heavy bit as well, us as a group. It was very close to our sense of humor. Mike's an Anglophile so he has a real feel for what people find funny in this country.
Was it strange to be catapulted back into the MTV generation when you won the Video Music Award?
Well, people tell us we invented it, that we're to blame because "Bohemian Rhapsody" was effectively the first [music video]. We found ourselves unwittingly at the center of that and then it zoomed off at a tangent and became something that was harder for us to relate to. We never had the idea that a song would only be represented by a video, it was just one way of promoting it. And suddenly you couldn't possibly put out a record without having a video and the video locked in people's minds in terms of how they visualized the song. Very often music is about people spinning their own images in their head and [videos] took away that ability and meant that the song was forever welded to this creation and you couldn't get away from it.
Is it a bit like that now for "Bohemian Rhapsody"? Is it always linked in people's minds to Wayne's World?
Yeah, but "Bohemian Rhapsody" does cross a lot of boundaries. It's been done so many different ways now by different people. I think Freddie did good—and we did good, I guess!

Sunday 1 November 2015

Bohemian Rhapsody - 40 years

Is ‘Bohemian Rhapsody’ Really All About Freddie Mercury?BY LESLEY-ANN JONES ON 30/10/2015






A statue of Freddie Mercury in Montreux (Photo: Russ2009)Although Bohemian Rhapsody’s creator, the late Freddie Mercury, never explained the lyrics, declaring vaguely that they were ‘just about relationships’ with ‘a bit of nonsense in the middle’, conflicting theories about the song’s true meaning are as rife today as they have ever been. While Queen’s surviving members – guitarist Brian May, drummer Roger Taylor and retired bassist John Deacon – have always protected their frontman’s most closely guarded secret, intense speculation persists.

Forty years this month since Queen’s soaring, decadent, magnum opus was originally released, I can reveal the song’s true meaning. The ‘baroque’n’roll’ classic was not, contrary to popular belief, Freddie Mercury’s attempt at writing a song to upstage Led Zeppelin’s folk-rock epic Stairway to Heaven‘. Nor was it merely a fictitious fantasy, describing a random individual confessing a murder to his mother, pleading poverty at his trial, and resigning himself to a tragic fate – never revealing the identity of whom he had killed, nor why. It could not have been, as has been widely reported, Freddie’s lament about having become infected with the AIDS virus. He conceived the idea for the song in the late 1960s, and dabbled with it for years, only completing, recording and releasing it with the band in late 1975. He was not diagnosed as HIV positive until ten years later.

It wasn’t even a deliberate ‘showcase single’ of everything this superlative rock band was capable of, not only musically and lyrically, but also collectively and individually – as numerous music scholars around the world believe. The truth, though simply, is infinitely more personal.

A song with chart potential

The song was recorded originally for Queen’s studio LP ‘A Night at the Opera’. Realising its chart potential, the band drummed up support among radio DJs such as Kenny Everett and ‘Diddy’ David Hamilton for the unusually long (5:55 minutes) album track to be released as a single. It was, despite having broken every rule in the pop-hit-writing manual, an instant commercial success. It became the Christmas single of 1975, held its own at the top of the UK singles chart for nine weeks, and had sold more than a million copies by the end of January 1976. The single was accompanied by an avant-garde promotional video directed by Bruce Gowers, which is still considered definitive and groundbreaking, and which kick-started the MTV pop-video boom.
It reigned at number one again in 1991 for five weeks following Mercury’s death, eventually becoming the UK’s third best-selling single of all time – after Elton John’s Candle In the Wind/Something About the Way You Look Tonight (reworked for the funeral of Diana Princess of Wales in 1997), and the 1984 Band Aid fund-raiser Do they Know it’s Christmas. It was thus the first same-version song ever to reach number one twice in the UK.

It also topped the charts in various foreign territories, including Australia, New Zealand, Canada, Ireland and The Netherlands. In the United States, the song originally peaked at number nine in 1976. It returned at number two in 1992 after getting an airing in the smash-hit movie ‘Wayne’s World’.

In 2004, ‘Bohemian Rhapsody‘ was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame. Seven years later, BBC Radio 4’s Desert Island Discs listeners chose it as their all-time favourite pop song. In 2012, it topped an ITV nationwide poll to find “The Nation’s Favourite Number One” over 60 years of music. It is reckoned that the song is still played somewhere in the world at least once every hour.

Despite Queen having released a total of 18 number one albums, 18 number one singles and ten number one DVDs worldwide, making them one of the planet’s best-selling rock acts, not to mention the fact that they are the only group in which every member has composed more than one chart-topping single, it remains the song that defines them, their most enduring work. Largely because of it, Queen have overtaken The Beatles to become the UK album chart leaders.

Although critical reaction was initially mixed, ‘Bo Rap‘, the name by which it is known affectionately in the music business, frequently makes lists of the greatest songs of all time.

All this, without anyone, but Freddie, ever knowing what the song really means.

It was Freddie’s all the way

Lead guitarist Dr. Brian May has always acknowledged Freddie’s sole authorship of Bohemian Rhapsody, saying that when the singer first turned up with it, ‘he seemed to have the whole thing worked out in his head.’

It was, Brian said, ‘an epic undertaking.’ The song comprises an a capella introduction, an instrumental sequence of piano, guitar, bass and drums, a mock-operatic interlude and a loaded monster-rock crescendo, before fading into its contemplative ‘nothing really matters’ conclusion. To the rest of the band, the piece at first seemed insurmountable.

‘We were all a bit mystified as to how he was going to link all these pieces,’ admitted Brian.

The song fetched to life a host of obscure classical characters: Scaramouche, a clown from the Commedia dell’arte; 16th Century astronomer and father of modern science Galileo; Figaro, the principal character in Beaumarchais’ The Barber of Seville, and the Marriage of Figaro, from which operas by Paisiello, Rossini and Mozart had been composed; Beelzebub, identified in the Christian New Testament as Satan, Prince of Demons, and in Arabic as ‘Lord of the Flies’, or ‘Lord of the heavenly dwelling’. Also from Arabic, the word Bismillah is drawn: a noun from a phrase in the Qur’an meaning ‘in the name of God, most gracious, most merciful’.


In 1986, I found myself in a Budapest hotel suite with Freddie Mercury, during Queen’s ‘A Kind of Magic’ world tour. Having his undivided attention for a few moments, I put to him, not for the first time, my theory about these characters. Scaramouche, I ventured, had to be Freddie himself, with a penchant for the ‘tears of a clown’ motif. Galileo was obviously astronomer, astrophysicist and mathematician Brian May. Beelzebub must be Roger Taylor, the band’s wildest party animal, while Figaro was perhaps not the operatic character at all, but the tuxedo kitten in Walt Disney’s 1940 animated classic ‘Pinocchio’ – a dead ringer for ‘pussy cat’ John Deacon. Well, Freddie did adore his feline friends.

Freddie’s face was a picture. He didn’t say a word. He looked even more perplexed when I asked him about the song’s inspiration. I suggested in so many words that it was, in fact, a thickly disguised confession about his sexual orientation. Having been raised in a close, intensely religious Parsee community, adherents of the monotheistic religion of Zoroastrianism dating back to 6th Century BC Persia (modern-day Iran), Freddie had never been at liberty to live a publicly flamboyant lifestyle. Not only would this have offended his parents, but their religion does not recognise homosexuality. He was never able to live openly as a gay man. He shared his life for seven years with devoted girlfriend Mary Austin, before admitting to her that he thought he might be bisexual.

‘No, Freddie,’ responded Mary, ‘I think you’re gay.’ From then on, apart from a brief, intense affair with the late German actress Barbara Valentin in Munich in 1984, conducted at the same time as liaisons with two male partners, he had sexual relationships only with men. He did not refuse to discuss all this with me. What he said about these questions was ‘bad timing!’

Only after Freddie’s death from AIDS-related illness in November 1991, when I went to spend a week with his long-term live-in lover Jim Hutton at Jim’s bungalow in County Carlow, south-east Ireland, did the truth about Bohemian Rhapsodyemerge.

One evening after supper, we took a stroll in Jim’s garden, where he proudly showed me his lilac ‘Blue Moon’ roses, which Freddie had adored. The conversation turned to his former partner’s most famous creation.

‘You were right about Bohemian Rhapsody,’ said Jim.

‘Freddie was never going to admit it publicly, of course, because he always had to carry on the charade about being straight, for his family. But we did discuss it on numerous occasions. Bohemian Rhapsody WAS Freddie’s confessional. It was about how different his life could have been, and how much happier he might have been, had he just been able to be himself, the whole of his life. The world heard this song as a masterpiece of imagination, a great command of musical styles. It was this remarkable tapestry. It was so intricate and had so many layers, but the message, if hidden, was simple. Just as the management, the band, all of us in his life, never admitted that Freddie was even ill, not until the day before he died – because it was his business – he felt the same about this song.

Couldn’t be bothered

‘Not only that, but you’d have to say that he was a bit bored by the relentless interest in it. He didn’t ‘reveal’ what it was all about because he couldn’t be bothered. He had said all that he was ever going to say about it – which wasn’t very much. Others have stated over the years that it was better for the song’s true meaning never to be made public, because it would last much longer if its aura of mystique were maintained. I disagree. I don’t think that matters. The song has proved itself over and over. It has stood the test of time. It isn’t going anywhere. Freddie will be known throughout the world forever because of it.’

However convoluted and obscure, said Jim, Bohemian Rhapsody was ‘Freddie as he truly was.’

Jim died of cancer in 2010.

During the course of my research for my biography of Freddie Mercury, I discussed the song at length with arguably the UK’s greatest living lyricist, Sir Tim Rice. Having collaborated with Freddie on songs for the ‘Barcelona’ album with Montserrat Caballé, the co-creator of The Lion King and Evita knew Freddie better than most.

‘It’s fairly obvious to me that this was Freddie’s coming out song,’ Tim told me.
‘I’ve even spoken to Roger Taylor about it. There is a very clear message contained in it. This is Freddie admitting that he is gay.

”Mama, I just killed a man’: he’s killed the old Freddie he was trying to be–the former image.

”Put a gun against his head, pulled my trigger, now he’s dead’: he’s dead, the straight person he was originally. He’s destroyed the man he was trying to be, and now this is him, trying to live with the new Freddie.

”I see a little silhouetto of a man’; that’s him, still being haunted by what he’s done and what he is.

‘Every time I hear the record on the radio, I think of him trying to shake off one Freddie and embracing another – even all these years after his death. Do I think he managed it? I think he was in the process of managing it, rather well.

‘Freddie was an exceptional lyricist, and Bohemian Rhapsody is beyond any doubt one of the great pieces of music of the twentieth century.’

There are further clues in a track from Queen’s fifteenth and final studio album, ‘Made In Heaven’, which was released in 1995, four years after Freddie’s death.

‘A Winter’s Tale’ was Freddie’s swansong. He wrote and composed the song in his Montreux apartment overlooking Lake Geneva, which he loved. The lyrics, describing all that he could see from his window, celebrate the peace and contentment he found there towards the end. The song’s title is an homage to William Shakespeare’s romantic play, and alludes to Freddie’s early songwriting inspiration. One protagonist of the Shakespeare play is Polixenes, the King of Bohemia, which is an ancient kingdom, which corresponds roughly to the modern-day Czech Republic. As such, it may have germinatedBohemian Rhapsody. If, as presumed by many Bard scholars, this play was an allegory on the demise of Anne Boleyn, its character Perdita was based on the daughter of Anne and King Henry VIII, who would become Elizabeth 1st, England’s Queen …

The band’s original greatest hit laced through Freddie’s final offering? It’s not impossible.

Lesley Ann-Jones is the author of Freddie Mercury: The Definitive Biography published by Hodder & Stoughton

Tuesday 13 October 2015

Brian May forced to sell home of Sir Patrick Moore

Brian May forced to sell home of Sir Patrick Moore as museum hopes dashed

The Queen guitarist has been trying to turn Farthings into a museum to the astronomer but says he will now sell the property


Sir Patrick Moore at Farthings Photo: RII SCHROER


By Sarah Knapton, Science Editor
12:01AM BST 10 Oct 2015

Brian May, the Queen guitarist, is to sell the home of Sir Patrick Moore after giving up a two year battle to turn the house into a museum to the astronomer.

The musician bought the property several years before Sir Patrick’s deathand allowed the Sky at Night presenter to stay there for a peppercorn rent after he fell on hard times.

Sir Patrick had lived and worked at Farthings in West Sussex from 1967 until his death aged 89, first with his mother, and then with his beloved cat Ptolemy. It was hoped the house could be turned into a museum or study centre for amateur astronomers who could benefit from the scientists’ library and equipment.

But planning constraints made it impossible to turn the house into a commercial enterprise and May said he had been forced to ‘bite the bullet’ and sell the property after ‘exhausting’ all avenues.

“I’m sad to have to sell it at all, but I can’t live in it and I believe we have now exhausted the exploration of all possible futures for the house,” he said.

“We have all spent the last two years trying to find a way for Farthings to be part of a monument of some kind to Patrick. All the proposals we have considered have come to a dead end.

“There is simply no way to make the house sustainable as a study centre, museum or monument. It sits in a residential area and so cannot be converted into commercial premises, it has no possibility of dedicated parking and all our advice was that it would simple lose money until it fell into disuse, becoming an embarrassment for Patrick’s memory.”

Brian May with Sir Patrick shortly before his death Photo: Rii Schroer

May said he was hoping to sell the house with covenants so that the site could not be broken up by “money-making housebuilders’ who would annoy the neighbours.

“I would be happy, and I believe so would Patrick, if it makes a home for a growing family,” he added.

May has described Sir Patrick as a 'father figure' who inspired him to study for a PhD in astrophysics. The two connected in person after working on a radio play together, and later co-authored the book Bang! The Complete History of the Universe.

They also shared a love of music with Sir Patrick writing also wrote more than 100 musical compositions, including a march in praise of Halley’s Comet.

But May claims that despite a healthy income from his books, music and television career, the Sir Patrick was ‘generous to the point of folly’ and gave away such large amounts of money that he could no longer sustain his lifestyle.

He would regularly splash out large sums on annual New Year's Eve parties for the village and help young astronomers through university.

Sir Patrick Moore's home, Farthings

“As many people close to Patrick know, he was a very generous man, sometimes to the point of folly,” added May.

“All of us who were close to Patrick blanched at the thought of this great man spending his last days in an old people’s home rather than staying in his house.

“You might have thought that being a knight of the real, and one of the most celebrated figures in Britain people in high places would have stepped in and made sure his welfare was taken care of, but not so.

“Realising the tragedy that was imminent, I secretly offered to bail him out. I bought first a strip of his garden to give him some ready cash, but then things continued to get worse so I then bought the house and leased it back to him for a peppercorn rent so he never had to worry about money again.”

Sir Patrick’s substantial collection of objects, manuscripts and memorabilia will now be housed at the Science Museum in London except those relating to William Herschel, the discoverer of Uranus, which will go to the Herschel Museum in Bath.

A waxwork of Sir Patrick Moore which is currently in the Chichester Planetarium

Money left over from the estate will be used to found the Patrick Moore Heritage Trust while any profits from the sale of the house will go towards the expansion of Chichester Planetarium which the astronomer helped found and where he gave regular lectures. A realistic waxwork of the astronomer currently greets visitors.

May has promised to keep copies of the astronomer’s xylophone compositions and recordings safe alongside his own ‘Queen treasures.’

A Night at the Odeon

Brian May Talks Queen's 1975 Concert Film, Performing 'Bohemian Rhapsody' Live
"In those days, people went to a rock show to listen ... And there's nobody with mobile phones in the audience, nobody doing selfies – how weird is that," guitarist says of 1975 gig
BY MARK SUTHERLAND October 12, 2015

Queen perform in 1975. The band will release their live album/concert film 'A Night at the Odeon - Hammersmith 1975' on November 20th. Andrew Putler/Redferns

Christmas will come early for Queen fans this year as the band releases its legendary 1975 festive London Hammersmith Odeon gig as a live album/DVD.

The much-bootlegged concert footage – originally broadcast live to an audience of millions on BBC TV and radio on Christmas Eve night in 1975 – has been completely restored for the release, entitled Queen – A Night at the Odeon – Hammersmith 1975. The new version was premiered at a screening at the former Olympic Studios – now a cinema – in Barnes, West London on October 8.

In attendance was Queen guitarist Brian May, who went through the unusual experience of watching his younger self play what was then the most important concert of his career.

"It was very weird," he laughed, speaking exclusively to Rolling Stone at the event. "It seems like watching another person, that young boy. I look so thin! I look very serious and the body language is so different now – I was quite shy in those days. There was a lot of noise and energy in the playing, but my body is different from the way I am now. These days I feel a channel in the body towards the noise that's coming out, but in those days it looks like it just comes from nowhere."

Nonetheless, the concert – the final date of Queen's A Night at the Opera UK tour – captures the band in typically flamboyant form, with lots of pyrotechnics, a finale featuring balloons, confetti and blow up dolls falling from the roof and a vintage display of showmanship from late frontman Freddie Mercury.

"It felt great at the time," said May. "There was a lot of adrenalin, a lot of joy because all our fans who'd followed us on the tour had all scrambled to get in there. Roger [Taylor, drummer] was really sick – he looks pretty good but he was feeling really bad. I think he threw up afterwards but you wouldn't know [from watching]."

The tour also marked the live debut of "Bohemian Rhapsody" which, at the time of the Odeon concert, was on a nine-week run at the top of the UK charts. Live, however, it featured as part of a medley with "Killer Queen" and "The March of the Black Queen," as the band didn't feel it would be able to recreate the full song live.

"We've never played 'Bohemian Rhapsody' in full," said May, "Because the middle bit is a little work of art, it's something that's painted on a canvas and you can't really reproduce that – or, at least, we prefer not to try [recreating] the operatic bits. It's a choice we made early on; we thought, 'We don't want to be standing there trying to reproduce 140 voices in the studio.' You can't really pretend you're doing that on stage."

According to May, Queen only started thinking about how songs would work live later in its career, when it wrote anthems such as "We Will Rock You" and "We Are the Champions" with audience participation in mind. The A Night at the Odeonfootage, however, shows a different type of crowd.

"They sing along on some things but not a lot," the guitarist noted. "In those days, people went to a rock show to listen – and to jump about and scream and shout, but not to sing every word like they do now. And there's nobody with mobile phones in the audience, nobody doing selfies – how weird is that?"

Queen – A Night at the Odeon – Hammersmith 1975 is released on CD, DVD, Blu-Ray, vinyl, digitally and in a super deluxe box set version on November 20. Audio formats feature three additional tracks as the cameras stopped rolling before the band's second encore, while the audio team carried on recording.

Queen – A Night at the Odeon – Hammersmith 1975 Track List
"Now I'm Here"
"Ogre Battle"
"White Queen (As It Began)"
"Bohemian Rhapsody"
"Killer Queen"
"The March of the Black Queen"
"Bohemian Rhapsody (Reprise)"
"Bring Back That Leroy Brown"
"Brighton Rock"
"Son and Daughter"
"Keep Yourself Alive"
"Liar"
"In the Lap of the Gods… Revisited"
"Big Spender"
"Jailhouse Rock Medley"
"Seven Seas of Rhye"
"See What a Fool I've Been"
"God Save the Queen"

Tuesday 22 September 2015

John Deacon pictured out in London


300m album sales, £85m in the bank - but can you name this low profile rock legend who now wears sensible anoraks and grey trousers?

Reclusive former Queen bass player John Deacon pictured out in London

Deacon, 64, wrote some of band's biggest hits and is now worth £85million. But he looked far cry from flamboyantly-dressed figure who rose to fame

By JEMMA BUCKLEY, SHOWBUSINESS REPORTER FOR THE DAILY MAIL

PUBLISHED: 00:00 GMT, 19 September 2015 | UPDATED: 01:15 GMT, 19 September 2015

With his sensible anorak and grey trousers, he hardly seems the typical rock star.

Indeed, anyone passing this unassuming- looking gentleman in the street would probably fail to give him a second glance.

And that’s just the way he likes it – because this is John Deacon, the reclusive former Queen bass player who wrote some of their biggest hits and is now worth £85million.


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Low profile: John Deacon is pictured out and about in London (left) and with Queen in 1984 (right, far left)

Strolling near his home holding a copy of the Daily Mail, the 64-year-old looked a far cry from the flamboyantly-dressed figure who rose to fame with the band in the 1970s.

Despite not having played with Queen since 1997, Deacon receives lucrative royalties from his hits such as I Want To Break Free.

This week the group’s remaining members, Roger Taylor, 66, and Brian May, 68, set off on a tour of South America. Former American Idol contestant Adam Lambert, 33, is taking the place of singer Freddie Mercury, who died in 1991 after suffering from Aids.

But Deacon turned down the chance to rejoin the band – estimated to have sold up to 300million albums – and stayed at home in west London.

Last year May and Taylor said they barely keep in touch with him and that he has ‘completely retired from any kind of social contact’.


Rock legends Queen emerge from dressing room for gig in 1982







Rock out: Freddie Mercury and John Deacon are pictured on stage at a Queen concert in Stockholm in 1986

Taylor said: ‘I think he’s a little fragile and just didn’t want to know anything about talking to people in the music business or whatever. That’s fair enough. We respect that.’

May added: ‘He wants to be private and in his own universe. He still keeps an eye on the finances, though.’

Deacon, a father of six who lives with his wife of 40 years Veronica Tetzlaff, has seen his fortune grow by an estimated £20million in the past four years, partly due to the success of West End musical We Will Rock You.


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3240742/300m-album-sales-85m-bank-low-profile-rock-legend-wears-sensible-anoraks-grey-trousers.html#ixzz3mSk90qPG
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Saturday 5 September 2015

Freddie Mercury getting a piggyback ride from Darth Vader



The story of Freddie Mercury getting a piggyback ride from Darth Vader

Freddie Mercury (Photo: Tom Callins, represented by Modern Rocks Gallery)
Freddie Mercury (Photo: Tom Callins, represented by Modern Rocks Gallery)
Late Queen frontman Freddie Mercury was known for his commanding live performances. But he became internet-iconic thanks in part to a stunt he pulled during shows in late 1979 and into 1980: emerging during the encore perched on the shoulders of someone dressed as Darth Vader or Superman. The former gesture has become far more well known than the latter, due to online-circulated photos of the stunt and the occasional meme. In fact, earlier this year, Rian Johnson, the writer and director Star Wars: Episode VIII, even tweeted a photo of Mercury and Vader to silence a troll.
Most of these photos date from 1980’s The Game tour, a fact verified because Mercury is sporting a mustache, a look so controversial that fans reportedly threw razors at him. One photographer lucky enough to catch Mercury during that era was Tom Callins, who shot Queen on August 10, 1980, at Houston’s Summit Center—a basketball arena then, and now the headquarters of the megachurch Lakewood Church, whose pastor is televangelist Joel Osteen. At the time, he was 21 and working for a commercial photographer while attending college and shooting rock shows at night. Callins wasn’t expecting Mercury to arrive during the encore with Darth in tow, but he happened to be in the right place at the right time and captured a moment that’s been bootlegged online for years now.
Freddie Mercury and Darth Vader (Photo: Tom Callins, represented by Modern Rocks Gallery)
The photo Callins took is now being represented and sold by the Austin-basedModern Rocks Gallery, whose collection also includes rare Nirvana photos snapped by Kirk Weddle, who also took the Nevermind album cover shot, and unique photos of The Smiths, David Bowie, Rush, Van Halen, and Bruce Springsteen. (A Callins photo of Queen guitarist Brian May, taken at the same show, is also available.) As he explains to The A.V. Club, there are a lot of misconceptions floating around about these photos of Darth and Mercury. The only one Callins has ever released is the one pictured above; any other photos credited to him are incorrect. The black-and-white one Johnson tweeted? Not his. The snap posted to Reddit earlier this year that was purported to be from the Houston show? Not from that date and not his either, Callins says.
Still, the photographer—who still lives in Houston and still shoots the occasional rock show—has fond memories of shooting the 1980 show and capturing an occasion that lives on in internet infamy, as he recently told us.
The A.V. Club: Were you on assignment for somebody shooting Queen?
Tom Callins: I was doing it for myself, [but] I did review that concert for a local magazine in San Antonio, Texas, called It’s Only Rock & Roll. I grew up in San Antonio and moved to Houston when I was a teen. Part of the reason I chose Houston is because of all the concerts. Generally, all of the big concerts would come to Houston and Dallas, and a lot of the bigger shows would bypass San Antonio. I wanted to be where the bigger concerts were happening.
AVC: What were your restrictions? Was it first-three-songs-and-out from the pit like it is now?
TC: It was a free-for-all back in the day. It was prior to the three-songs-and-out. If you had a pass, you were lucky enough to hang out in the pit for the concert, which I think was great. The first three songs, every performer comes out, and they have the persona they have on. They’re kind of like playing themselves. It isn’t until further in the set that they instinctively start doing their thing. That’s when I think the best shots are.
AVC: The Darth Vader appearance happened in the encore, correct?
TC: It was during the encore, and it was during “We Will Rock You.” And he came out sitting on Darth’s shoulders. I guess it was a shtick he did that tour, because I’ve seen other photos of other shows. But I just happened to be at the right angle at the right place in front of the stage to get the shot.
AVC: What was your reaction when you saw this happening?
TC: I tried to focus as quick as I could. They were walking toward me, and I was concerned because I had a fixed-focus lens, which was a 135mm Canon f/2.8 lens. That was my main concert lens at the time, and because it was a fixed focus, I couldn’t zoom in or out, and they were walking toward me. I didn’t want them to get too close, because I’d miss all the action. I remember focusing and thinking to myself, “Please, stop—stop, stop!” [Laughs.] He kind of did—I think he took one step too many for me, but that’s where he stopped, and that’s when I got the picture.
AVC: About how far away from them were you?
TC: Not very far. I was right at the foot of the stage, and they were probably in the center of the stage. It was about maybe 20 feet away? Fifteen feet away?
AVC: Who was Darth? Was it a roadie? Did you know who was in the suit?
TC: I never found out—I’ve never known. I’m sure it was a roadie that they hired, or maybe a bodyguard. I guess you had to be a pretty bulky guy to carry Freddie around.
AVC: What was the crowd reaction when this happened?
TC: Oh, it was pandemonium. Everybody just thought it was so funny, so Freddie. It was so over-the-top. [Laughs.] Everybody got a chuckle out of it, but a cheer went up. It was a happening, you know? Everybody got into it.
AVC: During that whole era, Star Wars fandom and mania was at a fever pitch.
TC: And Queen had done the soundtrack to [1980 film] Flash Gordon, so there was the whole sci-fi connection.
AVC: Were you a Queen fan when you shot the show?
TC: Oh yeah. I was in junior high when I first heard Queen II, and shortly thereafter,Sheer Heart Attack was released—[that’s] still that’s my favorite Queen record. I backtracked to the first Queen [single] “Keep Yourself Alive.” So I had been a Queen fan for at least five or six years. In fact, in San Antonio, I saw Queen in 1975. I was fifteen years old, and it was at Municipal Auditorium in San Antonio, which was a great rock ’n’ roll venue, it wasn’t really a big auditorium at all.
The concert wasn’t a third sold—if it was half-full, I’d be surprised. I had tickets on the third or fourth row, and a band called Brownsville Station opened the show. They were from Texas, and they had a hit, “Smokin’ In The Boys Room.” They played, and everybody went nuts for them. I thought to myself, “Oh, no, everyone’s here to see the opening band.”
But then Queen came on—the stage got dark, and they’re playing the pre-recorded tracks from the opening of Queen II, “Procession.” They started with Brian playing that guitar part. Everybody rushed the stage. I still get goose bumps thinking about it. It was so exciting. I thought to myself, “Man, I wish I had a camera.” That’s how the thought got in my head that maybe I should start taking a camera to concerts.
AVC: When you finally did get to shoot them in 1980, were there any particular challenges? What was the best part?
TC: It was really a good show. The lighting was really great for photography. I photographed them in 1982, a couple years later. The lighting was more elaborate and probably from an audience perspective it was more grandiose. [But] the images don’t have the certain look that the 1980 concert had. I feel I was fortunate, because the pictures look so great. [It was like] somebody had styled the lighting for me. It was just great facing Queen and having Queen in my viewfinder, because I was a huge Queen fan. I particularly like Brian May’s guitar: Nobody has tone like Brian May’s, it’s amazing.
I was down front [and] I didn’t have a pass for that show. For that particular show, at the record store, [I had bought] a sticker that had the Queen logo, the Q with the two lines around it that I think Freddie had designed for Queen II. [Callins clarifies via email the sticker “had the ‘Q’ with the lions and swan part of the logo on it.”—ed.] I took that sticker and I put it on my jeans, like it was a photo pass. In fact, a couple security people asked me, and I just kind of gestured down to the fake photo pass, and they let me go up. I was actually up in the front of the stage because of a bootleg photo pass. [Laughs.]
AVC: You weren’t even supposed to be there to get the Freddie-Darth shot!
TC: It was looser back in the day—I generally got in front, whether I had a photo pass or not. I could generally get to where I wanted to be. It wasn’t a big a deal as it is now.
AVC: What did you do with all the pictures you took?
TC: The San Antonio music magazine was one of those regional giveaway magazines, music magazines, you’d find in record stores. They ran the story; I reviewed the concert, and they ran a couple of pictures in that. For the ’82 show, I was talking to the record company trying to get a photo pass. It got down to the day of the show—the week of the show—and the girl I had been talking to said, “I’m sorry, they’re not issuing photo passes.” I said, “Well, I’ve got this great picture of Brian May I’d like to get to him. Do you know how I could do it?” She goes, “If you want to send it to me, they’ll be in our Los Angeles office on this tour, we have a meeting with them.” So I sent her two copies—one for Brian, one for me. Brian signed it and sent it back to me. I have that hanging on my wall.
Outside of that, they’ve been in my archive. Maybe about 15 years ago, there’s an agency in New York that has some of my archives. Occasionally, the Freddie Mercury [photo] will sell online, and I’ll get a nominal check every once in a while, because it’ll be [due to] some internet usage. But since the internet came around, it’s just been bootlegged all over the world.
Brian May (Photo: Tom Callins, represented by Modern Rocks Gallery)
AVC: Was the photo in the San Antonio review? Did the photo get out somewhere else?
They didn’t use it for the review; they used another picture of Freddie and the picture of Brian that I sent to Brian. The Modern Rocks gallery has the Brian May photo as well. I kind of prefer the Brian shot, in a way—it’s kind of an iconic Brian shot, although he’s not sitting on Darth Vader’s shoulders. [Laughs.]
I did have that photo on my web gallery—I’m a commercial photographer now, I shoot a lot of corporate work here in Houston, corporate industrial. I still shoot music for fun. So I did have it on my web gallery. People just bootlegged it, and it got around.
AVC: That is the perils of the internet: They find it and think it’s fair game.
TC: I don’t let it bother me, because it’s an internet-sized image—I can’t see anybody doing anything with it of any significance outside of sharing it on the internet.
AVC: What other bands have you shot that you’re particularly proud of?
TC: I shot The Who at the Summit. That was the year [Pete] Townshend had a broken wrist or something, he had a cast on the strumming hand. I’m a huge Mott The Hoople fan, and I photographed Ian Hunter in 1979 when he was with Mick Ronson. Got really great shots of Ian Hunter I’m really proud of—I’m as proud of that shot as I am of the Brian May shot and the Freddie shot. I shot The New Barbarians with Keith [Richards] and Ronnie [Wood], when Ronnie put together The New Barbarians tour. That was a lot of fun. [Bruce] Springsteen—I’ve seen him three or four times, photographed him one show. It was just an amazing event to photograph; there was so much energy onstage. It translates into pictures. There was a certain era from 1978, ’79 to ’83, ’84, where I was shooting a lot of concerts.
Bruce Springsteen (Photo: Tom Callins, represented by Modern Rocks Gallery)
TC: I’m very proud of [the Freddie-Darth photo], I’ll tell you that. It was a fun time in my life, and I still enjoy shooting music. The older I get, the more I miss Freddie—the more I realize how one-of-a-kind person he was, what a force he was vocally. Nobody can take his place, you know?
http://www.avclub.com/article/story-freddie-mercury-getting-piggyback-ride-darth-224511