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Queen 2
Queen
Queen 2
Genres: Pop, Rock, Classic Rock, Metal
 
  •  Track Listings (14) - Disc #1


     
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CD Details

All Artists: Queen
Title: Queen 2
Members Wishing: 8
Total Copies: 0
Label: Hollywood Records
Original Release Date: 1/1/2000
Re-Release Date: 10/22/1991
Genres: Pop, Rock, Classic Rock, Metal
Styles: Progressive, Progressive Rock, Album-Oriented Rock (AOR), Supergroups, Glam, Arena Rock, Hard Rock
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPCs: 720616123220, 020616123245, 720616123244, 766488087024

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Member CD Reviews

Eddie F. (klaatune) from DALLAS, GA
Reviewed on 8/20/2009...
This classic band had far more classic albums, however this one showed that they were paving the way of masterpieces to come. Well worth the space in your CD collection, and certainly one that is worthy of more multiple listens. It's part of the foundational building blocks of a dynasty.

CD Reviews

The Queen's Special Crown
Samhot | Star Land | 07/02/2003
(5 out of 5 stars)

""Queen are one of those rare groups that sound like nobody but themselves...They made their own sound."



Thank you so much Stanley Runk. That's something that seems to escape many Queen fans (and detractors): Queen's overwhelming originality. They hardly sounded like anyone during their time, and they incorporated elements and ideas into their music that other bands wouldn't, or possibly couldn't touch with a 10-foot pole. Hell, they were even like the only band I can think of who made progressive rock without a single use of a synthesizer during the 70s progressive rock movement. But, Queen were far more than just some "progressive rock" band, or a "hard rock" band or a "glam" band. They were above all of that cheap labeling.



Which brings us to this disc - an album that to this day still amazes me with it's sheer brilliance and inimitability. The musicianship is unique, inventive, clever, elegant, sophisticatedly sexy and compelling, and the amounts of complexity found within the album border on unfathomability. What's more astounding is how the album frequently contrasts dark & light, elegant & naughty, and brash & soft moments, added with the hyper-complexity in arrangements which still leave room for ethereal, angelic melodies and vocal harmonies, all in Queen's unique, Classicism-drenched style. Queen made all of this work so well, and all of this is what makes it the tantalizing and spellbinding wonder that it is, and after many years of listening to this album, I'm still discovering subtleties buried underneath it's mysterious surface. Freddie Mercury's talents were far too exquisite, possibly even greater than his own understanding. He could do anything he wanted, and go anywhere he wanted with his superhuman vocal and songwriting abilities: he could be the Diva, the angel, the demon, the sorcerer, the seducer...you name it; and it shows on this disc.



This album is possibly more important in practical terms than many people may realize. The operatic qualities, the hyper-complexity in arrangements, the dark atmosphere and the heavy metal blasts found here arguably and inadvertently helped prototype (or advance) what would later be known as "progressive metal." When you listen to some of Brian May's arpeggios and riffing, Freddie Mercury's powerful voice, and the overall dark atmosphere of the album, you can easily pick up on bits that can be heard in the music of important progressive metal bands like Queensrÿche, Dream Theater, Metallica, Iron Maiden, Blind Guardian and possible others. Ironically enough, each of these aforementioned bands were influenced by Queen.



The album opens with "Procession," Brian May's grandiose guitar orchestration which also features a clever guitar/amplifier effect - get ready for this -- mimicking a heartbeat mimicking a drum pattern. This then segues into the fiery balladry of "Father To Son," which features a section of dizzying vocal polyphony and polyrhythms, which are later followed by the big crash of Brian's guitar crunch, which then gives way to one of the most violently explosive instrumental sections to be heard in all of classic rock. Freddie's vocals on here are astounding as well.



"Ogre Battle" is a blistering progressive metal rocker with some hot-oiled riffing from Brian, which then segues into the beautifully outrageous (more appropriately; arty) and elegant Bach-meets-manic whimsy of "The Fairy Feller's Master-Stroke." "Nevermore" is a brief, but haunting, ethereal ballad featuring some of the most beautiful and precious vocal harmonies, some of them just happen to be operatic. "The March of The Black Queen" seems to bring bits of everything before this into full circle. This track seems to twist and morph into a different mode every few seconds or so, which makes it sound like a dozen different songs rolled into one. It showcases a dizzying mix of opera, metal, ballad, Broadway, glam and more. "Funny How Love Is" is an enchanting ballad featuring exquisite vocal harmonies, and "Seven Seas of Rhye" is the only hit on the album. Needs no explanation.



Queen has contributed some of the most daring and original material to popular music that still has not been equalled, and they entered into territory that still hasn't been charted. _Queen II_ is one of the finest examples of this, if not the finest. They would go on, and release many important albums after this, but they would never again make anything as bold and risqué as this. My words for this album will run well past the 1,000 word limit. Simply put: this is my favorite album of all-time, and by my favorite band of all-time. Please enjoy.



"
The Pretentious Cacophony of Oversexed Art Students?
Justin Carlson | Salt Lake City, UT USA | 09/20/2004
(5 out of 5 stars)

"When it comes to first impressions of Queen II, many listeners say they feel overwhelmed, disappointed, or even disgusted. Why?



If you pull apart the songs and examine their single threads, what you find goes BEYOND motley:



--tenderly lilting piano with plaintive falsetto vocals (Nevermore)



--jarring vocal harmonies delivered in shrill, open-throated staccato SCREAMS (Ogre, March)



--fiery speed-metal riffs (Ogre)



--impish harpsichord and piano backing a strange, rollicking stories about fairy creatures, medieval village folk, and adventures in times of myth (Feller, Rhye)



--duelling lead guitars swirling like so much an intra-cranial maelstrom, while wave after wave of a**-kicking metal riffs crashes against your skull (Father to Son-guitar solo)



--simple, serene acoustic guitar rhythms driving plain melodies (Some Day, Funny)



Thus, to the casual fan, Queen II can feel like an irritating hodge podge of songs that bend and shift beneath your feet.



One possible exception is "White Queen," which may appeal to those who crave a good, melodramatic ballad. The music & lyric swell in a crescendo of emotion. At climax, it breaks into one of the most God-beautiful epiphanies of regret I've ever heard recorded: "my Goddess hear my darkest fear: I speak too late/it's for evermore that I wait."



So, the genius of this album really emerges in the SYNTHESIS of the diverse threads into a manic tapestry of joy, regret, yearning; it's the passionate bliss of creating wild-eyed tales in strange settings; or it's the common pleasure of rocking out to the sound of your amped-up guitar.



"Loser in the End", drummer Taylor's song, is a fairly dated rocker - I generally fast foward right to Ogre Battle - but, the rest of album achieves a rare and brilliant alchemy, difficult to describe. I'll try to put it in context of the other music Queen was producing at the time.



I think Queen's first album "Queen"--while decent--was maybe a bit too rough and derivative of early-70's hard rock...kind of like art students who loved to jam to the heavy bands of that time. By contrast, albums from "Opera" to "Jazz" tended toward TOO MUCH refinement and compartmentalized song-writing; or they overly wore the imprint of the producer (e.g. Mack & "The Game").



Yet, on Queen II, the band caught an updraft of chaotic creativity. I hear May & Mercury still influencing each other, still cross-pollenating and still wrestling with each other, OUT LOUD.



If this description was too arcane, then I'll use the time-honored idioms of SEX, DRUGS, and ROCK'N'ROLL to break down my "highlight" songs in a different way:



Procession/Father to Son: Think Coldplay having sex with early-Sabbath; Politik meets War Pigs (roughly)



White Queen - Think Chris Isaak having sex with Pink Floyd on the Dark Side; an ethereal, acoustic, swelling ballad of yearning & loss



Ogre Battle - Think Motorhead having sex with early-Rush; Ziggy-era Bowie stands watching nearby; Bowie lowers the hashpipe and in a croaky voice says, "God, that's loud; but oh, how lovely!"



Nevermore - Elton John, a bit tipsy, sucks up a lungful of helium and launches into a rueful ballad, touched with a bit of baroque whimsy



Fairy Feller's Master Stroke - Elton John drops some "good" acid and thinks about a painting of a fairy-village scene



Black Queen - Elton John's acid trip turns bad; Pete Townsend and Tina Turner appear; by turn, they torment and tantalize Elton, who plays out these cycles of angst/ecstacy in a dark 1st draft of Bohemian Rhapsody



Seven Seas - Coldplay doing speed with Roger Daltrey; a weird, megalomaniacal vibe takes over



As a 12-year old kid in Utah (1983), I thought I was so far-out cool to have bought such a weird, freaked-out album. I had loved my Uncle Dave's copy of "Sheer Heart Attack" for several years, but "Queen II" took me a few months to digest. It was worth it...21 years later, these compositions, though dated in a few moments, remain suprisingly fresh & avant garde.



If you like music to be predictable, pleasant, and familiar, STAY AWAY FROM THIS ALBUM. But if you like Queen and you're up for a careful listen and a wild ride...have at it."