By Mortz C. Ortigoza
The first time I heard the song of the British rock
band Queen was in Paco, Manila in 1980. I was in second year high school
spending my vacation in the jungle asphalt of the Metropolis with my air
force’s father who was in his furlough.
“Turorum-tum-tom turo-ro-rum tutom! “Turorum-tum-tom
turo-ro-rum tutom!” low riffed by the four strings bass guitar of
John Deacon, the composer, who would start the song while the hard beat of the
sticks to the drums of Roger Taylor accompanied the “Turorum-tum-tom
turo-ro-rum tutom!” that made them stimulate my mind.
"Ansarap naman niyang beat ng Another One Bites The Dust," I quipped to myself.
"Ansarap naman niyang beat ng Another One Bites The Dust," I quipped to myself.
Then lead singer Freddie Mercury deep throaty flirty-growl
and high-pitched voice opened the vocal with:
Steve walks warily down the street
With the brim pulled way down low
Ain't no sound but the sound of his feet
Machine guns ready to go
Are you ready? Hey, are you ready for this?
Are you hanging on the edge of your seat?
Of course I did not know yet the names of the lead singer, lead guitarist
Brian May, bass guitarist, and the drummer of the rock band created in London
in 1970.
The song caught me with its funk rock beat of the
bass guitar, drum, and its boogie styled melody.
I later learned that the song, Another One
Bites the Dust, was the Billboard hit, Grammy Award Nominated for Best Rock
Performance, and winner of the American Music Award for Favorite Rock Single
Nominee.
According to the tall long haired Brian May, the
song was hammered through the genius of Mercury even if the tune was the creation
of Deacon.
“A fantastic bit of work from Freddie really. I mean,
I remember Deacie having this idea, but Deacie doesn't sing of course, so he
was trying to suggest to Freddie how it should be and Fred just went in there
and hammered and hammered until his throat bled, making... you know, he really
was inspired bit and took it to a new height, I think,” May declared in an
article’s Queen Absolute Greatest Narrative.
One year from that Paco's encounter with the Queen,
I was jolted from my seat when a third year high school classmate in a
protestant school in Mindanao played that song, in a class break, in his
cassette player.
When the long shock haired Melvin Santander showed
to me the case of the tape, I looked with curiosity the black front design of
the album where the fabulous four sitting and clad on black leather jackets and
coat that dominate the album’s design.
At the back of the tape it showed the following songs
at Sides A and B that I could still, Holy Molly, sing now with gusto whenever I
heard them.
They are Bohemian Rhapsody, Another One Bites
the Dust, Killer Queen, Fat Bottomed Girls, Bicycle Race, You're My Best
Friend, Don't Stop Me Now, Save Me at the Side A’s part.
Crazy Little Thing Called Love, Somebody to Love,
Now I'm Here, Good Old-Fashioned Lover Boy, Play the Game, Flash, Seven Seas of
Rhye, We Will Rock You, We Are the Champions at the Side B’s part.
As obviously seen, the first song of that album was
Bohemian Rhapsody.
Teenagers who spent their idle time in 1980s, where
YouTube, FaceBook, Instagram whatever were still Greek, would just play and
replay the song and sang it with their lungs out the lyrics “Galilio,
Galilio, Magnifico O-O-O or the ballad ” Mama, just killed a man…”.
We did not know then that the “lengthy” six
minutes song is a masterpiece, a global treasure son of a gun that was voted The Song
of the Millennium in 2000, and was recorded in the Guinness Book of Records
as the No. 1 song of all time.
Before I will discuss why Bohemian Rhapsody was the
best and unique, to those who are not familiar with the song you can play the
video here below so you can appreciate the seemingly nonsense I am mouthing
here, teh he, as the article you read progresses.
Probably you heard already the song after you heeded
my request to hear the music first before we plow on with this article.
Now let’s continue!
Rhapsody was not your regular song you read on the
Jingle Magazine or Ultimate-Guitar.Com.
It’s structure is not the typical Verse-Chorus-Verse-Chorus, or Verse-Chorus-Bridge.
It’s structure is not the typical Verse-Chorus-Verse-Chorus, or Verse-Chorus-Bridge.
It was revolutionary work of art, far better than
those created by the Revolutionary Communists in our country, composed by
Mercury in 1975 for the album’s A Night At the Opera.
It was an opus because not only of its mind blowing
melodies but it’s structure are divided into five different genres. They were A
Capella – Ballad – Opera – Hard Rock - Coda.
Here how the five structures play with some of the
lyrics I provided under them.
Read or sing them as you browsed.
Read or sing them as you browsed.
A CAPELLA
Is this the real life?
Is this just fantasy?
Caught in a landslide,
No escape from reality.
Is this just fantasy?
Caught in a landslide,
No escape from reality.
BALLAD
Mama, just killed a man,
Put a gun against his head,
Pulled my trigger, now he's dead.
Mama, life had just begun,
But now I've gone and thrown it all away.
Put a gun against his head,
Pulled my trigger, now he's dead.
Mama, life had just begun,
But now I've gone and thrown it all away.
OPERA
I see a little silhouette of a man,
Scaramouche, Scaramouche, will you do the Fandango?
Thunderbolt and lightning,
Very, very frightening me.
(Galileo) Galileo.
(Galileo) Galileo,
Galileo Figaro
Magnifico-o-o-o-o.
Scaramouche, Scaramouche, will you do the Fandango?
Thunderbolt and lightning,
Very, very frightening me.
(Galileo) Galileo.
(Galileo) Galileo,
Galileo Figaro
Magnifico-o-o-o-o.
HARD ROCK
So you think you can stone me and spit in my eye?
So you think you can love me and leave me to die?
Oh, baby, can't do this to me, baby,
Just gotta get out, just gotta get right outta here.
So you think you can love me and leave me to die?
Oh, baby, can't do this to me, baby,
Just gotta get out, just gotta get right outta here.
CODA
Nothing really matters,
Anyone can see,
Nothing really matters,
Nothing really matters to me.
Anyone can see,
Nothing really matters,
Nothing really matters to me.
You can appreciate the song above further after the
Coda when you saw Roger Taylor smashed with a mallet the huge gong whose sound
reverberated before the more 75, 000 spectators at the 1985 Live
Aid Concert at Wembley Stadium in London (another 100,000
fans at the John F. Kennedy Stadium in Philadelphia in Pennsylvania, United
States) and more than 1.9 billion of television
viewers who saw the mother of all concerts then as shown in the flick’s Bohemian
Rhapsody. The movie is still being shown in theaters all over the country.
In my next column, I will write how the genius
Mercury and the other members of Queen created the musical magnum opus’
Bohemian Rhapsody.
I hope this article helps educate you about music.
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READ MY OTHER ARTICLE:
(You can read my selected columns at http://mortzortigoza.blogspot.com and articles at Pangasinan News Aro. You can send comments too at totomortz@yahoo.com)
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