A Day At The Races by Queen

A Day At The Races

Queen

1976

A Day At The Races is a Rock album by Queen, originally released in 1976. On Gatefold: 371 pressings tracked, owned by 45 collectors.

Sound DNA

  • Rock
  • Art Rock
  • layered
  • triumphant
  • art school

About

If “Bohemian Rhapsody” defined <i>A Night at the Opera</i>, then “Somebody to Love” defined <i>A Day at the Races</i>. One song captured Queen’s excess and <i>Scaramouche</i>-sized ambition; the other captured the band’s ability to streamline that excess into something simple and direct. By the time <i>A Day at the Races</i> was released in 1976, the group was ready for a change: A recent five-month tour celebrating the successes of <i>Opera</i> had exhausted Freddie Mercury, Brian May, Roger Taylor, and John Deacon. But it had emboldened them, too. In certain ways, <i>Races</i> sounded like a return to familiar ground, but with a newfound confidence and a renewed sense of effortlessness: “White Man” and “Tie Your Mother Down” were heavy and nasty, “The Millionaire Waltz” let Mercury indulge in vaudeville and cabaret, and “Teo Torriatte (Let Us Cling Together”) sounded nostalgic in an almost late-1960s kind of way. These guys knew what they were doing by now—so much so, they insisted on producing themselves this time around (May later reflected that the secret ingredient in <i>A Day at the Races</i> was freedom). As for the album’s hit lead-off single, “Somebody To Love”: Mercury had always loved the earthiness of soul and gospel music—qualities that might’ve seemed at odds with the extreme ornamentation of “Bohemian Rhapsody,” but that also predicted the power and simplicity of stuff like “We Are the Champions” and “Another One Bites the Dust.” And while “Somebody to Love” would become one of the band’s biggest hits, it also played a crucial—if unintended—role in late-1970s hard-rock history. Not long after the song’s release as a single, the band was forced to pull out of an appearance on the television show <i>Today with Bill Grundy</i> so that Mercury could go to the dentist. In a pivot that captured the shifting cultural winds of the time, Grundy instead hosted the Sex Pistols, who’d just released “Anarchy in the U.K.” The Pistols got drunk, cursed, and in general gave one of the more entertaining television performances in pop history (though the show itself was soon canceled). Soon enough, Queen and the Sex Pistols would be competing on the charts, as punk began its assault on big-name, big-ego rock—though, for what it’s worth: An ever-respectful May would later recall the two bands meeting at the halls of Wessex Sound Studios in London, and getting along just fine.

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Tracklist

Side A

  1. A1Tie Your Mother Down
  2. A2You Take My Breath Away
  3. A3Long Away
  4. A4The Millionaire Waltz
  5. A5You And I

Side B

  1. B1Somebody To Love
  2. B2White Man
  3. B3Good Old-Fashioned Lover Boy
  4. B4Drowse
  5. B5Teo Torriatte (Let Us Cling Together)

Credits

Performers

45 collectors on Gatefold own this · 371 pressings tracked on Gatefold