Freddie Mercury had to convince Roger Taylor that Queen hit wasn’t ‘just another track’
Freddie Mercury had to persuade Roger Taylor not to overlook a song that became one of Queen's best-loved hits.
Queen’s back catalogue is full of household name hits, but some of them almost didn’t happen.
Back in the early 1980s, Roger Taylor heard his son utter the words “radio ca-ca” while listening to a bad song on the radio.
The drummer then spent three days in the studio, locked away working on what would become Radio Ga Ga, which celebrates its 40th anniversary this week.
Initially, he thought he’d put it on a solo album before John Deacon and Freddie Mercury got involved.
The Queen singer once reflected: “I think Roger was thinking about it as just another track. But I instantly felt there was something in there, a really good, strong, saleable commodity.”
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As a result, Deacon added a bassline and Freddie worked on the lyrics, harmony and arrangements while Taylor was on a skiing holiday. By the time Queen came together for their only North American recording at Record Plant Studios in Los Angeles in August 1983, Radio Ga Ga was ready.
Released a year later with Brian May’s I Go Crazy as a B-side, the song about TV overtaking radio ended up hitting No 2 in the UK Singles Chart. Incredibly Queen would go on to perform Radio Ga Ga at every single concert from 1984, including at Live Aid, until their final one with Freddie in 1986. This is hardly surprising given the audience participation of the song, with fans clapping along in unison, is a highlight of the band's concerts to this day.