This footage contains interviews with members of the band(Brian and Roger), some crew members and also with some fans. It also features the band's arrival and a few moments of them walking towards the stage. Enjoy!!!
bold of you to assume we don't have a crush on 90's and nowadays roger too. he can take me yesterday or now or tomorrow and i'd give him all of me and 32 children if he asked
Incredible how Mercury could turn on the confidence and that level of performance a complete contrast to his real quiet shy self...just brilliant, a true world class artist. So missed.
Queen were visionaries and they were a decade or so ahead of every other band.❤️❤️ even to this day, no band has ever done what they have done nor crossed the boundaries they have.
man, I was born the year this was filmed....I wish I could had seen Queen live. I remember seen live aid 86 at 4 years old. very glimpse memory but I remember Freddy.
can you imagine responding to the interviewer's question 'are you looking forward to the show?' 'absolutely no, not at all' why would anyone ask such silly questions? what kind of answer did you expect?
Never seen this! Great stuff!! I know the MK without overdubs..was the first Queen concert I ever saw on tv and captured on video..played that a 1000 times! ;-) Especially the note from fat bottomed girls ' Ain't no beauty queens in this LOOOOOcality ' is quite surprising isn't it? XD Great channel! Love it! Keep it up!
I was getting nervous watching Freddie waiting to go on stage!! I'm a former synchronized swimmer both in age-group when I was 12-17 and in masters at age 35. The feeling while waiting for the music to begin is a mixture of adrenaline and nerves.
I wonder what's going on in Freddie's head in the minutes before they go on..he looks so calm and collected. I wonder if he ever got nervous before a gig..
T. Kazim/Nikki he definitely did get anxious! tony hadley met him backstage in ‘84 and described him like this: “He was there in his dressing room. He was really, really polite. He was pacing up and down, quite nervous. Very precise and very controlled because he was just about to go onstage. I was overawed. Without a doubt, when you met him you knew you were meeting a star. Freddie knew that too … He knew he was in control.”
Due to Jim Hutton Freddie was always nervous short before show. I think its great.it tells me that he took it serious, he wanted people to have really great experience.
From the Queen gigs I saw around that time, he was damn good at his job and I'd like you to pass on my grateful thanks. "The band shouldn't have anything to worry about except playing for their fans" - I'd suggest that attitude is how you become stage manager for one of the world's greatest bands.
@@angelkisses9226 Yes but Freddie caught Hiv earlier than Everett he was in New York clubs going back to the very early 80s where it was rife in comparison to the gay clubs in London where cases in the early 80s were practically zero. He caught it in the clubs of New York where HIV cases were appearing every week from the mid 70s. Freddie was exposed to it from a lover of Gaetan Dugas one of the first gay men in the first wave of deaths in North America. Dugas knowingly infected other men and died in 1984. He was no doubt infected in the 70s. Freddie wasn't infected until the early 80s and died in 91.
That's actually a bandage that Freddie had on his hand after an argument. Clearly, he didn't want it on him at the concert so he took it off right before going on stage. True pro!