Freddie Mercury wrote his tribute song to Elvis Presley in the bath in 10 minutes, his bandmates Roger Taylor and Brian May have said.
âCrazy Little Thing Called Loveâ was released in 1979, two years after the US starâs death at the age of 42.
During the latest episode of Queen The Greatest, which looks back on the bandâs career, Taylor and May recalled the origins of âCrazy Little Thing Called Loveâ and its impact on the group.
Talking about trying to change tact with their recording process seven albums in, May said Queen âgot into this rather indulgent way of just bowling into the studio with no ideas, or very few ideas, and just doing it from scratchâ.
Taylor added: âThe first thing we did was âCrazy Little ThingâŠâ, and Fred did write the song in the bath in about 10 minutes.â
Speaking about Mercuryâs love of Presley, May said: âHe was very fond of Elvis, and of Cliff, I have to say. Yeah, Freddie wrote it very quickly and rushed in and put it down with the boys. By the time I got there, it was almost done.
âAnd I think the sounds that [sound engineer Reinhold] Mack managed to get, these very elemental, very real sounds, ambient sounds in the studio had a big contribution to make. It does sound very authentic, everything about it is sort of like original rock and roll sounding.â
âCrazy Little Thing Called Loveâ went onto be Queenâs first Number One single on the Billboard Hot 100, and reached Number Two on the Official UK Singles Chart.
Earlier this month, May said he thought Mercury would still be playing with Queen if he was alive. The bandâs frontman died in 1991 from bronchial pneumonia resulting from AIDS. âThe funny thing is I feel more and more that he is kind of with us in a way, maybe Iâm getting to be an old romantic, but Freddie is in my day every day,â he added.
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