Queen II | |
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Album Information | |
Artist | Queen |
Released | 1974 |
Total Tracks | 11 |
Genre | Rock |
Queen II is the second album by British rock group Queen, released in March 1974. It was recorded at Trident Studios, London in August 1973 with co-producers Roy Thomas Baker and Robin Cable, and engineered by Mike Stone.
The two sides of the original LP were labelled "Side White" and "Side Black" (instead of the conventional sides "1" and "2"), with corresponding photos of the band dressed in white or in black on either side of the record's label face. It is also a concept album, with the white side having songs with a more emotional theme and the black side almost entirely about fantasy, often with quite dark themes. Mick Rock's album cover photograph was frequently re-used by the band throughout its career, most notably in the music video for the song "Bohemian Rhapsody" (1975).
Released to an initially mixed critical reception, Queen II remains one of the band's lesser-known albums. Nonetheless, the album has retained a cult following since its release and has in recent years been cited by a number of music publications, fellow artists and fans as one of their finest works.
Songs[]
- Procession
- Father To Son
- White Queen (As It Began)
- Some Day One Day
- The Loser In The End
- Ogre Battle
- The Fairy Feller's Master-Stroke
- Nevermore
- March Of The Black Queen
- Funny How Love Is
- Seven Seas of Rhye
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