Saturday, 25 March 2023

Innuendo Album - A Fan Review


Composed from adapted excerpts from my EBook 'Bohemia Place - My Life, Our Times and Queen', and my 'Story Behind the Song' Features.

The first track on the album, the title track, born out of an improvisation session in the Barrière Casino in Montreux, finished up lasting six and a half minutes. This song also seems like a missive for posterity: to keep on trying…that promise is made, and various perspectives are presented: the forces of nature, the shackles of society, the mantra that progression involves walking a tightrope; advice to the individual about yielding to freedom, followed by a riveting instrumental part that implies that humanity makes collective headway when this happens; and then a series of probes ending in a challenge. Towards the end, the song mirrors ‘Bohemian Rhapsody’ in its acceptance of providence. This is how life will continue until eternity – as our future becomes history. The deliberative nature of the song - the primeval mood of foreboding in the intro, with its huge nod to Led Zeppelin, the marked changes in tempo, and the tenebrous lyrics, all bring a sense of apprehension about the future. Even the lighter, slower or more peaceful parts – as with Steve Howe's Spanish guitar solo – are just an interlude. ‘Innuendo’ is an epilogue, an adieu, and a crowning achievement all in one.

 It's followed, in contrast, by the humorous ‘I’m Going Slightly Mad’: the lyrics were apparently created by Freddie with some uncredited support from his friend, actor Peter Straker – and according to Jim Hutton in ‘Mercury and Me’, were the result of some late-night work that gave rise to a lot of laughter.  Next up is Brian's the light-hearted rocker ‘Headlong’, which sprints along with its rather fluky lyrics. In ‘I Can’t Live with You’: the darting rhythm depicts the insurmountable dilemma expressed by Brian: not being able to live with – but not being able to live without - someone.  

The serene 'Don't Try So Hard' is an interesting song coming from Freddie, who was always such a hard worker. It expresses a kind of acceptance that not everything comes at once and that you shouldn't struggle unnecessarily. Roger's exhilirating 'Ride the Wild Wind', with its advice to 'push the envelope', seems to be the opposite - it has overtones of 'Breakthru' from the previous album, with its vivacious railtrack rhythm. There are also throwbacks to the escapism of 'Tenement Funster', but even more to the momentum of 'I'm in Love With My Car'. However, this time, it's Freddie's voice that evidences a rich quality on the track, although it's superbly accompanied by Roger's spoken backing vocals. 

‘All God’s People’ was co-written by Freddie and Mike Moran, who also worked with him on the ‘Barcelona’ project. It’s clear that this song has religious connotations – with words concerning the ‘lessons of the Lord’, and having, of course, a gospel style that can be traced through from the seventies ‘Somebody to Love’ to the eighties ‘Let Me Live’, which finally appeared on the ‘Made in Heaven’ album. There’s a section in the middle that sounds like a testimonial in a Pentecostal church, with the guitar mimicking the congregation around, who are murmuring, and then, along with the narrator, swooning. But I feel it might also belong to that small number of Queen songs with a social message.  The way it addresses people and governments, asking them to welcome others inside their homes, makes it sound like an exhortation about migration. Could this be Freddie displaying his gratitude over being taken in to the UK all those years before? 

'These are the Days of Our Lives' was written by Roger from the perspective of a middle-aged man looking back at the carefree days of childhood in the light of the fact that he now had his own children to be the source of his life’s enjoyment. He wonders if life has been a show, touching on the Shakespearean idea that everyone is essentially an actor on the world’s stage. Notably, the video for the song, filmed on 30th May 1991, provided Freddie with his last ever stage. Freddie, Roger and John were filmed together, all of them quite static – but Freddie’s unforgettable finale is so memorable that his stunning performance throughout the video, expressing himself through face and hands to the last, may receive less attention. Behind him on one side is the longing that lurks in John’s bass line, and on the other the tenderness encapsulated in Roger’s conga-tapping. As Brian was absent in the US at the time of the shoot, footage of him playing, infusing his prodigiously plaintive guitar solo, was added later. Despite the black and white presentation, the splendour of the cat waistcoat that Freddie's costume designer Diana Mosely had made for him was apparent...the next track, 'Delilah', is Freddie's dedication to one of his cats, reflecting his sentiments as a lifelong cat lover. 

With 'Innuendo', it was necessary for the band to pull together. The result is multifarious: take the contrast between Brian's torridly ultra-aggressive 'Hitman' and the passionately all-consuming 'Bijou' - a joint contribution from him and Freddie - as an example. In the latter, it seems, tears were shed that were flowing through the strings of Brian's guitar. 

 'Innuendo' concludes with 'The Show Must Go On'. When he was a guest on BBC Radio's 'Desert Island Discs' in 2002, one of the pieces Brian chose was Gustav Holst's 'Saturn, The Bringer of Old Age' from 'The Planets'. Certainly, ‘The Show Must Go On’ may have been influenced by this classical movement's quality of being pondered yet not ponderous.  The lyrical content has some similarity to another of Brian’s 2002 ‘Desert Island Disc’ choices: Smokey Robinson’s ‘The Tracks of My Tears’ from 1965, the lyrics of which contain the words: 'Outside I'm masquerading / Inside my hope is fading / Just a clown…my smile is my make-up...’  The stalwart stance of the narrative is matched by the amazing expression in Freddie’s voice. Apparently, Brian wanted to change the title, but Freddie, of course, knew what would resonate at the very end of this album. 

 


Tuesday, 14 March 2023

Why ‘Stereoscopy is Good for You’ is Good for You

 Where can you see a world of photos taken during the Covid pandemic, a ‘Victorian Emporium,’ and a pictorial history of the rock band Queen all under one roof?

Answer: at the ‘Stereoscopy is Good for You: Life in 3D’ exhibition at Proud Galleries near Charing Cross, now extended to 8th April!

What is stereoscopy, and when did it all start?  Well, it’s basically photography (two photos placed side by side) viewed in 3D, and its beginnings were almost simultaneous with its 2D counterpart. You can find out more about this at the back of the exhibition, where the ‘Victorian Emporium’ awaits you, inviting you into the world of early stereoscopy, and where you can learn about it - in 3D - from photo historian Denis Pellerin, who explains how popular it was at the time.

Here you can also see a miscellany of stereoscopic equipment – and it was one such gadget, obtained through an offer found in a Weetabix cereal box, that first got a seven-year-old Brian May - who later became Queen's lead guitarist - interested in the subject, leading to a lifelong passion. Eventually, in 2008, it spurred him into reviving the long defunct London Stereoscopic Company, which had closed down eighty-six years before. It had, in fact, been founded back in 1854, sixteen years after the initial invention of stereoscopic technology by a certain Charles Wheatstone.

Before you arrive in the ‘Victorian Emporium’, with its quaint little table lamp lighting up one corner, you pass through an exhibition of a selection of work from contributors to the book published late last year, ‘Stereoscopy is Good for You: Life in 3D’, for which members of the public were invited to submit entries. Here, displayed in poster size, an international array of recent subjects is presented, ranging from animals and the natural world to landscapes, each of which is also available in small-size duplicate format, together with an individual stereoscope for the 3D effect. What’s more, you can use a stereoscopic viewer to look at a wide variety of other pictorial studies.

Venturing downstairs, there's a similar viewer displaying a selection of photos from the history of Queen, taken by Dr. May, providing a fascinating insight into the band members at work and at play, and many of those appearing on the wall are accompanied by his personal commentary. You can also watch him present a highly informative 3D video dealing with the history of 3D movies, which have staged a comeback in more recent times, having been popular in the 1950s, but which were then usurped in the public's affection by the advent of widescreen: depth losing out to breadth. In fact, when I told my 94-year-old dad about the exhibition, I discovered that his knowledge of 3D technology dated back to that post-war heyday, and he was still able to recite a limerick about it from the time:

A young lady, just twenty-three
Said, "Today I feel careless and free
I'll walk through the park
And just for a lark
I'll be photographed nude in 3D!"

Maybe now is the time for stereoscopy to re-enter public consciousness and popular culture once more – Sir Brian certainly hopes so. As he put it, going back to that first magical  ‘wow’ experience when he saw a double picture through the stereoscope as a child, “If you can take 3D pictures, why would you bother taking 2D pictures?”

Open: Tuesday to Sunday

Also includes a Gift Shop selling plenty of interesting books with different themes given the stereoscopic treatment, including the one with the same title as the exhibition!