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Antiguo 02-02-2023 , 13:01:25   #4521
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Predeterminado Queen - Queen II (Remastered 2011) (2021) [96kHz/24bit]

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Queen - Queen II (Remastered 2011) (2021) 96-24
Country: UK
Genre: Rock
Format: FLAC (*tracks)
Quality: Lossless [96kHz/24 bit]
Time: 40:43
Full Size: 886.42 MB


Digitally re-mastered edition of the British Pomp Rock band's 1974 sophomore album. Queen II is the real beginning of Queen as we know it. It's the first time we hear the multi layered overdubs, the harmonies, the varied musical styles (ballads, Folk, Blues, Metal, Pop and Rock, it's all there). It also includes their first hit single 'Seven Seas of Rhye', which led to the first of many iconic performances on Top of the Pops. The band recorded Queen II in just over a month in 1973 ahead of it's release in 1974. The album cover was shot by legendary photographer Mick Rock and inspired by a Marlene Dietrich portrait. The image was later brought to life in the revolutionary 'Bohemian Rhapsody' video. Island.

"In one regard, Queen II does indeed provide more of the same thing as on the band's debut. Certainly, of all the other albums in Queen's catalog it bears the closest resemblance to its immediate predecessor, particularly in its lean, hard attack and in how it has only one song that is well-known to listeners outside of their hardcore cult: in this case, it's "Seven Seas of Rhye," which is itself more elliptical than "Keep Yourself Alive," the big song from the debut. But these similarities are superficial and Queen II is a very different beast than its predecessor, an album that is richer, darker, and weirder, an album that finds Queen growing as a band by leaps and bounds. There is still a surplus of ideas, but their energies are better focused this time around, channeled into a over-inflated, pompous rock that could be called prog if it wasn't so heavy. Even with all the queens and ogres that populate Queen II, this never feels as fantastical as Genesis or Uriah Heep, and that's because Queen hits hard as a rock band here, where even the blasts of vocal harmonies feel like power chords, no matter how florid they are. Besides, these grandiose harmonies, along with the handful of wistful ballads here, are overshadowed by the onslaught of guitars and pummeling rhythms that give Queen II majesty and menace. Queen is coiled, tense, and vicious here, delivering on their inherent sense of drama, and that gives Queen II real power as music, as well as a true cohesion. The one thing that is missing is any semblance of a pop sensibility, even when they flirt with a mock Phil Spector production on "Funny How Love Is." This hits like heavy metal but has an art-rock sensibility through and through, which also means that it has no true hook in for those who don't want to succumb to Queen's world. But that kind of insular drama is quite alluring in its own right, which is why Queen II is one of the favorites of their hardcore fans. At the very least, it illustrates that Queen is starting to pull all their ambitions and influences into a signature sound, and it's quite powerful in that regard." (Stephen Thomas Erlewine, AMG)


Cita:
01. Procession (Remastered 2011) (01:12)
02. Father To Son (Remastered 2011) (06:13)
03. White Queen (As It Began) (Remastered 2011) (04:35)
04. Some Day One Day (Remastered 2011) (04:22)
05. The Loser In The End (Remastered 2011) (04:06)
06. Ogre Battle (Remastered 2011) (04:0
07. The Fairy Feller's Master-Stroke (Remastered 2011) (02:40)
08. Nevermore (Remastered 2011) (01:1
09. The March Of The Black Queen (Remastered 2011) (06:32)
10. Funny How Love Is (Remastered 2011) (02:51)
11. Seven Seas Of Rhye (Remastered 2011) (02:46)




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https://www.keeplinks.org/p72/63c5881091365

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