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Hammer to Fall

"Hammer to Fall"
HammerQueen.jpg
Single by Queen
from the album The Works
B-side "Tear It Up"
Released 10 September 1984 (UK) (UK etc.)
12 October 1984 (US)
Format Vinyl record (7", 12")
Recorded January 1984
Genre Heavy metal
Length
  • 4:28 (Album version)
  • 3:40 (Single edit)
  • 5:25 (12" Headbanger's Mix)
Label EMI, Capitol
Writer(s) Brian May
Producer(s) Queen and Reinhold Mack
Queen singles chronology
"It's a Hard Life"
(1984)
"Hammer to Fall"
(1984)
"Thank God It's Christmas"
(1984)
Withdrawn cover

"Hammer to Fall" is a 1984 song by the British rock band Queen. Written by guitarist Brian May, the song is the eighth track on their 1984 album The Works.

It was the fourth and final single to be released from that album, although the single version was edited down by thirty seconds in contrast to the version on the album. Different sleeves were used to package this single and the live picture sleeve is now a collector's item. The song harks back to the Queen of old, with a song being built around a hard angular and muscular riff. The song features Freddie Mercury on lead vocals.

"Hammer to Fall" was a concert favourite, and was the third song the band performed at Live Aid in 1985. The song features in the setlist of both The Works Tour and The Magic Tour. The full album version of the song appears on Queen Rocks while the single version appears on Greatest Hits II and Classic Queen.

The lyrics at several points refer to the Cold War era in which the band members grew up, fuelling the popular conception that the song was about nuclear war:

For we who grew up tall and proud
In the shadow of the mushroom cloud
Convinced our voices can't be heard
We just wanna scream it louder and louder and louder
What the hell we fighting for
Just surrender and it won't hurt at all
You've just got time to say your prayers
While you're waiting for the Hammer to Fall.

The term "waiting for the hammer to fall" in the song was taken to refer to the anticipation by the public that Cold War would turn "hot" – or, alternatively, as a reference to the Soviet Hammer and Sickle.

The song also contains references to death and its inevitability:


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