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Seven seas of rye

"Seven Seas of Rhye"
SevenSeasOfRhye.jpg
Cover art (Germany)
Single by Queen
from the album Queen and Queen II
B-side See What a Fool I've Been
Funny How Love Is (UK 3" CD Single)
The Loser in the End (Japan)
Released 23 February 1974
Format 7"
Recorded 1972-73 at Trident Studios
Genre Hard rock
Length
Label EMI Records (UK), Elektra (US)
Songwriter(s) Freddie Mercury
Producer(s) Roy Thomas Baker, Queen
Queen singles chronology
"Liar"
(1974)
"Seven Seas of Rhye"
(1974)
"Killer Queen" / "Flick of the Wrist"
(1974)
"Liar"
(1974)
"Seven Seas of Rhye"
(1974)
"Killer Queen" /
"Flick of the Wrist"
(1974)

"Seven Seas of Rhye" is a song by the British rock band Queen. It was primarily written by Freddie Mercury, with Brian May contributing the second middle-eight. The song is officially credited to Mercury only. A rudimentary instrumental version appears as the final track on the group's debut album Queen (1973), with the final version on the follow-up Queen II (1974). The completed version served as the band's third single, the earliest-released song to appear on their Greatest Hits album, with the exception of some versions where their first single, "Keep Yourself Alive", is included.

Initially Seven Seas of Rhye was simply an "instrumental musical sketch closing their first album". An expanded rendition, planned for inclusion on the album Queen II, was publicly premiered when Queen was offered a sudden chance to appear on Top of the Pops in February 1974, and was rushed to vinyl a mere 2 days later on 23 February. It became their first chart entry after gaining airtime on BBC Radio 1, peaking at number 10 on the UK Singles Chart, which in turn persuaded Freddie Mercury to take up Queen as his full-time career.

The song was dropped from the live set in 1976 and wasn't played in concert again until The Works Tour eight years later.

It was the opening song of the set at the first performance of the Queen + Adam Lambert's tour of Asia in Tel Aviv’s Park HaYarkon in Israel.

The song features a distinctive arpeggiated piano introduction. These piano runs are sampled in "It's a Beautiful Day (reprise)", on the album Made In Heaven.


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Wikipedia

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