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1982 single by Queen

"Las Palabras de Amor (The Words of Love)" is a rock ballad by the British rock band Queen. It was released as the third single from their 1982 album Hot Space. It is sung mostly in English, but with several Spanish phrases. Written by guitarist Brian May, the song proved more popular in the United Kingdom than their previous single ("Body Language"), reaching No. 17 in the UK Singles Chart.[1]

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Singles chronology

Body Language
Body Language
19/4/1982
Staying Power
Staying Power
0/7/1982

Las Palabras de Amor (The Words of Love)

Queen

1982 Single
  • Fecha Lanzamiento: 1 Junio 1982 · Fecha Grabación: 1982 -
    Discográfica: EMI · Estudio de grabación: Musicland, Munich · Productor: Queen , Reinhold Mack
    CHARTS
    17
    UK
    26
    BEL
    68
    GER
    10
    IRE
    18
    NLD
    13
    SWI
    Hot Space
    ALBUM
    1
    Las Palabras de Amor (The Words of Love)
    Queen • w: May • v: Mercury with May • 1982 /06 /01
    4:30
  • 2
    Cool Cat
    Queen • w: Mercury · Deacon • 1982 /06 /01
    3:28
  • Album


    Hot space

    Hot space

    Fecha Lanzamiento: 4 Mayo 1982 · Fecha Grabación: Junio 1981 - Marzo 1982
    Discográfica: EMIElektra · Estudio de Grabación: Mountain (Montreux, Switzerland); Musicland (Munich, West Germany) · Productor: Queen , Reinhold Mack , David Bowie
    CHARTS
    4
    UK
    15
    AUS
    1
    AUT
    7
    FRA
    5
    GER
    6
    JPN
    1
    NLD
    3
    NOR
    4
    SWE
    22
    US
    CERTIFICATIONS
    BPI: Gold
    IFPI AUT: Gold
    RIAA: Gold
    1
    Staying power
    Queen • w: Freddie Mercury • 1982 /05 /04
    4:11
  • 2
    Dancer
    Queen • w: Brian May • 1982 /05 /04
    3:49
  • 3
    Back chat
    Queen • w: John Deacon • 1982 /05 /04
    4:35
  • 4
    Body language
    Queen • w: Mercury • 1982 /05 /04
    4:31
  • 5
    Action this day
    Queen • w: Roger Taylor • v: Mercury and Roger Taylor • 1982 /05 /04
    3:32
  • 6
    Put out the fire
    Queen • w: May • v: Mercury with Brian May • 1982 /05 /04
    3:18
  • 7
    Life is real (song for Lennon)
    Queen • w: Mercury • 1982 /05 /04
    3:32
  • 8
    Calling all girls
    Queen • w: Taylor • 1982 /05 /04
    3:50
  • 9
    Las palabras de amor
    Queen • w: May • v: Mercury with May • 1982 /05 /04
    4:30
  • 10
    Cool cat
    Queen • w: Mercury · Deacon • 1982 /05 /04
    3:28
  • 11
    Under pressure
    Queen • w: Taylor · Mercury · David Bowie · Deacon · May • v: Mercury and David Bowie with Taylor • 1982 /05 /04
    4:06
  • "Las Palabras de Amor (The Words of Love)"
    A-side label for the UK vinyl single
    Single by Queen
    from the album Hot Space
    B-side"Cool Cat"
    Released1 June 1982
    Recorded1981–1982
    StudioMusicland, Munich
    GenreSoft rock
    Length4:29
    LabelEMI
    Songwriter(s)Brian May
    Producer(s)
    Queen singles chronology
    "Body Language"
    (1982)
    "Las Palabras de Amor (The Words of Love)"
    (1982)
    "Calling All Girls"
    (1982)

    Review

    1982 single by Queen

    "Las Palabras de Amor (The Words of Love)" is a rock ballad by the British rock band Queen. It was released as the third single from their 1982 album Hot Space. It is sung mostly in English, but with several Spanish phrases. Written by guitarist Brian May, the song proved more popular in the United Kingdom than their previous single ("Body Language"), reaching No. 17 in the UK Singles Chart.[1]

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    Despite the mixed response to its parent album, "Las Palabras de Amor" has become a fan favourite.

    Background

    The song`s lyrics were written by guitarist Brian May.[2] Vocals were provided by lead singer Freddie Mercury with May on the high harmony vocal. The song was inspired by the band`s close relationship with their Argentinian fans. It marked the band`s final studio appearance on Top of the Pops (having previously appeared to promote "Seven Seas of Rhye", "Killer Queen", "Now I`m Here" and "Good Old-Fashioned Lover Boy" respectively). For this mimed performance May is seen playing a grand piano as well as his guitar and, on the recording, he plays both piano and synths in addition to acoustic and electric guitars. May also sang lead vocals for the harmonized line "this night and evermore" throughout the song.

    During the Freddie Mercury Tribute Concert at Wembley Stadium in 1992, this was the third song of the second half, performed by Zucchero and Queen.[3] In Queen + Paul Rodgers Rock The Cosmos-tour 2008 it was played in the Spanish speaking countries, sung by May.

    This song also made it onto 1999 Queen`s Greatest Hits III[2] and, more recently, on the Queen Forever compilation. It also appears on the Greatest Video Hits 2 DVD released in November 2003.[4][5]

    Musical theatre actress Elaine Paige recorded the song on her album of Queen covers The Queen Album in 1988.[6]

    The baby`s face image of the single`s cover would reappear on The Cross single for their song "New Dark Ages".

    Personnel

    Queen

    • Freddie Mercury – lead and backing vocals
    • Brian May – electric and 12-string acoustic guitars, keyboards, backing and co-lead vocals
    • Roger Taylor – drums, backing vocals
    • John Deacon – bass guitar

    Charts

    CountryPeak position

    Belgium (Ultratop 50 Flanders)[7]

    26

    Ireland (IRMA)[8]

    10

    Netherlands (Dutch Top 40)[9]

    26

    Netherlands (Single Top 100)[10]

    18

    Poland1

    Switzerland (Schweizer Hitparade)[11]

    13

    UK Singles (OCC)[12]

    17

    West Germany (GfK)[13]

    68

    1982 single by Queen

    "Las Palabras de Amor (The Words of Love)" is a rock ballad by the British rock band Queen. It was released as the third single from their 1982 album Hot Space. It is sung mostly in English, but with several Spanish phrases. Written by guitarist Brian May, the song proved more popular in the United Kingdom than their previous single ("Body Language"), reaching No. 17 in the UK Singles Chart.[1]

    Despite the mixed response to its parent album, "Las Palabras de Amor" has become a fan favourite.

    Background

    The song`s lyrics were written by guitarist Brian May.[2] Vocals were provided by lead singer Freddie Mercury with May on the high harmony vocal. The song was inspired by the band`s close relationship with their Argentinian fans. It marked the band`s final studio appearance on Top of the Pops (having previously appeared to promote "Seven Seas of Rhye", "Killer Queen", "Now I`m Here" and "Good Old-Fashioned Lover Boy" respectively). For this mimed performance May is seen playing a grand piano as well as his guitar and, on the recording, he plays both piano and synths in addition to acoustic and electric guitars. May also sang lead vocals for the harmonized line "this night and evermore" throughout the song.

    During the Freddie Mercury Tribute Concert at Wembley Stadium in 1992, this was the third song of the second half, performed by Zucchero and Queen.[3] In Queen + Paul Rodgers Rock The Cosmos-tour 2008 it was played in the Spanish speaking countries, sung by May.

    This song also made it onto 1999 Queen`s Greatest Hits III[2] and, more recently, on the Queen Forever compilation. It also appears on the Greatest Video Hits 2 DVD released in November 2003.[4][5]

    Musical theatre actress Elaine Paige recorded the song on her album of Queen covers The Queen Album in 1988.[6]

    The baby`s face image of the single`s cover would reappear on The Cross single for their song "New Dark Ages".

    Personnel

    Queen

    • Freddie Mercury – lead and backing vocals
    • Brian May – electric and 12-string acoustic guitars, keyboards, backing and co-lead vocals
    • Roger Taylor – drums, backing vocals
    • John Deacon – bass guitar

    Charts

    CountryPeak position

    Belgium (Ultratop 50 Flanders)[7]

    26

    Ireland (IRMA)[8]

    10

    Netherlands (Dutch Top 40)[9]

    26

    Netherlands (Single Top 100)[10]

    18

    Poland1

    Switzerland (Schweizer Hitparade)[11]

    13

    UK Singles (OCC)[12]

    17

    West Germany (GfK)[13]

    68

    DISCOGRAFÍA

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