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1978 single by Queen

"Spread Your Wings" is a power ballad by British rock band Queen, from their 1977 album News of the World.[2] Written by bassist John Deacon, it was released as a single in 1978, with "Sheer Heart Attack" as the B-side. According to music writer Benoit Clerc, "Spread Your Wings" was chosen as the second single from News of the World because the band regretted releasing "Tie Your Mother Down" as a single from A Day at the Races instead of Deacon`s "You and I".[3]

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Singles chronology

Spread Your Wings
Spread Your Wings
10/2/1978
Its Late
Its Late
25/4/1978

Spread Your Wings

Queen

1978 Single
  • Fecha Lanzamiento: 10 Febrero 1978 · Fecha Grabación: 1977 -
    Discográfica: EMI (UK) · Estudio de grabación: Sarm West, LondonWessex, London · Productor: Queen , assisted by Mike Stone
    CHARTS
    34
    UK
    29
    GER
    26
    NLD
    News of the World
    ALBUM
    1
    Spread Your Wings
    Queen • w: John Deacon • 1978 /02 /10
    4:34
  • 2
    Sheer Heart Attack
    Queen • w: Roger Taylor • v: Mercury and Roger Taylor • 1978 /02 /10
    3:27
  • Album


    New of the world

    New of the world

    Fecha Lanzamiento: 28 Octubre 1977 · Fecha Grabación: 6 Julio 1977 - 16 Septiembre 1977
    Discográfica: EMI Elektra · Estudio de Grabación: Sarm East (London); Wessex Sound (London) · Productor: Queen , Mike Stone
    1
    We will rock you
    Queen • w: Brian May • 1977 /10 /28
    2:02
  • 2
    We are the champions
    Queen • w: Freddie Mercury • 1977 /10 /28
    3:01
  • 3
    Sheer heart attack
    Queen • w: Roger Taylor • v: Mercury and Roger Taylor • 1977 /10 /28
    3:27
  • 4
    All dead ,all dead
    Queen • w: May • v: Brian May • 1977 /10 /28
    3:09
  • 5
    Spread your wings
    Queen • w: John Deacon • 1977 /10 /28
    4:34
  • 6
    Fight from the inside
    Queen • w: Taylor • v: Taylor • 1977 /10 /28
    3:04
  • 7
    Get down ,make love
    Queen • w: Mercury • 1977 /10 /28
    3:50
  • 8
    Sleeping on the sidewalk
    Queen • w: May • v: May • 1977 /10 /28
    3:07
  • 9
    Who needs you
    Queen • w: Deacon • 1977 /10 /28
    3:06
  • 10
    It's late
    Queen • w: May • 1977 /10 /28
    6:25
  • 11
    My melancholy blues
    Queen • w: Mercury • 1977 /10 /28
    3:33
  • Album

    Spread Your Wings
    Spread Your Wings
    10/2/1978
    Its Late
    Its Late
    25/4/1978
    "Spread Your Wings"
    UK single picture sleeve
    Single by Queen
    from the album News of the World
    B-side"Sheer Heart Attack"
    Released10 February 1978
    Recorded1977
    Studio
    GenrePower ballad, Hard rock[1]
    Length4:32
    LabelEMI (UK)
    Songwriter(s)John Deacon
    Producer(s)Queen, assisted by Mike Stone
    Queen singles chronology
    "We Are the Champions" / "We Will Rock You"
    (1977)
    "Spread Your Wings"
    (1978)
    "It`s Late"
    (1978)
    Music video
    "Spread Your Wings" on YouTube

    Review

    1978 single by Queen

    "Spread Your Wings" is a power ballad by British rock band Queen, from their 1977 album News of the World.[2] Written by bassist John Deacon, it was released as a single in 1978, with "Sheer Heart Attack" as the B-side. According to music writer Benoit Clerc, "Spread Your Wings" was chosen as the second single from News of the World because the band regretted releasing "Tie Your Mother Down" as a single from A Day at the Races instead of Deacon`s "You and I".[3]

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    Background

    The lyrics of "Spread Your Wings" tells of a character named Sammy, who works cleaning floors at a bar but dreams of improving his life despite his boss telling him that he has no ambition.[3] Deacon has said:

    The song has to do with a number of personal experiences from recent years. I`d rather not say in detail, because I don`t like to explain songs. People should figure it out for themselves, I think...It`s not always easy, let me tell you. You deal with a lot of things that are not always pleasant. Of course, money is wonderful, but I don`t need to be very rich. I just don`t want to fall back into a state of poverty, which a number of fairly famous musicians have ended up in. I want to try to keep something for the future.[3]

    Queen FAQ author Daniel Ross described "Spread Your Wings" as Deacon`s "first attempt at narrative songwriting."[4] Queen lead singer Freddie Mercury considered it to be the best song Deacon had written to date.[5]

    Musicologist Nick Braae describes the structure of "Spread Your Wings" as being somewhat unusual, in that after the initial verse and refrain centered on the key of D major, there is a bridge centered on the key of B minor, followed by an instrumental bridge that starts moving back to D major for the next verse-refrain pair.[6] Deacon used this double-bridge strategy in several other songs, including "You and I" and "Need Your Loving Tonight".[6]

    The track features Freddie Mercury on piano and vocals, Brian May on electric guitar, Roger Taylor on drums, and John Deacon on bass and acoustic guitars.[3]

    The song is unusual for Queen in that it uses a third-person narrative.[7] It is also the only Queen single that does not have the rest of the group providing backing vocals to Mercury`s lead.[3][7][8]

    "Spread Your Wings" was not released as a single in North America. However, the live version of the song from Live Killers was chosen as the B-side of Queen`s 1979 hit "Crazy Little Thing Called Love", which reached number one on the US Billboard Hot 100.[9]

    Reception

    Dayton Daily News critic Gary Nuhn called it "a song with Beatles-like lyrics of a man pulling himself up.[10] Courier-News critic Bill Bleyer says that it makes a similar point as the more popular song "We Are the Champions", – that "while the established order continues to hold down the young, they can still make it if they try" – it does so better and "without overpowering the listener".[11] Ross described it as a "melancholy anthem" that has "the same sense of bombast as `We Are the Champions` but shot through with existential sadness and a desire to burst the shackles of mundane employment."[4]

    Clerc praised Mercury`s vocal delivery, saying that he sang the song "superbly, emphasizing the lyrics with his compelling vocal dexterity".[3] Andrew Wild said that it`s a "commercial song with a terrific chorus" and is "sung with real conviction by Freddie Mercury".[8]

    Ultimate Classic Rock critic Eduardo Rivadavia rated the song as the fourth-best song Deacon wrote for Queen, praising its "rising appreciation of musical drama".[7] Classic Rock History critic Millie Zeiler rated it John Deacon`s fourth-best Queen song.[12]

    The song peaked at number 34 in the UK Singles Chart.

    Music video

    The music video for "Spread Your Wings" was shot in January 1978 in the garden of Roger Taylor`s house in Surrey, on the same day the band also shot the video for "We Will Rock You".[3][5] The video was directed by Rock Flicks.[3]

    Personnel

    • Freddie Mercury – lead vocals, piano[13]
    • Brian May – electric guitar
    • Roger Taylor – drums, percussion
    • John Deacon – bass guitar, acoustic guitar

    Charts

    Chart (1978)Peak
    position

    Germany (GfK)[14]

    29

    Netherlands (Dutch Top 40)[15]

    20

    Netherlands (Single Top 100)[16]

    26

    UK Singles (OCC)[17]

    34

    Cover versions

    This song was covered by German power metal band Blind Guardian on their 1992 album Somewhere Far Beyond. The same recording reappeared on their 1996 album The Forgotten Tales.[18]

    1978 single by Queen

    "Spread Your Wings" is a power ballad by British rock band Queen, from their 1977 album News of the World.[2] Written by bassist John Deacon, it was released as a single in 1978, with "Sheer Heart Attack" as the B-side. According to music writer Benoit Clerc, "Spread Your Wings" was chosen as the second single from News of the World because the band regretted releasing "Tie Your Mother Down" as a single from A Day at the Races instead of Deacon`s "You and I".[3]

    Background

    The lyrics of "Spread Your Wings" tells of a character named Sammy, who works cleaning floors at a bar but dreams of improving his life despite his boss telling him that he has no ambition.[3] Deacon has said:

    The song has to do with a number of personal experiences from recent years. I`d rather not say in detail, because I don`t like to explain songs. People should figure it out for themselves, I think...It`s not always easy, let me tell you. You deal with a lot of things that are not always pleasant. Of course, money is wonderful, but I don`t need to be very rich. I just don`t want to fall back into a state of poverty, which a number of fairly famous musicians have ended up in. I want to try to keep something for the future.[3]

    Queen FAQ author Daniel Ross described "Spread Your Wings" as Deacon`s "first attempt at narrative songwriting."[4] Queen lead singer Freddie Mercury considered it to be the best song Deacon had written to date.[5]

    Musicologist Nick Braae describes the structure of "Spread Your Wings" as being somewhat unusual, in that after the initial verse and refrain centered on the key of D major, there is a bridge centered on the key of B minor, followed by an instrumental bridge that starts moving back to D major for the next verse-refrain pair.[6] Deacon used this double-bridge strategy in several other songs, including "You and I" and "Need Your Loving Tonight".[6]

    The track features Freddie Mercury on piano and vocals, Brian May on electric guitar, Roger Taylor on drums, and John Deacon on bass and acoustic guitars.[3]

    The song is unusual for Queen in that it uses a third-person narrative.[7] It is also the only Queen single that does not have the rest of the group providing backing vocals to Mercury`s lead.[3][7][8]

    "Spread Your Wings" was not released as a single in North America. However, the live version of the song from Live Killers was chosen as the B-side of Queen`s 1979 hit "Crazy Little Thing Called Love", which reached number one on the US Billboard Hot 100.[9]

    Reception

    Dayton Daily News critic Gary Nuhn called it "a song with Beatles-like lyrics of a man pulling himself up.[10] Courier-News critic Bill Bleyer says that it makes a similar point as the more popular song "We Are the Champions", – that "while the established order continues to hold down the young, they can still make it if they try" – it does so better and "without overpowering the listener".[11] Ross described it as a "melancholy anthem" that has "the same sense of bombast as `We Are the Champions` but shot through with existential sadness and a desire to burst the shackles of mundane employment."[4]

    Clerc praised Mercury`s vocal delivery, saying that he sang the song "superbly, emphasizing the lyrics with his compelling vocal dexterity".[3] Andrew Wild said that it`s a "commercial song with a terrific chorus" and is "sung with real conviction by Freddie Mercury".[8]

    Ultimate Classic Rock critic Eduardo Rivadavia rated the song as the fourth-best song Deacon wrote for Queen, praising its "rising appreciation of musical drama".[7] Classic Rock History critic Millie Zeiler rated it John Deacon`s fourth-best Queen song.[12]

    The song peaked at number 34 in the UK Singles Chart.

    Music video

    The music video for "Spread Your Wings" was shot in January 1978 in the garden of Roger Taylor`s house in Surrey, on the same day the band also shot the video for "We Will Rock You".[3][5] The video was directed by Rock Flicks.[3]

    Personnel

    • Freddie Mercury – lead vocals, piano[13]
    • Brian May – electric guitar
    • Roger Taylor – drums, percussion
    • John Deacon – bass guitar, acoustic guitar

    Charts

    Chart (1978)Peak
    position

    Germany (GfK)[14]

    29

    Netherlands (Dutch Top 40)[15]

    20

    Netherlands (Single Top 100)[16]

    26

    UK Singles (OCC)[17]

    34

    Cover versions

    This song was covered by German power metal band Blind Guardian on their 1992 album Somewhere Far Beyond. The same recording reappeared on their 1996 album The Forgotten Tales.[18]

    DISCOGRAFÍA

    No videos available