A Day at the Races is a rock album by English band Queen released in 1976. The album was recorded at Sarm West and Wessex Studios, England and engineered by Mike Stone. The title of the album was a reference to the band's immediately preceding album, A Night at the Opera. Both A Night at the Opera and A Day at the Races were titles of films by the Marx Brothers. A Day at the Races peaked at number 1 in the UK, in Japan and in the Netherlands. It reached number 5 on the US album charts and was Queen's first US album to ship gold. It subsequently reached platinum status in sales.
1991 Hollywood Records bonus tracks (US re-release):
"Tie Your Mother Down (1991 Bonus Remix by Matt Wallace)" (May) - 3:44
"Somebody To Love (1991 Bonus Remix by Randy Badazz)" (Mercury) - 5:00
Songs' story
The [Neutral point of view>neutrality] of this article is [NPOV disputedisputed]. Please see the discussion on the [Tenerife, when Brian May was doing his PhD in Astronomy in early 1975. He wrote it on Spanish guitar and thought he'd change the title and chorus later on, but Mercury liked it and they kept it that way. The song was performed live before recording. The album and single versions include Roger Taylor hitting a high E without falsetto in the last chorus.
"You Take My Breath Away" was written by Freddie Mercury and based on the Japanese pentatonic scale. All of the vocals were done by him as well as the piano, and he performed it by himself at Hyde Park before recording it. The vocal interlude that segues into the next song begins with a chromatic loop of the phrase "Long Away" which slowly morphs into the words "You take my, you take my...breath away."
"Long Away" was composed and sung by May. He used a Burns Double Six 12-string electric guitar for the rhythm parts instead of his Red Special. He'd been wanting to use a Rickenbacker because he admired John Lennon, but he didn't get along well with the thin neck of the instrument.
"The Millionaire Waltz" was written about John Reid (Queen's and Elton John's manager). It's another multi-key and multi-metre song like Bohemian Rhapsody, using abrupt arrangement changes and including Brian May doing multi-tracked guitar choirs.
"You And I" is John Deacon's song in the album. It features him on acoustic guitar and Mercury playing Elton John-esque piano parts.
"Somebody To Love" is the hit single of the album. It was Freddie Mercury's own favourite song and he wrote it with Aretha Franklin in mind. The band emulated a gospel choir via multi-tracking, and Mercury recorded a huge range of notes, going from a very low F to a high A (880 Hz).
"White Man" was written by May about racism in the US. Its riff was used for the album intro, similarly to "Father To Son" and "Procession" some years before. This song would be the focal point for a Freddie Mercury vocal solo on the A Day at the Races tour and would serve as both a Mercury vocal solo spot and a Brian May guitar solo spot on the 1977/78 News Of The World tour.
"Good Old-Fashioned Lover Boy" was written by Mercury and featured Mike Stone (sound engineer and co-producer) taking over the lead vocals for one line. ("Hey, boy, where'd you get it from? Hey, boy, where did you go?") Multi-tracked vocals enhanced the song as well as May's guitar choirs.
"Drowse" was Roger Taylor's song in 6/4 having him playing rhythm guitar and timpani and doing all of the vocals. May played slide guitar during this and "Tie Your Mother Down" (the second guitar solo in the middle of the song).
"Teo Torriatte" was Brian May's tribute to the Japanese fans. He played grand piano, plastic piano and harmonium as well as guitar.
Unreleased songs include an early version of 'We Are The Champions' (simply titled 'Champions' at this stage), a re-recording of 'Woe' by May and Mercury, a May song called 'The Night Draws In', and a Mercury song called 'Lap Of Luxury'.[[Citing sources citation needed]]
Singles
In the UK the first track to be released as a single was Somebody to Love on November 181976 (EMI 2565). It reached number 2. It is a good example of Queen's multi-layered vocal arrangements. Tie Your Mother Down followed on March 41977 (EMI 2593), reaching number 31. In the US, Somebody to Love was released on 10 December1976 ( Elektra E45362) and reached number 13. It was followed by Tie Your Mother Down (Elektra E45385) in March 1977, which reached number 49. Both of these were released in Japan: in addition, Teo Torriatte was also released in Japan.
Personnel
All lead vocals by Freddie Mercury except:
*Long Away: Brian May
*Good Old-Fashioned Lover Boy: Freddie Mercury & Mike Stone