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Smile (Queen)

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Smile were a London based rock band for about 18 months in the late 1960s. The band Queen was formed out of its ashes. Formed by Brian May (later guitarist for Queen) in 1967, it also included later Queen drummer Roger Taylor and Tim Staffell as singer.

Formation

May was previously the leader of a group known as 1984. That group, which included Staffell as lead singer, had lasted about four years[http://www.queenfans.com/articles/prequeen2.shtml].

Roger Taylor joined the group on drums in response to an advertisement. He had previously been both drummer and vocalist as frontman for a group known as Reaction. With a manager, roadie, logo designed by Staffell and paid gigs, the group was now becoming professional. They also used the promotions agency Rondo for publicity.

While Staffell and May both studied at Imperial College, their first gig there was on 26 October 1968, as a support act to Pink Floyd, playing mostly variations of covers with wild tempo changes and extreme dynamics. By the end of that year, Taylor had dropped his dentistry course, while May was still enrolled in astronomy.

The group's biggest public performance was on 27 February 1969 was at the National Council for the Unmarried Mother and her Child. Held at the Royal Albert Hall, May, Taylor and Staffell performed as a trio on guitar, drums and bass respectively. Keyboardist Chris Smith had been fired the day before, according to Staffell. (According to Chris, he was only briefly in the band and left of his own accord due to wanting to try different styles. http://www.queenfans.com/articles/pics/chrissmith.jpg (currently offline)

Around this time Freddie Mercury was living with all three, and supported them behind the scenes. However, without a place for him in the band, he continued playing in other groups such as Ibex, later known as Wreckage.

Songs

The following songs have been confirmed by the members of the band as being part of their repertoire, either live or in their short-lived studio time.

Recording

In March 1969, the band played at a venue known as PJ's, using claims to have previously been played on radio station Radio 1 to secure an audience. It seems likely that the claims were fictitious, however. [http://www.queenfans.com/articles/prequeen2.shtml] Shortly after they were given a one-off recording deal by Mercury Records to record three tracks, "Earth" (Staffell), "Step on me" (May), and "Doin' All Right". These were recorded in June 1969 at Trident Studios in Soho. Ultimately this US promotional recording was never published commercially.

However, in September of the same year, Mercury commissioned them to record three more songs: "April Lady" (Stanley Lucas), "Blag", a Taylor instrumental, and "Polar Bear", a "gentle song about a polar bear" [http://www.queenfans.com/articles/prequeen2.shtml] written and led by May, at De Lane Lea. Again, the record was not released at the time.

Two legitimate releases of the six Smile tracks have since been issued:

Gettin' Smile (LP) from Japan, released September 23rd, 1982, on Mercury Records. The sleeve contains notoriously inaccurate lyrics and songwriting credits for the songs. This release was used for all subsequent bootlegs which contain the these songs.

Ghost Of A Smile (CD) from Holland, released in 1997, on Pseudonym Records. The CD booklet is comprehensive and features new liner notes by Tim Staffell. All the tracks were newly remastered. The album also features two versions on the Eddie Howell/Freddie Mercury collaboration "The Man From Manhattan" (no relation to Smile, except that Brian May plays guitar on it).

Queen

In 1970, Staffell left the group to join Humpy Bong, while Sour Milk Sea, the group Mercury was playing with, had just broken up. This left a perfect opportunity for Mercury to join Smile. At the same time, the name of the group changed to Queen. They were still a very small group, practising cover versions of other groups' songs in lecture theatres at a university. On 27 June, 1970 they played their first public gig together, with the lineup of Mercury, May, Taylor and Mike Grose on bass.

After the bass players Grose, Barry Mitchell and a player known only as 'Doug' proved unsuitable, Queen engaged the fourth band member, John Deacon in 1971. This definitively created the Queen lineup which lasted until Mercury's death in 1991.

For their debut album, Queen recorded "Doing All Right". According to the book "Queen: The Early Years", Tim Staffell has been well compensated through royalties (given his co-songwriting credit for the song with Brian May) from the sale of the album.

Queen also recorded the song for their first BBC recording session with John Peel. That session, along with their third session, have been released in the UK as Queen At The Beeb (Band Of Joy Records) in 1989, and in the US as Queen At The BBC (Hollywood Records) in 1996.

Later in 1995, Queen issued their Let Me Live singles, one of which features three of the first session BBC recordings, including "Doing Alright".

There is a bootleg album of their early tracks circa the Smile era titled Pre-Ordained.

Smile songs recorded by other artists

Sources

Footnotes

Further reading

Queen
John Deacon | Brian May | Freddie Mercury | Roger Taylor
Discography
Studio albums: Queen | Queen II | Sheer Heart Attack | A Night at the Opera | A Day at the Races | News of the World | Jazz | The Game | Flash Gordon | Hot Space | The Works | A Kind of Magic | The Miracle | Innuendo | Made in Heaven
Live albums: Live Killers | Live Magic | Live at Wembley '86 | Queen on Fire - Live at the Bowl | Return of the Champions
Compilations: Greatest Hits | At the Beeb | Greatest Hits II | Classic Queen | Queen Rocks | Greatest Hits III | Stone Cold Classics
Box sets: Greatest Hits I & II | The Crown Jewels |
DVDs
We Will Rock You | The Freddie Mercury Tribute Concert | Greatest Video Hits 1 | Queen Live at Wembley Stadium | Greatest Video Hits 2 | Queen on Fire - Live at the Bowl | Return of the Champions | Super Live in Japan
Musicals
We Will Rock You

 


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