The Works (Queen album)

The Works
Studio album by
Released27 February 1984
RecordedAugust 1983 – January 1984
Studio
Genre
Length37:15
Label
Producer
Queen chronology
Hot Space
(1982)
The Works
(1984)
The Complete Works
(1985)
Singles from The Works
  1. "Radio Ga Ga"
    Released: 16 January 1984[5]
  2. "I Want to Break Free"
    Released: 2 April 1984
  3. "It's a Hard Life"
    Released: 16 July 1984
  4. "Hammer to Fall"
    Released: 10 September 1984

The Works is the eleventh studio album by the British rock band Queen. It was released on 27 February 1984 by EMI Records just shortly after recording for the album had been completed in the United Kingdom and it is the band's first studio album to be released by Capitol Records in the United States. After the synth-heavy Hot Space (1982), the album saw the re-emergence of Brian May and Roger Taylor's rock sound, while still incorporating the early 80s retro futuristic electronic music (at the behest of Freddie Mercury) and New York funk scenes (John Deacon's topic of interest). Recorded at the Record Plant Studios in Los Angeles, California, and Musicland Studios in Munich, Germany, from August 1983 to January 1984, the album's title comes from a comment Taylor made as recording began – "Let's give them the works!".

During the decade, after a negative reaction to the music video for "I Want to Break Free" in the United States,[6] the band decided not to tour in North America and lost the top spot in US sales, but sales around the world would be much better, especially in Europe. Despite failing to reach number one, it spent 94 weeks on the UK Albums Chart, the longest for a Queen studio album. The Works has sold over 6 million copies worldwide.

  1. ^ "The Works by Queen". Classic Rock Review. 12 September 2014. Here the group fused May and Taylor's rock sound with some of the German-influenced electro pop...
  2. ^ "The Works". Rolling Stone. 12 April 1984. The Works is a royal feast of hard rock...
  3. ^ a b "'The Works': Giving Their All In The 80s, Queen Dominated The Stadiums". udiscovermusic.com. 27 February 2024.
  4. ^ August 2016, Malcolm Dome29 (29 August 2016). "Queen albums ranked from worst to best". Classic Rock Magazine. Retrieved 29 November 2020.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  5. ^ "News: Predictions 1984". Record Mirror. 31 December 1983. p. 4. Retrieved 16 December 2020 – via Flickr.
  6. ^ Queen – Days of Our Lives. Episode 2 (ca. at 23-minute). BBC video.

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