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Queen: Crazy Little Thing Called Love Single (1979)

  • Writer: Queen
    Queen
  • Oct 4, 1979
  • 5 min read

A Rockabilly Romp

Queen’s “Crazy Little Thing Called Love” 7-inch vinyl single, was released in the UK on October 5, 1979, on EMI Records (catalogue: EMI 5001). Backed with “We Will Rock You,”.


Written by Freddie Mercury in 1979, the track is included on their 1980 album "The Game" and also appears on the band's compilation album "Greatest Hits" in 1981. The song peaked at number two on the UK Singles Chart in 1979 and became the group's first number-one single on the Billboard Hot 100 in the US in 1980, remaining there for four consecutive weeks. It topped the Australian ARIA Charts for seven weeks. It was the band's final single release of the 1970s.


Having composed "Crazy Little Thing Called Love" on guitar, Mercury played rhythm guitar while performing the song live, which was the first time he played guitar in concert with Queen. Queen played the song live between 1979 and 1986, and a live performance of the song is recorded in the albums Queen Rock Montreal, Queen on Fire – Live at the Bowl, Live at Wembley '86, and Hungarian Rhapsody: Queen Live in Budapest. Since its release, the song has been covered by a number of artists. The song was played live on 20 April 1992 during The Freddie Mercury Tribute Concert, performed by Robert Plant with Queen. The style of the song was described by author Karl Coryat as rockabilly in his 1999 book titled The Bass Player Book.


Composition

As reported by Freddie Mercury in Melody Maker, 2 May 1981, he composed "Crazy Little Thing Called Love" on the guitar in just five to ten minutes.


'Crazy Little Thing Called Love' took me five or ten minutes. I did that on the guitar, which I can't play for nuts, and in one way it was quite a good thing because I was restricted, knowing only a few chords. It's a good discipline because I simply had to write within a small framework. I couldn't work through too many chords and because of that restriction I wrote a good song, I think.


— Freddie Mercury

The song was written by Mercury as a tribute to his musical heroes Elvis Presley and Cliff Richard. Roger Taylor mentioned in an interview that Mercury wrote it in just 10 minutes while lounging in a bath at the Bayerischer Hof Hotel in Munich during one of their extensive Munich recording sessions, which was later confirmed by Mercury himself. Mercury took it to the studio shortly after writing it and presented it to Taylor and John Deacon. The three of them, with their then-new producer Reinhold Mack, recorded it at Musicland Studios in Munich. The entire song was reportedly recorded in less than half an hour (although Mack says it was six hours).


Having written "Crazy Little Thing Called Love" on guitar and played an acoustic rhythm guitar on the record, Mercury played guitar in concerts for the first time ever, for example at Live Aid at Wembley Stadium, London, in 1985. Billboard described Brian May's guitar playing as "stunning in its simplicity." Cash Box called it a "hip shakin' rockabilly romp" and an "upbeat tune." Record World said that the band "does a superb job of capturing the spirit and sound of the late '50s be-bop rock'n'roll."


May wanted to emulate Rick Nelson's and Presley's longtime guitarist James Burton, and at Mack's suggestion, used a Fender Esquire rather than his regular Red Special for the recording session.


Music video

The music video for the song was filmed at Trillion Studios on 21 September 1979 and directed by Denis deVance involving four dancers featuring Nikki Billyeald and Julie Warwick and a floor of hands. An alternate version was included on the Days of Our Lives DVD and Blu-ray releases.


Live performances

In the immediate aftermath of the single, the band embarked on a mini UK tour entitled the Crazy Tour.


Whenever the song was played live, the band added a solid rock ending that extended the under-three-minute track to over five minutes, with May and Mercury providing additional guitars. An example of this is on the CD/DVD set Live at Wembley '86, where the song continues for five minutes.


On 13 July 1985, Queen performed the song for the Live Aid dual-venue benefit concert.


Single release

The "Crazy Little Thing Called Love" single hit number two on the UK Singles Chart in 1979, unable to dislodge "When You're in Love with a Beautiful Woman" from #1 for two weeks, and became the first US number-one hit for the band, topping the Billboard Hot 100 for four weeks. It was knocked out of the top spot on this chart by Pink Floyd's "Another Brick in the Wall, Part II." The song also topped the Australian ARIA charts for seven consecutive weeks from 1 March to 12 April 1980. The UK release had "We Will Rock You (live)" as the B-side, while America, Australia, and Canada had "Spread Your Wings (live)."".


Personnel

Freddie Mercury – lead and backing vocals, acoustic guitar, hand claps

Brian May – backing vocals, electric guitar, hand claps

Roger Taylor – backing vocals, drums, hand claps

John Deacon – bass guitar, hand claps

Although Mercury played an acoustic-electric twelve-string Ovation Pacemaker 1615 guitar and later on an electric six-string Fender Telecaster (both owned by May) live, he recorded the studio version of the song using a six-string acoustic with external mics. Mercury also played the original guitar solo on a version which has been lost.

Data courtesy of Wikipedia.


Single Overview

Label: EMI – EMI 5001

Format: Vinyl, 7", 45 RPM, Single, Picture Sleeve

Country: UK

Released: 5 Oct 1979

A Crazy Little Thing Called Love

Written-By – Mercury 2:42

B We Will Rock You

Written-By – May 2:48

Phonographic Copyright ℗ – Raincloud Productions Ltd.

Published By – Queen Music Ltd.

Published By – EMI Music Publishing Ltd.

Pressed By – EMI Records

Lacquer Cut At – Sterling Sound

Lacquer Cut By – Nick W* (tracks: A)

Producer [Produced By] – Queen

Issued in a picture sleeve.

For the version in a company sleeve with identical labels see Crazy Little Thing Called Love.

Made in Gt. Britain

B-side From The Album "Live Killers" EMSP 330.

Track timings not given on sleeve or label.

Runouts are stamped except for the etched "Nick W".


UK Releases:

Label:EMI – EMI 5001

Format: Vinyl, 7", 45 RPM, Single, Promo, Picture Sleeve

Country: UK

Released: 1979

Label: EMI – EMI 5001

Format: Vinyl, 7", Single, 45 RPM, Company Sleeve, Four-Prong Centre

Country:UK

Released: 5 Oct 1979

Label:EMI – EMI 5001

Format: Vinyl, 7", 45 RPM, Single, Picture Sleeve, Four-Prong Centre

Country:UK

Released: 5 Oct 1979

Label: EMI – EMI 5001

Format: Vinyl, 7", 45 RPM, Single, Solid Centre,Company Sleeve

Country: UK

Released:5 Oct 1979

Country Variations: (1979)

Country Variations (all territories used the same picture sleeve image as UK, or no picture sleeve at all)

Argentina - EMI - 1979


Barbados - EMI - 1979


Brazil - EMI - 1979


Chile - EMI - 1979


France - EMI - 1979


Germany - EMI - 1979


Guatemala - EMI - 1979


Hong Kong - EMI - 1979


India - EMI - 1979


Ireland - EMI - 1979


Italy - EMI - 1979


Mexico - EMI - 1979


Netherlands - EMI - 1979


Panama - EMI - 1979


Peru - EMI - 1979


Philippines - EMI - 1979


Portugal - EMI - 1979


South Africa - EMI - 1979


Spain - EMI - 1979


Sweden - EMI - 1979


Weekly charts

Chart (1979–1980) Peak

position

Australia (Kent Music Report) 1

Austria (Ö3 Austria Top 40) 9

Belgium (Ultratop 50 Flanders) 3

Canada Top Singles (RPM) 1

Ireland (IRMA) 2

Netherlands (Dutch Top 40) 1

Netherlands (Single Top 100) 1

Norway (VG-lista) 8

New Zealand (Recorded Music NZ) 2

South Africa (Springbok Radio) 3

Switzerland (Schweizer Hitparade) 5

UK Singles (OCC) 2

US Billboard Hot 100 1

US Adult Contemporary (Billboard) 17

West Germany (GfK) 13


Sources

Wikipedia: Crazy Little Thing Called Love

Wikipedia: The Game

Wikipedia: Queen Discography

YouTube: Crazy Little Thing Called Love Official Video (2008 upload, 300M+ views)

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