Freddie playing Crazy Little Thing Called Love on stage.


Freddie Mercury

As Arranger

As Backing Singer

As Composer

As Guitarist

As Lead Singer

As Pianist

As Producer

Influences


Song Analyses

Bohemian Rhapsody

Crazy Little Thing Called Love

Somebody to Love

Staying Power

The Fairy Feller's Master Stroke

The Kiss

Was It All Worth It?

We Are the Champions


Equipment

Bechstein Grand Piano

Bösendorfer Grand Piano

Fender Telecaster Electric Guitar

Martin Acoustic Guitar

Oberheim Synthesizer

Ovation Acoustic Guitar

Steinway Grand Piano

Yamaha Baby-Grand Piano


Related Links

British Version

Argentinean Version

Bechstein Debauchery

Member Index - Brian

Member Index - Roger

Member Index - John

Song Database

Write Me


Footnotes

1: As a side-note, the terms Occam's Razor may be misleading, because the famous "entia non sunt multiplicanda sine necesítate" can't be found in any of his writings. It was popularized by the way Welsh Nobel Bertrand Russell interpreted Ockam's work (btw the three spellings are correct: Ockham, Occam and Ockam).

2: "Crazy Little Thing was the last song that I ever wrote on the guitar, I'm so limited with the guitar chords, sometimes that's a good thing, that's what I liked Crazy Little Thing, if I knew too many guitar chords I'd ruin it" - Freddie Mercury (Munich interview 1984, available on audio format through his Solo Box-Set).

3: "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 (May 2nd 1981, Melody Maker).

CRAZY LITTLE THING CALLED LOVE


Although Freddie's main instrument was the piano, he could play guitar well and would sometimes write songs on it.

One of Mercury's big frustrations was not seeing Bohemian Rhapsody hitting the top of the American charts. He was very proud of the track, and seeing it "only" as a #9 was quite disappointing. Somebody to Love wasn't the success he'd expected either, so he probably thought that the States would keep running away from him. As it often happens, the answer came unexpectedly: Freddie's first (and only) #1 hit in the US was a simple rockabilly tune he wrote in ten minutes, that would become his last world mega-hit (Innuendo would be #1 in some countries, including England, but it's not as globally well-known as Champions, for instance).

Even on an easy song to play, like this one (seven chords, generic form), Mercury had a high level of craftsmanship: there are some syncopations and a clever section variant that show this track couldn't have been composed by an amateur. Part of an artist's challenge is knowing when and where to use Ockham's Razor (1), and here he proved he was aware of that.

Freddie was self-deprecating about his guitar abilities, and often credited this song's quality on the grounds that he had to work with few chords since he didn't know more (2). According to him, he'd have ruined it, had he been familiar with more chords, because he'd put more than necessary.


General Information:

Music & Lyrics by: Freddie Mercury
Arranged by: Freddie Mercury
Written: 1979
Length: 2:44
Released on: July 1979

Produced by: Queen & Reinhold Mack
Mixed by: Reinhold Mack
Engineered by: Reinhold Mack

Recorded: June 1979
Recorded at: Musicland Studios, Munich, West Germany

Keys: D Mixolydian, D Minor, A Minor
Meter: 4/4
Form: Two-Bridge

Acoustic Drums: Roger Taylor
Electric Bass: John Deacon
Acoustic Guitar: Freddie Mercury
Electric Guitar: Brian May
Percussion: Uncredited

Lead Vocals: Freddie Mercury
Backing Vocals: Freddie Mercury, Roger Taylor & Brian May

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Form:

Intro
Verse
Refrain
Verse
Refrain
Bridge
Break
Verse
Refrain
Bridge'
Break
Verse
Refrain
Verse
Refrain
Refrain'...

Even on such a quick song to write (3) and even though it uses the classic two-bridge model, as many popular tunes (e.g. Yesterday), there is a nice variant in the second bridge, saving it from being generic or "authentic" rockabilly.

The use of tag at the end is reminiscent to Seaside Rendezvous in a way, and when played live proved to give vent to crazy improvisations by Brian and Freddie himself, especially since they began hiring keyboard players. In a Japanese gig in '82, Freddie actually played some piano with Fred Mandel before going on with the guitar.

Beatles-esque attention to detail is reflected in the changing arrangement:

Section
Studio
Live
Intro
Fred on guitar
Fred on guitar
1st Verse + Refrain
Add drums, bass and lead vocals
Add bass, drums, vocals Brian's rhythm guitar and (from 1982 onwards) piano by a guest musician
2nd Verse + Refrain
Add backing vocals
Add backing vocals
Bridge
Drums, bass, Fred's guitar & lead vocal
Drums, bass, Freddie and Brian on guitars, Freddie's lead vocal and (from 1982) piano by a guest musician
1st Break + 3rd Verse
Add Brian's lead guitar
Add Brian's lead guitar
Bridge'
Guitar solo by Brian
Guitar solo by Brian
2nd Break
No lead guitar by Brian
No lead guitar by Brian
4th Verse
Only percussion and vocals (lead + chordal backing and then "ready Freddie")
Only percussion and vocals (lead + Roger and Brian on "ready Freddie")
5th Verse
Drums, bass, Fred's and Brian's guitars, Freddie on lead vocals
Drums, bass, piano, Fred's rhythm guitar, Brian's Red Special, Freddie on lead vocals
Tag
Add backing vocals (first "crazy little thing called love" and then "yeah yeah")
Add backing vocals on the first "crazy little thing called love"

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Harmony:

1st Phrase ("this thing ... round to it"):
Chords
D
G
C
G
D Mixolydian
I
IV
VII
IV

2nd Phrase ("ready, crazy little thing called love"):
Chords
D
Bb
C
D
D Mixolydian
I
bVI
VII
I
D Minor
VI

3rd Phrase ("there goes my baby... rock n' roll"):
Chords
G
C
G
D Mixolydian
IV
VII
IV
D Minor

4th Phrase ("she drives me crazy ... sweat"):
Chords
Bb
E
A
F
D Mixolydian
bVI
V-V
V
bIII
D Minor
VI
III

5th Phrase (break):
Chords
C
G
E
A
D Mixolydian
VII
IV
V-V
V
D Minor
A Minor
III
VII
V
I

6th Phrase (beginning of solo)
Chords
Bb
D
G
D
D Mixolydian
bVI
I
IV
I
D Minor
VI

Tag (title phrase)
Chords
Bb
C
D
D Mixolydian
bVI
VII
I
D Minor
VI

The song's got seven chords, all major: D, G, C, Bb, E, A and F. Mode seems to switch between Mixolydian, Aeolian and even Dorian, while the tonal centre remains D most of the time, except during the break where it seems to have moved to A (note that the song would've worked OK if it finished there).

C > G > E > A (the break progression) reinforces the Am flavor, since it's a very common cadence for that key (only that this time Picardy Third is applied). For instance, it's used on King Henry VIII's Pastime With Good Company (King's Ballad).

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Modulations:

Home Key
Target Key
Tonal Center
Pitch Set
D Mixolydian
D Minor
I > i
1 Sharp > 1 Flat
D Minor
D Mixolydian
i > I
1 Flat > 1 Sharp
D Minor
A Minor
i > v
1 Flat > No Flats
A Minor
D Mixolydian
i > IV
No Sharps > 1 Sharp

These key-changes are all abrupt (one phrase ends on a pitch-set, the next one begins on the other without having a pivot chord), but since the song is fast and the modulations aren't distant, the listener is hardly-ever disturbed by them. What's more, Freddie on lead vocals is already hinting to the modal switch when he uses F-Natural instead of F# in words like "handle" and "round".

Paul McCartney's Lady Madonna also features modal switch from Mixolydian to Minor and back, only that he used ii > V instead of II > V. Both songs have a chord stream after an AA verse too.

At the end of the break, as said before, the song could've been left finished there (since the Am key is well-established), but instead the next phrase begins in D-Mixolydian again. A similar formula (but involving D and G Ionian) would be used in Brian's Save Me, which was written and recorded around the same time.

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Rhythm Section:


The bass-line at the end of the bridge sections (before the break).

The story, as it's been narrated by Roger ('In the Studio' radio program), is that Freddie wrote the song in the bathtub at the hotel in Munich, then he went into the studios and taught it to John and Roger. They recorded the backing track in less than half an hour, and as a matter of fact they were rather tipsy.

Both drums and bass have rockabilly influences, yet they're still as Queen-esque as they can get. The fact they didn't have much time to over-arrange it (Fred wanted it to be laid down quickly) and their past experience playing that genre (in many of their tours they did a medley of rock n' roll classics) led them to record simple, yet clever, parts. Again, that proves Crazy Little Thing couldn't have been done (that way) by amateurs.

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Guitar Work:

Freddie played rhythm guitar both in the studio and live. It's one take, yet mixed stereo, which suggests Mack placed an external mike and at the same time there was a signal from the amp. He played using his fingers instead of a pick (like Jeff Beck does). On the record, he'd used his home Martin acoustic, while on stage he played a twelve-string Ovation (between 1979 and 1982) and a Fender Telecaster (from 1984 to 1986).

Brian too used different equipment: in the studio he only recorded lead guitar with Roger's old natural-finish Telecaster. Live, he played three different instruments: from 1st verse to 1st bridge, he played a twelve-string Ovation (and doubled Freddie's part), then he changed to a black Telecaster and while Freddie was doing the sing-along bit with the public, Brian picked up his Red Special and finished off the song with it.

After Freddie died, Brian replaced the Tele by the Red Special, so he just used two guitars in the song. He also replaced the Ovation bits: in the Robert Plant version he played a Godin A-12 Thinline, and when covering the song with Paul Rodgers, he plays a Yamaha Silent.

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Vocals:

As a tacit tribute to Elvis, Mercury emulated his style of singing. Again, that's another nod to Paul McCartney's Lady Madonna. The work on harmonies is very simple but interesting: during the second verse they repeat what the lead part says (a resource Fred would employ later on in The Miracle and How Can I Go On), during the fourth they provide chordal backing and then do the famous "ready Freddie" line.

Brian, Roger and Freddie sing in the studio, and the sound is quite different from previous records due to production and the fact all parts were averagely lower than the Queen-standard.

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Elvis & Lady Madonna:


Elvis at a white baby-grand piano.

The King (born on January 8th 1935 in Tupelo, Mississippi, USA, died on August 16th 1977 in Memphis, Tennessee) was one of Freddie's favorite singers and showmen. As a musician, he played guitar, piano and occasional bass, and was an exceptional vocalist able to cover different styles with remarkable skill.

He wasn't a songwriter and couldn't read music, yet trained his ear enough to be an outright professional in most of his records. John Lennon, Freddie's biggest hero, was a fan of Elvis' too.


Paul McCartney, drawn by Freddie in late 60s.

Lady Madonna (written by Paul McCartney in 1967) was probably Freddie's inspiration for Crazy Little Thing. Its original recording featured Paul on piano, bass and lead vocals, John and George on guitars and vocal-brasses, Ringo Starr on drums and a marvelous tenor saxophone solo by guest musician Ronnie Scott. Freddie and Roger would also do vocal-brasses in Freddie's 1975 Seaside Rendezvous.

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