"His (John's) songs are good and are getting better every time actually. I’m getting a bit worried actually" - Freddie Mercury (Radio interview with Kenny Everett, December 1976).


John Deacon

As Arranger

As Bassist

As Composer

As Guitarist

As Keyboardist

As Producer

As Singer?

Influences


Song Analyses

Another One Bites the Dust

I Want to Break Free

In Only Seven Days

Friends Will Be Friends

Misfire

My Life Has Been Saved

You And I

You're My Best Friend


Equipment

Fender Precision Electric Basses

Fender Stratocaster Electric Guitar

Fender Telecaster Electric Guitar

Giffin Electric Bass

Musicman Electric Bass

Rickenbacker Electric Bass

Roland Synthesizer

Steinway Grand Piano


Related Links

British Version

Argentinean Version

Bechstein Debauchery

Member Index - Freddie

Member Index - Brian

Member Index - Roger

Song Database

Write Me

YOU AND I

'A Day at the Races' was in many ways a sequel to 'A Night at the Opera': both albums have a Roger number in triple meter (Car - Drowse), Mercury's incursions into vaudeville (Lazing / Seaside - Good Old Fashioned), complex rock tunes with classical influences (Bo Rhap - Millionaire Waltz), piano ballads (Love of My Life - You Take My Breath Away), Brian's skiffle-esque numbers ('39 - Long Away) and some heavy tracks with a canon in the middle (Prophet's Song - White Man). And then there's of course the couple of Deacon tracks: You're My Best Friend and You And I, both beautiful rock/pop ballads with very clever structure.

Unfortunately this one wasn't a single and the band never performed it live, which made it fall into being mere "music playing in the darkness", only known to some relatively few lucky listeners. The use of broad multi-tracked harmonies (on both vocals and guitars) wasn't a trademark of John's, but it did characterize the Marx-Brothers' era in general.


General Information:

Music & Lyrics by: John Deacon
Arranged by: John Deacon
Written: 1976
Length: 3:25
Released on: December 10th 1976

Produced by: Queen
Mixed by: Mike Stone
Engineered by: Mike Stone

Recorded: July - November 1976
Recorded at: Wessex and/or Sarm East, London, and/or Sarm Hookend, Hookend Manor.

Keys: D, A, Bm
Meter: 4/4
Form: Cyclic

Acoustic Drums: Roger Taylor
Electric Bass: John Deacon
Acoustic Guitar: John Deacon
Electric Guitars: Brian May
Acoustic Piano: Freddie Mercury

Lead Vocals: Freddie Mercury
Backing Vocals: Queen

Back to the top


Form:

Verse'
Verse
Lift
Bridge
Verse
Break
Verse
Lift
Bridge
Verse-Tag
Verse'/2...

Back to the top


Harmony:

Intro (D)
D
G/D
D
G/D
I
IV
I
IV

D
G/D
G
D
Em
D
I
IV
IV
I
ii
I


Verse (D)
D
A
Bm
G
E
I
V
vi
IV
II

D
A
G
D
Em
D
I
V
IV
I
ii
I


Lift (D)
G
G
D
D7
IV
IV
I
V-IV

G
G
E
A
IV
IV
V-V
V


Bridge 1st Phrase (A)
G
D
Dm
E
IV-IV
IV
iv
V

Bridge 2nd Phrase (D)
C
G
Gm
A
IV-IV
IV
iv
V


Break 1st Half (Bm)
F#
F#
Bm
Bm
V-vi
V-vi
vi
vi

Break 2nd Half (D)
D
D
A
F#/B#
I
I
V
V-vi

Bm
E
A
A+
vi
V-V
V
V+

The basic set of chords is almost the same as in Best Friend (I, II, ii, III, IV, iv, V, vi), but this one includes IV-IV (see Spread Your Wings or Friends Will Be Friends). You And I is much more influenced by rock, while Best Friend features some slight jazz influences. As a result, You And I is notably simpler in both harmony and phrasing.

Modulations are mostly done abruptly, which is a major difference between John's ballads (My Life Has Been Saved, Misfire) and Freddie's (Lily of the Valley, Made in Heaven). Brian employed both approaches (Save Me vs White Queen).

Back to the top


Verse:

This is one of the very few songs in the Queen catalogue that employs the 1-5-6-4 cliché (non-Queen examples from the top off my head: Beatles' Let It Be, blink-182's Always, Damn It, Feeling This, First Date, +44's 155, Avril Lavigne's Sk8r Boi, Bob Marley's No Woman No Cry, Black Eyed Peas' Where Is the Love, etc).

IV > I > ii > I appears in Let It Be as well. The lack of "iii" function is somewhat usual in John Deacon's songs' verses (Spread Your Wings, One Year Of Love I Want to Break Free, You're My Best Friend...), as well as the "II" chord (Spread Your Wings, Best Friend).

Back to the top


Lift:

It starts on the subdominant (as in Friends Will Be Friends and other pop ballads like Don Henley's Heart of the Matter, Guns N' Roses' November Rain and Avril Lavigne's When You're Gone).

IV > II > V is another cliché'd progression (Friends Will Be Friends).

Back to the top


Bridge:

Nice IV/IV > IV > iv > V chord-chain driven by a chromatic line (as in John's Best Friend which has I > V/vi > vi > V/IV in the opposite direction). The progression is done twice: once in A, once in D (similar to Another One Bites the Dust doing the chorus in Fm and then shifting to Gm).

IV > iv is a common chord-change in ballads (Save Me, Best Friend, Play the Game, More than Words, Creep, Wake Me Up When September Ends...).

Back to the top


Break:

Yet further references to Best Friend are the V/vi > vi > I progression (both times preceded by the tonic) and V > V/vi > i > V/V. Compare You're My Best Friend's fragment from "in rain or shine" up to "happy at home" with You and I (from "forever" until right before the solo begins):

Best Friend
G
E/G#
Am
D
C
G
V
V-vi
vi
V-V
I
V

You and I
A
F#/A#
Bm
E
A
A
V
V-vi
vi
V-V
V
V

As you can see, both bits are harmonically identical in an 83.33%. That's enough to regard both songs fraternal twins, isn't it?

Back to the top