logo
Roy Thomas Baker, record producer behind Queen's ‘Bohemian Rhapsody,' dies at 78

Roy Thomas Baker, record producer behind Queen's ‘Bohemian Rhapsody,' dies at 78

Roy Thomas Baker, the hitmaking record producer behind some of the biggest and most proudly polished songs and albums of the rock era — including Queen's chart-topping, multipart 'Bohemian Rhapsody' — died April 12 at his home in Lake Havasu City, Ariz. He was 78.
His death was announced by a spokesperson, Bob Merlis, who said the cause had not yet been established.
Known for his technological savvy and his discipline in the recording studio, Baker oversaw the creation of Queen's first four albums, which spun off a varied assortment of singles in the early 1970s including the jaunty 'Killer Queen,' the tender 'You're My Best Friend' and the almost comically elaborate 'Bohemian Rhapsody,' which moves over six minutes from a show-tune-style intro through a densely arranged operatic sequence before climaxing in a hard-rock section that inspired a headbanging set piece in 1992's 'Wayne's World' movie.
''Bohemian Rhapsody' was totally insane, but we enjoyed every minute of it,' Baker told Mix magazine in 1999. 'It was basically a joke, but a successful joke.' The song went to No. 1 on the U.K. singles chart in 1975 and later peaked at No. 2 on the Billboard Hot 100 after 'Wayne's World' was released. In 2018, 'Bohemian Rhapsody' provided the title of the blockbuster biopic about Queen's flamboyant frontman, Freddie Mercury; on Spotify, the song has been streamed more than 2.7 billion times.
Baker had a similarly close artistic relationship with the Cars, whose first four albums he produced; among the gleaming new wave hits they created were 'Just What I Needed,' 'My Best Friend's Girl,' 'Let's Go' and 'Shake It Up.' The producer also worked with Journey, Cheap Trick, Alice Cooper, Devo and Ozzy Osbourne, among many others. He reunited with Queen in 1978 to make 'Jazz.'
Born in the Hampstead area of London on Nov. 10, 1946, Baker got his start in music as a second engineer at London's vaunted Decca Studios and Trident Studios, where he assisted the producers Gus Dudgeon and Tony Visconti and worked on records by the likes of David Bowie, the Who and the Rolling Stones.
He moved to Los Angeles in the late '70s and later became an A&R rep for Elektra Records, helping to bring acts including Metallica and 10,000 Maniacs to the label. In the late '90s and early 2000s, he produced albums by Local H, the Smashing Pumpkins and the Darkness. Baker is survived by his wife, Tere Livrano Baker, and his brother, Alan Baker.
Asked by Mix what he thought of artists forgoing producers to make their own records, Baker compared the decision to 'someone wanting to be their own lawyer in court' and advised against it.
'I think, even if you're a great producer who happens to be an artist, and you're great at working with other artists, you should never produce yourself,' he said. 'You still need somebody else around to make sure you get the best out of yourself, because you can't be in two places at once.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Cardi B Releases First Song of 2025 'Outside' amid Estrangement from Offset: 'I Was Very, Very Angry'
Cardi B Releases First Song of 2025 'Outside' amid Estrangement from Offset: 'I Was Very, Very Angry'

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Cardi B Releases First Song of 2025 'Outside' amid Estrangement from Offset: 'I Was Very, Very Angry'

Cardi B has released her first single of 2025 with "Outside" "I made this song a few months ago when I was very, very angry," the rapper said in a video on Instagram Stories ahead of its release Cardi debuted the song on Wednesday, June 18 during a Spotify event in CannesCardi B is back! On Friday, June 20, the rapper released her first single of 2025 with "Outside" after debuting it at a Spotify event in Cannes two days prior. "OUTSIDE 😤 IS OUT NOW," Cardi, 32, wrote in an Instagram post. She also celebrated the release with a video on Instagram Stories. "If y'all wouldn't have asked for it, I wouldn't have put it out," Cardi said in the video posted on Thursday, June 19. She continued: "I made this song a few months ago when I was very, very angry. I had to change some bars because I was angry, honey.' The summer anthem, which comes amid her estrangement from Offset, was produced by Charlie Heat and HeyMicki, per Genius. 'When I tell you these n----- ain't shit, please believe me (Let's go),' Cardi raps on the track 'They gon' f--- on anything, these n----- way too easy (Facts) / Good for nothing, low-down, dirty dogs, I'm convinced (Yeah) / Next time you see your momma, tell her how she raised a bitch." On Wednesday, June 18, Cardi performed "Outside" live for the first time during Spotify's Cannes event. According to Variety, she played Megan Thee Stallion team-ups "Bongos" and "WAP" and performed songs including 'I Like It,' 'Bodak Yellow,' 'Money" and 'Up." PEOPLE can confirm she also performed her song "Bartier Cardi," but noticeably didn't mention Offset's name during the song. According to the publication, Cardi noted she was having 'a bad day today" in the midst of the show, saying she wasn't sure 'if it's because I'm sleepy or hungry but there's always tomorrow.' In a live X Spaces conversation in March, Cardi discussed her long-awaited sophomore album and specifically addressed the "features" on her new music. 'The features on my album are really good,' she began, noting that she won't have "a lot of features." is now available in the Apple App Store! Download it now for the most binge-worthy celeb content, exclusive video clips, astrology updates and more! Cardi added: "I'm working with artists, some that I have worked [with] before and some that I haven't worked [with] before." She then noted that she was "really, really surprise y'all." "And it's such a vibe," said Cardi. "I could tell you this – I'm 100 percent confident with this album. I just don't think what I got is out there." Read the original article on People

Prince Harry and Meghan's Biggest U.S. Scandals
Prince Harry and Meghan's Biggest U.S. Scandals

Newsweek

time6 hours ago

  • Newsweek

Prince Harry and Meghan's Biggest U.S. Scandals

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Meghan Markle and Prince Harry were frequent targets of the British press as working royals, but it was only after several years in the United States that they began to face controversy across the pond as well. The Duke and Duchess of Sussex have experienced successes since moving to California, but have also faced their fair share of crises. Meghan's mock curtsy, Harry's frostbite, and allegations of staff mistreatment have been just some of the moments fans of the couple might prefer to forget. Meghan's Curtsy to Queen Elizabeth II The duchess used the couple's December 2022 Netflix show, Harry & Meghan, to describe her first-ever curtsy to Queen Elizabeth, but it provoked a backlash for allegedly disrespecting British culture. Meghan re-created the curtsy she said she performed, bowing at the waist and spreading her arms wide in either direction. "I mean, Americans would understand this," she said. "We have Medieval Times Dinner & was like that." She had previously described the meeting to Oprah Winfrey in 2021 without mentioning any issues with her curtsy, and Harry went on to say it was "flawless" in his memoir, Spare. Many came away feeling the mock curtsy had disrespected a long-standing British tradition, and the fact that the queen had died three months earlier no doubt did not help. Prince Harry and Meghan Markle attend the Invictus Games in Vancouver, Canada, on February 9, 2025. Prince Harry and Meghan Markle attend the Invictus Games in Vancouver, Canada, on February 9, 2025. Samir Hussein/WireImage Prince Harry Mocked Over Frostbite Harry's book, Spare, was released a month later and led to ridicule after he described in detail applying his mother's favorite Elizabeth Arden lip cream to his frost-bitten private parts. "My penis was oscillating between extremely sensitive and borderline traumatized," he wrote. "The last place I wanted to be was Frostnipistan. "I'd been trying some home remedies, including one recommended by a friend. She'd urged me to apply Elizabeth Arden cream. My mum used that on her lips. 'You want me to put that on my todger?' "'It works, Harry. Trust me.' I found a tube, and the minute I opened it, the smell transported me through time. I felt as if my mother was right there in the room. "Then I took a smidge and applied there. 'Weird' doesn't really do the feeling justice." Suffice it to say, the passage attracted the attention of quite a few late-night U.S. comedy shows. 'F****** Grifters' and the Collapse of Spotify Just months later, the Sussexes' Spotify deal collapsed, and just as their team was reassuring journalists the two had parted ways by mutual consent, up popped an executive at the streaming giant to derail the PR strategy. Bill Simmons used his own podcast to fire a parting shot at the couple: "I wish I had been involved in the Meghan and Harry leave Spotify negotiation. 'The F****** Grifters,' that's the podcast we should have launched with them. "I gotta get drunk one night and tell the story of the Zoom I had with Harry, trying to help him with a podcast idea. It's one of my best stories." Meghan a 'Dictator in High Heels' Meghan had long been fending off allegations that she bullied staff at Kensington Palace as a working royal. The scandal migrated to America in September 2024 with an article from The Hollywood Reporter headlined: "Why Hollywood Keeps Quitting on Harry and Meghan." The article quoted a source who said the couple's U.S. staff were terrified of Meghan and that the royal belittled people. Another source said Meghan marched around "like a dictator in high heels," and has reduced grown men to tears. Meghan's team launched a PR counterattack in the pages of Us Weekly, where several past and present staffers praised her. She has consistently denied the allegations of bullying. Prince Harry's ESPY Award In 2024, Prince Harry was awarded the ESPY's Pat Tillman Award for Service, sparking a major backlash from sports fans. At its peak, Mary Tillman, Pat's mother, told The Mail on Sunday: "I am shocked as to why they would select such a controversial and divisive individual to receive the award. There are recipients that are far more fitting." 'South Park' and the 'Worldwide Privacy Tour' Harry's memoir sparked a collapse in the couple's U.S. approval rating, and in the same way that a picture can tell a thousand words, an episode of South Park ridiculing the duke and duchess appeared to tell the story of a shift in American perceptions. The episode, titled "The Worldwide Privacy Tour," depicted the "Prince and Princess of Canada" campaigning for their privacy in the aftermath of the death of the "Queen of Canada." In one scene, the couple appears on a fictional Canadian morning show, holding "We Want Privacy" placards. The anchor asks the prince: "Let me start with you, sir. You lived a life with the royal family, you had everything handed to you but you say your life has been hard and now you've written all about it in your new book: Waaagh." The princess said: "I was totally like, 'You should write a book 'cause your family's, like, stupid and then so are, like, journalists." The interviewer says, "So you hate journalists? And now you wrote a book that reports on the lives of the royal family? So, you're a journalist." Jack Royston is chief royal correspondent for Newsweek, based in London. You can find him on Twitter at @jack_royston and read his stories on Newsweek's The Royals Facebook page. Do you have a question about King Charles III, William and Kate, Meghan and Harry, or their family that you would like our experienced royal correspondents to answer? Email royals@ We'd love to hear from you.

Chad Stahelski's Highlander Movie Just Added Russell Crowe In A Key Role And It's The Man Of Steel Reunion I've Always Wanted
Chad Stahelski's Highlander Movie Just Added Russell Crowe In A Key Role And It's The Man Of Steel Reunion I've Always Wanted

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • Yahoo

Chad Stahelski's Highlander Movie Just Added Russell Crowe In A Key Role And It's The Man Of Steel Reunion I've Always Wanted

When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. When the original Highlander made its way to the big screen in 1986, the film's sweeping ballad from Queen asked the audience 'Who wants to live forever?' Cut to looking ahead from the 2025 movie schedule, and the answer I'm tempted to give is, 'Anyone who wanted to see Henry Cavill's Highlander reboot actually happen.' Well it doesn't seem like it'll be that long before director Chad Stahelski's vision will be in front of us, especially since Russell Crowe has now been drafted into a pretty impressive role. The casting coup, announced by Collider, suggests that Cavill's Kryptonian father from Man of Steel will be playing fellow immortal Ramirez; which is perfect – despite the obvious racial difference. Played by Sean Connery in the original, Ramirez is the man who helps Highlander protagonist Connor MacLeod adjust to the tradition of decimating his fellow immortals, until there's only one. Because, you see, there can only be one. Henry Cavill's role as Connor (originally played by Christopher Lambert) would put him in line to once again learn from the Gladiator legend, and potentially for longer than they worked together in Man of Steel. Which, again, is a reason to get excited about Russell Crowe's potential place in this new round of beheadings. And that's on top of Highlander's supposed attention to lore that's excited its geeky lead in the past. Admittedly, that's the sort of news that distracts one from wondering about Highlander's previous budget concerns, which saw the film fall into limbo before Amazon-MGM Studios stepped in. What's even more fun to ponder is how, after watching the trailer for 1986's Highlander, it sounds like Sean Connery saying some things that Crowe may or may not have said in Zack Snyder's 2013 DC reboot. Take a look for yourself, and tell me I'm wrong: Look, if Chad Stahelski doesn't at least consider Adam Lambert and Queen for the soundtrack to Highlander's reboot, what are we even doing here? If Russell Crowe's casting does happen to be for Ramirez, he and Henry Cavill have clearly shown their love for the original film's spirit. That only makes my hypothetical suggestion above more valid, because who else are you going to trust with 'Princes of the Universe?' I thought so. At the moment, there's still a lot of moving pieces in play for Highlander to happen. With production aiming to start this fall, there's a chance that 2026 or 2027 will see the next era of these immortals hitting the big screen. That is, of course, if Mr. Cavill's Warhammer 40,000 adaptation doesn't get in the way. So now with two thirds of the major characters seemingly cast, one question will be occupying our minds until it's answered: who in the hell is going to play the Kurgan?!

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store