FREDDIE MERCURY frequently clashed with Queen bandmates Brian May and Roger Taylor, the legendary guitarist revealed in a throwback interview.
Brian said: “We had big, big dreams. “But within the band we did. “We sometimes said terrible things, but we got the best out of each other.” The first part of ‘Queen: A Rock History’ airs on Channel 5 at 9:15pm tonight, and is followed by ‘Queen: Live At The Odeon’, one of the band’s most iconic gigs recorded in Hammersmith on Christmas Eve 1975. The programme documents Queen’s rise to the top, focusing on key moments in the band’s history, namely the ‘A Night at the Opera’ album which brought them international recognition. “There was conflict, but we got there.”
FREDDY MERCURY'S death due to AIDS was a bombshell for everyone but especially those closest to him including Queen co-star Brian May who recently said he ...
In a new interview on BBC Radio 2, May said he was still “struggling” with Mercury’s death. "Once, he showed it to us at dinner. The Queen co-founder tragically also shared how he was certain that Mercury “missed” treatment that allows HIV and AIDS sufferers to live a normal life by a “few months”. Freddy Mercury’s early death in 1991 due to AIDS complications sent rippled around the music world. Brian May even revealed to the Sunday Times that AIDS had cost the star his foot, which he was upset about because it left the Queen singer in “terrible pain”. FREDDY MERCURY'S death due to AIDS was a bombshell for everyone but especially those closest to him including Queen co-star Brian May who recently said he "lost" his "sense of reality" and suggested Mercury missed life-extending treatment by "months".