Too Much Love Will Kill You - Queen, Lamers, Elizabeth
Somebody to Love - Queen, Mercury, Freddie
You Don't Fool Me - Queen, Queen [1]
Heaven for Everyone - Queen, Taylor, Roger [1]
Las Palabras de Amor (The Words of Love) - Queen, May, Brian [1]
Driven by You - Queen, May, Brian [1]
Living on My Own - Queen, Mercury, Freddie
Let Me Live - Queen, Queen [1]
The Great Pretender - Queen, Ram, Buck
Princes of the Universe - Queen, Mercury, Freddie
Another One Bites the Dust - Queen, Deacon, John [Queen
No One But You (Only the Good Die Young) - Queen, May, Brian [1]
These Are the Days of Our Lives - Queen, Queen [1]
Thank God It's Christmas [*] - Queen, May, Brian [1]
Though at first glance a third Queen hits collection might seem to stretch the bounds of credibility, upon reflection this collection may well be the most revealing and compelling of the lot. Gathered from disparate late-c... more »areer band and solo projects as well as Freddie Mercury tributes with guest vocalists filling the shoes of the band's late singer (Elton John dramatically on "The Show Must Go On," George Michael playfully over-the-top on "Somebody to Love"), it's a collection that coalesces into a thematically and musically satisfying whole. Though oft criticized for their unapologetic excesses, Queen's brash infusion of rock and blues with operatic drama and scale (deliciously exemplified here by "Barcelona," Mercury's duet with diva Montserrat Caballe) was unique. III isn't so much a collection of hits as a well-paced, lovingly compiled homage to Freddie Mercury and his distinctly arch artistic vision. --Jerry McCulley« less
Though at first glance a third Queen hits collection might seem to stretch the bounds of credibility, upon reflection this collection may well be the most revealing and compelling of the lot. Gathered from disparate late-career band and solo projects as well as Freddie Mercury tributes with guest vocalists filling the shoes of the band's late singer (Elton John dramatically on "The Show Must Go On," George Michael playfully over-the-top on "Somebody to Love"), it's a collection that coalesces into a thematically and musically satisfying whole. Though oft criticized for their unapologetic excesses, Queen's brash infusion of rock and blues with operatic drama and scale (deliciously exemplified here by "Barcelona," Mercury's duet with diva Montserrat Caballe) was unique. III isn't so much a collection of hits as a well-paced, lovingly compiled homage to Freddie Mercury and his distinctly arch artistic vision. --Jerry McCulley