Shipping takes place in special record boxes.
Shipping costs only once throughout Germany, no matter how many items you buy!
When Queen began recording Innuendo in March 1990, it was probably already clear to them that their 14th album was to be released. Studio record will be the last with its singer Freddie Mercury. Your swan song. By April 1987 at the latest he knew about his AIDS illness; rumors and speculation were downplayed, denied and brushed aside by him, the band and everyone around him. At the latest at the Brit Awards on the 18th. February 1990, when Queen were honored for their Outstanding Contribution To British Music, it was obvious that Mercury was very, very ill. He blames it on the long tours and the stressful life of a musician, but it will be his last public appearance.
The album will be released on the 4th. February 1991, delayed due to Mercury's health problems. Queen sound more powerful than last, building on the anthemic, bombastic sound of the seventies. “Oddly enough, we had a lot of fun composing the album,” Roger Taylor would say years later. “We adapted to Freddie and were able to work on the songs so much more and make them stronger.” Justin Shirley-Smith, who was an assistant behind the controls during the recordings, also has fond memories of the sessions. “It's hard to explain, but it wasn't sad, it was actually very joyful. Freddie was one of the funniest people I've ever met. I laughed with him most of the time.” More than anything, Mercury wants to finish this album. He knows: it is his legacy. But he also knows that it's a race against time.