SYNOPSICS
Queen: Live at the Rainbow '74 (2014) is a English movie. N/A has directed this movie. John Deacon, Brian May, Freddie Mercury, Roger Taylor are the starring of this movie. It was released in 2014. Queen: Live at the Rainbow '74 (2014) is considered one of the best Music movie in India and around the world.
For the long time fan, maybe the most outstanding concert of Queen. The reason? It gives a perfect overview of an early Queen presentation. The material, the costumes, and the performance of the members are really great and supported by the hilarious conversational approach of a young Freddie Mercury. In one of the last interviews, the singer Freddie Mercury said that the way he looked in those days were ridiculous; many would argue. The band looked very theatrical and outrageous. That's the way that the orthodox, good old fashion Queen fan likes it more, so it's joyful to see the careful treatment of the performance and the power of the Queen sound when all the members of the band sing together.
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Queen: Live at the Rainbow '74 (2014) Reviews
Finally - Some of Queen's Live Beginnings...
I know in a concert, there really isn't such a thing as a "spoiler", but since I don't know what I am generally going to write about, I'm just going to put it on all of them. That being said, this concert was originally released a long time ago on VHS as part of Queen's "Box of Tricks", but only in part. I never saw the VHS, but since DVD, this concert has been long-requested. Finally, "Live at the Rainbow '74" was released, and it was released in COMPLETION with Bonus Features from Queen's second (Queen II) tour in early 1974 (the 2-CD release has both concerts in full). So, as in usual Queen concerts, it was pure Mercury magic. There was no amount of disappointment, no amount of hype-driven disappointment, just pure entertainment. Though it has some elements which one might consider just for the hardcore Queen fans, I believe that all fans of Queen could like this. From the "Sheer Heart Attack" Tour, this concert is encrusted with musical jewels such as "Stone Cold Crazy", "Killer Queen", "In the Lap of the Gods" (both original and 'revisited'), "Father to Son", etc. The performance is electric, plain and simple, and ANYONE who watches this will see that - I am pretty positive on that assumption. Freddie Mercury is at some of his best here, performing in a way that differs him even from performances in the 1980's, as well as significant vocal differences. Everything is perfect, and I have no complaints at all. If you have a chance to pick this memorable show up, it's definitely worth the money. Just pop it in, turn on your surround sound unit if you have one, and play the hell out of it on a magnificent plasma TV. Shows like this make me proud to be a Queen fan, and I think it will for the viewer as well.