Long Away | |
Cover: | Long Away audio cover.jpg |
Type: | single |
Artist: | Queen |
Album: | A Day at the Races |
B-Side: | "You and I" |
Released: | 7 June 1977 |
Recorded: | 1976 |
Genre: | Rock |
Length: | 3:33 |
Label: | Elektra |
Producer: | Queen |
Prev Title: | Good Old-Fashioned Lover Boy |
Prev Year: | 1977 |
Next Title: | We Are the Champions" / "We Will Rock You |
Next Year: | 1977 |
"Long Away" is a song by the British rock band Queen; it is the third track on their 1976 album A Day at the Races. Brian May wrote the song and sings the lead vocals. It was released as the third single from the album in North America and New Zealand only.
It is one of the few songs where May uses a guitar other than his Red Special. For the rhythm guitar parts, he used an electric Burns twelve string guitar (although he used the Red Special for the second guitar solo in the middle section of the track). Originally, May wanted to use a Rickenbacker guitar (as he admired John Lennon), but he didn't get along well with the Rickenbacker's thin neck.
Roger Taylor sings the highest parts of the song.
The song has a sad tone, describing that "for every star in heaven / there's a sad soul here today," and an overall sense of melancholic nostalgia lies over the song. It is similar in feel to the song '39 from A Night at the Opera, although without the folk influence.
The song was never performed live with Mercury, though it was rehearsed before the start of the A Day at the Races Tour in January 1977.[1]
The Washington Post described it as "an affectionate recreation of the mid-'60s Beatles/Byrds sound," and one of the best songs on the album.[2] Wesley Strick of Circus magazine, in a mixed review of the album, named the album's best song and also noted the influence of the Beatles and the Byrds. He observed that Long Away was "haunting" and "never smart-ass or strickly for laughs, "Long Away" - unlike most of Races - feels real."[3] Cash Box said that "this gentle tune is built from endless layers of strummed guitars, showcasing the versatile Freddie Mercury's sweetest voice and the group's distinctive high register harmonies."[4]
The song also appears on two Queen compilation albums: Deep Cuts, Volume 1 (1973–1976)[5] [6] (2011) and Queen Forever[7] [8] [9] [10] (2014).
Queen