Bohemian Rhapsody tops poll of best Queen song as plan to rename planet Mercury launched

It racked up a staggering 48 percent of the vote, beating sporting anthem We Are the Champions into second place with just 19 percent. The research, commissioned by Greatest Hits Radio, saw Queen’s feelgood classic Don’t Stop Me Now come in third, with We Will Rock You and I Want to Break Free rounding out the top five.

Bohemian Rhapsody topped the charts for nine weeks and sold more than a million copies by the end of January 1976.

It topped the charts again for another five weeks after Freddie Mercury’s death in 1991 to become the UK’s third best-selling single of all time.

Queen guitarist Brian May said: “I think Bohemian Rhapsody is something you can never get bored with.

“It has so many moods and atmospheres and changes of key and time and it’s a fascinating story, which I think Freddie was so wise not to talk about, because in everybody’s mind it’s something different and it relates to people’s lives.

“It relates to their darkest fears and their hopes and dreams of triumphing.

“It stirs up emotions and I think it always will. It will definitely out do all of us and God bless it.”

After also topping Greatest Hits Radio’s Top 500 songs of the 70s, 80s and 90s, Brian

May added: “I’m very touched, thank you thank you so much folks!

“Freddie would say the same thing. He’d probably smile a little wicked smile and say ‘of course darling’, but he’d appreciate it all the same.”

Greatest Hits Radio has launched a petition to have the planet Mercury renamed FREDDIE Mercury to honour the frontman ahead of World Space Week.

Greatest Hits Radio presenter Pat Sharp said: “Freddie Mercury has had an enormous impact on the UK, and indeed the entire world.

“Arguably more than the planet Mercury, when you think about it – what’s Mercury done for us lately?

“We want to honour Freddie’s incredible contributions to the world by making him a household name across the galaxy, not just earth.”

It comes after fans named A Night at the Opera – the album that contained Bohemian Rhapsody – as Queen’s finest.

But it was the years after that album’s release in 1975 – from 1976 until 1980 – that were defined as the best of the band’s original line-up of Mercury, May, Roger Taylor and John Deacon.

And one in four Britons picked the hilarious drag video for I Want to Break Free as Queen’s best music video.

Queen’s triumphant appearance at Live Aid in 1985 – featuring Freddie Mercury’s iconic white vest – was also picked as their top live performance.

That outfit was also deemed to be Freddie’s most memorable, narrowly beating his famous lemon yellow military-style jacket.

But just under a tenth also wish the band had released Brighton Rock as a single, rather than an album track on their 1984 LP Sheer Heart Attack.

The survey, carried out via OnePoll, also asked Britons to pick their favourite individual Queen lyric, with the motivational “’We are the champions my friends, and we’ll keep on fighting until the end”, coming top.

Pat Sharp added: “Queen’s impact on music and culture is as big today as during their 1970s heyday.

“It was only the year before last that the Bohemian Rhapsody movie came out, inspiring a whole new generation of fans.

“We hope to get lots of support for our plan to rename the planet Mercury – there’s nobody more deserving than Freddie.”

 

THE TOP 20 QUEEN SONGS EVER

 

1. Bohemian Rhapsody

2. We Are the Champions

3. Don’t Stop Me Now

4. We Will Rock You

5. I Want to Break Free

6. Somebody to Love

7. Killer Queen

8. Radio Ga Ga

9. Under Pressure

10. The Show Must Go On

11. Another One Bites the Dust

12. Crazy Little Thing Called Love

13. It’s a Kind of Magic

14. You’re My Best Friend

15. Love of My Life

16. Fat Bottomed Girls

17. I Want it All

18. One Vision

19. The Miracle

20. Heaven for Everyone

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