John Deacon |
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Queen was comprised of some quite colorful characters, but the group's quiet and reserved bassist, John Deacon was an exception. Although he would often occupy the background, Deacon proved to be as talented as the others when it came to Deacon had long wanted to write a song that was in the style of funk/disco, and he more than delivered with "Another One Bites the Dust," an infectious, bass-propelled ditty that went on to become one of the year's biggest crossover hits. Deacon continued to pen songs for Queen ("Need Your Loving Tonight," the UK hit "I Want to Break Free," "Friends will be Friends," etc.), and also began playing with others. A few of these extracurricular recording sessions resulted in a one-off single, "Picking Up Sounds," recorded by the obscure supergroup Man Friday and Jive Junior (which featured Scott Gorham, Simon Kirke, Martin Chambers, and Mick Ralphs), a pair of Elton John albums (1985's Ice on Fire and 1986's Leather Jackets), plus releases by Anita Dobson, Cozy Powell, and solo albums by all three of his fellow Queen bandmates. In 1986, Deacon was supposedly ready to launch his own side project, the Immortals, but aside from an obscure single, "No Turning Back," nothing was ever heard from the band again. Following Queen leader Freddie Mercury's death in 1991, Deacon kept a low profile (perfectly content on leading the 'family life'), although he did reappear with his fellow surviving bandmates at a all-star concert tribute to Mercury in 1992. Deacon also supplied bass to a few unfinished tracks that Mercury left behind before his passing, which were finished off and issued under the title of Made in Heaven in 1995. Deacon has subsequently retired from the music business entirely, failing to even show up with his Queen bandmates at the 2001 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction ceremony. ~ Greg Prato, All Music Guide
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