Side one "Tie Your Mother Down" "Tie Your Mother Down" was written by
Brian May in
Tenerife in early 1968, two years before the formation of Queen. At the time, he was working on his PhD in
Astronomy. He wrote the song on
Spanish guitar and thought he'd change the title and chorus later on, but when he brought it to the band for inclusion on this album,
Freddie Mercury liked the original and it was kept the way it was written. After its release in 1976, the song was played by Queen on every subsequent tour.
"You Take My Breath Away" "You Take My Breath Away" was written by Mercury and based on the
harmonic minor scale. He performed it by himself at the
summer gigs in 1976 before recording it, and all of the vocals in the version of the song on the album were performed by him, as was the piano part. Unusual for Queen, Mercury's lead vocals were triple-tracked to achieve "a solo vocal that could hold its own against the chorus." There is a vocal interlude between this song and the next in which a wash of vocals consisting of a
loop of a multi-tracked Mercury repeating the words "take my breath" steadily increases in volume until it resolves into the
echoed phrase "take my breath away" and fades out.
"Long Away" "Long Away" was composed and sung by May. He used a Burns Double Six
12-string electric guitar for the rhythm parts, instead of his
Red Special; he had wanted to use a
Rickenbacker because he admired
John Lennon, but did not get along well with the thin neck of the instrument. The song was released as a single in the US, Canada, and New Zealand, but failed to chart anywhere.
"The Millionaire Waltz" "The Millionaire Waltz" was written by Mercury about
John Reid (Queen and
Elton John's manager at the time). The song was the biggest
hit single from the album. It went to number two on the UK charts (kept from the number one spot by "
Under the Moon of Love" by
Showaddywaddy) and number 13 on the US singles chart.
"White Man" "White Man" was written by May about the suffering of Native Americans at the hands of European immigrants during the
colonial period, taking the viewpoint of native peoples. It is one of Queen's heaviest works, thematically and musically.
"Good Old-Fashioned Lover Boy" "Good Old-Fashioned Lover Boy" was written by Mercury. It starts with a piano and vocal introduction by Mercury, and the bass and drums join in at the start of the chorus. Part of the bridge of the song is sung by engineer
Mike Stone (the lines: "Hey boy where'd you get it from? Hey boy where did you go?"). The recording is enhanced by multi-tracked vocals, as well as May's guitar choirs. The song was performed live on
Top of the Pops in June 1977, with Taylor singing Stone's part. Most of the track was a concert staple on the band's
A Day at the Races Tour and
News of the World Tour.
"Drowse" "Drowse" is the only song on the album written by Roger Taylor, who, in addition to playing the drums, did all of the vocals and played rhythm guitar; May played the
slide guitar. Like "
I'm In Love With My Car", Taylor's song on the previous album, "Drowse" is in . The song has never been performed live, but it was rehearsed by
Queen + Adam Lambert before their
Rock Big Ben Live concert. It made an appearance on both the standard and deluxe editions of
Queen Forever.
"Teo Torriatte (Let Us Cling Together)" "Teo Torriatte (Let Us Cling Together)" was May's tribute to the band's
Japanese fans, and was performed live in
Tokyo during the
Jazz Tour in 1979, and again when the band visited Japan during
The Game and
Hot Space tours in 1981 and 1982, respectively. It has two choruses sung in
Japanese, making it one of only three Queen songs in which an entire verse or chorus is sung in a language other than English (the others being "
Mustapha", from
Jazz and "
Las Palabras de Amor" from
Hot Space). The song features a piano, a plastic piano, and a harmonium, all of which are played by May. The harmonium melody that ends the song is a longer reprise of the second part of the introduction to "Tie Your Mother Down", the first track on the album. May described it as "a never-ending staircase", otherwise commonly known, especially in music, as a
Shepard tone. ==Singles==