Producer legend Roy Thomas Baker – perhaps best known for his work on Queen’s magnum opus Bohemian Rhapsody – has died at the age of 78. While no cause of death has been announced, a statement from his publicist has confirmed that Baker passed away on 12 April.
Baker’s work was pivotal throughout the 1970s and ‘80s, with Bohemian Rhapsody having gone down in history, and Rolling Stone ranking it among the best songs of all time and the Guinness Book of World Records naming it the most streamed song from the 20th century.
Fifty years on from Bohemian Rhapsody’s 1975 release, it continues to inspire modern artists and rouse huge crowd sing-alongs. Yet, back in 2005, Baker told the New York Times that he was shocked by the track’s legacy. “I thought it was going to be a hit,” he said. “But we didn’t know it was going to be quite that big. I didn’t realise it was still going to be talked about 30 years later.”
Baker also had an illustrious career elsewhere, working with the likes of Alice Cooper, David Bowie, The Cars, Guns N’ Roses, Ozzy Osbourne, the Smashing Pumpkins and more. He also went on to serve as an Elektra A&R executive, helping sign such names as Metallica, Simply Red and 10,000 Maniacs.
Born in Hampstead in 1946, Baker kickstarted his venture into the music industry at the age of 14. His first job was at Decca Records, where he worked as a second engineer. Baker assisted on tracks from The Rolling Stones to Dusty Springfield, building up a strong portfolio of hits. His work also spanned from T. Rex, to Free’s All Right Now in 1970, before eventually moving up to Trident Studios.
Working as the Soho studio’s in-house engineer, Baker would soon meet Queen – and history would be made. Following his work on the band’s 1973 debut, he went on to produce Queen’s first four records – including 1975’s A Night At The Opera, which featured the track that made him a legend.
Baker reflected on Bohemian Rhapsody in conversation with Sound On Sound in 1995. “We were going out to dinner one night and I met Freddie [Mercury] at his apartment in Kensington,” he said. “He sat down at his piano and said, ‘I’d like to play you a song that I’m working on at the moment.’”
“He played the first part… [then] he played a bit further through the song and then stopped suddenly, saying, ‘This is where the opera section comes in,’” he remembered. “We both just burst out laughing. I had worked with the D’Oyly Carte Opera Company at Decca where I learned a lot about vocals and the way vocals are stressed, so I was probably one of the few people in the whole world who knew exactly what he was talking about.”
“[Bohemian Rhapsody] was the first time that an opera section had been incorporated into a pop record, let alone a Number One. It was obviously very unusual and we originally planned to have just a couple of ‘Galileos’. But things often have a habit of evolving differently once you’re inside the studio. It did get longer and bigger.”
While Mercury clearly knew that Baker had a dynamic skillset, The Cars’ Ric Ocasek also praised him back in 2016. “He was an electronics whizz,” he told Magnet Magazine. “A sound guy with a classical background for mic-ing the room’s sound. He got harmony. And he took things in stride – a very upbeat, elegant man. Spontaneous, too.”
Queen’s Roger Taylor has also noted his respect of Baker: “I think he brought a certain amount of discipline, a lot of cynicism and a passion for fattening desserts. He liked his food, Roy. He was very disciplined and very strict in the beginning . . . he would always get it right. The take had to be right.” [via Variety]
The post Roy Thomas Baker, producer of Bohemian Rhapsody, dies at 78 appeared first on MusicTech.
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