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BRIAN MAY
Date
of birth: July 19, 1947
Full
name: Brian Harold May
Place
of birth: Feltham, England
Height:
6ft 1
Weight: 10 ½ stone
Colour
of hair: dark brown
Colour
of eyes: hazel
Education: A BSc in Physics from London University, taught at a
Comprehensive school, in
October 2007 he completed his PhD thesis in astrophysics, graduated in May
2008
Influences: Jimi Hendrix, Eric Clapton,
Jeff Beck, Davy O’List, Lonnie
Donegan, Johnny Duncan, Tommy Steel, Everly Brothers, Buddy Holly
Favourite
Colour: black
Favourite
Albums: Abbey Road (Beatles)
and Band of Gypsies (Hendrix)
Favourite
Books: „Steppenwolf“ (Hermann Hesse) & „Glass
Band Game“ (Hesse)
Favourite
Writers: Hesse
& C.S. Lewis
Favourite
Films: „Women In Love“,
„Wizard of Oz“
Favourite
Actor: James Mason
Favourite
Actress: Natalie Wood
Favourite
Country: England
Favourite
Food: Vegetarian and Prawn
cocktails
Favourite
drink: Grapefruit juice
Other
occupation: Inventing
things
Married:
Chrissy Mullen (from 1974 to 1988), Anita Dobson
Children: James (Jimmy) (1978), Louisa (1981), and Emily Ruth
(1987) from his first marriage to Chrissy Mullen
Important
QUEEN songs: We Will Rock
You, Who Wants To Live Forever, Tie Your Mother Down,
Prophet’s Song, Now I’m Here, Save Me, Fat Bottomed Girls, Too Much Love Will
Kill You
à Links of interest:
http://www.thebiographychannel.co.uk/biographies/brian-may.html
Interviews:
www.queencuttings.com -> Solo Members Section
à Quote: "I live in my head too much."
à Biography from www.allmusic.com by Greg Porta:
Few rock guitarists possess a playing style as
instantly recognizable as Queen's Brian May. With his orchestrated guitar
armies (multi-tracked guitar lines overdubbed on top of each other) and
instantly memorable, well-constructed melodic leads, May is in a class all by
himself. Born in Hampton, Middlesex, in July 1947, May showed an interest in
music at a very early age -- learning to play the ukulele and piano before
receiving his first guitar as a present on his seventh birthday. Shortly
thereafter, May and his father began to build a custom guitar from scratch.
Completed two years later, the one-of-a-kind instrument would become known as
the Red Special, a guitar that would later become May's sonic and visual
trademark throughout his career.
It wasn't long until May began to pick up a thing
or two from such popular rock guitarists as the Shadows' Hank Marvin, Elvis
Presley's sideman Scotty Moore, and Buddy Holly. As a student at secondary
school, May formed his first group, the instrumental band 1984, playing around
London and even opening a 1967 show at the Olympia Theatre for such soon-to-be
big names as Jimi Hendrix, Traffic, Pink Floyd, and
Tyrannosaurus Rex (later T. Rex). After beginning studies at Imperial College
(in the physics/infrared astronomy field) and growing weary of their musical
direction, May left
During his college career, May hooked up with
drummer Roger Taylor (via an ad placed on a college noteboard)
and a fellow ex-1984 member, bassist/vocalist Tim Staffell,
forming the rock trio Smile. Shortly after graduating from college with an honors degree in physics and math, May focused full-time on
music when Smile signed to Mercury Records. Despite great promise, Smile only
managed to issue one single (titled "Earth") and a few unreleased
tracks before Staffell left the group. But it was a
friend of Staffell's who would offer his services as
the group's new singer -- Freddie Mercury. With the lineup
change came a new name, Queen, and a new musical direction -- heavy rock mixed
with grand ballads and a flamboyantly glam look.
After going through numerous bassists, Queen found
a permanent member in John Deacon -- resulting in a recording contract with
EMI/Elektra and a self-titled debut following in 1973. With each successive
release (1974's Queen II and Sheer Heart Attack), Queen's musical direction and
stageshow grew stronger and more popular, until they
were one of the world's biggest acts by the mid- to late '70s, due to such
mega-hit albums as Night at the Opera, A Day at the Races, News of the World,
and Jazz. Unlike other groups where a single member supplied all the songwriting, all four of Queen's members had their own songwriting credits equally, with May writing some of the
group's most identifiable hits -- "We Will Rock You," "Fat
Bottomed Girls," "Now I'm Here," and "Tie Your Mother
Down," among others.
During a short break in 1983, May issued his first
solo release, the four-track EP Star Fleet Project (which featured an all-star
cast backing him -- Eddie Van Halen, REO Speedwagon drummer Alan Gratzer,
and session bassist Phil Chen), and co-produced the debut recording from the
obscure heavy metal outfit Heavy Pettin, titled Lettin Loose. Around the same time, an exact duplicate of
May's Red Special guitar was issued to the public via the Guild guitar company,
and May recorded a video guitar lesson as part of the Star Licks series.
Queen would continue issuing hit albums and
sold-out tours throughout the late '80s (as they experimented with a wide range
of musical styles), until they became solely a "studio band" during
their latter years, 1989's The Miracle and 1991's Innuendo (the reason for this
was kept under wraps at the time, but it later became known that it was due to
health reasons -- Mercury was diagnosed with AIDS). With Mercury's death in
1991, Queen went their separate ways, with May focusing on a solo career and
other projects (including hosting and playing at a 1991 Guitar Legends concert
alongside Steve Vai and Joe Satriani).
May's first full-length solo album was preceded by
the single "Driven by You," which reached the Top Ten in England and
was featured in a Ford car commercial -- winning an Ivor
Novello Award for Best Theme From
a TV/Radio Commercial. 1993 finally saw the release of Back to the Light, an
album that was a sizeable hit in Europe, and led to May's first solo tour
(which included members Cozy Powell on drums, Neil
Murray on bass, longtime Queen sideman
Spike Edney on keyboards, Jamie Moses on guitar, plus
backing vocalists Shelley Preston and Cathy Porter). A year later, a live
document of the tour, Live at the Brixton Academy, was issued, mixing new solo
material with Queen classics. It wasn't until 1998
that May would issue a proper studio follow-up, Another World.
In addition to rock music, May has retained his
interest in astronomy and is working on a book about T.R. Williams, a famous
stereo photographer of the 1850s. May has also tried his hand at penning
original music for movies (the 1996 version of The Adventures of Pinnochio) and a radio series (a BBC radio special on the
Amazing Spiderman), as well as recording the soundtrack for the Red and Gold
Theatre Company's production of Macbeth, which was staged at London's Riverside
Theatre in the late '90s.
May's contribution to rock guitar remains great as
his playing has proven to be a great influence on other renowned rock
guitarists past and present, including Billy Corgan
(Smashing Pumpkins), Ty Tabor (King's X), Nuno
Bettencourt (Extreme), and Phil Collen (Def Leppard), to name but a few.