(hennemusic) Queen play vocal games with fans on the latest episode of the weekly series The Greatest Live. Freddie Mercury was the master of crowd interaction - and the bigger the audience, the better. In a clip from Queen's famous 1982 show at the U.K. Milton Keynes Bowl, the singer challenges the vast crowd to match his vocal acrobatics.
Of all the qualities that routinely see Mercury referenced among the greatest frontmen of all time, his ability to connect with a crowd was paramount. As revisited in recent episodes of The Greatest Live series, the band intentionally built a call-and-response element into many of their best-known tracks....but that wasn't enough for Freddie, who often bantered with the fans between songs - and even challenged entire stadiums to keep up with his a capella vocal ad-libs.
"That's part of my role - I have to win the audience over, otherwise it's not a successful gig," the singer once explained. "It's my job to make sure I win them over and make them feel that they've had a good time. I'm very frivolous and I like to enjoy myself - and what better way to do it than onstage in front of 300,000 people?"
The most obvious example of Freddie's vocal games might be the joyous 'ay-oh!' section of Queen's show-stealing performance at 1985's Live Aid. But for Queen connoisseurs, this week's episode focuses on a lesser-known but equally charming moment from a little earlier in the decade, as the frontman interrupts the band's summer '82 show at the U.K. Milton Keynes Bowl to put the capacity crowd through their paces.
Stream the latest episode of Queen's "The Greatest Live" series here.
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