

Queen and Lambert are presently touring together and are set to do three dates at London’s O2 Arena this week before returning to play a string of six shows from the 14 to the 21 of June.

The documentary also touches on run-up to The Freddie Mercury Tribute Concert at Wembley Stadium in 1992, which was watched by an estimated half a billion people worldwide. For Queen and Lambert’s most recent performance at the Queen’s Platinum Jubilee, the band performed a medley of some of their biggest hits including “We Will Rock You,” “Don’t Stop Me Now” and “We Are the Champions.” Read more: The Freddie Mercury tribute concert: A guide to the greatest gig of the ‘90s. On November 23, Mercury, who was at his home in London, England, issued a statement that he was HIV-positive. In 1991, Mercury was just 45 years old and was known to have been suffering from an unspecified illness. Lambert has been performing lead vocals for the band since 2011 when he replaced Paul Rodgers who had toured with the band between 20. Freddie Mercury, born Farookh Bulsara in 1946, was the frontman of Queen and one of the biggest rock stars in the world. Since Mercury’s death in 1991, Queen has released several previously unreleased tracks featuring the singer, including 2014’s “Queen Forever,” a compilation of such songs. “It’s a very passionate piece,” Taylor concurred. But it’s beautiful, it’s touching piece.” But in fact, we went in there again and our wonderful engineering team went, ‘okay, we can do this and this.’ It’s like kind of stitching bits together. We looked at it many times and thought, oh no, we can’t really rescue that. May added that the song was “kind of hiding in plain sight.
