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| Jazz | ||
|---|---|---|
| LP by Queen | ||
| Released | November 14, 1978 | |
| Recorded | July 1978-October 1978 | |
| Genre | Classic Rock | |
| Length | 54 min 12 sec | |
| Record label | Hollywood Records | |
| Producer | Queen and Roy Thomas Baker | |
| Professional reviews | ||
| Allmusic.com | 4 of 5 stars | |
| Rolling Stone | 2 of 5 stars | |
| Queen Chronology | ||
| News of the World (1977) | Jazz (1978) | Live Killers (1979) |
Jazz is a 1978 album by British rock band Queen. It was was the band's seventh studio album, and consisted of a mix of very different styles of music, from disco-funk ("Fun It") to vaudeville ("Dreamer's Ball") to good old rock and roll ("Dead On Time"). Curiously, it contains nothing recognizable as jazz, except perhaps the music-hall swing of "Dreamer's Ball." The album's eclecticism was alternately praised and criticised; it was at the time victim to a viciously scathing Rolling Stone review but nevertheless made it to 6th on the American Billboard Pop Albums chart.
The band had intended to sell the album with a poster depicting the all-female nude bicycle race staged to promote "Fat Bottomed Girls," but in the USA it was only available through mail-order so as not to upset retailers.
Amongst other attributions in the liner notes, in reference to the crash of thunder heard at the end of the song "Dead On Time," one may find the line "Thunderbolt courtesy of God."
(* singles - see below)
Four singles were released from the album: