Product Description
Rare Actual 1978 Japanese First Pressing! Embossed Heavy Grade Gatefold Cover Includes Queen Photo Insert. Features Hits “Don’t Stop Me Now”, “Fat Bottomed Girls”, “Bicycle Race” & More Great Queen songs.
Condition – Vinyl: NEAR MINT!
Condition – Cover: NEAR MINT!
Japanese vinyl pressings are highly sought after by audiophiles and collectors, due to their premium sound quality and beautifully presented packaging. The sonic quality of Japanese records is regarded as the best in the world. No wonder all the original Mobile Fidelity Sound Lab records were pressed in Japan! The covers are printed on better quality heavy stock paper too. Nice condition original Japanese pressings are becoming scarcer ~ and therefore more collectable and valuable every year.
Side 1:
Mustapha
Fat Bottomed Girls
Jealousy
Bicycle Race
If You Can’t Beat Them
Let Me Entertain You
Side 2:
Dead On Time
In Only Seven Days
Dreamers Ball
Fun It
Leaving Home Ain’t Easy
Don’t Stop Me Now
More Of That Jazz
AMG –
Jazz showcases a band that does thrive upon its power, thrilling upon the hold that it has on its audience. Famously tagged as "fascist" in a Rolling Stone review printed at the time of its 1978 release, Jazz does indeed showcase a band that does thrive upon its power, thrilling upon the hold that it has on its audience. That confidence, that self-intoxication, was hinted at on News of the World but it takes full flower here, and that assurance acts as a cohesive device, turning this into one of Queen's sleekest albums. Like its patchwork predecessor, Jazz also dabbles in a bunch of different sounds -- that's a perennial problem with Queen, where the four songwriters were often pulling in different directions -- but it sounds bigger, heavier than News, thanks to the mountains of guitars Brian May has layered all over this record. If May has indulged himself, Freddie Mercury runs riot all over this album, infusing it with an absurdity that's hard to resist. This goofiness is apparent from the galloping overture "Mustapha," and things only get a lot sillier from that point out, as the group sings the praises of "Fat Bottomed Girls" and "Bicycle Races," as May and Mercury have an unspoken competition on who can overdub the most onto a particular track while Roger Taylor steers them toward their first disco song in the gloriously dumb "Fun It." But since over-the-top campiness has always been an attribute in Queen, this kind of grand-scale exaggeration gives Jazz a sense of ridiculousness that makes it more fun than many of their other albums.