1986 queen tour

In June the mighty Queen machine rolled into action for the very last time with Freddie, and the Magic tour of Europe commenced. Using the biggest stage and lighting rig ever assembled, the band played mostly stadiums and some large arenas across Europe and the UK.

Following an unusually long period of rehearsal at Wembley in London during May and June, Queen travel to Stockholm for the first Magic Tour shows.

The Magic Tour incorporates the UK and nine European countries only. It is never taken to America, Japan or Canada, as were most other tours. It consists of twenty-six performances at twenty separate locations, played over an eight week period. It includes Queen’s first and only show in Budapest, Hungary, and also their only concert at the beautiful Knebworth Park site, in Hertfordshire.

Queen are again Britain’s most popular band and the UK shows break all attendance records like never before. The queue for tickets at Newcastle (the first show in England) was longer than that seen in 1974, when Newcastle United reached the FA Cup Final. All 38,000 tickets were sold within an hour. The proceeds from this show are donated by the band and promoter Harvey Goldsmith to the international Save The Children Fund.

At the two Wembley Stadium shows, the show itself incorporated the largest lighting rig ever assembled for a live show, weighing over nine and a half tons. The stage was the largest ever erected there and measured 160 ft wide and over 52 ft high from ground level to the top of the lights. It was capable of filling one entire end of Wembley and was so heavy that supports had to be bored into the concrete foundations of the stadium.

The second show is filmed by Tyne Tees Television, and later broadcast as their first ever radio / television simulcast, transmitted to all 48 stations in the Independent Radio Network. It is also released in edited form on home video and later a complete version is issued on DVD.

The Manchester show on July 16th sold out so quickly that it was reported that more than double the amount of tickets could have been sold for the 35,000 seat football venue, thus making Queen’s concert the fastest selling show in the history of the city.

They made history on July 27th when they played at the Nepstadion in Hungary. It was the first time that a major rock band had played a stadium date in the Eastern Bloc, and was filmed by the Hungarian Film State company Mafilm Dialog. The filming necessitates using nearly every available 35mm television camera in the country, seventeen in all. This show too would be released on home video and titled Live In Budapest.

Queen's final show of the tour took place at Knebworth Park on August 9th, with the 15th century mansion house being a fitting location for what would sadly prove to be Queen’s very last concert with Freddie. Before an audience variously estimated at between 160,000 and 200,000, Queen certainly went out in style.

Text taken from the forthcoming revised and updated edition of Queen Live: A Concert Documentary .

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1986 queen tour

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  • July 11, 1986 Setlist

Queen Setlist at Wembley Stadium, London, England

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  • One Vision Play Video
  • Tie Your Mother Down Play Video
  • In the Lap of the Gods... Revisited / Seven Seas of Rhye / Liar / Tear It Up Play Video
  • A Kind of Magic Play Video
  • Ay‐Oh Play Video
  • Under Pressure Play Video
  • Another One Bites the Dust Play Video
  • Who Wants to Live Forever Play Video
  • I Want to Break Free Play Video
  • Impromptu Play Video
  • Guitar Solo Play Video
  • Now I'm Here Play Video
  • Love of My Life Play Video
  • Is This the World We Created...? Play Video
  • (You're So Square) Baby I Don't Care ( Elvis Presley  cover) Play Video
  • Hello Mary Lou ( Gene Pitney  cover) Play Video
  • Tutti Frutti ( Little Richard  cover) Play Video
  • Bohemian Rhapsody Play Video
  • Hammer to Fall Play Video
  • Crazy Little Thing Called Love Play Video
  • Radio Ga Ga Play Video
  • We Will Rock You Play Video
  • Friends Will Be Friends Play Video
  • We Are the Champions Play Video
  • Song played from tape God Save the Queen ( [traditional]  song) Play Video

Note: Show was released in September 2011 for Freddie Mercury's 65th birthday as well as for the 25th anniversary of the show.

Edits and Comments

45 activities (last edit by unofficial , 8 Mar 2024, 16:28 Etc/UTC )

Songs on Albums

  • A Kind of Magic
  • Friends Will Be Friends
  • Who Wants to Live Forever
  • Hammer to Fall
  • I Want to Break Free
  • Is This the World We Created...?
  • Radio Ga Ga
  • (You're So Square) Baby I Don't Care by Elvis Presley
  • Hello Mary Lou by Gene Pitney
  • Tutti Frutti by Little Richard
  • Bohemian Rhapsody
  • Love of My Life
  • We Are the Champions
  • We Will Rock You
  • Another One Bites the Dust
  • Crazy Little Thing Called Love
  • Tie Your Mother Down
  • Under Pressure
  • In the Lap of the Gods... Revisited / Seven Seas of Rhye / Liar / Tear It Up
  • Now I'm Here
  • Guitar Solo

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[url=https://www.setlist.fm/setlist/queen/1986/wembley-stadium-london-england-53d4574d.html][img]https://www.setlist.fm/widgets/setlist-image-v1?id=53d4574d[/img][/url] [url=https://www.setlist.fm/edit?setlist=53d4574d&amp;step=song]Edit this setlist[/url] | [url=https://www.setlist.fm/setlists/queen-43d6e37f.html]More Queen setlists[/url]

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On this landmark tour, the band undertook 26 performances at twenty separate locations in the UK and nine European countries over an eight-week period.

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Queen’s latest ‘The Greatest’ episode celebrates their now legendary 1986 stadium tour of Europe – ‘The Magic Tour.’ You can watch the new episode in full below.

Queen 1986 : The Magic Tour, Part 1 (Episode 33)

Rejuvenated by their history making Live Aid performance a year earlier, and the success of their A Kind Of Magic album, June 1986 saw Queen return to touring for what would be the biggest series of concerts of Queen’s career, and although the band had played vast venues before, there was a sense that this tour would take it to another level…

‘Tomorrow Never Knows’: The Beatles’ Sonic Gateway

“We’re going to play the biggest stage ever built at Wembley with the greatest light show ever seen,” Roger Taylor told journalists ahead of the tour.

On ‘The Magic Tour’, the band would undertake 26 performances at twenty separate locations in the UK and nine European countries over an eight-week period including their first and only show in Budapest, Hungary.

Such was the vast scale and scope of the under-taking, the bridge-like stage structure required the services of a company normally involved in motorway and bridge construction. The trucks transporting the equipment would cover over 165,000 miles, the equivalent of nearly seven times around the world.

Talking here in the preparation stage for ‘The Magic Tour’, the band speak of the commitment they were taking on, with only Freddie expressing concerns about the weight such a massive tour would levy, but non-the-less expressing his enthusiasm for performing for large audiences.

Roger Taylor: “The thing we are all looking forward to most at the moment is this European tour.”

John Deacon: “And that’s quite a commitment from us in a way, because Freddie’s sometimes a little reluctant to go on the road these days.”

Freddie Mercury: “It’s been a while since we actually did a tour. It’s very, very exhausting for me to do what I have to do. The stages are getting bigger and everything, and you know I just like to feel that I’m perfectly fit to do these shows, and not just say ‘yes I’ll do it.”

John Deacon: “We’re starting on it now really, ideas for the staging, the lighting and that sort of thing.”

[Interviewer] “This particular tour you’re doing, you’re taking a hundred and sixty foot stage, which is the biggest ever constructed for a rock act?”

Roger Taylor: “Yes, it’s an absolutely massive stage. It’s really been designed to cope with the places that we’re playing in. To get the optimum out of those places.”

Brian May: “We usually go in someplace like a film studio which has this big, open…like an aircraft hangar I suppose…and just set everything up and put everything through its paces.”

Brian May: “Because it’s not enough for us to be rehearsed, we make sure every single lamp, every wire, is set up so everything’s going to be given a run through, so all the bugs can be ironed out before we get on tour. It’s like a full dress rehearsal.”

John Deacon: “We’ve been playing for so many years now, we do feel very relaxed playing in quite big gigs as well really.”

Roger Taylor: “Strangely enough, when you’re used to large audiences, 100,000 is almost less terrifying in some ways, than 5000. “It’s a strange thing with our band, the bigger the audience the better it seems to work. The audience contact seems to be better with the larger audiences.”

Brian May: “Once you’re on tour, I like to get on and do it. I don’t like to be hanging around on tour. I like to get in as much as you can because you can build up this great rhythm, and you get into the mood and the feel of playing, you play better each night, I think. If you see us at the end of the tour, we are a lot different from what we are at the beginning of the tour, because we’re in that rhythm. I suppose it’s almost like being an athlete, you just work on yourself and you have nothing else to think about, except doing your bit for that two hours as well as you can.”

Freddie Mercury: “There was a trend a few years ago, with the punk movement and whatever, where they said, ‘Oh, we want to play to the small audiences because we’re being intimate, and all that.’ Load of rubbish. I mean everybody who wants to be a star wants to play to the biggest audiences.”

As will be seen in part 2 of ‘The Magic Tour’, over the final few weeks of the tour, Queen would perform three of their biggest and most iconic gigs – demonstrating why they are regarded as the greatest live act.

Watch every episode of ‘The Greatest’ on Queen’s official YouTube channel .

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Remembering Freddie Mercury's incredible final performance with Queen - video

20 January 2022, 13:50 | Updated: 8 February 2022, 17:33

Queen's final live show with Freddie Mercury at Knebworth in 1986

By Giorgina Ramazzotti

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Freddie Mercury's iconic last concert with Queen saw the star perform classics including Radio Ga Ga and Bohemian Rhapsody at Knebworth Park in the summer of 1986.

Performing in front of an crowd of 120,000, the August 9 concert was the final date of the band's highly successful Magic Tour and the last time the band would ever play with live with Freddie Mercury .

The band's line-up featured all four original members of Queen - Brian May, John Deacon, Freddie Mercury and Roger Taylor - six years before Freddie's untimely death from AIDS and eleven years before John Deacon would quit the band .

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1986 queen tour

Queen - Live at Knebworth Park, August 9, 1986 (Full, Uncut Concert) [Best Source Merge]

Freddie Mercury  arrives at the Knebworth Festival by helicopter, 9th August 1986

As none of Queen knew it would be their last time performing together, the Knebworth Park concert would become one of the band's most famous concerts - with Freddie Mercury's military yellow jacket becoming the most iconic lasting image of the singer's career.

The video begins with the run-up to the big concert, showing the staff preparing the grounds and footage of the audience as they begin to stream into the venue.

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Filmed on a hot August day, the footage shows incredible aerial shots of Queen 's helicopter taking off from Battersea helipad, circling the Thames and flying over Battersea Power Station as the band made their way way 30 miles north of London to the Hertfordshire venue.

The August 9, 1986 concert was the final date of the band's highly successful Magic Tour

Queen Live At Knebworth Park - Under Pressure

Shown landing and exiting the helicopter - creating what is now a famous shot of Freddie in his Hawaiian shirt and aviator sunglasses - the band make their way to the backstage area as roadies and other members of staff excitedly set up around them.

Queen 's keyboard player Spike Edney recently told Rolling Stone that the helicopter journey was such a highlight for the band that is caused them to miss the backstage after party.

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"The end of tour party was a huge fairground filled with topless models," he recalls, yet: "[Queen] was so pleased and loved the helicopter ride in so much, that as soon as the gig was over, they took the helicopter ride out."

Freddie Mercury performing live on stage at Knebworth on August 9, 1991

The 1986 video then shows incredible footage of Freddie backstage in his dressing room asking someone off camera how long until showtime ("Ten minutes," comes the reply) before the star launches into an acapella performance.

The singer's high energy is palpable as he sings a range of scales and performs voice exercises, showing off his impressive range of vocals before Roger Taylor enters the shot and joins Freddie in an impromptu duet.

Brian May and Freddie Mercury performing live on stage at Knebworth Park

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The shot then changes to Freddie on stage in front of the 120,000 strong audience and goes on to show the star performing a variety of hits in front of the huge crowd.

The Knebworth Park concert had a setlist of the band's greatest hits including 'One Vision', 'Radio Ga Ga', 'Crazy Little Thing Called Love', 'We Will Rock You', 'I Want To Break Free', various guitar solos and a rousing final rendition of 'God Save The Queen'.

1986 queen tour

Queen and Their Last Show at Knebworth 1986 (Compilation)

Freddie Mercury holding a union jack flag at the end of the August 9 concert

While Queen would continue to record in private right up to Freddie's death , the band's Knebworth Park performance was their last with their star singer at the helm, but not their last public appearance.

Roger Taylor , John Deacon and Brian May joined a fragile Freddie Mercury on stage at the 1990 Brits Awards for what would be the star's last public outing before his death on November 24, 1991.

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"Can you believe that at Freddie Mercury's last concert, no one actually pressed record?": The story of the great showman's last stand

On August 9th 1986, Freddie Mercury played with Queen for 120,000 fans at Knebworth Park. No one knew it would be his final show with the band

Freddie Mercury onstage at Knebworth: August 9, 1986

By the summer of 1986, it seemed there was no end to Queen ’s omnipotence. Rallied by their show-stealing set at the previous year’s Live Aid , the band now saw promoter Harvey Goldsmith swamped with bookings for their twin shows at Wembley Stadium. 

A further two 35,000-capacity dates in Newcastle and Manchester were added as a release valve, to no avail. “They literally sold out in two hours flat,” noted Goldsmith at the time. “So we’ve added one huge show at the end of the Magic Tour at Knebworth Park. We have a capacity there of 120,000 – and on the first day of tickets going onsale, we sold 30,000 tickets. They seem to have an endless market.”  

But if you squinted a little harder, moved quietly amongst the band’s inner circle, the first hints of Queen’s demise were already tainting this apparent purple patch. Though he would not officially learn of his AIDS diagnosis until the following year, an aside from Freddie Mercury in Budapest, just two weeks before Knebworth, was pure gallows humour, the singer telling a reporter that he would return to play the city’s Népstadion “if I’m still alive”. 

Then there was the throwaway remark, overheard by Brian May in Spain and quickly discounted: “John and Freddie were having a minor disagreement. And Freddie said, ‘Well, I won’t always be here to do this…’”

Whether Mercury sensed the gathering storm or merely wished to avoid the embarrassment of treading the boards as a middle-aged rock star – “I know there’ll be a time when I can’t run around onstage because it’ll be ridiculous” – going out with a whimper wasn’t Queen’s style. Capping a Magic Tour that in total grossed £11 million, played to 400,000 fans and, in Roger Taylor ’s words, “made Ben Hur look like The Muppets”, Knebworth was grandiose in every sense. 

The crowd at Knebworth

Over 120,000 punters flooded the gardens of the Hertfordshire country house. A battalion of amps, eight miles of cabling and a twenty-foot video screen kept an army of techs and roadies busy. With suitable pomp and pageantry, the band themselves arrived in the gaudy ‘Magic Helicopter’, personalised with the art from that year’s A Kind Of Magic album.

That night’s set was a masterclass, roaring to life with the post-Live Aid single One Vision , mining every corner of the catalogue and sweeping up hits from Under Pressure and Another One Bites The Dust to Bohemian Rhapsody and Crazy Little Thing Called Love . But maddeningly, given the significance it would later take on, the show was never captured for posterity.

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“Can you believe that on Freddie Mercury’s last concert, the great showman, no one actually pressed record?” gaped Knebworth House’s current occupant, Henry Lytton-Cobbold, who watched the concert as a twenty-something. “There’s a Dutch bootleg of somebody filming a screen at the back of the audience for the whole show, so there’s a record of it, but no proper film.”

There were further frustrations afoot, the normally mild-mannered Deacon smashing his bass into his amp after Radio Ga Ga . “He wasn’t pissed off at his gear, he wasn’t pissed off at me, I don’t know what it was,” recalled roadie Peter Hince . “John acted strangely on that tour; he was doing stuff that was out of character.”

Freddie Mercury arrives at Knebworth

While there was a familiar flourish to the encore of God Save The Queen – Mercury resplendent in crown and gown, bidding the crowd “goodnight and sweet dreams” – the band came offstage to find hairline cracks in their empire. The triumph of the night was soured by black news, the band learning that a 21-year-old fan had been fatally stabbed in the melee, with medics unable to reach him.

As for Mercury, the singer barely stopped to enjoy the backstage bacchanals before flying home to London. “Did we know it would be the last time?” May pondered in Guitar World . “No. Freddie said something like, ‘Oh, I can’t fucking do this anymore, my whole body’s wracked with pain!’ But he normally said things like that at the end of a tour, so I don’t think we took it seriously, really.”

But soon, it was hard to ignore the mounting evidence that Queen – as a live entity, at least – was running out of time. Returning from a holiday in Japan, Mercury was confronted by a tabloid feeding frenzy, The News Of The World reporting a secret AIDS test in Harley Street, while The Sun went with the screamer headline: ‘Do I Look Like I’m Dying Of AIDS? fumes Freddie’. The article went on to quote the singer as saying he was “perfectly fit and healthy”.

But in the words of his flamboyant 1987 solo hit, rock’s best frontman was also a great pretender. He was five years from death – and had sung with Queen for the final time.    

Henry Yates

Henry Yates has been a freelance journalist since 2002 and written about music for titles including The Guardian, The Telegraph, NME, Classic Rock, Guitarist, Total Guitar and Metal Hammer . He is the author of Walter Trout's official biography, Rescued From Reality , a music pundit on Times Radio and BBC TV, and an interviewer who has spoken to Brian May, Jimmy Page, Ozzy Osbourne, Ronnie Wood, Dave Grohl, Marilyn Manson, Kiefer Sutherland and many more. 

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QUEEN - Live In Budapest 1986

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COMMENTS

  1. Queen's 1986 Concert & Tour History

    Queen's 1986 Concert History. 27 Concerts. Queen is a British rock band formed in London in 1970. It emerged with Freddie Mercury (vocals, piano), Brian May (guitar, vocals), Roger Taylor (drums, vocals), and John Deacon (bass) ...

  2. Magic Tour (Queen)

    The Magic Tour was a European concert tour by the British rock band Queen in 1986. The tour was in support of their latest album, A Kind of Magic, and featured 26 shows across Western Europe.In addition, the band performed one show behind the Iron Curtain in Hungary.. The highlight of the tour was the two sold-out shows at Wembley Stadium on 11-12 July.

  3. Queen Live At Wembley Stadium 1986 (full HD)

    Magic entertainment presenta el concierto en vivo de queen realizado en el año 1986 en el estadio de Wembley la cual trago consigo las siguientes canciones. ...

  4. Queen at Wembley

    Queen Live at Wembley Stadium, also referred to as Queen Live At Wembley, Queen At Wembley, Queen Live At Wembley '86, Live At Wembley and Live At Wembley '86, is a recording of a concert at the original Wembley Stadium, London, England on Saturday 12 July 1986 during Queen's Magic Tour and transmitted and released in various audio and video forms (including the Queen: Live at Wembley Stadium ...

  5. Queen on tour: Magic tour 1986

    02.07.1986 Zurich, Switzerland. 05.08.1986 Marbella, Spain. 05.07.1986 Slane, County Meath, Ireland. 09.08.1986 Stevenage, UK. The very last tour - it's possible that Freddie knew about his illness already at that time so MAYBE he knew it was the last time he sang live with Queen. The ending of One Vision includes riffs from Brian's Star Fleet.

  6. QueenOnline.com

    This show too would be released on home video and titled Live In Budapest. Queen's final show of the tour took place at Knebworth Park on August 9th, with the 15th century mansion house being a fitting location for what would sadly prove to be Queen's very last concert with Freddie. Before an audience variously estimated at between 160,000 ...

  7. Live at Wembley '86

    Live at Wembley '86 is a double live album by the British rock band Queen.It was recorded live on Saturday 12 July 1986 during the Magic Tour at Wembley Stadium in London, England.The album was released on 26 May 1992, with a companion DVD released in June 2003.. The album was remastered and re-released with bonus tracks in August 2003 in the US as Live at Wembley Stadium after the companion DVD.

  8. Concert: Queen live at the Wembley Stadium, London, UK [11.07.1986

    Video - information. six songs are featured on the Live At Wembley DVD as bonus - AKOM, AOBTD, Tutti Frutti, CLTCL, WATC (ending), GSTQ. Video - downloads. TV report HQ: link. Line-up. Freddie Mercury (lead vocals, piano, electric guitar), Brian May (electric guitar, backing vocals, acoustic guitar, keyboards), Roger Taylor (drums, backing ...

  9. Queen Concert Setlist at Wembley Stadium, London on July 12, 1986

    A Kind of Magic 4. The Works 4. A Night at the Opera 2. News of the World 2. The Game 2. A Day at the Races 1. Bohemian Rhapsody: The Original Soundtrack 1. Hot Space 1. Live at Wembley '86 1.

  10. Queen Concert Setlist at Wembley Stadium, London on July 11, 1986

    Get the Queen Setlist of the concert at Wembley Stadium, London, England on July 11, 1986 from the Magic Tour and other Queen Setlists for free on setlist.fm!

  11. Watch 'Queen 1986: The Magic Tour

    Queen hasve shared Episode 33 of their year-long 'The Greatest' archival video series. This week's homes in 1986's enormous 'The Magic' tour.

  12. Queen 1986 : The Magic Tour, Part 1 (Episode 33)

    It's 1986 and preparations are underway for what would become Queen's biggest and most successful stadium tour. This is the first in a two part story going ...

  13. Queen 1986: The Magic Tour, Part 2 (Episode 34)

    Continuing our look at Queen's record breaking Magic Tour. As the tour reaches its climax, and within just a few short weeks of each other, Queen play three...

  14. Queen

    Live at Wembley '86 is a double live album by British rock band Queen, released May 26th, 1992, with a companion DVD released in June 2003. It was recorded live during the Magic Tour at Wembley ...

  15. List of Queen concert tours

    Summer Gigs 1976 [ edit] Queen played four shows during a short UK tour during September 1976. Beginning on 1 September, Queen played in Edinburgh, as well as on the following night on 2 September. On 10 September, they played in Cardiff, which was Queen's second and final show in the city, having played there on the previous tour in 1975.

  16. Queen

    Thank you so much for watching! If you enjoyed this video, drop a like and subscribe if you're newLive at Wembley Stadium, London 12th July 1986Setlist1:12 O...

  17. I Saw Freddie Mercury's Final Performance With Queen: I Will Never

    Queen's Final Concert. On August 9, 1986, over 120,000 people gathered outdoors at Knebworth Park to watch a number of British musical acts. Topping the bill was the rock band Queen, fronted by their charismatic vocalist, Freddie Mercury, and still riding high after their stunning performance at the Live Aid concert at Wembley Stadium (July 13, 1985).

  18. Remembering Freddie Mercury's incredible final concert with Queen

    Freddie Mercury's iconic last concert with Queen saw the star perform classics including Radio Ga Ga and Bohemian Rhapsody at Knebworth Park in the summer of 1986. Performing in front of an crowd of 120,000, the August 9 concert was the final date of the band's highly successful Magic Tour and the last time the band would ever play with live ...

  19. When Queen played Knebworth: Freddie Mercury's last show

    The story of the great showman's last stand. On August 9th 1986, Freddie Mercury played with Queen for 120,000 fans at Knebworth Park. No one knew it would be his final show with the band. By the summer of 1986, it seemed there was no end to Queen 's omnipotence. Rallied by their show-stealing set at the previous year's Live Aid, the band ...

  20. Queen

    Queen's Legendary Wembley Concert Remastered In High Quality

  21. QUEEN

    QUEEN - Hungarian Rhapsody. Live In Budapest 1986. 01 - One Vision. 02 - Tie Your Mother Down. 03 - In the Lap of the Gods... Revisited. 04 - Seven Seas of Rhye. 05 - Tear It Up. 06 - A Kind of Magic.

  22. Queen

    Queen - Live at Wembley Stadium 1986 - Full Concert -- Set List: One Vision Tie Your Mother Down A Kind of Magic Ay‐Oh Under Pressure Another One Bites the D...

  23. Queen

    Re-Upload from Simon Christensen01:00 - One Vision06:33 - Tie Your Mother Down08:50 - In the Lap of the Gods... Revisited11:05 - Seven Seas of Rhye12:25 - Te...