

Until I'm ready.crazy little thing called love. Take a back seat, hitch-hike, and take a long ride on my motor bike. Bb D Bb E A A I gotta be cool, relax, get hip, get on my tracks. D Bb Until I'm ready.crazy little C D thing called love. D Take a back seat, hitch-hike, and G take a long ride C G on my motor bike. D G I gotta be cool, relax, get hip, C G get on my tracks.

F then she leaves me in a cool, cool sweat. Bb She drives me crazy.she gives me E A hot and cold fever.

G C There goes my baby.she knows how to G Rock n' Roll. D Bb I kinda like it.crazy little C D thing called love. D G It swings, it jives, it shakes all over like a C G jelly fish. D This thing (this thing) called love (called love) G C it cries (like a baby) in a cradle G all night. D G This thing called love, I must get C G round to it. It proved to be a wise decision.īuy Queen’s News Of The World: 40th Anniversary Edition box set.DO NOT SHOW ADS x4 D D G This thing called love, I just can't C G handle it. Mercury also revealed in that volume that Queen’s American label, Elektra, were less than enthused about releasing “Crazy Little Thing” as a single, but their hand was forced when radio DJs started playing the import. Listen to the best of Queen on Apple Music and Spotify.

It’s not typical of my work, but that’s because nothing is typical of my work.” The finished version sounded like the bathroom version. “We arranged at band rehearsals the following day with me trying to play rhythm guitar. Freddie reportedly got out of the tub to go to his guitar and piano to lay down the melody. “I wrote the song languishing in my bath at the Munich Hilton,” Mercury said in the Billboard Book of Number One Hits, by Fred Bronson. The single was certified gold in both the US and UK, as well as in Holland. It did even better in Australia, with a seven-week reign in March and April and platinum certification. By the second half of February, “Love” was starting a five-week run at the top of that survey. It was the highest of no fewer than 15 new entries on the American chart in that week before Christmas, at No.58. Written solely by Freddie Mercury, the song became one of Queen’s biggest international singles to that point.
