When a parade of CGI-made, red-eyed robots began marching across the scrim at Madison Square Garden on Thursday (Oct. 12) night, the 20,000 people huddled in attendance let out a rapturous cheer. The far-off voice of late rock icon Freddie Mercury echoed through the cavernous venue, singing the first chorus of “Machines (Or Back to Humans)” as the screen slowly lifted, revealing the three men eager to carry on the legacy of his band that evening.
That is just what Queen + Adam Lambert did during their 2-hour performance at Madison Square Garden on Thursday evening. Hardly stopping throughout the madcap evening for so much as a water break, Lambert, Sir Brian May and Roger Taylor gave fans of the iconic rock group an evening to remember, playing through some of their greatest hits as well as a few beloved B-sides.
With Lambert taking the helm as the touring group’s new frontman all the way back in 2012, it’s been officially been over a decade of the trio performing together, a fact that he relished about halfway through the evening. “Can you guys believe that I have gotten to tour with these legends for the last 10 years?” Lambert said to a cheering audience. “It is such a privilege to be singing this music.”
There was a lot to take in throughout the event — between emotional tributes, flashy pyrotechnics and some ridiculously good performances, Queen + Adam Lambert left everything they had on the stage. Below, Billboard takes a look back at 5 of the best moments from Thursday night’s show of the band’s Rhapsody Tour:
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All the Stage Production You Could Hope For
If there’s one thing that Queen has always understood as a band, it’s the idea of theatrics. That fact certainly didn’t change during their MSG show — at different points in the evening, fans were treated to all manner of spectacles from Lambert, May and Taylor. For “Bicycle Race,” Lambert rose from under the stage on a shimmering chrome motorcycle (straddling a camera on its dashboard all the while); during “Killer Queen,” the singer turned his back to the audience and performed directly into a vanity mirror, primping and preening at every given opportunity; even during “A Kind of Magic,” May managed to conjure up sorcery of his by shooting flares out of the end of his guitar.
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An Interactive Evening
At one point late in the show, May let the audience in on secret. “You’re all in very good voice tonight. At Queen shows, we like to hear you,” he said with a cheeky smile. “It’s more fun when there’s a bit of audience participation.” The crowd at MSG certainly delivered on that front; during the band’s opening number “Radio Ga Ga,” the crowd perfectly nailed the hands-up, double-clap choreography for the song’s chorus. When “Fat Bottomed Girls” arrived at its ear-worm chorus, the audience sounded more like a choir than a group of concertgoers. And Lambert certainly facilitated that choral energy for the bridge of “Somebody to Love,” letting the audience take the reins.
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May and Taylor Still Got It
In the 53 years since Sir Brian May and Roger Taylor formed Queen with Freddie Mercury, it seems like they’ve only gotten better at their respective skills — and at two points during the evening they got to prove that fact. First, Taylor accompanied a famous video of himself performing a raging timpani solo for their filmed Queen Rock Montreal performance in 1981, smashing his way through a killer drum solo. Later on in the evening, May (literally) rose above the stage for a planetary guitar solo, in which he incorporated bits of classical composer Antonín Dvořák’s “New World Symphony” through a distorted guitar, while glowing planets swirled around his head. Needless to say, both original members showed time and again that they’re not slowing down any time soon.
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The ‘Rhapsody’ Takes Over the Garden
While the show was filled with excellent, high-production numbers, none came close to matching the majesty of “Bohemian Rhapsody,” which the band used as their pre-encore closer. Everything about the number was about as grand as you could hope. The number provided some magical production elements, including a vanishing and suddenly-reappearing May, as well as a lightning quick costume change from Lambert. May and Taylor nailed their respective parts, rocking out and leaning in where appropriate. But the star of the final number was Lambert’s voice — never imitating Mercury, Lambert kept the core spirit of the free-wheeling track alive, letting his stratospheric voice launch “Bohemian Rhapsody” into the heavens.
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Freddie Mercury’s Legacy Lives On
At no point during their show did Queen + Adam Lambert pull the focus away from the spirit of their enigmatic former frontman. During a solo section in which May performed an acoustic version of “Love of My Life,” he acknowledged that this was “Freddie’s song,” and that “Freddie should be singing it right now.” After introducing his legendary bandmates, Lambert made sure the audience knew whose shoes he was filling on stage. “Just know that every time I take this stage, just like all of you and just like these gentlemen, we all have Freddie Mercury in our hearts,” he said.
But the most poignant and fitting tribute to Mercury’s legacy came just moments before the band’s encore, when a video of Mercury performing live appeared on the stage’s scrim. Performing his famous vocal improvisation “Ay-Oh,” in which he quickly runs through a series of riffs and runs while getting the audience to repeat after him, the virtual image of Mercury secured the same command over the crowd gathered in MSG as he did when he was still alive. It was simple, effective, and exactly the kind of tribute you would want to see for an icon like Mercury.
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Full Setlist
- “Machines (Or Back to Humans)”/ “Radio Ga Ga”
- “Hammer to Fall”
- “Stone Cold Crazy”
- “Another One Bites The Dust”
- “I’m in Love With My Car”
- “Bicycle Race”
- “Fat Bottomed Girls”
- “A Kind of Magic”
- “Killer Queen”
- “Don’t Stop Me Now”
- “Somebody to Love”
- “Love of My Life”
- “‘39”
- Roger Taylor’s drum solo
- “Under Pressure”
- “Tie Your Mother Down”
- “Crazy Little Thing Called Love”
- “I Want To Break Free”
- “Who Wants To Live Forever”
- Brian May’s guitar solo
- “Is This The World We Created…?”
- “Bohemian Rhapsody”
Encore:
- “We Will Rock You”
- “Radio Gaga (reprise)”
- “We are the Champions”