For the Australian film
composer, see Brian May (composer).
| Brian May |

Brian
May (with Red
Special) from a 2005 performance in Frankfurt, Germany
|
| Background information |
| Birth name |
Brian Harold May |
| Born |
July 19, 1947 (1947-07-19) (age 60) Hampton,
Middlesex,
England |
| Genre(s) |
Hard rock, Heavy
metal, Progressive rock |
| Occupation(s) |
Guitarist, Singer, Songwriter,
Producer, Astrophysicist |
| Instrument(s) |
Guitar
Keyboards
Vocals
Ukelele
Harp |
| Years active |
1968 – present |
Associated
acts |
Queen
Queen + Paul Rodgers
Smile
1984 |
| Website |
brianmay.com |
| Notable instrument(s) |
| Red
Special |
Brian Harold May CBE (born July 19, 1947) is an English
musician best known as the lead guitarist and backing vocalist for the
English rock
band Queen. As a guitarist, he is
known for his memorable riffs and solos,
distinctive tone,
as well as for the fact that he built (with his father) his own guitar,
called the "Red Special". He is also cited as a
pioneer of the delay effect.
He wrote many of Queen's most famous songs and biggest hits, including "We
Will Rock You", "Fat Bottomed Girls", "Tie
Your Mother Down", "Who Wants to Live Forever"
and "I
Want It All" (as he discusses in the song's commentary track on the
Video Hits II DVD). Because of his musical skills, he is often
described as a virtuoso.
He also has had a long term interest in astrophysics,
having recently completed his doctoral thesis in the subject.
|
Contents
- 1 Biography
- 2 As
a musician
- 2.1 Highlights
- 2.2 Equipment
- 2.3 Contributions
to Queen
- 3 The
Brian May Band
- 4 Discography
- 5 Bibliography
- 6 Trivia
- 7 References
- 8 External
links
|
Biography
May was born in Hampton, in Middlesex,
and attended Hampton Grammar School (now Hampton
School). He went on to study at the Imperial College London
departments of Physics
and Mathematics,
and was part way through a Ph.D. programme at Imperial
College, studying reflected light from interstellar dust and
the velocity of dust in the plane of the Solar
System, when Queen became successful. He abandoned his astrophysics
doctorate - temporarily, as it later turned out - but did co-author two
scientific research papers: MgI Emission in the Night-Sky
Spectrum
and An Investigation of the Motion of
Zodiacal Dust Particles (Part I),
which were based on Brian's observations in Tenerife. As
of August 2007,
he has submitted his Ph.D. thesis, and is awaiting review.
He was awarded the honorary degree of Doctor
of Science (D.Sc.) in November 2002 by the University of
Hertfordshire, although it is not customary in the United Kingdom for
honorary doctors to use the title. Most recently, he was the co-author
of "Bang! – The Complete History of the Universe"
with Patrick
Moore and Chris Lintott, which was published on October
23, 2006.
May is known for being rather quiet and reserved at parties.
He has stated in interviews that he suffered from depression
in the late 1980s, even to the point of contemplating suicide,
and that drug use would have worsened any problems he faced. At the
time, during the recording sessions of the Queen album The
Miracle, he was splitting up with his wife
Chrissy, his father died, and as a result of Freddie
Mercury's illness, Queen retired from touring.
May's father Harold had been a longtime cigarette-smoker,
and this likely contributed to his early death. As a result, May
dislikes smoking, even to the point where he specifically prohibits
smoking indoors at his more recent concerts. He often writes about his
opinion on smoking on his website: http://brianmay.com.
His avoidance of alcohol can be traced to an early concert
where Queen played with the band Aerosmith, and May had a conversation with
fellow guitarist Joe Perry backstage. Perry
brought out a bottle of whisky, which the two drank between
themselves. May felt so unpleasant during the concert that he promised
himself never to have more than one drink before playing.
May married actress Anita Dobson, who played Angie
Watts in EastEnders, on November
18, 2000. He
has three children: James (Jimmy) (1978), Louisa (1981), and Emily Ruth
(1987) from his first marriage to Chrissy Mullens. May lives in West
End, Surrey
(as of 12 October 2006 - Woking News and Mail).
As a musician
Brian May tapping.
May has played a range of guitars, most often the "Red
Special," which he designed with his father, Harold May, and built with
wood from a 19th century fireplace. His comments on this instrument,
from Queen In Their Own Words (ed. Mick St.
Michael, Omnibus Press, 1992, p. 62) are:
| “ |
I
like a big neck – thick, flat and wide. I lacquered the fingerboard
with Rustin's Plastic Coating. The tremolo is interesting in that the
arm's made from an old bicycle saddle bag carrier, the knob at the
end's off a knitting needle and the springs are valve springs from an
old motorbike. |
” |
In addition to using his homemade guitar he prefers to use
coins (especially sixpence coins), instead of a
more traditional plastic plectrum, on the basis that their rigidity
gives him more control in playing. He is known to carry coins in his
pockets specifically for this purpose.
May's early heroes were Cliff
Richard and The Shadows, who he says were
"the most metallic thing out at the time." Many years later he gained
his opportunity to play on separate occasions with both Cliff Richard
and Shadows lead guitarist Hank Marvin. He has
collaborated with Cliff Richard on a
re-recording of the Cliff Richard and The
Shadows (then known as The Drifters) 1958 hit "Move It" on the Cliff
Richard duets album Two's Company which
was released on 6 November 2006.
May was proud upon hearing that Cliff Richard had mentioned in
an interview that he would have Brian May in his personal fantasy band.
As well as recording with Hank Marvin, May also contributed to the 1996
album Twang!: A Tribute to Hank Marvin & the Shadows,
playing FBI. The album featured many other renowned guitarists.
In Queen's three-part vocal harmonies, his was generally the
lower-range backing vocal. On some of his songs he sings the lead
vocal, most notably the first verse of Who Wants to Live Forever,
and also "Some Day One Day," "All Dead, All Dead," "Long Away," "Leaving Home Ain't Easy," "Good
Company," "Sleeping on the Sidewalk"
and "'39."
Throughout recent years, he has overseen the re mastering of
Queen albums and various DVD and Greatest Hits releases. In 2004, he
announced that he and drummer Roger Taylor were going on tour for the
first time in 18 years as "Queen", along with Free/Bad
Company vocalist Paul Rodgers. Billed as "Queen + Paul Rodgers",
the band has played throughout 2005 and 2006 in South Africa, Western
Europe, Japan, and North America.
In the Queen's birthday
honours list of 2005, he was made a Commander of the Order of the British
Empire "for services to the music industry".
During the time in which Brian May and his father were
building the Red Special, May also produced plans to
build a second guitar. However, so successful was the Red
Special, that May simply had no need to build another guitar. These
plans were eventually given to guitar luthier Andrew Guyton in around
2004/05, some slight modifications were made and the guitar was built.
It was named "The Spade", as the shape of the body resembled the form
shown on playing cards. However the guitar also came to be known as
"The Guitar That Time Forgot". As yet, this guitar has not been used in
any recordings and remains in May's possession.
Highlights
Brian May began composing in 1968/1969, and has covered a wide
variety of styles during his career. Through the years he wrote some
songs with other people, such as "Too Much Love Will Kill
You", composed with Frank Musker and Elizabeth Lamers,
which won Ivor Novello Award for Best Song
Musically & Lyrically in 1996. As a meticulous arranger, he
focused on multi-part harmonies, often more contrapuntal
than parallel — a rarity for rock guitar. Examples are found in Queen's
albums A Night at the Opera and A Day at
the Races, where he arranged a jazz band for guitar
mini-orchestra ("Good Company"), a vocal canon ("The Prophet's Song")
and guitar and vocal counterpoints ("Teo
Torriatte").
As a performer, he is primarily respected as a guitarist. May
explored a wide variety of styles in guitar as well. Playing lead some
of his best works include sweep picking ("Was
It All Worth It"), tapping ("Bijou","It's Late","Resurrection",
"Cyborg"), Hendrix-like licks ("Liar", "Brighton
Rock") and melodic parts ("Bohemian Rhapsody", "Killer
Queen", "These Are the Days
of Our Lives"). Some of his solos and orchestral parts were composed by
Freddie Mercury, who then
asked May to bring them to life ("Bicycle Race", "Lazing On A Sunday
Afternoon"). May also performed notable acoustic works, including "Love
of My Life" from 1975's A Night at the Opera, the
fingerpicked solo of "White Queen", and the skiffle-influenced
"'39".
Aided by the uniqueness of his guitar—the Red Special—May was
often able to create strange and unusual sound effects. For example, he
was able to imitate an orchestra in the song "Procession",
in "Get Down, Make Love", he
was able to create sound effects with his guitar that were so unusual
that many thought a synthesizer was being used. In "Good Company" he
used his guitar to mimic a trombone, a piccolo and several other
instruments for the song's Dixieland jazz band feel.
May's abilities are not restricted to one instrument. During
his Queen days he performed ukulele ("Good Company" and "Bring Back That
Leroy Brown") and sometimes piano, detaching on a soft and gentle style ("All
Dead, All Dead", "Save Me", "Dear
Friends"). He also played part of the synthesizer intro to "One
Vision". He recorded some other instruments (maracas, banjo, etc),
including the harp on "Love of My Life", which was recorded in overdubs
and mixed to sound as one performance.
May is also an accomplished singer. His wide vocal range went
from notes around low A (110 Hz) to very high tenor Ds and Es (mostly
in his solo career). Occasionally he contributed falsetto parts as well
("Ogre Battle", "Why Don't We Try
Again"). From Queen's Queen II to Hot
Space, May contributed lead vocals to at least one song per
album.
Equipment
Most of May's guitar work was done on the Red
Special. However, he has used a number of other electric guitars,
including a Burns Double Six (Long Away), a Gibson
Les Paul (as a backup during the early tours.), a Gibson
Flying V (spare during Hot Space tour), a Fender
Telecaster (Crazy Little Thing Called Love), an Ibanez JS (Nothing
But Blue),a Greco BM90 (featured in the promo video of "Good
Old Fashioned Lover Boy", but was not actually used in the studio), and
a Parker Fly (Mother Love).
In early Queen tours he had a Stratocaster as spare guitar,
replacing it with a Les Paul Deluxe in 1974, then a John
Birch replica of his Red Special the next year. In a concert in the
States on the 1982 Hot Space North American tour, he got
frustrated with that instrument and smashed it, thereafter using a
Gibson Flying V until he got more suitable replicas of his beloved Red
Special. In 1984 Guild
released the first official red Special replica for mass production,
and made some prototypes specifically for May. However the solid body
construction (the original RS has hollow cavities in the body) and the
pickups (DiMarzio) that were not an exact replica of the Burns TriSonic
didn't make May happy, so the production stopped after just 300
guitars. In 1993 Guild made a second replica of the RS, made in just
1000 copies, of which May has some and used as a backup. At the moment,
he uses the 2 guitars made by Greg Fryer as backup, the luthier who
restored the Old Lady in 1998. They are really identical to the
original, except for the Fryer logo on the headstock (May's original
one has a sixpence).
For acoustic guitars, he mostly used Ovation 12-Strings,
Martins, and a Gibson Chet Atkins for nylon-string parts. He created
the unique "buzzing" tone heard on "White Queen (As It Began)" and
"Jealousy" by placing pieces of piano wire under the frets. His ukulele
was Aloha. Pianos he recorded include Bosendorfers, although in
concerts he relied on Freddie Mercury's Steinway. May used Yamaha DX7
synths for some of his most memorable inputs: the opening sequence of "One
Vision" and the backgrounds of "Who Wants to Live
Forever", "Scandal" and "The
Show Must Go On".
May was keen on using some toys as instruments as well. Some
of his early acoustic works were done on a cheap Hairfred he had
conserved from his childhood. He also used a Yamaha
plastic piano in Teo Torriatte, a "genuine George
Formby Ukulele-Banjo" in Bring Back That Leroy
Brown and a toy mini koto in The
Prophet's Song.
May has used Vox AC-30 amplifiers almost exclusively
since a meeting with his long time hero Rory
Gallagher at a gig in London during the late 60s/early 70s. His choice
is the model AC30TBX, the top-boost version with Blue Alnico speakers,
and he runs the amp at full volume on the Normal channel. He also
customizes his amps by removing the circuitry for the Brilliant and
Vib-trem channels (leaving only the circuitry for the Normal), and this
alters the tone slightly, with a gain addition of 6-7dB. He always used
a 'treble booster pedal' of some
kind which, along with the AC-30, went a long way in helping to create
many of his signature guitar tones. He used the Dallas Rangemaster for
the first Queen albums, up to A Day at the Races. Then,
effects guru Pete Cornish built for him the TB-83 (32dB of gain) that
used for all the remaining Queen albums. He switched in 2000 to the
Fryer's booster, which actually gives less boost than the TB-83.
Live, he uses banks of AC-30 amplifiers keeping some amps with
only guitar and others with all effects such as delay, flanger and
chorus. He has a rack of 14 AC30s, which are grouped as Normal, Chorus,
Delay 1, Delay 2. On his pedal board, May has a custom switch unit made
by Cornish and subsequently modified by Fryer that allows him to choose
which amps are active. He uses a BOSS pedal from the 70s, the Chorus Ensemble
CE-1, which you can hear in In The Lap of The Gods (Live
at Wembley '86) or Hammer to Fall (slow version played
live with P. Rodgers). Next in the chain, he uses a Foxx Foot Phaser (We
Will Rock You, We Are the Champions, Keep
Yourself Alive, etc), a wah-wah pedal (I
Want to Break Free solo) that May doesn't use in the conventional way
but to give different tones, and two delay machines to play his
trademark Brighton Rock solo.
Another particular choice of May is the plectrum: he uses an
English Sixpence coin from the '60s. This gives a mysterious, clean and
crystalline tone. Bandmate and electrical engineer John
Deacon also built May a small DC-powered amplifier which he
often used when recording. Known as the 'Deacy amp',
it was reproduced as the "Brian May Special" by Vox in 2003. Vox have
also released a Brian May custom AC-30 model with a single volume
control and a rear mounted guitar input jack so multiple amps can be
stacked on top of each other. The Digitech corporation recently released a
pedal called the "Brian May Red Special" from its artist series of
pedals made to emulate the tones of famous guitarist. This particular
pedal is made to simulate the tones from seven Queen hits, as well as
the tone of the Red Special, the Deacy amp, the Treble Booster and the
Vox AC-30s. Also V-stack made a "simulator" of Brian May's sound.
Last, but not least, a quite influential factor on his sound
in studio is the particular positioning of the mics. This allowed May
to cut down the noise produced by the extremely loud AC30 at full
volume and also nailed particular, unique mid-loaded tones. For
example, to record the solos of Bohemian Rhapsody and We Will Rock you,
most of It's Late and almost every guitar part in We Are The Champions,
mics were placed in the corners of the room, at the center of which
there was the amplifier. This makes his tone even more difficult to
copy, because the amplifier sounds significantly different if
microphoned up in one way or another.
Contributions to Queen
After the famous Live Aid concert in summer 1985, Mercury
rang his band mates and proposed writing a song together. The result
was "One
Vision," which was basically May on music (the Magic Years documentary
shows how he came up with the opening section and the basic guitar
riff) and Roger Taylor on lyrics, with Freddie Mercury being more a
producer and arranger than a proper co-writer, and John
Deacon mostly absent.
For their 1989 release album, The
Miracle, the band had decided that all of the
tracks would be credited to all the band, no matter who had been the
main writer. Still, interviews and musical analyses tend to identify
the input of each member on each track.
May composed "I Want It All" for that album, as well
as "Scandal"
(based on his personal problems with the British
press). For the rest of the album he didn't contribute so much
creatively, although he helped building the basis of Party and Was It
All Worth It (both being mostly Freddie's pieces) and came up with the
guitar riff of Chinese Torture, an unreleased track
of those sessions.
Queen's next album was Innuendo,
on which May's contributions increased, although more in arrangements
than actual writing in most cases; for the title
track he did some of the arrangement for the heavy solo, then he added
vocal harmonies to "I'm Going Slightly Mad" and
composed the solo of "These Are the Days
of Our Lives", a song for which the four of them decided the keyboard
parts together. He changed the tempo and key of Mercury's song The
Hitman and took it under his wing, even singing guide vocal in the
demo. May also co-wrote some of the guitar lines in Bijou.
Two songs that May had composed for his first solo album, "Headlong"
and "I Can't Live With You," eventually ended up in the Queen project.
His other composition was "The Show Must Go
On," a group effort in which he was the coordinator and primary
composer, but in which they all had input — Deacon and Taylor with the
famous chord sequence, Mercury with the first verse.
The Brian May Band
The Brian May Band was officially formed in late October 1992,
following the release of his album Back
to the Light.
A proto version of the band was loosely formed for 19 October
1991, when May took part in the Guitar Legends
guitar festival in Seville, Spain. The line-up for his
performance was May (Lead Vocals & Lead Guitar), Cozy
Powell (Drums & Percussion), Mike Moran
(Keyboards), Rick Wakeman (Keyboards),
Maggie Ryder (Backing Vocals), Miriam Stockley (Backing Vocals) and Chris
Thompson (Backing Vocals).
Following the death of Freddie
Mercury in November 1991, May decided to deal with his grief
by committing himself as fully as possible to work, first by finishing
the album and then hitting the road worldwide to promote it. He has
said in numerous interviews that this was the only form of
self-prescribed therapy he could think of.
The original line-up was Brian May (Lead Vocals and Lead
Guitar), Cozy Powell (Drums and Percussion), Mike Caswell (Guitar), Neil Murray (Bass),
Maggie Ryder (Backing Vocals), Miriam Stockley (Backing Vocals) and
Chris Thompson (Backing Vocals). This version of the band lasted only
during the South American support tour (supporting The B-52's
and Joe
Cocker) on only five dates. Afterwards, May made significant
changes, feeling the group never quite gelled.
Most significantly, May brought guitarist Jamie
Moses onboard to replace Mike Caswell. May considered Moses a perfect
fit to the band. The other change made was in the backing vocal
department. Ryder, Stockley and Thompson are replaced with Catherine
Porter and Shelley Preston.
23 February 1993, saw the new and improved line-up of The
Brian May Band begin its world tour in the US, both supporting Guns
N' Roses and headlining a few dates. The tour would take them through
North America, Europe and Japan.
After the tour ended on 18 December 1993, May returned to the
studio to work with fellow surviving Queen band members Roger Taylor and John
Deacon to work on Queen's Made
in Heaven album. Spike
Edney, Cozy Powell, Neil Murray and Jamie Moses decided they enjoyed
working together so much, they formed the SAS
Band. Murray would end up only playing with them in their early gigs,
before commitments with Whitesnake and other projects
pulled him away. The SAS Band (which stands for Spike's All-Star Band)
would go on to record one studio album and one live album.
In 1995, May began working towards a new solo album of covers
tentatively named Heroes. He also worked on
different film projects and collaborations. The SAS Band played gigs
and began recording their first (and ultimately only) studio album.
By 1997, the self-titled album SAS Band is
released. The creation of the songs (a mix of straight covers, new
songs, and songs by the band members brought in from previous ventures)
kept with Spike Edney's vision of the band, to collaborate freely with
other singers and musicians as described by Edney in the liner notes as
"a musician's social club. A place where great singers and players come
to display their talents and have fun."
Brian May, meanwhile, had changed the approach of his new
album from covers to focus on the collaborations and new material he
was writing. The songs recorded for the new album, Another World
would feature mainly Edney, Powell, Murray and Moses, who had become
his core support/collaborative team.
On 5
April 1998,
Cozy Powell was killed in a car accident on the M4
motorway near Bristol, England. This caused a huge, unexpected dent in
the upcoming tour for The Brian May Band, with the need for a new
drummer on short notice. Steve Ferrone was brought on to help
May finish recording drums for the title track "Another World" and to
join the band for the early stage promotional tour of five dates in
Europe before the world tour.
The line up was then Brian May (Lead Vocals & Lead
Guitar), Spike Edney (Keyboards), Neil Murray (Bass), Jamie Moses
(Guitar), Steve Ferrone (Drums & Percussion), Susie Webb
(Backing Vocals) and Zoe Nicholas (Backing Vocals). Webb and Nicholas
worked with the SAS Band on SAS Band album and were
brought on to replace Porter and Preston. Porter has since pursued her
own singing/songwriting/performing career. May hinted in at least one
interview that the two (Preston and Porter) didn't get along, though he
may have been joking.
After the early promo tour, Eric Singer replaced Steve Ferrone for
the full 1998 world tour. The Band then became Brian May (Lead Vocals
& Lead Guitar), Spike Edney (Keyboards), Neil Murray (Bass),
Jamie Moses (Guitar), Eric Singer (Drums & Percussion), Susie
Webb (Backing Vocals) and Zoe Nicholas (Backing Vocals).
In 2005, Edney and Moses were recruited along with Danny
Miranda (Bass) to join the Queen + Paul Rodgers
tour, to fill the roles of keyboard player and second guitarist
respectively.
Discography
-
Main article: Brian
May discography
- See
also: Queen discography
Bibliography
- Bang! The History of Universe (2006),
co-authored with Patrick Moore and Chris
Lintott
Trivia
- In 1995 he played lead guitar on "Make your
dream come true", a song on Münchener Freiheit lead singer
Stefan Zauner's solo-album "S.O.L".
- He played lead guitar on Guns
N' Roses' "Catcher in the Rye" which was leaked in February 2006.
- He has also offered a song, "Crazy
Nights"/"Golden Days" (The latter was B-side song in Japan but A-side
in UK), to Japanese female singer the late Minako
Honda in 1987.
He wrote the lyrics, composed and produced. (However, Japanese words
were written by Yasushi Akimoto) After she died of
leukemia in 2005,
May made a comment on her and said "Minako was an angel" on his
official page in several days of November of the same year. [2] [3] [4]
- May opened the "Party
at the Palace" concert to celebrate Elizabeth II's
golden jubilee in 2002, by standing on Buckingham Palace roof and
playing "God Save the Queen" on his guitar.
- A keen astronomer since a boy, May finished his
dissertation for doctorate in astrophysics, at Imperial College
London.
He is also a regular contributor to the BBC The Sky At Night programme, hosted
by Patrick
Moore.
- May is known to use a sixpence
coin as a guitar
pick.
- May's favorite Queen song is "The
Miracle", according to his own words on the UK's The Paul O'Grady Show on
December 18th 2006.
- In 2006, May played lead/rhythm guitar and
sang background vocals on Lynn Carey Saylor's remake of
Lowen and Navarro's 1984 hit "We Belong." This track appears on Lynn
Carey Saylor's 2007 release CD "You Like It Clean" along with another
track May played guitar and sang backgrounds on, the Lynn Carey Saylor
penned song, "If We Believe".[5]
- May has guested with many artists, notably
with Foo
Fighters, on their 2002 track "Tired of You" and a cover of the Pink
Floyd song "Have a Cigar".
- May is no. 39 in Rolling Stones Magazine's top
100 list of all time guitarists.
- It has been said on Britain's TV show, Top
Gear, that Brian May hated one of Queen's most famous song, "Don't Stop
Me Now"
- May is a fan of MIKA,
even to the point of vociferously defending the singer in his blog
after negative comments by Guardian
journalist Alexis Petridis and music webzine Drowned
in Sound.
- May hates his trademark curly hair.
References
-
, "Queen", Encyclopædia Britannica,
2007
-
Sharpe-Young, Garry, Brian
May, Rockdetector
-
Coleman, Mark (1986-10-09), "A Kind of Magic",
Rolling Stone (no. 484)
-
"Not another axe to grind", The
Guardian, 2007-02-17
-
May, Brian. News.
-
"Queen star hands in science PhD",
BBC News.
-
Nature 240, 401
- 402 (15 December 1972)
-
Monthly
Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 166, 429
- 448 (1974)
-
Queen star finishes PhD thesis after 30 years.
Retrieved on 2007-07-11
Queen star hands in science PhD.
Retrieved on 2007-08-03
-
Error on call to Template:cite web: Parameters url
and title must be specifiedMay, Brian. .
-
"Queen star finishes PhD thesis after 30 years," Yahoo/AFP, July 11,
2007, http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20070711/od_afp/entertainmentbritain_070711230038
-
May, Brian (2007-02-05), "ANOTHER CRAP WRITER IN THE GUARDIAN. SOON WE
WILL STOP BEING SURPRISED !", Brian's
Soapbox
-
May, Brian (2007-02-05), "ANOTHER NASTY PIECE OF WORK", Brian's
Soapbox
-
Jonze, Tim (2007-02-09), "Bri's blog rage: the latest from the rock
blogs", Guardian Unlimited: Arts blog - music
-
[1]
External links
| v • d • e Queen |
| Freddie Mercury • Brian May • Roger Taylor • John
Deacon |
| Discography |
| Studio albums: Queen
• Queen
II • Sheer
Heart Attack • A Night at the
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Gordon • Hot Space
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in Heaven |
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| Persondata |
| NAME |
May, Brian |
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES |
|
| SHORT DESCRIPTION |
British musician |
| DATE OF BIRTH |
July 7, 1947 |
| PLACE OF BIRTH |
Hampton, Middlesex, England |
| DATE OF DEATH |
|
| PLACE OF DEATH |
|
|