Queen - See What A Fool I've Been (Langham Studio Version) video free download


34,702
Duration: 04:30
Uploaded: 2007/07/23

BBC Langham Studio version of See What A Fool I've Been. Recorded on July 25th 1973 and broadcast on Radio 1 on September 24th 1973. Recorded at Langham One Studio in London.

Lyrics:

Well she's gone

Gone this morning

See what a fool I've been

Oh Lord, I said

What a fool I've been

Wow

Caught a train

A train to Georgia

Sixteen coaches long

Oh Lord, I said

Sixteen coaches long, yeah

Wow

I walked out

Onto the highway

Oooh, ow, ow, ow, ow

Oh Lord, I said

Greyhound bus had gone

Wow, surprise

Now hit

Woooh

I walked out

Onto the highway

Greyhound bus had gone

Oh Lord, I said

Greyhound bus had gone

It went a long time ago, sure did

Wow

Oh, well she's gone

Gone this morning

See what a fool I've been

So long I said what a

Fo-oo-oo-oo-oo-oo-oool

I've been, oooh

Comments

9 years ago

White Queenie

YAY!!

9 years ago

White Queenie

Esto es un bluesazo de los que te mueres

11 years ago

Robert Waggoner

I wish Queen did more Blues oriented songs like this...DAMN this song is Led Zeppelin with a better voice! (Sorry Bobby Plant..but even he knows Freddie had a better voice...)

12 years ago

Erik Knear

This is the best version... Sixteen coaches long!

12 years ago

CapsuleJX

@m86ichael The Seven Seas of Rhye B-Side version, probably. This is the most well-known version, being on the Seven Seas of Rhye single, the 1991 US Queen II CD and the 2011 Queen II CD.

12 years ago

Jason Forrest

@alkalineburner it was not on queen 2

12 years ago

popsnorman

HAPPY BIRTHDAY FARROKH BULSARA!

12 years ago

sigfried37

3 Dislikes? WTF!!???

12 years ago

pedrocollares

@m86ichael shut your mouth. they're both great bands!! but blues is more zeppelin's than queen's they gave it a try sometimes with excellent result, but nothing like Since I've Been Loving You but I couldn't ever imagine led zeppelin having epic lyrics/concepts or complex harmony as queen's.

13 years ago

Joseph Clark

@Salse7rito It's all Brian May, but he loved to layer guitars in harmony in the studio. Almost all of their early tracks, and a lot of later ones, feature layered guitars in harmony. But it is all Brian playing.

13 years ago

Joseph Clark

@m86ichael Queen II. Great album!

13 years ago

Joseph Clark

@m86ichael It's probably the album version from Queen II

13 years ago

manuel86mi

@m86ichael the original Seven Seas of Rhye B-side :)

13 years ago

IAmPlaysWithSquirrel

@Salse7rito There's only one guitarist and one guitar being played here. Brian's guitar is custom built from scratch, so he can do things with it that most other guitarists can't.

13 years ago

Fito Rubio-Lopez

There are two guitars . Who played the rythm guitar ???

13 years ago

Brighton Rock

This is so much better than the version on my edition of "Queen". Rough, raw, and bluesy. Though, I stand by my belief that Roger or Brian on lead vocals would have made this a bit more "authentic" in the blues department.

13 years ago

joe b

@fras888 Lez Zep there biggest idols?? The Beatles. Hendrix. The Who.

14 years ago

fras444

the closest queen came to blues rock!!!!!, the red special is not quite the same as a gibson guitar of jimmy page when playing blues... but its the best sound ever when brian plays his guitar the QUEEN rock style... oh awsme bass playing once again by the one and only John Deacon

14 years ago

jeremy beth

i love this tuneeeeeeeee, on the album queen as bonus !!!!

14 years ago

beans909

freddie was so talented

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