I think that was the first step in that direction, the first time we'd really seen Freddie working at his full capacity. He's virtually a self-taught pianist, and he was making vast strides at the time, although we didn't have a piano on stage at that point, because it would have been impossible to fix up, and we didn't want an organ sound. So in the studio was the first chance Freddie had to do his piano things, and we actually got that sound of the piano and guitar working for the first time, which was very exciting. And My Fairy King was the first of those sort of epics where there were loads of voice overdubs and harmonies and a quite complicated structure, which Freddie got into, and that led to The March of the Black Queen on the second album, which is very much in that idiom, and then Bohemian Rhapsody later on.