We recorded that song, really, six months before the rest of the album, and I remember while we were actually in the studio in Munich in Germany doing the rest of that album, that song had already been released, and we were there and I remember somebody phoning up and said “hey, your record's number two in America,” and we all went out in celebration, and then the next week we got the phone call again: “hey, your record's number one in America,” and it seemed unreal because we were in the other side of the world, and we hadn't even finished the album which the single was from, we were still working on it, and we thought, “we're off to a good start here.” It is Freddie on acoustic, it took half an hour to record, it was like that, it had a great feel. I remember he came in the studio, he says, “my dear, I just wrote this in the bath,” and he did, he'd just been lying in the bath, and there it was, it was very simple, very easy, and it had a great fresh sound to it. And I think Brian did a really nice Telecaster solo on that, which fitted in great with that slight rockabilly kind of edge, you know. We wanted it like an almost a slightly early Elvis feel, you know, that was the idea, that's not easy to get, but the record did sound good, I think. I remember actually one of the things which made me very proud, was that John Lennon said in some article, he said something like, “I heard the Queen record and it made me wanna get back in the studio,” and I thought, “wow, fantastic,” to have actually had any little dent on somebody like Lennon is great.