
Roy Thomas Baker, record producer behind Queen's ‘Bohemian Rhapsody,' dies at 78
Roy Thomas Baker, the hitmaking record producer behind some of the biggest and most proudly polished songs and albums of the rock era — including Queen's chart-topping, multipart 'Bohemian Rhapsody' — died April 12 at his home in Lake Havasu City, Arizona. He was 78.
His death was announced by a spokesperson, Bob Merlis, who said the cause had not yet been established.
Known for his technological savvy and his discipline in the recording studio, Baker oversaw the creation of Queen's first four albums, which spun off a varied assortment of singles in the early 1970s including the jaunty 'Killer Queen,' the tender 'You're My Best Friend' and the almost comically elaborate 'Bohemian Rhapsody,' which moves over six minutes from a show-tune-style intro through a densely arranged operatic sequence before climaxing in a hard-rock section that inspired a headbanging set piece in 1992's 'Wayne's World' movie.
''Bohemian Rhapsody' was totally insane, but we enjoyed every minute of it,' Baker told Mix magazine in 1999. 'It was basically a joke, but a successful joke.' The song went to No. 1 on the U.K. singles chart in 1975 and later peaked at No. 2 on the Billboard Hot 100 after 'Wayne's World' was released. In 2018, 'Bohemian Rhapsody' provided the title of the blockbuster biopic about Queen's flamboyant frontman, Freddie Mercury; on Spotify, the song has been streamed more than 2.7 billion times.
Baker had a similarly close artistic relationship with the Cars, whose first four albums he produced; among the gleaming new wave hits they created were 'Just What I Needed,' 'My Best Friend's Girl,' 'Let's Go' and 'Shake It Up.' The producer also worked with Journey, Cheap Trick, Alice Cooper, Devo and Ozzy Osbourne, among many others. He reunited with Queen in 1978 to make 'Jazz.'
Born in the Hampstead area of London on Nov. 10, 1946, Baker got his start in music as a second engineer at London's vaunted Decca Studios and Trident Studios, where he assisted the producers Gus Dudgeon and Tony Visconti and worked on records by the likes of David Bowie, the Who and the Rolling Stones.
He moved to Los Angeles in the late '70s and later became an A&R rep for Elektra Records, helping to bring acts including Metallica and 10,000 Maniacs to the label. In the late '90s and early 2000s, he produced albums by Local H, the Smashing Pumpkins and the Darkness. Baker is survived by his wife, Tere Livrano Baker, and his brother, Alan Baker.
Asked by Mix what he thought of artists forgoing producers to make their own records, Baker compared the decision to 'someone wanting to be their own lawyer in court' and advised against it.
'I think, even if you're a great producer who happens to be an artist, and you're great at working with other artists, you should never produce yourself,' he said. 'You still need somebody else around to make sure you get the best out of yourself, because you can't be in two places at once.'
___
© 2025 Los Angeles Times.
Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Los Angeles Times
11 minutes ago
- Los Angeles Times
Safe and sound: Orange County's oldest music store reopens in Laguna
Wave Baker, a longtime employee of Sound Spectrum, will tell anyone who listens that the place has 'an energy of its own.' So when the Laguna Beach-based record shop, which opened on South Coast Highway in 1967, closed in October, Baker had a feeling it wasn't over. Whether it was more than a feeling, what happened next was more than he hoped for. A music-oriented family came forward with a bid, planning to revive the business and restore the building. James, Audrey and Sadie Jean Wilcox, siblings who grew up in the nearby city of Tustin, worked together to reopen Orange County's oldest music store. After spending more than two decades working under the original owners, Jimmy and Edith Otto, Baker was asked to remain on staff. 'In a sense, I'm a bridge from the old to the new,' Baker said. 'I met with them, and we got along, and they wanted my help. I said, 'Well, I come with one condition — my left and my right arm. Travis [Garman] and Niloo [Aghaseyedali] were part of the old, and now we're all three part of the new.' James, 28, recalled visiting Sound Spectrum during surfing trips to Laguna Beach. In December, when he learned the iconic record store had closed, he called Wave. Within a week, the family had submitted an offer that was accepted. 'At the end of the day, a record store sells music,' James said. 'The special thing about this store is that it has sold music for so many decades. It sold music through the vinyl era, through the cassette era, through the CD era, and then all the way back again. 'In my opinion, the special part about this store is that it's past trends. It doesn't need to sell off of these trends. It can just keep selling music that touches people's hearts.' As for the responsibility that goes with inheriting a legacy of 57 years of service to the community, James said that Jimmy Otto created a business that could stand on its own. 'Jimmy was very much someone who could stand on his own, and he made his store stand on its own,' he added. 'We hope to keep that same energy, really forever. We believe that this store is so sacred and special. The special thing about music is that it does last forever.' James also called it a 'special moment' to have the keys to Sound Spectrum passed on to his family by Edith Otto, who also gave them a tour of the store. Audrey, 30, who is due to be married this year, compared the commitment to preserve a community staple to a wedding. 'There's like this union,' Audrey said. 'I have this connection with the former owner. … I feel like the Sound Spectrum itself is like a being of its own. I feel less that I'm the one that's deciding what happens to it and more that I'm listening to what it needs, being more like a steward to what the store wants, listening to that and making it happen. That's been my biggest source of inspiration is just what … everyone needs.' The Wilcox family's music industry experience has been driven by a burgeoning career for Sadie Jean, 23, as a singer-songwriter. James and Audrey, both of whom have business backgrounds, have helped manage her career. She has nearly two dozen shows lined up in Europe this fall, and she's preparing to release her first album later this year. Sadie Jean revealed she has been writing songs from a young age, but she was unsure if her family would embrace that side of her. 'It was so funny because once I told people I could sing and write songs, my family was like my biggest champions,' Sadie Jean said. 'Now they manage me, and my siblings manage me. My career became like a really big family thing, and my parents go on tour with me. All of a sudden, we're like a music family after being so like not at all. 'I think it just made so much sense when we found out that the record store in our community that we love was about to be gone forever. It felt so serendipitous. It was like a calling that we had to take it on and save it because music is built into our family culture now.' The return of the record store was celebrated with a ribbon-cutting ceremony on Thursday evening, music pumping as people perused the aisles stocked with selections of vinyl, CDs and posters spanning the decades. Local artists also collaborate, leading restorative efforts at the store. Amanda Burke touched up a mural by Bill Ogden, and a display by Brighid Burnes in the front window depicts musicians jamming away on various instruments. 'I saw many fathers or mothers say to their kid, 'I bought my first record here in the '80s,' Baker said. 'I want that little kid to be able to say that to their kids 30 years from now, long after I'm gone. I know the importance of that feeling. … That's what I want to keep. That's part of what I want to help survive.'
Yahoo
20 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Just the Start: Alex Warren's Real Climb to Hitmaker Status
Before topping the Billboard Global 200, Alex Warren was sleeping in his car. Today, the former Hype House member turned pop powerhouse is in the middle of a sold-out global tour, while his breakout single 'Ordinary' soundtracks millions of TikToks. Even Lana Del Rey is a fan. 'Every time I hear it, I think, 'Why can't we hear more like this?' because it takes you to church,' she said. More from Rolling Stone Why the Evergreen Sound of New York City Hip Hop Will Always Stay True David Shaw and Tarriona 'Tank' Ball Bring the Heat to New Orleans' Musicians on Musicians Event Making Music and Memories in Myrtle Beach With over 2.3 million TikTok videos featuring 'Ordinary' and 10.2 billion views on those videos alone, Warren's success is a masterclass in the new rules of the music business, where fan engagement fuels real-world impact. 'Hype House was like my college, but for social media,' he told Variety. 'It helped me learn how to create content that resonates with an audience and can captivate people. Also, being homeless was a great motivator.' He understood TikTok's potential as a career-builder early on—and he knew how to use it. Warren, who is deeply embedded in the app's music ecosystem, doesn't stop at posting his own music. He leans into trends, responds to fans, and plays an active role in shaping the narrative around his songs. And fans have responded—500M+ streams, #2 on the Billboard Hot 100, #1 on the UK Singles Chart, and #5 on the Spotify Global Top 50 all speak to the massive cultural moment 'Ordinary' has become. He even broke a 70-year record held by Elvis Presley, as 'Ordinary' marked its ninth week at Number 1—the longest run by a U.S. male solo artist in decades. But even more telling is the way the song has been adopted by TikTok creators: it's now a go-to soundtrack for wedding montages, emotional tributes, and relationship content. TikTok's ability to turn passive listening into participation is what sets it apart. The scrolling video platform is transforming how artists connect with fans, build momentum, and break into the story is highlighted in TikTok's new content series, Behind the Breakthrough—a docu-style spotlight on artists who first found their audiences on the platform and are now shaping the global charts. Like Gigi Perez and Malcolm Todd before him, Warren used TikTok not just as a launchpad, but as an incubator for creativity and authenticity. It's that honesty—his openness about mental health, heartbreak, and resilience—that makes him resonate so deeply. Following the success of 'Ordinary,' Warren's full-length debut You'll Be Alright Kid (Chapter 1) cemented his standing as more than a viral artist. Songs like 'Carry You Home' (with nearly 500 million streams globally) showcase his emotional range and songwriting depth. He's not chasing trends—he's building a body of work. And the industry is taking note. Named one of People Magazine's 'Talented Emerging Artists,' an iHeartRadio 'On The Verge' artist, and featured in Tidal and Amazon's artists-to-watch lists, Warren is positioning himself for long-term impact. His Cheaper Than Therapy Global Tour is hitting 47 cities, bringing the vulnerability and connection of his songs into the real world. Still, he credits TikTok with giving him the tools and audience to launch his second act. TikTok, for its part, continues to redefine how music is promoted, discovered, and loved. In 2024 alone, the platform drove over 200 million creations tied to the Global Top 10 Songs—resulting in over 8 billion Spotify streams. And with tools that blend organic reach with strategic promotion, it's helping artists build sustained momentum—beyond fleeting virality. The takeaway? Artists today don't just release songs—they create moments. And TikTok is where those moments start. For Alex Warren, what began as a personal outlet has evolved into a global stage. His story is proof that with vulnerability, vision, and the right platform, the ordinary can become extraordinary. Watch Alex Warren reflect on how TikTok fueled his success by checking out 'Behind the Breakthrough' here. Best of Rolling Stone The 50 Greatest Eminem Songs All 274 of Taylor Swift's Songs, Ranked The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time


UPI
4 hours ago
- UPI
'Eternal Queen of Asian Pop' sings last encore from beyond the grave
To the delight of millions of fans of the late Teresa Teng, the track titled 'Love Songs Are Best in the Foggy Night' will appear on an album to be released June 25. Photo by Van3ssa_/ Pixabay Several years ago, an employee at Universal Music came across a cassette tape in a Tokyo warehouse while sorting through archival materials. On it was a recording by the late Taiwanese pop star Teresa Teng that had never been released. The pop ballad, likely recorded in the mid-1980s while Teng was living and performing in Japan, was a collaboration between composer Takashi Miki and lyricist Toyohisa Araki. Now, to the delight of her millions of fans, the track titled "Love Songs Are Best in the Foggy Night" will appear on an album to be released June 25. Teng died 30 years ago. Most Americans know little about her life and her body of work. Yet, the ballads of Teng, who could sing in Mandarin, Cantonese, Japanese and Indonesian, continue to echo through karaoke rooms, on Spotify playlists, at tribute concerts and at family gatherings across Asia and beyond. I study how pop music has served as a tool of soft power, and I've spent the past several years researching Teng's music and its legacy. I've found that Teng's influence endures not just because of her voice, but also because her music transcends Asia's political fault lines. From local star to Asian icon Born in 1953 in Yunlin, Taiwan, Teresa Teng grew up in one of the many villages that were built to house soldiers and their families who had fled mainland China in 1949 after the communists claimed victory in the Chinese civil war. Her early exposure to traditional Chinese music and opera laid the foundation for her singing career. By age 6, she was taking voice lessons. She soon began winning local singing competitions. "It wasn't adults who wanted me to sing," Teng wrote in her memoir. "I wanted to sing. As long as I could sing, I was happy." At 14, Teng dropped out of high school to focus entirely on music, signing with the local label Yeu Jow Records. Soon thereafter, she released her first album, Fengyang Flower Drum. In the 1970s, she toured and recorded across Taiwan, Hong Kong, Japan and Southeast Asia, becoming one of Asia's first truly transnational pop stars. Teng's career flourished in the late 1970s and 1980s. She released some of her most iconic tracks, such as her covers of Chinese singer Zhou Xuan's 1937 hit, "When Will You Return?" and Taiwanese singer Chen Fen-lan's "The Moon Represents My Heart," and toured widely across Asia, sparking what came to be known as "Teresa Teng Fever." In the early 1990s, Teng was forced to stop performing for health reasons. She died suddenly of an asthma attack on May 8, 1995, while on vacation in Chiang Mai, Thailand, at age 42. China catches Teng Fever Perhaps the most remarkable aspect of Teng's story is that Teng Fever peaked in China. Teng was ethnically Chinese, with ancestral roots in China's Shandong province. But the political divide between China and Taiwan following the Chinese civil war had led to decades of hostility, with each side refusing to recognize the legitimacy of the other. During the late 1970s and 1980s, however, China began to relax its political control under Deng Xiaoping's Reform and Opening Up policy. This sweeping initiative shifted China toward a market-oriented economy, encouraged foreign trade and investment, and cautiously reintroduced global cultural influences after decades of isolation. Pop music from other parts of the world began trickling in, including Teng's tender ballads. Her songs could be heard in coastal provinces such as Guangdong and Shanghai, inland cities such as Beijing and Tianjin, and even remote regions such as Tibet. Shanghai's propaganda department wrote an internal memo in 1980 noting that her music had spread to the city's public parks, restaurants, nursing homes and wedding halls. Teng's immense popularity in China was no accident. It reflected a time in the country's history when its people were particularly eager for emotionally resonant art after decades of cultural propaganda and censorship. For a society that had been awash in rote, revolutionary songs like "The East is Red" and "Union is Strength," Teng's music offered something entirely different. It was personal, tender and deeply human. Her gentle, approachable style -- often described as "angelic" or like that of "a girl next door" -- provided solace and a sense of intimacy that had long been absent from public life. Teng's music was also admired for her ability to bridge eras. Her 1983 album, Light Exquisite Feeling, fused classical Chinese poetry with contemporary Western pop melodies, showcasing her gift for blending the traditional and the modern. It cemented her reputation not just as a pop star but as a cultural innovator. It's no secret why audiences across China and Asia were so deeply drawn to her and her music. She was fluent in multiple languages; she was elegant but humble, polite and relatable, she was involved in various charities, and she spoke out in support of democratic values. A sound of home in distant lands Throughout the 1990s and early 2000s, the Chinese immigrant population in the United States grew to over 1.1 million. Teng's music has also deeply embedded itself within Chinese diasporic communities across the country. In cities such as Los Angeles, San Francisco and New York, Chinese immigrants played her music at family gatherings, during holidays and at community events. Walk through any Chinatown during Lunar New Year and you're bound to hear her voice wafting through the streets. For younger Chinese Americans and even non-Chinese audiences, Teng's music has become a window into Chinese culture. When I was studying in the United States, I often met Asian American students who belted out her songs at karaoke nights or during cultural festivals. Many had grown up hearing her music through their parents' playlists or local community celebrations. The release of her recently discovered song is a reminder that some voices do not fade -- they evolve, migrate and live on in the hearts of people scattered across the world. In an age when global politics drive different cultures apart, Teng's enduring appeal reminds us of something quieter yet more lasting: the power of voice to transmit emotion across time and space, the way a melody can build a bridge between continents and generations. I recently rewatched the YouTube video for Teng's iconic 1977 ballad, "The Moon Represents My Heart." As I read the comments section, one perfectly encapsulated what I had discovered about Teresa Teng in my own research: "Teng's music opened a window to a culture I never knew I needed." Xianda Huang is a doctoral student in Asian Languages and Cultures at the University of California-Los Angeles. This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article. The views and opinions in this commentary are solely those of the author.