Before drumming with
Queen, Roger Taylor was the drummer in the late '60s hard rock band,
Smile, along with future
Queen guitarist
Brian May. In 1970, that group morphed into
Queen with the addition of flamboyant lead singer
Freddie Mercury. Over the next decade, Taylor would generally write one or two songs per
Queen album, usually singing on his own compositions. The first member of the band to start a solo career,
Taylor released his single "I Wanna Testify" in 1977. Although it failed to chart, that did not deter the drummer from recording a solo album,
Fun in Space (1981). A modest success, the album showed
Taylor performing more straightforward and political rock music than
Queen. He followed with 1984's
Strange Frontier, which sounded similar to
Bruce Springsteen's music of the same period. After
Queen's Magic Tour in 1986,
Taylor formed his own band,
the Cross, for which he played guitar. The group released three albums between 1987 and 1991, but never received much interest in England. After
Freddie Mercury died of AIDS in 1991,
Taylor returned to a solo career, releasing
Happiness? in 1994. It's first single, "Nazis 1994," was banned by Radio 1 and several stores as it was feared it would lead to neo-Nazi riots. Nonetheless, "Nazis 1994" became
Taylor's first hit single in England and was followed by two other Top 40 U.K. hits, "Happiness" and "Foreign Sand."
Electric Fire, which saw
Taylor add some slight electronica elements to his rock sound, was released in 1998.
–
Geoff Orens, Rovi