Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Under Pressure" in English language version.
The sleek dance-rock hybrid—informed by disco but not belonging to it—is essentially ephemeral and amorphous, built upon a lithe John Deacon bassline that anchors interwoven harmonies and melodies that build to an overwhelming crescendo culminating with Bowie and Freddie Mercury singing "This is our last dance."
The great thing is, is I bought back all my royalties and I bought that song, too. So it kind of comes back around, kind of like Michael Jackson both The Beatles. [...] I can do whatever I want with it, because I own it.
what remains is an incredibly powerful and poignant pop song
... the lawsuit worked out in my favor, cause I ended up buying their song. It was four million dollars and it was one of my best investments.
The case was settled out of court, costing Ice an undisclosed sum and earning him a not-insignificant amount of public scorn. Bowie and members of Queen all received songwriting credits on the track.
A spokesman for Queen tells Ultimate Classic Rock that Vanilla Ice's statement is inaccurate: An arrangement was made whereby the publishing in the song was shared.
what remains is an incredibly powerful and poignant pop song
The great thing is, is I bought back all my royalties and I bought that song, too. So it kind of comes back around, kind of like Michael Jackson both The Beatles. [...] I can do whatever I want with it, because I own it.
there was one monster rock track that stood out among the rest
... the lawsuit worked out in my favor, cause I ended up buying their song. It was four million dollars and it was one of my best investments.