Queen "Fat Bottomed Girls"

Some bands would take a song with this title and make it tongue-in-cheek. Queen played it straight as an arrow.

If you're in a bar and the a-Capella intro comes on -- particularly during the witching hours -- you'll see a good percentage of the properly-posteriored women in attendance get up and dance.

Perhaps, it's because most popular music celebrates skinny -- often malnourished -- women. Perhaps, there's correlation between ass size and response to Freddie Mercury's voice. Maybe, big girls simply have more fun.

"Fat Bottomed Girls" is not a particularly tricky song. It has some harmonies, plays at a middling tempo, and relies on some simple guitar transitions without a solo -- although, the riff Brian May plays behind the bridge is actually one of his finer works.

The Louvre has plenty paintings celebrating fat-bottomed women, so Queen didn't exactly break ground with their appreciation. However, 24 years after "Fat Bottomed Girls" was released, Sir Mix-A-Lot released his ode to "thick, juicy" asses.

Another 24 years after that, Doug used his affinity for big booties to (momentarily) win admiration from his fellow contestants on Black Jeopardy.

That's half a century of shoutouts to the girls who make the rocking world go around.

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