Fun in Space is the debut solo album by English musician Roger Taylor, the drummer of Queen. It was released on 6 April1981 in the UK and 9 May in the US. The album peaked at number 18 in the British charts, while it performed poorly upon its US release, due to no promotion from the record company. The album was recorded in between legs of Queen's tours for The Game and Flash Gordon albums. Taylor wrote, produced, sang and performed all of the songs himself. The album's credits state "P.P.S. 157 synthesizers", a joke referring to Queen's usual statement of "No synthesizers" in the liner notes of all albums up to The Game. "Future Management" was issued as a single in Europe, while "Let's Get Crazy" was released in the US. The album was re-released as a digitally remastered CD in 1996.
Cover
The original cover art was created by American artist Jim Laurier. The piece was commissioned for the July 1980 issue of Creepy magazine. The back cover of the album shows Roger Taylor reading that issue. The 'alien' writing on the magazine on the front cover consists mainly of upside downHebrew characters. The actual words are meaningless. An interesting point to note is that the model Alien was in fact modelled and built by Tim Staffell, while he was freelancing as a Special FX Modelmaker in the early 'eighties. Ironically, neither knew each other's connection with the project until much later.
Track listing
Side 1
"No Violins" – 4:33
"Laugh or Cry" – 3:06
"Future Management" – 3:03
"Let's Get Crazy" – 3:40
"My Country I & II" – 6:49
Side 2
"Good Times Are Now" – 3:28
"Magic Is Loose" – 3:30
"Interlude in Constantinople" – 2:04
"Airheads" – 3:38
"Fun in Space" – 6:22
Personnel
Roger Taylor – drums, percussion, lead and backing vocals, guitars, bass guitar, keyboards
David Richards – engineer, approximately 50% of keyboards
Hipgnosis – artwork, cover design
Singles
Future Management
A-Side: "Future Management" B-Side: "Laugh Or Cry" Released on 30 March 1981. Reached #49 in the UK Singles Chart. Released in the UK, Germany, The Netherlands, Italy, Spain, Portugal, Brazil and Ireland.