Queen - | The Works -2011 Deluxe Remaster Flac- 88
There are album remasters, and then there are revelations . The 2011 Deluxe Remaster of Queen’s 1984 landmark, The Works , falls decisively into the latter category—especially when you get your hands on a high-fidelity FLAC 88 copy.
For decades, fans have debated the merits of The Works . Wedged between the synth-heavy Hot Space and the stadium-conquering A Kind of Magic , this album often gets labeled as Queen’s “back to basics” rock record. But listening to the 2011 remaster in 24-bit/88.2kHz FLAC reveals that there was nothing “basic” about it. Instead, it’s a masterclass in tension: the raw crunch of a Marshall stack wrestling with the cold, shimmering edge of a Fairlight CMI. Queen - The Works -2011 Deluxe Remaster FLAC- 88
The original 1984 vinyl and CD pressings were infamous for their compressed, sometimes muddy low-end—a casualty of the loud, aggressive production style of the mid-80s. The 2011 remaster (handled by Bob Ludwig) changes the game entirely. There are album remasters, and then there are revelations
For Queen completists, this is the definitive digital edition. For audiophiles, it’s a reminder that great music, properly transferred, can still surprise you 40 years later. Wedged between the synth-heavy Hot Space and the
If you only know The Works through Spotify, old CDs, or worn-out vinyl, you don’t actually know The Works . The 2011 Deluxe Remaster in FLAC 88 is the sonic equivalent of cleaning a stained glass window. The light was always there—you just couldn’t see it clearly.
The standout? The previously hard-to-find “Let Me Live” (early version with Rod Stewart? No—this is the raw 1984 outtake). The FLAC transfer captures the tape hiss authentically, giving it a warm, analog patina that contrasts beautifully with the polished A-sides.