Bohemian Rhapsody (1940's)

Bohemian Rhapsody was a 1940's barbershop quartet song that looked less planned for than it actually was.It was originally released for a song at the nightclub "The Ink & Paint Club" in dedication for Oswald the Lucky Rabbit; As he died.

And yes, Believe it or not, it was sung by toons. The toons that were originally a part of Oswald's original rock band.

Formation
How they start off as "Is this the real life?" is just a barbershop quartet, they just speak at the same time.

But as soon as they get into "Open your eyes." They had a harmony going on.

When they got to "To me." The piano was playing. This part was supposed to belong to Oswald, but he's been replaced due to his death.

The excellent and fast piano playing and the barbershop quartet were the only instruments available until "Thunderbolt and lightning," as this had a new instrument of the cymbals.

At the "He's just a poor boy from a poor family!" part there was a cymbal playing many times.

At the "Bismillah, No!" and the "No! No! No!" parts there was a cymbal playing many times as well.

At the rock part after "Bezulbub has a devil put aside for me." There introduced a whole orchestra playing the riff part. People were still singing. As well as the orchestra, until that rock part was over.

Around near the ending, it was just the barbershop quartet and the piano playing for a while.

And finally, the finishing touch (instead of a gong) was the orchestra playing soft, then loud, then cut.

And this is where the song ends.

Success
The debut of the song was one day in the 1940's at The Ink and Paint Club.

It was a huge success.

Costing $10K, they all pitched in to buy this orchestra for their band. The piano only costs $100, so that wasn't a big deal.

The whole estimated budget for the song was around $10,100

After their debut, they received $5M for how good the song was.

This also beat Jessica's debut of "Why Don't You Do Right?" which only received "$3M"