About the music of Queen you really must not lose many words - that is beyond doubt. "A Night at the Opera" while providing the variety that the vocals of Brian May and Roger Taylor is heard. Particularly, at this point the title of "'39" called - Queen uncharacteristic but nice. A small drawback, if you can ever call it so - DVD-Audio is available only in the form 5.1. Friends of stereophony and owners of pure 2-channel systems are so sadly outside in front and must make do with a compressed stereo track. Owners of high-quality multichannel system fails with this DVD-A but the hour. It is huge, what's going on all 5 (!!!) channels. 96kHz / 24bit are offering a dynamic and transparency that makes you forget everything around the listener. But as I said, the system has to play along - both in terms of heights, the bass, the transparency and not least the performance. The rear channels are not wither, as with other shots, to effect monitoring but are fully integrated into the music scene. Anyone who has heard even like Brian May's guitar floats diagonally across the room, how John Deacon's Piano positioned behind the listener and the backround his name makes all the glory will surely agree. But enough of enthusiasm. To point this technology DVD-A should be emphasized that the texts indexing music synchronized automatically on the individual titles. This I find very pleasant - unfortunately it is in the field of DVD-A still not a foregone conclusion. I highly recommend this DVD-A without restriction. So best self 'check it out ..... Cordially Jens