"They went on a victory lap around the stadium. Inside the stadium, there was no sign that anything had happened outside,'' said a young man who spoke on condition of anonymity.
A woman who grew up at a recording studio used by some of the UK's biggest bands says it was "just normal" for Freddie Mercury to be in the next room.Tiffany Murray from Blakeney, Gloucestershire, moved to Rockfield Studios in Monmouthshire aged six after her mum, a Cordon Bleu chef, got a job there after being praised by the band Black Sabbath.
Ms Murray's memoir, "My Family and Other Rock Stars", details how her mother, Joan, cooked for the likes of Queen and David Bowie."I was an only child so she would be cooking in the kitchen until the early hours and cleaning up and I was left to my own devices, so I did wander into the studios and annoy musicians at an early age," Ms Murray said.Ms Murray previously lived in a house in Herefordshire, where her mum advertised rehearsal space to bands.
The likes of Black Sabbath and Queen recorded there before moving onto Rockfield, where they would reminisce about Joan's food, leading to her being hired as the in-house cook.Queen's "Bohemian Rhapsody", Coldplay's "Yellow", and Oasis' "Wonderwall" are among the songs
"Mum and I lived with the bands on the Quadrangle," Ms Murray told BBC Radio Gloucestershire.
"We lived in the chalet, so you could have Freddie [Mercury] next door."The museum is open on Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays.
A city's oldest remaning town house has received nearly £90,000 so it can tell the "hidden stories" of some of the working class people connected to it over the years.The Judges' Lodgings Museum in Lancaster, which is part of Lancashire County Museum Service, has received a £88,969 from the Heritage Lottery Fund.
The money will fund a restoration programme, community engagement, and creative interpretation as the historic house celebrates its 400th anniversary and 50 years as a museum.Built in 1625, the Judges' Lodgings is close to the castle and was originally built for Thomas Covell the Keeper of the Castle.