| Freddie Mercury |

|
| Background information |
| Birth name |
Farrokh Bulsara |
| Born |
5 September 1946
Stone
Town, Zanzibar |
| Died |
24 November 1991 (aged 45)
Kensington,
London,
England |
| Genre(s) |
Hard rock
Heavy metal
Progressive rock
Pop
rock |
| Occupation(s) |
Singer, Musician, Songwriter,
Producer |
| Instrument(s) |
Vocals, Piano, Keyboards,
Guitar |
| Years active |
1958
– 1991 |
Associated
acts |
Queen |
Freddie Mercury (born Farrokh
Bulsara; 5 September 1946 – 24 November 1991) was a British
musician,
best known as the lead singer of the English rock band Queen.
He is remembered for his vocal abilities and for his live performances.
As a songwriter,
he composed many international hits, including "Killer
Queen", "Bohemian Rhapsody", "Somebody to Love", "We
Are the Champions" and "Crazy Little Thing
Called Love". Mercury died from complication of AIDS, greatly
heightening worldwide awareness of the disease.
|
Contents
- 1 Early
Years
- 2 Musician
- 2.1 Singer
- 2.2 Songwriter
- 2.3 Performer
- 2.4 Instrumentalist
- 2.5 Producer
- 2.6 Influences
- 3 Solo
career
- 4 Personal
life
- 5 Death
- 6 Criticism
and controversy
- 6.1 Regarding
sexual orientation
- 6.2 Regarding
ethnicity
- 6.3 Criticism
from rock critics
- 6.4 Controversies
- 7 Legacy
- 7.1 Lasting
popularity
- 7.2 Quotations
about Mercury by influential artists
- 8 Discography
- 9 Instruments
used by Mercury
- 10 Further
reading
- 11 References
- 12 External
links
|
Early Years
Mercury (on right) with his college friends in 1964, after a lunchtime
drink.
Mercury (third from right) at college with his friends in 1964.
Freddie Mercury was born Farrokh Bulsara on the African island of Zanzibar, at
the time a British colony, now part of Tanzania. His
parents, Bomi Bulsara and Jer Bulsara, were Parsis from India who practiced
the ancient Zoroastrian religion.
The family had emigrated to Zanzibar in order for Bomi to continue his
job as a middle-ranking cashier at the British Colonial
Office. Mercury had one younger sister, Kashmira.
Mercury was sent back to India to attend St. Peter's School, a boarding
school for boys at Panchgani near Bombay (now Mumbai). At St.
Peter's, he was a bright student who excelled at sports and learned to
play the piano. At school, he formed a popular school band for which he
played the piano. Mercury remained in India for most of his childhood,
living with his grandmother and aunt. He completed his education in
India at St. Mary's (ISC) High
School in Mazagon
before returning to Zanzibar.
At the age of 17, Freddie Mercury and his family were forced
to flee from Zanzibar to England as a result of the 1964 Zanzibar
Revolution.
The family moved into a small house in the suburban town of Feltham outside London. Mercury
enrolled at Isleworth Polytechnic (now West
Thames College) in West London where he studied art. He ultimately
earned a Diploma in Art and Graphic Design at Ealing
Art College, later using these skills in order to design the Queen
crest. Mercury remained a citizen for the rest of his life.
Following graduation, Mercury joined a series of bands and
sold second-hand clothes in the Kensington Market in London. He
also held a job at Heathrow Airport. Friends from the
time remembered Mercury as a quiet and shy student who showed a great
deal of interest in music. By 1971 he joined with guitarist Brian
May, drummer Roger Taylor to form a new band, which
would eventually become Queen, when John
Deacon later joined through auditions. Despite reservations
from two of the other members, Mercury chose the name "Queen" for the
band. At around this time, he also changed his name.
Musician
Singer
Widely considered one of the greatest vocalists in popular
music,
Freddie Mercury possessed a very distinctive voice, including a
recorded range of nearly four octaves.
Although his speaking voice naturally fell in the baritone
range, he delivered most songs in the tenor range. Another characteristic of his
voice involved his powerful delivery of technically difficult material.
On the other hand, perhaps in part because he suffered from vocal
nodules (refusing surgery for the condition), he would often lower the
highest notes during live performances. Mercury also claimed never to
have had any formal training.
Spanish soprano Montserrat
Caballé, with whom Mercury recorded an album expressed her opinion that
"The difference between Freddie and almost all the other rock stars was
he was selling the voice."
Songwriter
Mercury wrote ten out of the seventeen songs on Queen's Greatest
Hits album: "Seven
Seas of Rhye", "Killer Queen", "Bohemian
Rhapsody", "Somebody to Love", "Good Old-Fashioned
Lover Boy", "We Are the Champions", "Bicycle
Race", "Don't Stop Me Now", "Crazy Little Thing
Called Love", and "Play the Game". However, by the 1980s,
all four members of the band were writing hits. The most notable aspect
of his songwriting involved the wide range of different genres that he
used, which included, among other styles, rockabilly,
heavy
metal and disco.
Compared to many rock songwriters, Mercury tended to write musically
complex material. For example, "Bohemian Rhapsody" is acyclic in
structure and comprises nearly sixty chords.
On the other hand, "Crazy Little Thing Called Love" is made up of only
a few chords. Despite the fact that Mercury often wrote very intricate
harmonies, he also claimed that he could barely read music.
Singer Axl
Rose said of Mercury's songwriting, "If I didn’t have Freddie Mercury’s
lyrics to hold on to as a kid, I don’t know where I would be. It taught
me about all forms of music. It would open my mind. I never really had
a bigger teacher in my whole life."
Nevertheless, Queen albums were generally not popular with rock music
critics (See Criticism and Controversy section below).
Although all four members of the band Queen were songwriters, producer Gary
Langan, who worked in the studio with Queen on many of their
early albums, notes that "Freddie was always intensely supportive of
other people's songwriting and would give as much attention to one of
the others as he would to his own. It was so unlike other bands I've
worked with where there is an acknowledged songwriter and anyone else
who writes one really has to hassle to get it anywhere."
Mercury wrote most of his songs on the piano, often choosing keys that
were technically difficult for band mate and guitarist Brian
May (e.g., E- flat major). Due to his basic proficiency in
playing the guitar, he also wrote many lines and riffs for the
instrument, including many of those heard in "Bohemian Rhapsody." He
also wrote "Crazy Little Thing Called Love" on the guitar and would
play a guitar onstage when performing the song.
Performer
Mercury is noted for his live performances, which were often
delivered to stadium audiences around the world. As a performer, he
displayed a highly theatrical style that often invoked a great deal of
participation from the crowd. One of Mercury's most notable
performances took place at Live Aid in 1985, during which the entire
stadium audience of 72,000 people clapped, sang, and swayed in unison.
Mercury's performance at the event has since been voted as the greatest
live performance in the history of rock music.
In reviewing Live Aid in 2005, one critic wrote, "Those who compile
lists of Great Rock Frontmen and award the top spots to Mick
Jagger, Robert Plant et al. are
guilty of a terrible oversight. Freddie, as evidenced by his Dionysian
Live Aid performance, was easily the most godlike of them all."
Over the course of his career, Mercury performed an estimated
700 concerts in countries around the world with Queen. The band was the
first ever to play South American stadiums, breaking worldwide records
for concert attendance in Brazil.
In 1986, Queen was also the first to play behind the Iron
Curtain, when it played to a crowd of 80,000 in Budapest.
Mercury's final live performance with Queen, which drew an estimated
attendance of 150,000, took place on August 9th, 1986 at Knebworth
Park in England. Rock star David Bowie, who performed at
the Freddie Mercury
Tribute Concert and recorded the song "Under
Pressure" with Queen said of Mercury, "Of all the more theatrical rock
performers, Freddie took it further than the rest." ... "He took it
over the edge. And of course, I always admired a man who wears tights.
I only saw him in concert once, and as they say, he was definitely a
man who could hold an audience in the palm of his hand. He could always
turn a cliché to his advantage."
Instrumentalist
Mercury played the piano in many of Queen's most popular
songs. He used concert grand pianos and, in the studio, various
keyboard instruments such as organs, harpsichords and an upright piano.
From 1979 onwards also he made extensive use of synthesizers in the
studio. Although he was not a virtuoso pianist, his contributions were
generally very original, with a particular emphasis upon rhythm. Notable
examples include "The March of the Black Queen" (Queen II),
"Killer Queen" (Sheer Heart Attack), "Death on Two
Legs" and "Love of My Life" (A Night at the Opera),
"We Are the Champions" and "My Melancholy Blues" (News of the
World), "Bicycle Race" and "Don't Stop Me Now" (Jazz).
According to Brian May on the Making of 'A Night at the Opera'
DVD, Mercury didn't think much of his piano playing and began doing it
less and less as time went on. Mercury began playing guitar in late
1960s, partly because he was a devoted fan of Jimi
Hendrix and partly because his songwriting was more oriented towards
hard rock and heavy metal. From 1979 to 1986, Mercury played guitar
live on all concerts during "Crazy Little Thing Called Love."
Producer
Mercury was frequently involved in mixing Queen material.
Among other things, he generally programmed his own drum machines and
acted as an arranged songs such as "Radio Ga Ga."
Influences
As a child, Mercury listened to a considerable amount of
Indian music, and one of his early influences was the Bollywood playback
singer, Lata Mangeshkar.
According to Record Collector magazine, after
moving to England, Mercury became a fan of Jimi
Hendrix, John Lennon and The
Beatles.
Mercury said of Hendrix: “Jimi Hendrix is very important. He’s my idol.
He sort of epitomizes, from his presentation on stage, the whole works
of a rock star. There’s no way you can compare him. You either have the
magic or you don’t. There’s no way you can work up to it. There’s
nobody who can take his place."
Another one of Mercury’s favorite performers was singer and actress Liza
Minnelli. In a 1975 interview, he said of Minnelli: “Liza, in terms of
sheer talent, just oozes with it. She has sheer energy and stamina,
which she gets across the stage, and the way she delivers herself to
the public is a good influence. There is a lot to learn from her.”
Finally, Mercury was also an Elvis Presley fan as well. He
reportedly wrote the song "Crazy Little Thing Called Love" as a tribute
to Presley and performed songs such as Jailhouse
Rock and (You're
So Square) Baby I Don't Care at live concerts.
Solo career
In addition to his work with Queen, Mercury produced two solo
albums, Mr. Bad Guy and Barcelona,
released in 1985 and 1988, respectively. The former was a pop-oriented
album that emphasized disco and dance music. "Barcelona" was recorded
with the opera singer Montserrat Caballé, whom Mercury
had long admired.
Although it remained on the UK
Album Charts for 23 weeks, Mr. Bad Guy was not
considered to have been a commercial success relative to most Queen
albums. However, in 1993, a remix of "Living
on My Own", a single from the album, reached the #1 position on the UK
Singles Charts. The song remained on the charts for thirteen weeks and
garnered Mercury a posthumous Ivor Novello Award. All Music
critic David Prato describes Mr. Bad Guy as
"outstanding from start to finish" and expressed his view that Mercury
"did a commendable job of stretching into uncharted territory."
In particular, the album was heavily synthesizer-driven in a way that
was uncharacteristic of previous Queen albums, save portions of 1984's The Works.
Barcelona, recorded with Spanish soprano Montserrat
Caballé, combined elements of popular music and opera. Caballé
considered the album to have been one of the great successes of her
career and said of Mercury, “He was not only a popular singer, he was a
musician, that could sit at the piano and compose. He discovered a new
way to bring different music styles together. He is the first and only
person to have done this.”
In September of 2006, a compilation album featuring Mercury’s solo work
was released in the UK in honour of what would have been his sixtieth
birthday. The album debuted in the top 10 of the UK
Album Charts.
Over the years, rare Freddie Mercury solo albums have greatly
increased in value. For instance, a Japanese single of the song “Guide
Me Home” from the Barcelona album is now worth as
much as £1,000 ($2,003).
Another valuable item is a 1973 cover of the 1969
Beach
Boys song, "I Can Hear Music" recorded under
the stage
name Larry
Lurex. Widely bootlegged, the original record is
now a valuable collectible.
Mercury collaborated with Michael
Jackson on some tracks which were never officially released, including
“There Must Be More to Life Than This” and “State
of Shock”, which were both leaked to the Internet. “There Must Be More
to Life Than This” was later released ‒ in a different, Mercury-only
version, on Mercury's solo album “Mr. Bad Guy”. Mercury also recorded
another track with Michael Jackson called "Victory" that has yet to be
released to the public. “State of Shock”, released on the 1984
Victory
album, was ultimately performed by Mick
Jagger and The Jackson 5. Mercury was originally
scheduled to appear on the Thriller
album as well.
Personal life
In the early 1970s Mercury had a long-term relationship with a
girlfriend named Mary Austin, with whom he lived for many years.
However, by the mid-1970s, Mercury began an affair with a male record
executive, which ultimately resulted in the end of his relationship
with Austin.
However, the two remained close friends through the years, and Mercury
often referred to Austin as his only true friend. In a 1985 interview,
Mercury said of Austin, "All my lovers asked me why they couldn't
replace Mary (Austin), but it's simply impossible. The only friend I've
got is Mary, and I don't want anybody else. To me, she was my
common-law wife. To me, it was a marriage. We believe in each other,
that's enough for me. I couldn't fall in love with a man the same way
as I have with Mary."
According to the DVD "The Making of 'A Night at the Opera,'" Freddie
wrote several songs which were dedicated to Mary or were about Mary,
the most notable of which is "Love Of My Life."
By 1980, Mercury began to frequent gay
bathhouses and clubs in New York,
where he met many short-term partners. By 1985 he began another
long-term relationship with a hairdresser named Jim Hutton. Hutton
lived with Mercury for the last six years of his life, cared for him
when he was ill, and was at his bedside when he died.
According to Hutton, Mercury referred to him as his husband, and died
wearing a wedding band that Hutton had given him.
Hutton later wrote a book about his relationship with Mercury called Mercury
and Me.
Mercury possessed a notable overbite
of his teeth that he had wanted to fix for many years. Early in his
career, he commented that he wished to have work done, but regretted
that he did not have time to do it.
According to the January 2004 edition of Cat Fancy,
Mercury possessed a great fondness for cats, at one point owning as
many as ten. Mercury's personal assistant, Peter Freestone, wrote that
his boss "put as much importance on them [his cats] as any human life."
The album Mr. Bad Guy and
the song "Delilah" were dedicated to cats, and
Mercury wore clothes featuring cats in videos (such as the video clip
for "These Are the Days
of Our Lives") and on album covers.
Death
According to Hutton in his book "Mercury and Me", Mercury was
diagnosed with HIV
in the spring of 1987.
That same year, Mercury also claimed to have tested negative for the
virus in a published interview. Due to his failing health over the next
few years, Mercury and Queen stopped touring. Despite these denials,
the British press continued to pursue the rampant rumours about his
health, fueled by Mercury's physical appearance and by reports from
former lovers to various tabloids. His gaunt appearance in his last
video, "These Are the Days
of Our Lives", suggested serious illness.
Mercury continued to record music in the studio until the
month before he died. On November 22, 1991, Mercury called Queen's manager Jim Beach
over to his Kensington home, to discuss a public statement. The next
day, November
23, the following announcement was made to the press:
| “ |
Following
the enormous conjecture in the press over the last two weeks, I wish to
confirm that I have been tested HIV positive and have AIDS. I felt it
correct to keep this information private to date to protect the privacy
of those around me. However, the time has come now for my friends and
fans around the world to know the truth and I hope that everyone will
join with my doctors and all those worldwide in the fight against this
terrible disease. My privacy has always been very special to me and I
am famous for my lack of interviews. Please understand this policy will
continue. |
” |
A little over 24 hours after issuing the statement, Mercury
died at the age of 45. The official cause of death was bronchial
pneumonia
resulting from AIDS.
Although he had not attended religious services in years, Mercury's
funeral was conducted by a Zoroastrian priest. It was tradition for
those of the Zoroastrian religion to be cremated with all their
possessions, as his parents were followers of the religion. He was cremated at Kensal
Green Cemetery and the whereabouts of his ashes now are unknown,
although some believe them to have been dispersed into Lake
Geneva. In his will, Mercury left half of his wealth to his girlfriend,
Mary Austin, and the other half to his parents and sister. He further
left £500,000 to his chef, £500,000 to his personal assistant, £100,000
to his driver, and £500,000 to his partner, Jim Hutton. Mary Austin
inherited his estate, where she now lives with her family.
In the spring of 1992, the remaining members of Queen founded The Mercury Phoenix Trust
and organized The Freddie
Mercury Tribute Concert for AIDS Awareness.
The concert, which was broadcast around the world and had an attendance
of 72,000, featured wide variety of guests such as Extreme, Elton
John, Metallica, David
Bowie, Annie Lennox, Tony
Iommi, Guns N' Roses, Elizabeth
Taylor, George Michael, Def
Leppard and Liza Minnelli. The concert was
broadcast live to 76 countries and had an estimated viewing audience of
1 billion.
Criticism and controversy
Regarding sexual orientation
Mercury has been criticized for his unwillingness to publicly
acknowledge both his sexual orientation as well as his Indian
background. Critics have noted that Mercury never formally admitted to
the public that he was gay. Others criticized Mercury's reluctance to
admit his HIV status, saying that this gave the message to many fans
that AIDS was a shameful disease. It was further suggested that Mercury
could have raised a great deal of money by speaking truthfully and
honestly about his situation and his fight against AIDS.
On the other hand, much awareness was also made possible as a result of
the Freddie Mercury Tribute Concert, which was broadcast around the
world. Shortly after his death, pop star Phil
Collins said about Mercury,"I have the greatest admiration
and a lot of affection for him. But if you go around living a pretty
much promiscuous life, as he did, you always run the risk of AIDS."
Regarding ethnicity
Mercury has further been criticized for having kept his Indian
background a secret from the public. He would sometimes refer to
himself as "Persian," perhaps alluding to his identity as a Parsi. The
Sunday Times noted that he "managed to avoid claiming the crown of
Britain's first Indian pop star."
Many friends expressed their view that Mercury felt ashamed of his
ethnic origins and feared racial backlash in a country that had long
been troubled with ethnic tensions. Bandmate Roger Taylor
suggested that Mercury downplayed his heritage simply because he did
not feel that it would fit well with his public persona.
A critical journalist from Times Online wrote, "Curiously, people
are horrified that Michael Jackson should be in such
denial of his ethnic origins and yet don’t mind Mercury doing the same
thing."
Criticism from rock critics
Although Queen was always highly successful on a commercial
level, in the 1970s the band often received poor reviews from rock
music critics in magazines such as "NME" and "Rolling Stone." Many of these critics
embraced the newly emerging punk rock movement and felt that Queen
albums were full of over-produced songs.
One Rolling
Stone critic expressed his opinion that many of the songs on the band's
1974 Queen
II album (largely written by Mercury) featured "histrionic vocals,
abrupt and pointless compositional complexity, and a dearth of melody."
Controversies
Mercury and Queen were widely criticized in the 1980s for the
fact that they broke a United Nations cultural boycott by
performing a series of shows at Sun
City, an entertainment complex in apartheid South Africa. As a result
of these shows, Queen were placed on a United Nations list of
blacklisted artists and was widely criticized in magazines such as NME.
Controversy arose in 1999 when a Royal Mail
stamp
was issued in honor of Mercury as part of the Millennium
Stamp series.
One journalist expressed the opinion that Mercury had lived a
"degenerate lifestyle," making him an unsuitable subject for a stamp.
The stamp caused further controversy because Queen drummer Roger Taylor could be
seen in the background. At that time, members of the British Royal
family were the only living people who usually appeared on stamps in
the UK, although this policy has since changed.
A further controversy ensued in August 2006, when an
organization calling itself the Islamic Mobilization and Propagation
petitioned the Zanzibar government's culture ministry, demanding that a
large-scale celebration of what would have been Mercury's sixtieth
birthday be cancelled. The organization issued several complaints about
the planned celebrations, including that Mercury was not a true
Zanzibari and that he had lived a homosexual lifestyle not in
accordance with the laws of Islam, the dominant religion of the island.
The organization claimed that "associating Mercury with Zanzibar
degrades our island as a place of Islam."
The planned celebration was cancelled.
Legacy
Freddie Mercury statue in Montreux, Switzerland.
|
The Millennium Stamp featuring Freddie Mercury.
|
Lasting popularity
In the years since his death, Freddie Mercury and Queen have
remained popular. In England the band has spent more collective weeks
on the UK Album Charts than any other
musical act (including the Beatles),
and "Queen's Greatest Hits" is the highest selling album of all time.
Although the sources are not highly accurate, estimates of worldwide
record sales to date have been set as high as 300 million.
Whether Mercury's death in fact enhanced Queen's popularity is not
clear. In the United States, where Queen's popularity had lagged in the
1980s, sales of Queen albums went up dramatically in 1992, the year
following Mercury's death.
At the same time, the movie Wayne's World, which featured
"Bohemian Rhapsody," also came out that year.
Several popularity polls conducted over the past decade
indicate that Mercury's reputation may in fact have been enhanced since
his death. For instance, in 2002 he appeared in the 58th spot in a list
of the "100 Greatest Britons",
sponsored by the BBC
and voted for by the public.
He was further listed at the 52nd spot in a 2007 Japanese national
survey of the 100 most "influential heroes."
Other western entertainers on the Japanese list included Audrey
Hepburn, John Lennon and Elvis
Presley. Finally, despite the fact that he had been criticized by gay
activitists for hiding his HIV status, author Paul
Russell included Mercury in his book "The Gay 100: A Ranking of the
Most Influential Gay Men and Lesbians, Past and Present."
Other entertainers on Russell's list included Liberace and Rock
Hudson.
In addition to its continuing popularity in the UK, Queen
remains a popular international band as well. As an example, two of
Mercury's songs, "We Are the Champions" and "Bohemian
Rhapsody", have each been voted as the world's favorite song in two
different polls.
In a list of the greatest English language singers of the
20th century, compiled by BBC Radio, he was the highest-ranked hard
rock vocalist, having been voted at the tenth spot.
He also came in second in MTV's
list of the 22 greatest singers of
the past 25 years, having been beaten to the top spot by singer Mariah
Carey.
A statue in Montreux, Switzerland
(by Irena
Sedlecka) has been erected as a tribute to Mercury. Beginning in 2003,
fans from around the world gather in Switzerland on a yearly basis to
pay tribute to the singer as part of the Freddie Mercury Montreux
Memorial Day on September 1st and 2nd.
A Royal
Mail stamp
was also issued in honor of Mercury as part of the Millennium
Stamp series.
Finally, Mercury has recently been acknowledged as an
influential person of Asian descent. In 2006, Time
Asia magazine named Mercury as one of the most influential Asians
of the past 60 years.
The article credited Mercury with having "duplicated in popular music
what other Indians—such as Salman Rushdie and Vikram
Seth—have done in literature: taking the colonizer's art form and
representing it in a manner richer and more dazzling than many
Anglophones thought possible."
Quotations about Mercury by
influential artists
- "When we lost Freddie, we not only lost a great
personality, a man with a great sense of humor, a true showman, but we
lost probably the best, the really, the best virtuoso rock 'n' roll
singer of all time. He could sing anything in any style. He could
change his style from line to line and, God, that's an art. And he was
brilliant at it." — Roger Daltrey
- "When Freddie died, Queen ceased to exist." — David Bret
- "Of all the more theatrical rock performers, Freddie took
it further than the rest." ... "He took it over the edge. And of
course, I always admired a man who wears tights. I only saw him in
concert once, and as they say, he was definitely a man who could hold
an audience in the palm of his hand. He could always turn a cliché to
his advantage." — rock star David Bowie, who recorded the
song "Under Pressure" with Queen and
performed at The Freddie
Mercury Tribute Concert
- "The difference between Freddie and almost all the other
rock stars was he was selling the voice." — opera singer Montserrat
Caballé, who collaborated with Mercury on the Barcelona
album
- Freddie Mercury was the one rock star mentioned in singer Kurt
Cobain’s suicide note (1994): "I haven't felt the excitement of
listening to as well as creating music along with reading and writing
for too many years now. I feel guilty beyond words about these things.
For example, when we’re backstage and the lights go out and the manic
roar of the crowds begins, it doesn't affect me the way in which it did
for Freddy [sic] Mercury who seemed to love, relish
in the love and adoration from the crowd, which is something I totally
admire and envy."
- Pop star Phil Collins was quoted as
saying shortly after Mercury's death,"I have the greatest admiration
and a lot of affection for him. But if you go around living a pretty
much promiscuous life, as he did, you always run the risk of AIDS."
- Comedian Mike Myers, whose movie Wayne's
World introduced "Bohemian
Rhapsody" to a new generation of listeners, said of Mercury, "He had
theatricality, he was larger than life, new, fresh, cool. This is a god
that walks as man."
- Although singer Axl Rose has long been criticized by gay
activists, he was a Freddie Mercury fan. He has been quoted as saying,
"If I didn’t have Freddie Mercury’s lyrics to hold on to as a kid, I
don’t know where I would be. It taught me about all forms of music. It
would open my mind. I never really had a bigger teacher in my whole
life."
Rose also performed “We Will Rock You” and “Bohemian
Rhapsody” with Elton John at The Freddie
Mercury Tribute Concert.
Discography
-
Main article: Freddie Mercury
discography
- See
also: Queen discography
Instruments used by Mercury
Keyboards
Grand pianos:
- Baldwin SD10 Concert Grand
- Bechstein D Concert Grand
- Bechstein S Baby Grand
- Bösendorfer Imperial Concert Grand
- Kawai
RX7 Concert Grand
- Steinway D Concert Grand
- Steinway S Baby Grand
- White Baby Grand (unknown brand)
- Yamaha C1 Baby Grand
- Yamaha C7 Concert Grand
- Yamaha CFIIIS Concert Grand
Upright pianos:
- Chappell
- Upright (unknown brand)
Electronic pianos:
- Roland RD1000
- Wurlitzer
EP200
- Yamaha CP80
Synthesizers and samplers:
- E-mu Emulator
II+
- Fairlight
CMIIIS
- Korg
M1
- Kurzweil K250
- Oberheim
OB8
- Oberheim OBX
- Oberheim OBXA
- Roland Jupiter 8
- Yamaha DX7
Other keyboard:
- Hammond organ
- Harpsichord (unknown brand)
Other
Guitars:
- Ovation 12-string
- White Fender Telecaster
Further reading
- Boyce, Simon
(1995), Freddie Mercury, Bristol: Parragon, ISBN 9780752511054
- Clarke, Ross
(1991), Freddie Mercury: A Kind of Magic, Oxted:
Kingsfleet Publications, ISBN
9781874130017
- Freestone,
Peter (1998), Mister Mercury, London: Tusitala, ISBN 9780953334100
- Jones, Lesley-Ann
(1998), Freddie Mercury: The Definitive Biography,
London: Coronet, ISBN
9780340672099
- Hudson, Jeffrey
(1995), Freddie Mercury & Queen,
Chessington, Surrey: Castle Communications, ISBN
9781860740404
- Mercury,
Freddie; Greg Brooks & Simon Lupton (2006), Freddie
Mercury: A life, In His Own Words, London: Mercury Songs
Limited, ISBN
9780955375804
- Sky, Rick (1992), The
Show Must Go On, London: Fontana, ISBN
9780006378433
References
- Evans, David
& David Minns (1992), Freddie Mercury: This is the
Real Life, London: Britannia, ISBN
9780951993712
- Freestone,
Peter (1999), Freddie Mercury: An Intimate Memoir By the Man
Who Knew Him Best, London: Omnibus Press, ISBN 9780711978010
- Gunn, Jacky
& Jim Jenkins (1992), Queen: As It Began,
London: Sidgwick & Jackson, ISBN
9780330332590
- Jackson, Laura
(1997), Mercury: The King of Queen, London: Smith
Gryphon, ISBN
9781856851329
- Hutton,
Jim & Tim Waspshott (1994), Mercury and Me,
London: Bloomsbury, ISBN
9780747519225
Footnotes
-
"Certificate of Birth". Retrieved from mr-mercury.co.uk
-
"The Great Pretender", Mail
on Sunday, 2000-11-26
-
"Star of India", Sunday
Times Magazine, 1996-11-17
-
Prato, Greg, Freddie Mercury, All
Music Guide
-
Mercury was listed #2 in MTV's 22 Greatest Voices in
Music, aired March 2003 by MTV, compiled by MTV and
Blender magazine.
-
http://www.digitaldreamdoor.com/pages/best_vocalists.html
Freddie Mercury #1 Rock Vocalist
-
Careful documentation of recorded vocal range
-
Article discussing vocal range
-
Article discussing voice
-
"Interview with Mercury", Circus,
1977-12-05
-
"Bohemian Rhapsody" transcribed
-
"Interview with Mercury", Melody
Maker, 1981-05-02
-
Evans & Minns
-
"The World's Greatest Gigs," Channel 4
-
BBC Article on "The World's Greatest Gigs"
Poll
-
The Sins of St. FreddieJohn Harris.
Friday, January 14, 2005. The Guardian.
-
Morumbi Stadium, Sao Paulo, Brazil,
Queen Concerts
-
NME Coverage of Budapest Concert
-
Jackson
-
Davis, Andy (March 1996), "Queen
Before Queen", Record Collector (no. 199)
-
Rivadavia, Ed, Mr. Bad Guy, All Music Guide
-
Barcelona Queen
-
Jones, Tim (July 1999), "How
Great Thou Art… King Freddie", Record Collector
-
Documentary: "Freddie's Loves: Part 2"
-
"The Mercury that's rising in Rock is Freddie
the satiny seductor of 'Queen'", People, 1977-12-05
-
Documentary: "Freddie's Loves: Part 3"
-
"Freddie and Jim: A Love Story", The
Guardian, 1994-10-22
-
Freestone
-
"Freddie & His Best
Friends", Cat Fancy
-
Review of the Freddie Mercury Tribute Concert,
The
Times
-
ABC Article Discusses Tribute Concert
-
Criticism in "Rolling Stone" article
-
Excerpt from "The Show Must Go On," page 163
-
Donna, Kelley, CNN
Morning News, at 3:05 minutes, CNN
-
"Star of India", Sunday
Times Magazine, 1996-11-17
-
"Freddie Mercury: Magic Remixed, Roger Taylor
9:00
-
Journalist discusses ethnicity
-
NME article mentioning critics
-
"Rolling Stone Review from 1994
-
The Sins of St. FreddieJohn Harris.
Friday, January 14, 2005. The Guardian.
-
A
series of articles of stamp issue
-
MTV Article on Stamp
-
Zanzibar Muslim leader: Ban Freddie Mercury
party
-
Queen Ranks #1 in time on UK Album Charts
-
Queen's Greatest Hits it the highest selling
album of all time
-
An article estimating 300 million albums
worldwide
-
[www.riaa.com Recording Industry Association of America: Searchable
Database]
-
The 100 Greatest Britons
-
Results of Japanese "Hero" Poll
-
"[http://www.adherents.com/people/100_gay.html
The Gay 100: A Ranking of the Most Influential Gay Men and Lesbians,
Past and Present]".
-
"We Are the Champions" Voted #1
-
"Bohemian Rhapsody" Voted #1.
-
www.telegraph.co.uk discusses tribute day
-
Fitzpatrick, Liam, "Farrokh Bulsara", Time
Asia
-
Cobain, Kurt, Suicide Note
-
Donna, Kelley, CNN
Morning News, at 3:05 minutes, CNN
External links
Freddie
Mercury noquotend -->
| v • d • e Queen |
| Freddie Mercury
• Brian
May • Roger Taylor • John
Deacon |
| Discography |
| Studio albums: Queen
• Queen
II • Sheer
Heart Attack • A Night at the
Opera • A Day at the Races
• News of the World
• Jazz • The
Game • Flash
Gordon • Hot Space
• The Works
• A Kind of Magic
• The Miracle
• Innuendo • Made
in Heaven |
| Live albums: Live
Killers • Live Magic
• Live at Wembley '86
• Queen on Fire -
Live at the Bowl • Return of the Champions |
| Compilation albums: Greatest Hits
• At the Beeb • Greatest Hits II
• Classic Queen
• Queen Rocks • Greatest Hits III
• Stone Cold Classics
• The A-Z of Queen, Volume 1 |
| Videography |
| We Will Rock You
• The Freddie
Mercury Tribute Concert • Greatest
Video Hits 1 • Live at Wembley Stadium
• Greatest Video Hits 2
• We Are the
Champions: Final Live in Japan • Queen on Fire -
Live at the Bowl • Return of the Champions
• Super Live in Japan |
| Tours |
| Queen I Tour • Queen II
Tour • Sheer Heart Attack Tour • A
Night at the Opera Tour • A Day at the Races Tour
• News of the World Tour • Jazz Tour
• Crazy
Tour • The Game Tour • Hot
Space Tour • The Works Tour
• Magic
Tour • Queen + Paul Rodgers Tour |
| Multimedia |
| Queen: The eYe |
| Related
Articles |
| Ibex • Larry
Lurex • Smile
• The
Cross • Queen + Paul Rodgers
• We Will Rock You
(musical) • Deacy
Amp • Red
Special • The
Official International Queen Fan Club • Live performances • Songs
| Persondata |
| NAME |
Mercury, Freddie |
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES |
Bulsara, Farrokh (real name) |
| SHORT DESCRIPTION |
British South Asian rock musician |
| DATE OF BIRTH |
September 5, 1946 |
| PLACE OF BIRTH |
Zanzibar |
| DATE OF DEATH |
November 24, 1991 |
| PLACE OF DEATH |
Kensington, London, England |
|