Queens’ Tragic Rhapsody
Theatrical, brilliant, excessive and doomed – there had never been another band like Queen or a frontman like Freddie Mercury
People had trouble with how Mercury lived and with how he died. There were homophobes who saw his deterioraÂtion as a punishment for his sexuality and promisÂcuity. Others, who had done work combatÂing AIDS, faulted him for not acknowledgÂing his condition until the end. Those judgments will always follow Mercury, but if his music is any key at all, there was an alÂmost prayerful quality about his failings. In song after song he sang about mortality, solÂitary desolation and hopefulness, but he also implored some unattainable sanctuary ”“ noÂwhere so openly as in “Save Me,” from The Game: “I have no heart, I’m cold inside/I have no real intent. . . ./Save me/I can’t face this life alone.” But Mercury often felt he had to stay alone, as he had done in his childhood. “It can be a very lonely life,” he said, “but I choose it.” (In the early 1970s, when Austin suggested they have a child toÂgether, Mercury allegedly responded, “I’d rather have a cat.”) Instead of domestic refÂuge, Mercury sought ecstasy and restlessÂness for most of his life, and obviously that choice incurred a cost. One of his best songs, “Don’t Stop Me Now,” set out his ethos with a starkness that was also blissful: “I’m a rocket ship on my way to Mars/On a colliÂs i on c o u r s e / I ’m a s a t e l l i t e out of control/I’m a sex machine ready to reload.”
In The Marriage of Heaven and Hell, poet William Blake famously proclaimed, “The road of excess leads to the palace of wisÂdom.” It’s a maxim often taken to mean that a life of intemperance ”“ pursuing desires without self-restraint ”“ eventually brings one to realize the futility of those indulgencÂes, and to recognize more meaningful purÂposes. But it could also mean that without taking risks you never discover what’s posÂsible, what might illuminate you the most. In The Miracle, Mercury faced his excessÂes without sparing himself, and uncovered his answer: “Was it all worth it all these years? . . ./It didn’t matter if we won ”“ if we lost. . . ./Living, breathing rock & roll/Was it all worth it?/Yes, it was a worthwhile experiÂence/It was worth it.” He knew he had little time left when he sang those words. There was no room to bear false witness. “My misÂtakes,” he once said, “are down to me.”
The best song Mercury sang in his last years, “These Are the Days of Our Lives,” was written for him by Taylor. It is a song about accepting everything you have made of your life and looking toward your departure with a steadfast grace. The song’s video contains Mercury’s final moments in front of a camÂera. He is unmistakably a man almost dead ”“ he is painfully emaciated, and those presÂent at the filming said that even the touch of his clothes on his skin caused him agony. But he is fully present in those moments, even luÂminous. He looks skyward, his arms spread, then fixes his view on the lens as he says evÂerything he has left to say: “Those were the days of our lives ”“ yeah/The bad things in life were so few/Those days are all gone now, but one thing’s still true/When I look and I find/I still love you. . . . I still love you.”
In those moments, he is as justified as he will ever be: He has found his hard-learned wisdom in maybe the only way he could. It is Freddie Mercury’s dying that saved him.