Made In Heaven (Queen album)

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Made In Heaven
Made In Heaven, 1995
Released 6 November 1995 (UK),
7 November 1995 (US)
Recorded January - June 1991 and 18 October 1993 - early 1995 at Mountain, Allerton Hill, Cosford Mill, and Metropolis Studios
Length 60:22
Label Parlophone
Producer(s) Queen, David Richards, Justin Shirley-Smith, and Joshua J. Macrae
Queen chronology
Greatest Hits I & II
1995
Made In Heaven
1995
Queen Rocks
1997

Contents

After the lengthy sessions for Innuendo finished up in November 1990, Freddie was adamant that the band go back into the studios to work on further material. Knowing he was on borrowed time, he desired to get the most out of him while he still could. The original plan was to record some extra material for single B-side release, but as the sessions progressed, the band were surprised with the quality of the material and instead decided to record another album.

Sessions progressed steadily throughout the first half of 1991, with the band recording at Mountain Studios in Montreux. While it's not precisely known just what the band had worked on, three of the songs eventually released on the album – Mother Love, You Don't Fool Me, and A Winter's Tale – date from these sessions. According to Brian and Roger, the band were only able to work two or three days a week, and were at the mercy of Freddie's health. During this period, Brian and Roger continued to work on material for solo projects ( Back To The Light and The Cross's Blue Rock, respectively), while John went on various extended holidays with his wife and children.

Varying accounts have indicated the time period when Freddie was unable to continue working on the album. While David Richards had somewhat carelessly said that Freddie finished his last vocal and then passed away ten days later, he had also explained in the Champions Of The World documentary that Freddie's final vocal was on 22 May 1991, and then held up a studio track sheet of Mother Love that confirmed this. It's likely that the sessions extended no further than June 1991; as much of a workaholic as he was, Freddie also valued his rest and relaxation. Peter Freestone and Jim Hutton have also claimed that Freddie was unable to speak in his last weeks, and, listening to Mother Love, it's not possible he recorded his vocal ten days before he died.

However, the sessions weren't all doom and gloom. Freddie continuously pestered the others for more songs to sing, as Brian explained: "Right up until the end, Freddie asked me for lyrics and music that he could work on, and he was adamant that this material should be released." When the sessions ended, though, other matters became a priority for the time: Brian continued to promote Innuendo and Roger worked with The Cross for their final album.

On the evening of 24 November 1991, Brian, Roger, and John met with Jim Beach to discuss their future. It was unanimously decided that the band would be unable to continue as a recording and touring unit; it was also decided that some kind of celebration of Freddie's life and career should be planned. While collecting a BMI award for Best Single of 1991 (These Are The Days Of Our Lives which, ironically, was released as the secondary A-side of Bohemian Rhapsody), Roger indicated that a celebration was in the works for the spring of 1992; that eventually became the Freddie Mercury Tribute Concert.

After the concert, it was universally accepted that George Michael stole the show, and rumors abounded that Brian, Roger, and John would continue on with him as a lead singer. Instead, Brian went on tour with his own band, and Roger worked on his own solo material. Nothing was heard from the final post- Innuendo sessions until the autumn of 1995, though the band had been working on the songs as far back as the summer of 1993, when Roger and John started working on the material, adding new drums and bass to old songs. Brian was annoyed. "Roger and John became very impatient with me and started working on the tapes. I didn't want this stuff to go out without my involvement, so I took the tapes off them, felt that they'd done it wrong and spent months putting it all back together. Doing Made In Heaven was like assembling a jigsaw puzzle. But I wouldn't have put my seal of approval on it if I hadn't thought it was up to standard."

The others worked discontinuously between 1993 and 1995, piecing together the album from scraps of material discarded over the years. No songs survive from the 1970s, though a plethora of unreleased material would have worked nicely; it's obvious that the band weren't going for a posthumous compilation, a la Led Zeppelin's Coda, but were going for a cohesive album. It's A Beautiful Day is the oldest song on the album, dating from the April 1980 sessions for The Game; Let Me Live was recorded in 1983 (as Another Little Piece Of My Heart) during sessions for The Works; Heaven For Everyone, recorded in 1987, featured Freddie's original vocal; My Life Has Been Saved and Freddie's vocal for Too Much Love Will Kill You were recorded during The Miracle sessions. You Don't Fool Me was reportedly pieced together from bits of tape, while Let Me Live had existed only as a brief, 90-second jam. (Why Self Made Man or Love Makin' Love, or even a reported recording of Let Me In Your Heart Again, weren't considered is anyone's guess.)

Happily, everything received a fresh new recording, with Freddie's two solo songs sounding more like Queen songs – the title track becomes a grandiose epic, while I Was Born To Love You becomes a scorching rocker. Queen purists are indignant that Freddie would not have wanted his solo material touched, and that it had remained solo material for a reason.

The album was met with a wave of excitement, and became the second-biggest album release of 1995 (behind The Beatles' Anthology 1, which also, incidentally, featured a "new" recording from The Beatles, using an old demo tape of John Lennon's "Free As A Bird"). The album peaked at #1 in the UK, and the five singles - Heaven For Everyone, October 1995 (#2); A Winter's Tale, December 1995 (#6); Too Much Love Will Kill You, February 1996 (#15); Let Me Live, June 1996 (#9); You Don't Fool Me, November 1996 (#17) – all hit the Top 20. The vinyl release of the album featured two alternate sleeves – both taken on Lake Geneva in Montreux, one in the morning and one in the evening – with a brief instrumental snippet at the end of the album. This piece was extended to nearly 23 minutes on the CD release, and was created by David Richards, Brian, and Roger as a sound collage, to signify what Freddie's ascent to Heaven might have been like. (At least, this is how the far more spiritual fans interpret it; David merely explained, "This was started by me having fun with the ASR10 sampler. I took the opening chords of It's A Beautiful Day and made them loop forever. Then I added some of Freddie talking through strange echoes. Brian and Roger heard it and came in to add some effects of their own and we thought of it as a surreal Requiem. It was the end of the album and we all were feeling very emotional.") This piece, deemed a hidden track, was unofficially titled Track 13. The more astute fans will note that there are only eleven true songs on the album; the twelfth song has become known as Yeah, simply because this is all it consists of – all four seconds of it.

While Innuendo is considered Queen's final chapter, Made In Heaven, for all its faults, should be considered as a tasteful epilogue. Fans have hoped for a follow-up album of sorts, though Brian was hesitant to go down a similar path, noting that the posthumous sessions were particularly emotional and difficult. With the apparent retirement of John Deacon, and Brian and Roger now collaborating with Paul Rodgers, Made In Heaven remains the final true Queen album.

Tracklists

Vinyl version

  • Side 1:
  1. It's A Beautiful Day
  2. Made In Heaven
  3. Let Me Live
  4. Mother Love
  5. My Life Has Been Saved
  • Side 2:
  1. I Was Born To Love You
  2. Heaven For Everyone
  3. Too Much Love Will Kill You
  4. You Don't Fool Me
  5. A Winter's Tale
  6. It's A Beautiful Day (Reprise)

CD version

  1. It's A Beautiful Day
  2. Made In Heaven
  3. Let Me Live
  4. Mother Love
  5. My Life Has Been Saved
  6. I Was Born To Love You
  7. Heaven For Everyone
  8. Too Much Love Will Kill You
  9. You Don't Fool Me
  10. A Winter's Tale
  11. It's A Beautiful Day (Reprise)
  12. Yeah
  13. Track 13

2011 Universal Records CD

  • Disc 1:
  1. It's A Beautiful Day
  2. Made In Heaven
  3. Let Me Live
  4. Mother Love
  5. My Life Has Been Saved
  6. I Was Born To Love You
  7. Heaven For Everyone
  8. Too Much Love Will Kill You
  9. You Don't Fool Me
  10. A Winter's Tale
  11. It's A Beautiful Day (Reprise)
  12. Yeah
  13. Track 13
  • Disc 2 – Bonus EP:
  1. Heaven For Everyone (single version)
  2. It's A Beautiful Day (single version)
  3. My Life Has Been Saved (1989 B-side)
  4. I Was Born To Love You (vocal and piano version)
  5. Rock In Rio Blues
  6. A Winter's Tale (Cosy Fireside mix)
  • iTunes-exclusive bonus videos:
  1. Too Much Love Will Kill You / Heart-Ache (promotional video)
  2. Heaven For Everyone (promotional video)
  3. A Winter's Tale (alternate promotional video)

Credits

  • Musicians:
Freddie Mercury - vocals, piano, keyboards
John Deacon - bass guitar, keyboards
Roger Taylor - drums, percussion, keyboards, vocals
Brian May - guitars, keyboards, vocals
Rebecca Leigh-White, Gary Martin, Catherine Porter, and Miriam Stockley - backing vocals on Let Me Live
  • Produced by:
Queen, David Richards, Justin Shirley-Smith, and Joshua J. Macrae. Additional material recorded by Mack.
  • Recorded:
January - June 1991 at Mountain Studios, Montreux; late 1993 - early 1995 at Allerton Hill and Cosford Mill Studios, Surrey, and Metropolis Studios, London.

Charts

Country Release date First appearance in charts Peak position Chart run Weeks in chart Additional comments
UK - 18/11/1995 1 1-3-5-4-3-2-2-6-7-9-13-20-28-35-31-40-35-29-27-29-33-41-69-68-71-0-75 27 weeks First run in UK charts
UK - 22/03/1997 47 47-64 2 weeks Second run in UK charts
Information supplied by Fedepeti, 24 August 2004

Liner notes

Additional info

  • The vast majority of the recording work finishing off the tracks for the album was recorded in Allerton Hill and Cosford Mill studios, which share one thing in common, they're both home studios belonging to Queen band members.
  • From deciding to start work on constructing MIH to it's release date took nearly eighteen months as a concerted effort from Brian, Roger and John. Brian later said that although making the album was a task that had to be done, he wouldn't want to go through it ever again.
  • The sound-bursts you hear on the end of Mother Love, are apparently a few seconds of every Queen track ever recorded, put together, and then rapidly sped through a tape machine.
  • The two covers are not genuine original photographs, but a pair of composite shots. The two different cover shots of the view across Lake Geneva, were of one of sunrise and the other of sunset. Brian, Roger and John were photographed in a London studio, and the statue was still in it's sculpturer's/maker's studio for it's part of the photo session. The building on stilts, otherwise known as the duckhouse, is at one end of the lake shore at Montreux, and Freddie's statue is pretty much at the other, and just a short distance from the band's studios there.

Singles

Heaven For Everyone, 1995
A Winter's Tale, 1995
Too Much Love Will Kill You, 1996
Let Me Live, 1996
You Don't Fool Me, 1995

Queen Talks

Brian May, July 1998, Guitarist
"It was a long journey, and it was a much bigger job than anyone realised; we didn’t talk much about it.
We were able to work with Freddie on it, but hardly at all, and the object was to make an album that sounded like four guys in a studio. We knew that if we achieved that, then no one would ask any questions. And that’s almost what happened.
We started off with just scraps of tape. It was a huge job, two years of my life finding a way of developing the songs, but at the same time using the limited input we had from Freddie. Sometimes there was a complete first take vocal, while other times there were no more than three or four lines.
It was a labour of love for me, working through the night perhaps on just one line. But if you can listen to, for example, ‘I Was Born To Love You’ and say that it was a good performance, I’m glad it sounds so, but obviously it couldn’t have been."

Reviews

Entertainment Weekly, 1995
Initially recorded while the singer was suffering through the worst stages of AIDS (and completed in the four years since he succumbed), the album represents the last public words from a man approaching his last breath.
But fear not! Mercury--arguably rock's campiest performer--would never let anything (even death) turn things dreary. Made in Heaven depicts an almost Disneyesque view of the End, opening with the sound of tweeting birds and winding through ballads beaming with gooey wonder. Given its halting construction, it also makes for a surprisingly organic work with no shortage of highlights, from the rock version of Mercury's solo dance hit "I Was Born to Love You," to the wonderfully schmaltzy title song, to a fascinating jaw dropper of an unlisted finale. This last track, a 22-minute wash of celestial ahhs and twinkle, presents what could be rock's first-ever depiction of the afterlife, with heaven presented as some flouncy Hollywood epic. It's the perfect theatrical epitaph for a life dedicated to gorgeous artifice.
Additional Reviews

LP Releases

Click thumbnails to enlarge

Release Date Catalog # Country Notes
1995-xx-xx PCSD167 UK Cream Vinyl
1995-xx-xx PCSD167 UK Black Vinyl
1995-xx-xx HR-62017-1 USA UK Pressed
1995-xx-xx EMCJ5626 Zimbabwe

CD Releases

Click thumbnails to enlarge

Release Date Catalog # Country Notes
1995-xx-xx CDPCSD167 UK
1995-xx-xx 8360882 Brazil
2002-xx-xx 5410912 France w / Innuendo
1995-xx-xx TOCP-8700 Japan
1995-xx-xx TOCP-8700 Japan Promo
2001-xx-xx TOCP-65855 Japan Remaster
2001-xx-xx TOCP-65855 Japan Promo
2004-xx-xx TOCP-67390 Japan Remaster
2004-xx-xx TOCP-67355 Japan Remaster (Alt Sleeve)
1995-xx-xx 8360882 Mexico Free Patch
1995-xx-xx CDPCSD167 Taiwan

Cassette Releases

Click thumbnails to enlarge

Release Date Catalog # Country Notes
1995-xx-xx TCPCSD167 UK
1995-xx-xx PRCS620174 USA Promo

Promotional Material

UK Magazine Ad - Front
UK Magazine Ad - Back
USA Magazine Ad
German Promo Box
Parlophone Invitation
UK promo bottle of 1983 'Rothschild Chateau Lafite 1er Grand Cru Classe Paulliac' red wine
UK Chateau Lafite insert
French promo t-shirt
UK promo t-shirt
USA promo t-shirt
Australian promo jacket
UK Promo Display Stand
Spanish Press Release
USA Press Release