Daily Mail

Unearthed after 33 years ... more miracles from Mercury and May

- By Adrian Thrills

QUEEN: The Miracle (EMI Deluxe Collector’s Edition) Verdict: Still a kind of magic ★★★★I

DERMOT KENNEDY: Sonder (Island)

Verdict: Passionate Celtic soul ★★★II

FReDDIe MeRCURY said Queen did things ‘ bigger and better’, and the band he fronted lived up to that billing. Their artistic range was dazzling and the success they enjoyed was enormous — which goes some way to explaining why there’s still so much interest in them more than three decades after his death.

This year, guitarist Brian May and drummer Roger Taylor brought their spectacula­r Rhapsody tour to UK arenas — and the Platinum Party At The Palace — with American vocalist Adam Lambert stepping into the shoes of Mercury.

Prior to that, there was a jukebox musical (We Will Rock You) and Oscar-winning biopic (Bohemian Rhapsody).

Now comes an expanded repackagin­g of The Miracle, the group’s penultimat­e album in Mercury’s lifetime, and a record that saw them return to the grandiose, hard-rocking style they pioneered in the 1970s while reiteratin­g their importance to 1980s pop.

It’s a reissue bolstered by five unreleased songs plus another, the ballad Face It Alone, that emerged for the first time only last month.

The original 1989 album arrived at a watershed moment. Mercury, who died from Aids-related pneumonia in 1991, had yet to go public with his diagnosis, but his bandmates were aware of it and rallied round. With Freddie no longer able to tour, Queen would be a studio-based act from that point onwards.

According to May, the Miracle sessions were harmonious — not always a given with a combustibl­e outfit in which all four members were competitiv­e songwriter­s. In this case, the songs were built up in the studio, with writing credits shared. ‘We left our egos at the door,’ says May.

The original LP, remastered here, is a reminder of Mercury’s stature as one of rock’s greatest showmen. his singing, even in failing health, was gloriously over the top and his emotional range was stunning: the opening lines of

Breakthru are soft and delicate; I Want It All, its title taken from a quote from May’s wife Anita Dobson, is all rock and roll power.

It’s hard to listen to the epic Was It All Worth It without hearing a reflection on mortality. ‘What is there left for me to do … am I a happy man, or is this sinking sand?’ sings Freddie of his ‘godforsake­n life’ in the spotlight. But there’s a sting in the tale: ‘Yes, it was a worthwhile experience. It was worth it.’

It’s not all killer Queen: the bonus material — and there’s a lot of it, especially on the bumper, eight- disc edition — is hit and miss. An instrument­al version of the entire LP is superfluou­s and hardcore fans will already be familiar with 12-inch versions of Breakthru, The Invisible Man and Scandal, plus a string of B-sides.

The real interest is in the ‘new’ songs. Despite the inclusion of three unheard tracks on 2014’s

Queen Forever, the Queen archives haven’t exactly been generous in yielding buried treasures since 1995’ s posthumous Made In heaven album. This package goes some way to remedying that.

It’s easy to see why Dog With A Bone, built around an AC/DC-style riff, slide guitar and throwaway lyrics, stayed locked in the vaults for 33 years.

elsewhere, though, there are a couple of Mercury masterclas­ses.

Face It Alone is another emotive reflection on life and death, and When Love Breaks Up, even though it lasts just two minutes, contains some classic Queen ingredient­s — Bohemian Rhapsodyst­yle harmonies and a vocal tour de force from Freddie.

May gets a look- in, too: You Know You Belong To Me is a minorchord delight and Wa t e r another promising acoustic piece. As Mercury tells the band at the end of I Guess We’re Falling Out, another track built around those harmonies: ‘ That’s good, that’s good … it’s worth listening to that.’ You can understand why May and Taylor work so hard to keep the flame alive. n DeRMOT KeNNeDY cut his teeth as a busker in his native Dublin. his second album, Sonder, draws from a substantia­lly wider palate — auto-tuned R&B, electrifie­d rock and Celtic fiddle — but Kennedy retains the street entertaine­r’s knack of connecting on a simple, emotional level.

he describes Sonder as being ‘ brighter’ than his 2019 debut, Without Fear, a UK chart-topper, though his optimism is punctuated by darker undercurre­nts. Something To Someone is a rocker about long- distance love, while the vicissitud­es of romance loom large on Any Love, a salute to an old flame.

A fondness for big arrangemen­ts means that Sonder regularly sounds like the work of a band rather than a solo singer-songwriter.

The elton-like ballad Dreamer is festooned with fiddles. Kiss Me, written with Bastille’s Dan Smith and inspired by an F. Scott Fitzgerald novel, is a rich, dramatic love song that should come alive when he tours next spring. n The Miracle is out in multiple formats, including double CD (£15), vinyl picture disc (£32), cassette (£13) and eight-disc box set (£145) (queenonlin­e.com). Dermot Kennedy starts a UK tour at the OVO hydro Arena, Glasgow, on March 31, 2023 (ticketmast­er.co.uk).

 ?? ?? All hail: Queen, from left, John Deacon, Freddie Mercury, Brian May and Roger Taylor
All hail: Queen, from left, John Deacon, Freddie Mercury, Brian May and Roger Taylor
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