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About this product
Product Identifiers
ProducerDavid Richards^Janine Marmot^Joshua J. Macrae^Queen
Record LabelHollywood Records, Hwd
UPC0050087250713
eBay Product ID (ePID)5059374941
Product Key Features
Release Year2012
FormatCD
GenreRock
ArtistQueen
Release TitleMade In Heaven
Dimensions
Item Height0.38 in
Item Weight0.25 lb
Item Length5.57 in
Item Width5.01 in
Additional Product Features
Number of Discs2
Number of Tracks19
Country/Region of ManufactureUnited States
Tracks1.1 It S a Beautiful Day 1.2 Made in Heaven 1.3 Let Me Live 1.4 Mother Love 1.5 My Life Has Been Saved 1.6 I Was Born to Love You 1.7 Heaven for Everyone 1.8 Too Much Love Will Kill You 1.9 You Don't Fool Me 1.10 A Winter's Tale 1.11 It's a Beautiful Day (Reprise) 2.1 Heaven for Everyone [Single Version] [Version] 2.2 It S a Beautiful Day [1989 Bside Version] [Version] 2.3 I Was Born to Love You [Vocal ; Piano Version] [Version] 2.4 Rock in Rio Blues [Live Bside] [Live] 2.5 A Winter's Tale [Cosy Fireside Mix] 2.6 A Winter's Tale [Cosy Fireside Mix]
Sub-GenreEnglish
NotesDigitally re-mastered and expanded deluxe two CD edition of this 1995 album from the British Pomp rockers including a bonus five track CD. Originally released in 1995, this was the first posthumous release by the band since Freddie Mercury's death in 1991. The album topped the charts in Western Europe, with it's single, "Heaven for Everyone," reaching the Top Ten. Musically, Made in Heaven harked back to Queen's 1970s heyday with it's strong melodies and hard rock guitar playing, topped by Mercury's bravura singing and some of the massed choir effects familiar from "Bohemian Rhapsody." Even if one did not know that these songs were sung in the shadow of death, that subject would be obvious. The lyrics were imbued with life-and-death issues, from the titles - "Let Me Live," "My Life Has Been Saved," and "Too Much Love Will Kill You". The odd thing about this was that Mercury's over-the-top singing had always contained a hint of camp humor, and it continued to here, even when the sentiments clearly were as heartfelt as they were theatrically overstated. Maybe Mercury was determined to go out the same way he had come in, as a diva. If so, he succeeded.