The Miracle (album)

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The Miracle
File:Queen The Miracle.png
Studio album by Queen
Released 22 May 1989
Recorded January 1988 – January 1989 at Olympic Studios and Townhouse Studios, London, England, and Mountain Studios, Montreux, Switzerland
Genre
Length 41:22
Language English
Label Parlophone (UK)
Capitol / Hollywood (US)
Producer Queen, David Richards
Queen chronology
A Kind of Magic
(1986)A Kind of Magic1986
The Miracle
(1989)
Innuendo
(1991)Innuendo1991
Singles from The Miracle
  1. "I Want It All"
    Released: 2 May 1989
  2. "Breakthru"
    Released: 19 June 1989
  3. "The Invisible Man"
    Released: 7 August 1989 (Europe only)
  4. "Scandal"
    Released: 9 October 1989
  5. "The Miracle"
    Released: 27 November 1989 (Europe only)

The Miracle is the thirteenth studio album by British rock band Queen, released in 1989. The album was recorded as the band recovered from Brian May's marital problems and Freddie Mercury's AIDS diagnosis in 1987 (which was, though known to the band, not publicised at the time). Recording started in January 1988 and lasted for an entire year.

The album was originally going to be called The Invisible Men, but three weeks before the release, according to Roger Taylor, they decided to change the name to The Miracle. It is also the last album to feature a band photo with all four original members on the front cover.

The album reached #1 in the UK, Austria, Germany, the Netherlands, and Switzerland, and #24 on the US Billboard 200 chart. The Miracle is estimated to have sold 5 million copies, indicating that despite lower sales in the United States, the band had excellent numbers in the world, even without touring. Allmusic would name it as Queen's best album of the 1980s, along with The Game.[1]

It would prove to be the band's penultimate album to be recorded with Freddie Mercury, as he died in November 1991, less than a year after the next album, Innuendo, was released.

Track listing

All tracks credited to Queen. Listed below are the respective writers.

Side one
No. Title Writer(s) Length
1. "Party"   John Deacon, Brian May, Freddie Mercury 2:24
2. "Khashoggi's Ship"   Queen 2:47
3. "The Miracle"   Mercury, Deacon 5:02
4. "I Want It All"   May 4:41
5. "The Invisible Man"   Roger Taylor 3:55
Side two
No. Title Writer(s) Length
1. "Breakthru"   Mercury (intro), Taylor 4:07
2. "Rain Must Fall"   Deacon (music), Mercury (lyrics) 4:20
3. "Scandal"   May 4:42
4. "My Baby Does Me"   Mercury, Deacon 3:22
5. "Was It All Worth It"   Mercury 5:45

Song information

"Party"

"Party" began as a jam session between Freddie Mercury, Brian May and John Deacon. Mercury was at the piano and he started off the "we had a good night" section. From then on the three of them worked together and completed it. This is the only track which can truly be seen as a 'Queen' track in the sense that all the rest were written by sole members – but nevertheless credited to Queen. May sings lead on a small portion of the song near the beginning.

"Khashoggi's Ship"

"Khashoggi's Ship" was started by Mercury with all four of them contributing to the lyrics and music. The song is about famous billionaire Adnan Khashoggi and a ship (the Nabila, now Kingdom 5KR) that he owned at the time and was one of the largest private yachts in the world. On the album, this track segues from "Party", to which it has a very similar lyrical theme. The song served as the reference to the name of the Khashoggi character in the We Will Rock You musical.

"The Miracle"

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"The Miracle" is one of the most complex songs from the band's last years. Mercury and Deacon co-wrote the chords together. It is one of May's favourite songs. The entire band contributed with lyrical and some musical ideas and Mercury played piano as well as many synth-tracks, using a Korg M1.

"I Want It All"

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"I Want It All" was composed by May in 1987. On the Greatest Video Hits II DVD, May commented that the song was inspired by his second wife, Anita Dobson's favourite motto, "I want it all, and I want it now!" The idea of having intro, verses, choruses and solos over the same chord progression was reused on their next album with another May song, "The Show Must Go On", which was made in 1990. Mercury sang lead vocals for most of the song, but Mercury and May share the lead vocals during the bridge. Mercury played keyboards, May played acoustic and electric guitars and Roger Taylor used double-kick bass drums for the first (and only) time.

"The Invisible Man"

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"The Invisible Man" is Taylor's first song on the album. The lyrical idea came from a book he was reading after which the beat instantly came to his head. May and Taylor commented (Queen for an Hour interview, 1989) that Taylor wrote part of the song in the bath (similarly to what happened with Mercury and "Crazy Little Thing Called Love" ten years before). The names of all four band members are "hidden" in the vocals: "Freddie Mercury" (said by Roger Taylor) right before the first verse begins, "John Deacon" after the first verse, "Brian May" (repeated twice) before his guitar solo, and "Roger Taylor" (with the initial "r" rolled by Mercury to sound like a drum roll) after the lyric "look at me, look at me". Taylor "answers" with a drum fill. The demo version features a completely different middle-eight with Mercury singing alternate lyrics in the style of Elvis Presley. The whispered parts of the chorus are sung by Taylor.

"Breakthru"

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"Breakthru" is the joint of two songs: "A New Life Is Born", by Mercury, and "Breakthru", written by Taylor with input by the others in the key change. Taylor's songs tended to be in flat keys, in the mid-80s, when he started writing at the piano instead of on a guitar. This song was released as a single and made the top ten in the UK over the summer of 1989.

"Rain Must Fall"

"Rain Must Fall" is a collaboration between Deacon (music) and Mercury (lyrics) (as confirmed by producer David Richards and, more recently, May on his website). Taylor recorded a lot of Latin percussion but most of that was edited out in order to have more space for vocal harmonies, guitars and keyboards, the latter shared between Mercury and Deacon in this piece.

"Scandal"

"Scandal" was written by May about the British press, which had been controversial about his recent divorce, his relationship with Anita Dobson, and Mercury's rare public appearances due to his battle with AIDS. May played keyboards and did the guitar solo as a first take. Mercury's lead vocals were also a first take. Synth-bass is played by David Richards. May has since commented that the song is very close to his heart in spite of his life at the time going through a difficult phase.

"My Baby Does Me"

"My Baby Does Me" is another collaboration of Mercury and Deacon. Both of them had the idea of a simpler track in order to ease off the album. In a Radio 1 interview in 1989, both Mercury and Deacon claim each other constructed the bassline.

"Was It All Worth It"

"Was It All Worth It" was composed by Mercury. The song harks back to the band's intricately produced sound in the 1970s. Though the bulk of the song was masterminded by Mercury, all members contributed ideas and lyrics (for example – Taylor contributed the line "we love you madly!"). Deacon later cited the song as his favourite on the album. Taylor uses a gong and timpani.

"Hang On in There"

This song was written by all four band members, and features May playing both acoustic and electric guitars, as well as keyboards, a job he shared with Mercury, who also plays piano. The song originally appeared as the B-side to the "I Want It All" single. In the song, Mercury hits an E5 twice. In the middle of the song just when the guitar riff comes and Mercury sings "hang on in there" twice, it is replied each time with a harmonised "hang on in there"; the first response are the multitracked vocals by May only, the second - a similar vocals purely by Taylor.

"Chinese Torture"

The only CD track that did not appear on a single release. It is a dark instrumental which conveys the horror and fear that Chinese Water Torture was known to evoke in victims. For the first time this track emerged during the last concerts of their 1986 Magic Tour as part of May's guitar solo. He also included it in his solos when he was back on tour with Queen + Paul Rodgers in 2005/06.

Non-album tracks

"Stealin'"

Principally composed by Mercury (though, as all other songs from these sessions, credited to the band as a whole), this song is a tongue-in-cheek representation of a man who spends his life committing robbery. The song is performed mainly through spoken words, but occasionally has lines sung. This song appeared as the B-side to the "Breakthru" single. Later 2nd part of the composition grew "In Charge of My Heart" Single, and was written by Roger Taylor on the album The Cross - Mad, Bad and Dangerous to Know.

"Hijack My Heart"

Written by Taylor, this song also features him on lead vocals. It was credited to the band as an entity rather than just to its actual composer. It tells the story of a man who falls in love with a woman he meets, despite his original annoyance at her rudeness and mannerisms. It was the B-side to "The Invisible Man".

"My Life Has Been Saved"

Written by Deacon (originally as an acoustic track) about the state the world is in, this song was the B-side to "Scandal". A reworked version was later released on the 1995 Made in Heaven album.

Artwork

The striking cover art utilised the Quantel Paintbox, then state of the art image-manipulation technology, to combine photographs of the familiar faces of the four band members into one morphed gestalt image, in line with their decision to dispense with individual credits and simply present their music as the product of Queen; the back cover went a step further with a seamless regiment of the bands' eyes. Derek Riggs, best known for illustrating Iron Maiden covers, claims that Queen "stole" the idea for this album cover from his cover for the single The Clairvoyant.[2] The reports that Freddie Mercury was a "headbanger", and a huge fan of "That metal stuff", may give this claim some credibility. Although the cover was well received at the time, it has appeared on several contemporary lists and websites dedicated to cataloging the 'worst album covers of all time'.

Critical reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic 3.5/5 stars[1]
Rolling Stone 2/5 stars[3]
Q Magazine 4/5 stars[4]
The Times (mixed)[5]
Sun-Sentinel (favourable)[6]
Newsday (Melville, NY) (favourable)[7]
The Dallas Morning News (favourable)[8]

The Miracle received mixed to positive reviews from critics. Sun-Sentinel wrote "With Freddie Mercury in vintage light-operatic form, here's an album (like so many of Queen's others) that should be used as a pop music how-to for aspirants. Combining the forces of rock, pop, metal, clever melodies and cunning stylisations, The Miracle never lets down. From one track to the next there is, as usual, no telling which way this band will go, affording even the most jaded ear a challenge."

Newsday (Melville, NY) wrote "On The Miracle, Mercury's voice is steady and solid, May's runs are as flashy and supple as ever. Most of the 10 songs, written collaboratively by the four members, stick pretty much to the band's formula of mini-suites: edgy pop with tempos that change half-way into the number and some delicious hooks."

Rolling Stone stated "The band hasn't been so bogged down by synthesisers and pinging drum machines since Hot Space. The Miracle is a showcase for Freddie Mercury and his love of sweeping, quasi-operatic vocals. And indeed, Mercury – especially on the title track – has never sounded better. One of his strengths is his ability to take even the schlockiest material and make it his own, and that gift comes in handy on The Miracle. Brian May is still in fighting trim, too – when you can hear him. May's role on The Miracle is, for the most part, limited to a quick, typically brilliant solo here and there. As a result, the album lacks the sense of dynamics that marked most of Queen's early work. Only on a few tracks ("Khashoggi's Ship" and "Was It All Worth It") does May really let it rip, and when he does, it's like the old Queen peeping out for just a moment and then turning tail. At least The Miracle offers little snippets of Queen's former majesty."

Allmusic stated "The Miracle packs quite a sonic punch, recalling the rich sounds of their past classics (1976's A Day at the Races, etc.). Split 50/50 between pop and heavy rock, the album was another global smash. Along with The Game, The Miracle is Queen's strongest album of the '80s."

Charts

Certifications

Region Certification Sales/shipments
Austria (IFPI Austria)[27] Gold 25,000
Australia (ARIA)[28] Gold 35,000
Finland (Musiikkituottajat)[29] Gold 43,130[29]
France (SNEP)[30] Gold 163,000[31]
Germany (BVMI)[32] Platinum 500,000
Netherlands (NVPI)[33] Platinum 100,000
Poland (ZPAV)[34]
2009 Agora SA album reissue
Platinum 20,000
Spain (PROMUSICAE)[35] Platinum 100,000
Switzerland (IFPI Switzerland)[36] Platinum 50,000
United Kingdom (BPI)[37] Platinum 480,000[26]
United States (RIAA)[38] Gold 500,000

*sales figures based on certification alone
^shipments figures based on certification alone
xunspecified figures based on certification alone

Singles

Five singles were released from the album, all in 1989:

  • "I Want It All" was the lead single from the album, released in the UK on 2 May; it hit #3 in the British charts but made it to #1 in numerous other European countries. The song became an anti-apartheid anthem among youth in South Africa and also has been used to protest other causes. This well-known anthem has been heard as a rallying song for African youth. The song became Queen's first American rock radio hit since "Under Pressure" by peaking at #3 on Billboard's Mainstream Rock Singles chart, but only reached #50 on the Billboard Hot 100 Chart.
  • "Breakthru", the second single, was released in the UK on 19 June; its video was filmed on a private steam train known as "The Miracle Express". The song peaked at #7 in the UK. The song was also released as a single in the US. Also appearing in the video was Debbie Leng, who was at the time Roger Taylor's girlfriend.
  • "The Invisible Man", released in the UK on 7 August, hit #12 in the UK and was a hit throughout Europe; the video featured scores of computer-duplicated band members moving in unison. This song was later covered by the late Scatman John.
  • "Scandal" was the album's fourth single, and peaked at #25 in the UK. It is a protest song about the way the tabloids dealt with May's relationship with Anita Dobson.
  • "The Miracle", the fifth and final single from the album, released on 27 November in the UK, reached #21 on the British charts. Its video mimicked that of "The Invisible Man" in that it featured duplicate band members; however, these were actually young Queen lookalikes (including a then-unknown Ross McCall) who performed a Queen-style stage show. The real band appeared only at the end jamming with their younger counterparts.

Personnel

[39]

Additional personnel
  • David Richards - keyboards on "I Want It All", "The Invisible Man" and "Breakthru", sampler on "Scandal", programming on "Rain Must Fall", "My Baby Does Me" and "Breakthru", engineering
  • Assistant engineers - Andrew Bradfield, John Brough, Angelique Cooper, Claude Frider, Andy Mason, Justin Shirley-Smith
  • Mastered by Kevin Metcalf and Gordon Vickary
  • Computer programming by Brian Zellis
  • Album sleeve design by Richard Gray
  • Original photography by Simon Fowler

References

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  3. Rolling Stone review
  4. Q Magazine 08/01/1994
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  39. Since the album does not feature credits, this personnel has been compiled from various interviews with the band and producer.

External links

Preceded by UK number one album
3–9 June 1989
Succeeded by
Ten Good Reasons by Jason Donovan
Preceded by
Das Phantom der Oper by Original Cast
Austrian Chart number-one album
15 June 1989
Succeeded by
Doch die Sehnsucht bleibt... by Kastelruther Spatzen
Preceded by
Bümpliz – Casablanca by Züri West
Bümpliz – Casablanca by Züri West
Swiss Chart number-one album
18 June 1989
2 July 1989
Succeeded by
Bümpliz – Casablanca by Züri West
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Preceded by Dutch Mega Chart number-one album
1–7 July 1989
Succeeded by
Batman (soundtrack) by Prince