Friday, January 26, 2024

Queen revisit The Days Of Our Lives on The Greatest Live

Queen revisit the 1991 track, “These Are The Days Of Our Lives”, on the latest episode of the weekly series The Greatest Live.

For both the long-term fans who understand its significance – and the newcomers beguiled by the sweet yet wistful melody – “These Are The Days Of Our Lives” is one of any Queen show’s most emotionally charged moments. This week’s archive footage might have been filmed at a Queen + Paul Rodgers concert in 2005, but as befits a song that addresses the losses and gains of passing time, it invites those watching to reflect on the band’s history and their own.

By the late ’80s, those in Queen’s inner circle knew the band’s frontman Freddie Mercury was desperately ill. As Roger Taylor told Absolute Radio, “These Are The Days Of Our Lives” took form as he looked back on the pair’s adventures as young men, from working with the singer on a Kensington Market clothes stall to conquering the rock world alongside Brian May and John Deacon.

“I was sitting at home in a rather reflective mood and I did know that Freddie was ill, and I think it came out of that slightly melancholic mood,” says Taylor. “I guess I was trying to put an optimistic slant on it in a way – those were the days then. And these are the days of our lives – today is more important than yesterday.”

“These Are The Days Of Our Lives” was a highlight of 1991’s “Innuendo” album, but most poignant was the video, which would prove Freddie’s final appearance in front of a camera before his death that November.

“He must have had terrible pain, but you don’t see that, you just see a man and his destiny,” director Rudi Dolezal told People. “He didn’t want any special treatment. He was so brave.”

Fourteen years later, as Roger sings lead vocals on this heartfelt take of “These Are The Days Of Our Lives”, the Sheffield, UK, audience is transported back to Queen’s earliest years by onstage video footage of the band’s tea ceremony during their inaugural 1975 tour of Japan.

But this song is also about the here-and-now, and there’s a tenderness as Roger adapts the lyric to introduce the guitar solo from his old friend: “When I look and I find… Brian May!”

Add some Queen for your collection here.


See also:

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Queen will rock you on The Greatest Live
Search Queen at hennemusic