Showing posts with label Bohemian Rhapsody. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bohemian Rhapsody. Show all posts

Sunday, April 5, 2020

Week 11: Freddie Mercury and Subversion of a Homophobic World


I really wanted to do a post about ways Freddie Mercury (the lead singer of Queen and one of my all-time heroes) subversively defied the homophobic world he lived in after reading Branum, so here we are. I want to discuss four main ways Freddie (I’m going to refer to him by his first name because I consider him a close friend) told everyone who told him his identity was wrong that he didn’t care what they thought.
1.      The name of his band: Freddie met Brian May, Roger Taylor, and John Deacon soon after the four of them graduated college and the four of them formed a band Freddie decided to name Queen. When asked about this name choice years later, Freddie remarked that it was simple, theatrical, and outrageous. Outrageous is the key word here because Freddie knew what the popular connotation of the word “queen” was, and he knew a band of four men calling themselves Queen would get noticed. By calling his band Queen, Freddie reclaimed a word that has been used for decades to degrade and diminish effeminate gay men. He used the word in a positive and celebratory way, letting people know that they couldn’t reduce him to a label.
2.      His songs: Most of the songs Freddie wrote for Queen in the early ‘70s—pre-“Bohemian Rhapsody”—were fantastical stories of fairies, royalty, and magic, therefore Freddie was unafraid to produce songs that concerned typically feminine subject matter. In “This Monstrosity”, Branum states “Freddie Mercury, like all other gay guys, had this bundle of emotions that he could not let the world see directly, because if they saw, they would be horrified. He also needed to share them…” (172); Freddie’s painful emotions are obvious throughout “Bohemian Rhapsody”. The song is an expression of a closeted identity disguised as a rock song. The same year as “Bohemian Rhapsody” was released, Freddie was in a relationship with a woman while also secretly dating a man. He was struggling to find his true identity, and “Bohemian Rhapsody” was a watershed moment that helped him come to terms with what he had been lying to himself and others about his entire life. The year after “Bohemian Rhapsody”, Freddie wrote a song called “Good Old Fashioned Lover Boy”, and this song features a singer openly referring to the romantic dates he has with a man. Clearly, Freddie felt capable of more clear expression after the catharsis “Bohemian Rhapsody” brought him.
3.      His image: Branum’s metaphor in “Camouflage and Plumage” is easily applied to Freddie. If the two options for gay men and lesbian women were either hiding or displaying loud and proud plumage, then Freddie chose the latter option. In the time of glam rock and androgyny in rock, Freddie was right at home. He would describe his concerts as fashion shows, and revel in wearing tight, sparkly, extravagant, showy, and overall androgynous outfits.

Freddie in 1974

Freddie in 1977
In 1978 and 1979, Freddie adopted a full-leather look that was popular in gay clubs at the time, and it was in 1980 that Freddie first grew his iconic mustache. The full-leather look, and the mustache and tight clothing look were inspired by homoerotic art of the late 20th century that heavily influenced the way gay men dressed and identified other gay men. The derogatory phrase used to describe this look was “gay clone”, and it was seen on gay men in places all over the world. The goal was to portray the image of a hyper-masculine man and Freddie bought into this image like countless other gay men at the time. They weren’t hiding, they were displaying their plumage.
Freddie in 1979

Freddie in 1985

4.     
His refusal to publicly acknowledge his sexuality: Though practically every interviewer Freddie sat down with asked him to discuss his sexuality, he purposely averted discussion of this topic. Freddie would indirectly refer to his sexuality when he talked about how he couldn’t see himself getting married (despite what Branum said in “This Monstrosity”, Freddie was never married. He halfheartedly proposed to his girlfriend in 1975, but he never went through with the marriage), and how he felt unlucky in love and relationships. Freddie discussed his fear over the AIDS epidemic in several interviews, and he acknowledged the fact that he was at risk of getting what bigoted and ignorant people called the “gay plague”. Freddie didn’t want his sexuality to be a matter of public conversation. He wanted to talk about his music and career, yet interviewers and tabloids relentlessly pursued discussion of his sexuality. Freddie displayed his identity loudly and proudly, and he had no need to go to every newspaper in the country and publicly come out in plain terms because it was clear to anyone who cared to pay attention.

Thursday, April 2, 2020

Women in Music and Bohemian Rhapsody

So, as a music major, my Writing in the Major course is Music History.  I write one big paper and it has to be on (you guessed it) music history. I chose to write my paper on the influence opera had on Queen, which of course, included quite a bit about Bohemian Rhapsody.  Branum's close reading of Bohemian Rhapsody had me thinking quite a bit about my days in Music History. I went back the other night and reread my paper (and actually found a few spelling errors, OOPS!) to look at my close reading of Bohemian Rhapsody and compare Branum's interpretation to my own.  I will get to this later in the post, but first...
I am a music nerd. I love music history. So much so, that for Christmas I bought my boyfriend a Build-Your-Own Hurdy Gurdy.  Below are some pictures of the Hurdy Gurdy and the BYO one I got him as well as a link to go check out a really cool Hurdy Gurdy song if you have no idea what the heck I am talking about here. 

https://youtu.be/bvNZeh6f8vE
So basically, the Hurdy Gurdy is a Medieval string instrument that you crank to play. What makes it so cool is that it acts as a drone-tone, meaning as long as you keep cranking the crank, the sound is continuous.  Music history isn't really filled with female musicians, but one of the earliest, if not the earliest noted female composer is Hildegard von Bingen. She was not only a composer but also an artist, author, mystic, pharmacist, poet and even was canonized in 2012. Needless to say, she was one bad booty woman (I feel like it would be disrespectful to call a Saint a bad ass or a bad bitch, so you get "bad booty"). 
"So Hannah, why the heck are you talking about this when I thought you were going to talk about Queen?" Yeah, yeah, yeah.  I'll get there, okay? This past week I ordered all of my music for my senior recital which is next semester.  When facing major musicians block, the only thing that gets me through is thinking about female musicians and more specifically female tuba players.  Only 5% of professional female low brass players are women.  This makes me angry.  For my entire musical career I have been given a hard time by the men in my section for being a female. Once they all realize I am a force to be reckoned with, they back off but I just become "one of the boys", which is fine by me, but after a while, it gets belittling.  I feel like I loose my identity.  So to honor and embrace the fact that I am a female tuba player, I am choosing to do a lecture recital in which all of the music I am performing is composed by women.  It is not only hard to find music composed by women, but it is even harder to find music composed by women for tuba.  Fortunately for me, in 2013, a bunch of women worked together to compose and record an album of tuba music composed by women and performed by a female tuba player.  It is great and gets me through the times when I am angry about being a female musician.  I get down a lot because I often feel smothered and over looked because I am a female tuba player.  Like some how I'll never be as good as a man because I am a woman.  One of my peers actually said to me, "The reason tuba is a man's instrument is because we're anatomically bigger and can take in more air than girls so its just easier for us." Listen asshole,  I don't play tuba for it to be easy. I play tuba because I am empowered when I play and I show up all of the men who told me I couldn't do it.  
So for my recital I am playing a piece which was originally written by Hildegard von Bingen and arranged by Joanna Ross Hersey for tuba.  I have been practicing it lately so when I was prompted by Branum's Bohemian Rhapsody analysis to reflect back on my times in music history, I was reminded of all of these things.  That is all for that portion of my blog post.  Rant over.  

OK SO BOHEMIAN RHAPSODY

So Branum looks at Mercury's lyrics as all about him coming out or struggling with his sexuality.  While I do not disagree, I did look more into the background of all of the allusions that Mercury made to characters from Greek mythology and opera.  I will save you all the 18 pages of explanation for how Queen drew influence from opera, but I will explain a bit of the influences present in Bohemian Rhapsody, especially in the so-called "operatic section". Here is an excerpt from my paper from last year.

Other elements of Bohemian Rhapsody which pushed the boundaries of rock and roll were the lyrics.   The lyrics of Bohemian Rhapsody are poetic and dramatic.   Mercury claimed to Kenny Everett that the lyrics of Bohemian Rhapsody are complete nonsense, but Promane argues that encoded within Bohemian Rhapsody are  
“a multitude of personal factors that go beyond the nonsensical themes that Everett describes ...  Much like Bob Dylan and Igor Stravinsky, Mercury prided himself upon challenging his audience by disclosing limited or erroneous information to intrigue and to complicate the disclosure surrounding his repertory.” (p.  38) 
Bohemian Rhapsody famously contains lyrics in the so called “operatic section” which are in Italian.   Queen references Galileo, Scaramouch, Figaro and Magnifico.   Each of these characters points to representing an aspect of Freddie Mercury’s life, but as previously mentioned, Mercury claims that the lyrics of his song are simply nonsensical and random.    
Other lyric within the song arguably reflect the personal life of Mercury as well.   Following the lush opening a cappella section, the dramatic monologue arguably reflects the inner turmoil Mercury likely ensued as a result of his closeted homosexuality.   Some argue that this also reflects Mercury’s struggle with accepting the fate of his battle with AIDS but given that Mercury was involved with his girlfriend Mary Austin until 1975, the year Bohemian Rhapsody was released, it is unlikely that Mercury was battling his diagnosis of AIDS.   Another contributing factor to refuting that claim is that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention did not name AIDS until July of 1982.    
Reading the lyrics of Bohemian Rhapsody with the thought in mind that Mercury had only just come to personal terms with his sexuality makes the personal struggles of the narrator parallel that of what Mercury was likely experiencing.   Like the narrator of Bohemian Rhapsody, Mercury was going through an internal conflict, feeling suffocated by continuing to live a double life.   This is exemplified in the text, 
“Too late, my time has come.   
Send shivers down my spine, my body’s aching all the time 
Goodbye everybody, I’ve got to go 
Gotta leave you all behind and face the truth”  
(as cited in Promane, 2009, p.51) 
Some people also argue the role “mama” plays in the lyrics of Bohemian Rhapsody.  It is unlikely that Mercury wrote “mama” to symbolize his biological mother, Jer Bulsarsa, but rather his girlfriend Mary Austin.   This was a common term which was quickly appropriated from the African-American blues tradition into the work of many musicians like Led Zeppelin and Jimi Hendrix (Promane 2009).   In the early monologue-like lyrics following the opening a cappella section 
“Mama, just killed a man, put a gun against his head 
Pulled my trigger now he’s dead....”  
(as cited in Promane, 2009, p.  51) 
with the idea that “mama” is an epithet of Mary Austin and the narrator reflects Mercury himself, Mercury is likely singing of his recent acceptance of his sexuality and the dissolution of the relationship between Mercury and Austin.   The lyrics continue, 
“Mama, life had just begun 
But now I've gone and thrown it all away 
Mama, ooh, didn’t mean to make you cry 
If I’m not back again this time tomorrow 
Carry on, carry on, as if nothing really matters”  
(as sited in Promane, 2009, p.  51) 
With the same representations as before, Mercury is likely singing of how he feels that he ruined the relationship with Austin.   He states, “didn’t mean to make [her] cry” and asks “mama” to carry on without him (as if nothing really matters).    
Promane, Barry C. (2009) “Freddie Mercury and Queen: Technologies of Genre and the Poetics  
of  Innovation.” The School of Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies The University of Western Ontario , Barry C. Promane, , pp. 1–136.  
Opera. (n.d.). Retrieved from https://www.dictionary.com/browse/opera