Princes of the Universe

"Princes of the Universe"
Single by Queen
from the album A Kind of Magic
B-side "A Dozen Red Roses for My Darling"
"Who Wants to Live Forever" (Japan)
"Gimme the Prize (Kurgan's Theme)" (Australia)
"Was It All Worth It" (2000 Dutch CD Single)
Released 12 March 1986 (US, Canada, Australia, New Zealand) 6 October 1986 (Japan)
Format Vinyl record (7")
Recorded 1985 1986
Genre Heavy metal[1]
Length 3:32
Label Capitol, EMI
Writer(s) Freddie Mercury
Producer(s) Queen and Reinhold Mack
Queen singles chronology
"A Kind of Magic"
(1986)
"Princes of the Universe"
(1986)
"One Year of Love"
(1986)

"Princes of the Universe" is a song written by Freddie Mercury and performed by Queen. The song was written for the soundtrack of the movie Highlander and released on the A Kind of Magic album in 1986.[2]

Background

"Princes of the Universe", written for Highlander, is the only song on the album for which Mercury receives sole credit. It is played over the film's opening credits, and was later used as the opening theme for Highlander: The Series.[3] The song was never released as a single in the United Kingdom, and while it never truly charted, it is considered a cult favourite because of its relation to the film. In the movie, the guitar solo in the beginning is deleted.

The lyrics are from the perspective of the immortals, about the state of being immortal, the superiority it gives them to normal humans, and the test that they always have to face because of this. Some of the lyrics can be interpreted as regarding Queen themselves: "People talk about you, people say you've had your day / I'm a man that will go far, find the moon and reach for the stars." The song "Who Wants to Live Forever," which also features in the film, is the foil of this song.[4]

Music video

The music video was directed by Russell Mulcahy, and was shot on 14 February 1986 at Elstree Studios, London, on the Silvercup rooftop stage used for the film. It consists mostly of Queen performing the song, intercut with scenes from Highlander. Christopher Lambert reprises his role as Connor MacLeod for a brief appearance, where he swordfights Freddie Mercury, who uses his microphone stand as a sword. Brian May is seen playing a Washburn RR11V instead of his Red Special. Although the single did not chart in the US, the video was regularly played on MTV. Before its release on Greatest Flix III (VHS, 1999) and Greatest Video Hits 2 (DVD, 2003), it was rarely seen outside of North America.

Personnel

References

  1. A Kind of Magic review. The Times. 21 June 1986. Archived at queenarchives.com
  2. Freestone, Peter (2001) Freddie Mercury: an intimate memoir by the man who knew him best p.96.Omnibus Press, Retrieved 22 January 2011
  3. Bartkowiak, Mathew J. (2010) Sounds of the Future: Essays on Music in Science Fiction Film p.19. Retrieved 22 January 2011
  4. Who Wants To Live Forever UltimateQueen.co.uk
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