Freddie starting off the opera section in the video.


Freddie Mercury

As Arranger

As Backing Singer

As Composer

As Guitarist

As Lead Singer

As Pianist

As Producer

Influences


Song Analyses

Bohemian Rhapsody

Crazy Little Thing Called Love

Somebody to Love

Staying Power

The Fairy Feller's Master Stroke

The Kiss

Was It All Worth It?

We Are the Champions


Equipment

Bechstein Grand Piano

Bösendorfer Grand Piano

Fender Telecaster Electric Guitar

Martin Acoustic Guitar

Oberheim Synthesizer

Ovation Acoustic Guitar

Steinway Grand Piano

Yamaha Baby-Grand Piano


Related Links

British Version

Argentinean Version

Bechstein Debauchery

Member Index - Brian

Member Index - Roger

Member Index - John

Song Database

Write Me


Footnotes

1: "At first we wondered what he was up to. The rest of us just wanted to get on and mix the thing, but it really helps lift that section" - Brian May (Sound On Sound Magazine, June 2002).

BOHEMIAN RHAPSODY

Form


An approximate graphic of how Bo Rhap is organized, phrase-wise. Different colors denote variants.

Freddie, cleverly and/or unconsciously, built up this masterpiece from some very well-defined recurring motifs and themes, which feature so original variants that make the listener ignore them. That's one of the main reasons why Bohemian Rhapsody is so complicated, and at the same time so catchy. Of course it's not merely a matter of form, everything's involved there: production, arrangements, performance, tempo...

Mercury had manifested his interest in song structures from the beginning. Something like this requires craftsmanship, professionalism and patience, as well as advanced musical knowledge and of course, lots of imagination. The form of this particular rhapsody is so distinctive that whenever somebody uses the same (as in Valensia Clarkson's marvelous Phantom of the Opera) it's immediately deemed a rip-off by most critics.


The Main Theme:

1st Variant
 
Chords
Gm
C
F
Bb
Bb
vi
II
V
I

2nd Variant
 
Chords
Cm
F
Bb
ii
V
Chords
Fm
Bb
Eb
ii
V

3rd Variant
 
Chords
Bb
Gm
Cm
F
Bb
I
vi
ii
V

4th Variant
 
Chords
Bb
Gm
Cm
Bb
I
vi
ii

5th Variant
 
Chords
Eb
Bb
Cm
Fm
Bb
Eb
I
V
vi
ii
V

6th Variant
 
Chords
Eb
Bb
Cm
Abm
Eb
 
Eb
I
V
vi
iv
I
 

7th Variant
 
Chords
Eb
Bb
Cm
Fm
Eb
I
V
vi
ii

8th Variant
 
Chords
Eb
Bb
Cm
G Cm
G Cm
Eb
I
V
vi
III vi
III vi

This theme appears mostly in the ballad section, but one of its variants is the song opener too: it uses almost the same chords as the verse progression, only in different order and changing Cm by C7. Paul McCartney's Yesterday has a similar idea as bridge derives from the verse progression. Some comments on each variant:

- 1st: Chain of fifths: v/V/V > V/V > V > I, resulting in a nice cadence. Axl Rose's November Rain uses a similar trick but with different chords: IV > vi > ii > I (note that "vi" is "v/ii" too).

- 2nd: Done first during the intro ("I'm just a poor boy, I need no sympathy"), then during the rock section transposed to Eb ("oh baby can't do this to me baby...").

- 3rd: A very common progression, which I personally tend to label "the ABBA cliché" because it's used in several of their songs (Fernando, Winner Takes It All, Super Trouper).

- 4th: There's a chromatic progression over the Cm chord, similar to what Fred applied in both March of the Black Queen and Death on Two Legs.

- 5th: Almost identical to 3rd (functionally), but with a passing chord. Freddie very often did I > V > vi progressions with descending bass: Lily of the Valley, Good Old Fashioned Lover Boy, Somebody to Love, Life Is Real...

- 6th: Very clever two-and-a-half-bar variant. The use of "iv" instead of "IV" in some parts was common for Freddie also: Play the Game, How Can I Go On, Guide Me Home, Made in Heaven, There Must Be More to Life Than This, Barcelona, Killer Queen, Love of My Life, Good Old Fashioned Lover Boy, My Melancholy Blues, Innuendo...

- 7th: This variant is used during the second part of the guitar solo, and ends on a chromatic line that works as modulation to A Major (and double-time).

- 8th: Appears as the guitar fanfare ("oh yeah oh yeah") after Fred does the famous left-hand piano run. As an experiment, try singing "mamma ooooh" while listening to this part! The chord change from vi to III in the key of Eb will also appear in Good Old Fashioned Lover Boy.

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Dynamic Cadences:

1st Variant ("Open your eyes ... see")
Chords
Gm
Bb
Eb
Eb
iii
V
I

2nd Variant ("Anyway ... to me")
Chords
Eb
Bb
Dbdim
F
F
Bb
IV
I
biiidim
V
V

3rd Variant (End of Guitar Solo)
Chords
Db C
B Bb
Eb
bVII VI
bVI V

4th Variant ("Thunderbolt ... me")
Chords
C#
G#
C
E
A
A
III
VII
bIII
V
I

5th Variant ("Spare him ... monstrosity")
Chords
Ab
Eb
F
Bb
Bb
bVII
IV
V
I

6th Variant ("No no no no no no no")
Chords
Bm A
D Db
Gb Bbm
Eb
Eb
bvi bV
VII bVII
bIII v
I

7th Variant ("Beelzebub ... for me")
Chords
Eb
Ab
D
Gm
Bb (4 bars)
Eb
I
IV
VII
iii
V

8th Variant (End of Rock Bit)
Chords
Gb Ab
A
B
Ab
Bb (2 1/2 bars)
Eb
bIII IV
bV
bVI
IV
V

9th Variant (End of Fanfare)
Chords
Bb Eb
D
Gm
Ab
Eb
Eb
V I
VII
iii
IV
I

10th Variant ("Nothing really matters ... to me")
Chords
Cm
Gm
Cm
Gm
Cm
Abm
Abmaj7/Bb
Eb
vi
iii
vi
iii
vi
iv
IV - V

11th Variant (End of Fingerpicked Guitar)
Chords
Bb
Db
C
C
F
F
IV
bVI
V
V
I

12th Variant (End of the Song)
Chords
Bb F
Fdim Gm
F
F
IV I
idim ii
I

These twelve different cadences (seven perfect, five interrupted) have been grouped as one recurring theme, although different interpretations could result in other nominal conclusions. Some comments:

- 1st, 2nd, 4th & 11th last three-bars each. Another song by Freddie where he used this kind of phrasing was The Miracle (around thirteen years later), and a non-Queen example is John Lennon's I Am the Walrus.

- 1st, 5th & 10th overlap with the recurring piano leitmotif.

- 2nd progression has the 'biiidim' chromatic function that also appears in Leroy Brown, Barcelona and The Millionaire Waltz.

- 3rd variant is a descending line, used to modulate from Eb to A.

- 4th, 6th, 7th & 9th have the chromatic 'VII' function, which was used by Freddie in Killer Queen (also in the key of Eb), Death on Two Legs, Seaside Rendezvous, Good Old Fashioned Lover Boy, Don't Try Suicide, Life Is Real and How Can I Go On.

- 4th, 6th & 8th include the chromatic 'bIII' chord, also present in Barcelona, Seaside Rendezvous, Good Old Fashioned Lover Boy, Staying Power and Life Is Real.

- The end of 4th overlaps another motif ("Galileo").

- 5th variant has the bVII > IV > V > I progression, that Freddie would use again on Was It All Worth It. Also, in Bohemian Rhapsody itself, the recurring piano motif shares the two first chords (Ab > Eb), but changes the others (Ebdim > Fm7) and is on a different key.

- 6th progression has the following non-diatonic chords: 'bvi', 'bV' (Seven Seas of Rhye), 'VII' (Killer Queen...), 'bVII' (Sunday Afternoon, Waltz, Somebody to Love...), 'bIII' (Lover Boy, Life Is Real...), 'v' (Lover Boy, Love Me Like There's No Tomorrow, Liar, Black Queen, Leroy Brown, Rendezvous).

- 7th & 9th have the same chords, but in different order: 1-4-7-3-5 vs. 5-1-7-3-4. Note they both have VII > iii (which could be read as V/iii > iii).

- 8th progression can be interpreted as three IV > V incomplete cadences, first in Db, then E and finally Eb (which gets resolved at the beginning of the fanfare).

- 10th ends on the strange Abmaj7/Bb, a five-note chord entirely diatonic.

- 11th sets the modulation from Eb to F, pivoting on the Db>C change (bVII>VI in Eb, bVI>V in F).

- 12th has 'idim' function (Black Queen, Flick of the Wrist, Barcelona...), and closes with a ii>I cadence, as opposed to My Fairy King which is left unresolved on 'ii'. Maybe Freddie was trying to tell us that King didn't satisfy him and this one did?

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Piano Leitmotif:


Many years later, Freddie would use a similar formula for Was It All Worth It

Usually starting off with an arpeggio over Eb, it then turns to a semi-chromatic progression with pedal point. Sometimes it's interrupted, but in the full form it has the following chords: Ab > Eb > Ebdim > Fm7, or functionally, IV > I > idim > ii.

There's a passage in Love of My Life where this motif has a cameo (albeit not in complete form).

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Chromatic Leitmotif:

It comes in three versions:

- 1st: B > Bb > A > Bb (bII > I > VII > I) over "easy come easy go little high little low", "I'm just a poor boy nobody loves me" and "easy come easy go will you let me go". Second and third times it's done in double-tempo.

- 2nd: IV > I > idim > I, done first in A ("I see a little...") then in Bb ("he's just a poor boy from a poor family").

- 3rd: IV > I > IV > I > idim > I > IV > I ("Scaramouch ... fandango").

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Two-Bar Spacer:

One of Freddie's most recurring points is to leave a two-bar spacer in the tonic before starting off the first verse: My Fairy King, Killer Queen, Liar, The Miracle. In Bo Rhap this is done before each verse, at the beginning of the opera section and as harmonic base for the rock riff.

The riff itself consists of two parts: the first is all done over the two-bar thing, the second starts off the same but is transposed to F for the second bar.

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Galileo Motif & Vocal Cascades:

The "Galileo" melody appears twice in the song: first as a duet between Roger and Freddie, featuring bitonality (Am and Dm, or A Aeolian and A Phrygian), then, in reduced version, as Freddie's rough "oh mamma mia mamma mia", then joined by the choir for "mamma mia let me go", all in straight Eb key ("go" forms a Bb chord though).

Similarly, there are two (slightly different) vocal build-ups, both done by Mercury: first in "magnifico" (Bb6), then in "let me go" (Gb7/Db).

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Antiphonal Choirs:

There are several bounces interacting:

- "Bismilah": Done by Freddie on octave-vocals (shades of Flick of the Wrist).

- "No, we will not let you go": Done on a multi-tracked three-part harmony. Only the first time there's "no".

- "Let me go": Three-part again. The first two times Roger (who's alone on top) holds the note longer, but not in the others.

- "Never never never never let me go": Done by Freddie. According to Brian, he came up with that bit at the very end of the sessions, maybe even the day they were gonna finish editing it (1).

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Rock Progression:

The first variant is a Bb > Eb > Bb > Db progression lasting 3 1/2 bars. The second time it's Bb > Eb > Ab and lasts 3 bars. Lyrically, it covers the "so you think you can stone me ... leave me to die" portion.