Before âIce Ice Babyâ became the most ubiquitous earworm of 1989, its sampled groove drove a song recorded 8 years earlier, Queen and David Bowieâs brilliant collaboration âUnder Pressure.â Stylus magazine—who declared Queen bassist John Deaconâs three-note riff the number one bassline of all time—called the song âpossessed of understated cool [â¦] minimal and precise.â And if somehow youâve never heard it, have a listen; youâll surely agree. Bowie and Freddie Mercuryâs traded lines and melodic scatting build to powerful crescendos then pull back into deeply moving harmonies. Lyrically the song competes with anything written by either artist. As it turns out, Queen and Bowie wrote the song in a day, or as Bowie has it, âone evening flat.â âQuite a feat,â âfor what is actually a fairly complicated song,â he wrote in response to a fanâs question on his official website.
Bowie remembers that âthe riff had already been written by Freddie and the othersâ when he joined them in the studio in Montreux, Switzerland. In fact, âUnder Pressureâ evolved out of another song entirely, âFeel Like,â written by drummer Roger Taylor, which you can hear above in a very rough demo recording. A great many of the elements are thereâBrian Mayâs restrained guitar work, Taylorâs midtempo clockwork drumming, and many of the vocal melodies that would end up on âUnder Pressure.â But that iconic bassline is missing, as is, of course, the later songâs other big star. You can see the influence Bowie had on the thematic direction of the new song. âFeel Likeâ is a classic Queen lament over lost love, âUnder Pressureâ an apocalyptic cry of both fear and empathy. At the top of the post, Brian May, Roger Taylor, and Mercury (in archival footage) each remember their version of the songâs origins.
And that bassline? Everyone recalls that John Deacon himself came up with it. But Deacon, ever modest, credited it to Bowie in a 1984 interview. In either case, Deacon apparently forgot the riff, and May had to remind him of it—a funny moment you can hear above in a recording of studio sessions for the song. In the video at the top, May remembers that Bowie lived near the studio and that they âwent out for a meal or some drinks or something.â This may well be, but he doesnât tell us that Bowie originally joined the band in the studio to sing backing vocals for an eventually scrapped R&B song called âCool Cat.” An earlier Open Culture post featuring the isolated vocal tracks from âUnder Pressureâ (below) quotes both Taylor and Mayâs descriptions of what was, somewhat contrary to Bowieâs understatement, actually a 24-hour-long session, powered by wine and cocaine.
Their reminisces, recorded in Mark Blakeâs book Is This the Real Life?: The Untold Story of Freddie Mercury and Queen, also inform us that Bowie and Mercury âswap[ped] verses blind, which helped give the song its cut-and-paste feel.â Though the band sounds lighthearted enough in the studio sessions, the songwriting, May remembers, was fraught with tension. âIt was very hard,â he said in 2008, âbecause you already had four precocious boys and David, who was precocious enough for all of us.â Bowie, says May, âtook over the song lyricallyâ and insisted on presiding over the final mix session, which âdidnât go well,â according to Queen engineer Reinhold Mack. For his part, May has said he would âlove to sit down quietly on my own and re-mix it.”
While he hasnât necessarily followed through on that desire, May and Roger Taylor did contribute a dance mix of âUnder Pressureâ—the so-called âRah Mixâ—to 1999âs Greatest Hits IIIÂ (hear it above). The remix was a top 20 hit, but I, for one, think itâs impossible to improve on the original.
Related Content:
Listen to Freddie Mercury and David Bowie on the Isolated Vocal Track for the Queen Hit âUnder Pressure,â 1981
Guitarist Brian May Explains the Making of Queenâs Classic Song, âBohemian Rhapsodyâ
The Story of Ziggy Stardust: How David Bowie Created the Character that Made Him Famous
Josh Jones is a writer and musician based in Durham, NC. Follow him at @jdmagness.
The Making of Queen and David Bowie’s 1981 Hit “Under Pressureâ: Demos, Studio Sessions & More is a post from: Open Culture. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Google Plus, or get our Daily Email. And don’t miss our big collections of Free Online Courses, Free Online Movies, Free eBooks, Free Audio Books, Free Foreign Language Lessons, and MOOCs.
The post The Making of Queen and David Bowie’s 1981 Hit “Under Pressureâ: Demos, Studio Sessions & More appeared first on Open Culture.
The Making of Queen and David Bowieâs 1981 Hit âUnder Pressureâ: Demos, Studio Sessions & More
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