"It's a Beautiful Day" Years before Mercury started recording solo material, he created a sound clip of himself experimenting on the piano at
Musicland Studios in Munich in 1980 during the sessions of
The Game. Later, for the use of this album, the song was extended to two minutes and 32 seconds. The more classical section, without Mercury's improvisation, was put together by John Deacon. Near the end, a short orchestral sample from the coda of "
La Calinda" by English composer
Frederick Delius can clearly be heard.
"Made in Heaven" Originally from Mercury's
Mr. Bad Guy, this song, along with the other Mercury solo track "I Was Born to Love You", was reworked to a "Queen sound" and Mercury's original vocals were placed over the new music. In an interview with
Far Out, May called the song one of his favourite Queen tracks.
"Let Me Live" "Let Me Live" is a rock ballad, which features a rare sharing of the vocals between Mercury, May, and Taylor. This track was originally recorded with
Rod Stewart during sessions for the 1984 album
The Works. Once finished in 1995 for
Made in Heaven, Queen made one 11th-hour change to the song to avoid legal action. Part of the backing vocals featured lyrics too closely resembling
Erma Franklin's "
Piece of My Heart". The potentially problematic section was mixed out and the track was released. Promo cassettes from the US feature the unaltered backing track. Early Mexican and Dutch CD pressings are reported to have this alternate version as well.
"Mother Love" "Mother Love" was the final song co-written by Mercury and May, and was also Mercury's last vocal performance. Mercury's vocals for "Mother Love" were recorded 13–16 May 1991. On his website, May discussed the writing process he and Mercury had (writing both separately and together, and conscious of the nature of the song and the lyrics). Upon reaching the final verse, Mercury told May that he had to go and "have a rest", but that he would return later and finish it. Mercury never made it back to the studio due to his worsening condition, thus May sang the last verse on the track. The song features a
sample of the vocal improvisation from Queen's famous
12 July 1986 concert at Wembley Stadium, and a sample from the intro of the studio version of "
One Vision" and "
Tie Your Mother Down". It also features a sample from a cover of "
Goin' Back", a song written by
Carole King and
Gerry Goffin, for which Mercury had provided lead vocals in 1972. The cover was released as a B-side to "
I Can Hear Music", a
Ronettes cover, by
Larry Lurex (a pseudonym of Mercury's), not long before the release of Queen's
debut album. The sound bursts between the sing along and the "Goin' Back" sample are apparently a few milliseconds of every Queen track ever recorded, put together, and then rapidly sped through a tape machine. At the very end of the song, a baby is heard crying. This video is age-restricted on
YouTube. •
"My Life Has Been Saved" "My Life Has Been Saved" was started as an acoustic track composed mainly by Deacon in 1987–1988. Producer David Richards helped him out doing the demo and the keyboards, then Mercury sang on it, and later on the entire band recorded it. The
Made in Heaven version is different from that of 1989 (which originally featured as the B-side to the single "
Scandal"), although it uses the same vocals from Mercury. Deacon plays guitar and keyboards as well as his usual instrument, bass guitar. •
"I Was Born to Love You" "I Was Born to Love You" was originally recorded (piano, vocals, synths) by Mercury on 25 May 1984, for his
Mr. Bad Guy album, as a late addition (when told by the record company that the album needed "a single"). May, Taylor and Deacon re-recorded it and added their instruments, turning the song into fast-paced rock, mainly featuring hard rock guitar from May. That track became popular in Japan during 2004 when it was used for the theme song of a television drama named
Pride (プライド). This version also contains samples of Mercury's ad-lib vocals from "
A Kind of Magic", from the 1986
album of the same name, and from "
Living on My Own", from his
Mr. Bad Guy album. The music video for this version of the song, also made in 2004, is composed mainly of clips from the Mercury solo video and from
Queen: Live at Wembley.
"Heaven for Everyone" "Heaven for Everyone" is a track Taylor wrote and tried out with Queen in 1987, although according to some sources it was written with
Joan Armatrading in mind to sing it. Whether she turned it down or Taylor withdrew the song is unclear, but it was recorded by his other band
The Cross. One night Mercury came to visit The Cross at the studio and after some drinks he gave them ideas of how to sing the song and ended up recording the lead vocals for it. Mercury appeared on the UK version of their album
Shove It as guest lead vocalist on the song, with Taylor doing backing vocals. The roles were reversed on the single and the American version of
Shove It. Mercury's vocals were then used for the
Made in Heaven release, with a couple of different lines and May singing backing vocals instead of Taylor, with Richards adding several arrangement ideas. It was released as the leading single two weeks before the album's release, with the song's music video commemorating Mercury, and also containing footage of various
silent films from the 1900s, including
Walter R. Booth's 1906 film ''
The '?' Motorist'',
Georges Méliès' seminal 1902 film
A Trip to the Moon as well as his 1904 film
The Impossible Voyage.
"Too Much Love Will Kill You" "Too Much Love Will Kill You" was composed by May,
Frank Musker and Elizabeth Lamers sometime between the sessions for
A Kind of Magic and
The Miracle. They wrote it in the US and Mercury sang on it. However, there were some problems with the companies representing publishing rights for Musker and Lamers so they could not release the song properly on
The Miracle. The song even appears in the original track listing between "
I Want It All" and "
The Invisible Man", but was deleted. This is the only track on the
Made in Heaven album which wasn't reworked by the remaining members of the band during 1993–1995 sessions, as it is the original 1989 mix prepared for
The Miracle. At
The Freddie Mercury Tribute Concert, May played the song on piano and sang it for the first time in public and then released it as part of his solo album
Back to the Light. Its arrangement differs to the Queen version, featuring acoustic guitar solo and no drums. However May played this track live with his touring band in 1992–1993 using an arrangement similar to the original Queen version. The song was awarded Best Song Musically and Lyrically at the 1997
Novello Awards.
"You Don't Fool Me" "You Don't Fool Me" was one of the last tracks recorded for
Made in Heaven. May has explained on his website that producer David Richards more or less created the framework of the song single-handedly, building from unfinished musical ideas and fragments recorded with Mercury's vocals in May 1991 before his death. May has said that before Richards' work, there was no full song to speak of. However, after Richards edited and mixed the song (including a bit of harmonies recorded for "A Winter's Tale") he presented it to the band. May, Taylor and Deacon then added their instruments and backing vocals and were surprised to end up with a finished song that had begun as nothing. The style of the song is reminiscent of their 1982 album
Hot Space, and a comment over that featured on their
Greatest Hits III album.
"A Winter's Tale" "A Winter's Tale" is a ballad written and composed by Mercury at his apartment in Montreux, Switzerland. It is the last complete song Mercury composed on his own (the music for "Mother Love" is by May). It has been branded as one of few Christmas songs from the band, along with "
Thank God It's Christmas". The vocals were laid down months before Mercury's death and the band completed the backing track sometime after. According to the liner notes in the 2011 release, the band finished the song how they thought Mercury would have wanted it.
"It's a Beautiful Day (Reprise)" A heavier rock version of "It's a Beautiful Day", that is the same in the beginning but later turns into rock. It contains "Yeah" and samples from "
Seven Seas of Rhye".
"Yeah" "Yeah" is the shortest song on the album and in Queen's song catalogue, lasting only four seconds. It consists solely of Mercury saying the word "yeah". The origin of the vocal snippet is most commonly attributed to a backing vocal during the second chorus of "Action This Day" from
Hot Space, though similarity has been noted to the vocal in the intro of "Don't Try Suicide" from
The Game. "13/Untitled" Running at 22 minutes and 32 seconds, "13" began as an experiment by Richards with an
Ensoniq ASR-10 sampler. He took the opening chords of "It's a Beautiful Day" and made them loop, and then added Mercury's voice saying "are you running?", Mercury laughing and at the very end Mercury saying "fab", through strange echoes. May and Taylor also added some ideas to the track. This track was previously only available on the CD edition of the album and the aforementioned promo cassettes. This is also the longest track Queen had ever made. Standard cassettes of the album end with the shortened "It's a Beautiful Day (Reprise)", fading out after Track 12 ("Yeah"), where this untitled track would continue on. The LP (vinyl) edition of the album has only the first few seconds, which run into the run-off of the groove on the record, which means that if a listener has a record player which does not have an automatic stop activated at this point, said notes will play indefinitely. The album's last listed track (all formats) is track 11: "It's a Beautiful Day (Reprise)". In 2015, upon the re-issuing of Queen's discography on vinyl,
Made in Heaven was re-issued as a double disc set with track 13 taking up the entirety of side D. The track was given the name "13" and is listed on the artwork. ==Critical reception==