"Too Much Love Will Kill You" is a song written by British
guitaristBrian May of
Queen,
Frank Musker and Elizabeth Lamers.[2] The song reflected the breakdown of May's first marriage and attraction to his future wife,
Anita Dobson.[3] It was first recorded by Queen around 1988 or before, and was intended to be on the band's The Miracle album in 1989, but did not make the cut due to legal disputes following the band's decision that all songs on the album would be written by the group as opposed to individuals.[citation needed]
After
Freddie Mercury's death in 1991, May arranged a solo version, which he performed at
the Freddie Mercury Tribute Concert in 1992,[4] and subsequently included on his solo album Back to the Light that same year. When released as a single, it reached number five on the
UK Singles Chart, number two in Belgium, and topped the charts in the Netherlands. Because it was first played publicly at the Freddie Mercury Tribute Concert, a common misconception is that it was written as a tribute to Freddie Mercury, although it had actually been written several years before he died, and he sang lead vocal on the Queen version.
A version of this song recorded in 1989, with Mercury on vocals and in 1995, the remaining members of Queen elected to include the original recording of "Too Much Love Will Kill You", with Mercury on vocals, on the Made in Heaven album, released four years after Mercury's death.[30] Queen's version reached number 15 on the
UK Singles Chart and number 19 on Canada's RPM 100 Hit Tracks chart whilst failing to chart on US
Billboard Hot 100, peaking at number 18 on the
Bubbling Under Hot 100 chart.
Although it failed to duplicate the chart success of May's solo version, Queen's version of the song has since come to be regarded as the definitive version, after being awarded "Best Song Musically and Lyrically" at the 1996
Novello Awards (May said later that if there was one song that he would have wanted to win an award for, it was this one[2]), and being included on Queen's Greatest Hits III.[31]
Critical reception
Steve Baltin from Cash Box wrote, "One of the last remnants of the late, great
Freddie Mercury, the first single from the band’s new Made In Heaven album is vintage Mercury. After the wimpy opening that could’ve come from
Styx or
Chicago, Mercury's grandiose vocals kick in, eclipsing the lame melody. Hearing Mercury again, especially in such fine form vocally, is a surprisingly touching experience."[32]
‡ Sales+streaming figures based on certification alone.
Music videos
The video for the Brian May version of the song was directed by
David Mallet and features May singing the song to the camera, and is intercut with footage from various home movies. The video for the Queen version of the song was directed by
DoRo and is a montage-style video of clips mainly from live performances and promo videos, and uses the Promo Edit version of the song.
Other versions
In 2003, May and
Luciano Pavarotti performed a rendition of "Too Much Love Will Kill You", at the tenor's benefit concert held in Modena, Italy.[45]
^Too Much Love Will Kill You (UK 7-inch single vinyl disc).
Brian May.
Parlophone. 1992. R 6320, 7243 8 80199 7 2.{{
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^Too Much Love Will Kill You (UK cassette single sleeve). Brian May. Parlophone. 1992. TCR 6320, 7243 8 80199 4 1.{{
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^Too Much Love Will Kill You (UK CD single liner notes). Brian May. Parlophone. 1992. CDR 6320, 7243 8 80199 2 7.{{
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