It’s hard to believe that last year already marked the 35th anniversary of one of the most extraordinary songs of all time. Just hearing those opening bars still sends tingles up your spine. Barcelona was created for the 1992 Olympic Games in the Spanish city, but recorded five years earlier and released on October 26, 1987. For Freddie, it was the pinnacle of his career. The Queen legend called it “a dream come true, although I wondered if our voices would match or she would accept to do it.” He adored opera and, in particular, idolised the legendary Spanish soprano. Watch Montserrat in her last ever interview before her death in 2018, talking about their incredible partnership and confessing, very movingly, the reason why she was glad he told her about his AIDS diagnosis.
Freddie had made a playful comment on Spanish TV in 1986, mentioning that Montserrat was his favourite singer in the world. When Barcelona, her home city, was chosen for the 1992 Olympics, she approached the Queen star to record an official theme.
When they met in 1987, they discovered a mutual passion for creating something new. Despite original plans for just one song, an entire album was born between tapes sent back and forth between the UK and Spain, and recording sessions in London.
Montserrat revealed that Freddie originally came to Barcelona and played her some of his compositions for them to duet on. And she was “captivated.” The opera star said Freddie’e work was “magnificent. It is something very special, it is created from the heart.”
She even tried to persuade him to record some pure opera with her.
While the pair were still working on their collaboration, Montserrat also gave a performance at the Royal Opera House, with Freddie in attendance.
Freddie described how she “embarrassed” him by introducing him to the crowd: “I was sitting there with my tuxedo and I had to stand up and take a bow. She blew kisses to me and I blew kisses back.”
Montserrat said: “The audience loved it. They went crazy at the Royal Opera House.”
Asked if he hoped the song would become the official song of the Barcelona Games, Freddie said: “Yes. Yes! And if they don’t like this one, I’ll write another one. I hope the people in Barcelona, well everyone, I hope they like it. It’s for the whole world.”
At the official launch of the song Barcelona in Ibiza in May 1987, Freddie joked that he would dedicate the rest of his future to the woman he called Montsi: “(I’ll do) some more songs with Montsi. She’s gonna take up all my time now and I’m quite prepared to do it. I’m looking forward to all that time.”
Of course, time was not something Freddie had. The single was released in October 1987 and became a major hit, reaching Number Eight in the UK charts.
However, in 1990, Freddie confided in Montsi that his health was failing and that he would not survive to perform their song together at the Olympics.
The soprano described how Freddie broke the news, but also her heartfelt reaction.
WATCH MONTSERRAT’S LAST INTERVIEW BELOW (NOTE: SOME WORDS ARE TRANSLATED INCORRECTLY eg ‘Eight” for “AIDS’)
Montserrat said; “He told me two years earlier. He said, ‘I won’t make, I won’t make it.’ We were in the recording studio, recording some final things, which was the last thing he recorded, and he said to me, “I can’t do the Barcelona (performance).’
“And I totally stopped and said, ‘Why?’ I thought he didn’t want to. It was true that he had lost a lot of weight and deteriorated a lot and he said, ‘With AIDS, I can’t think about two years from now, anymore.”
In another interview, Montserrat added: “He said, ‘It is my duty to tell you this.’ And I said, ‘No, it is not a duty, but I am very thankful that you told me because it means I have your friendship and this is most important as anything to me.”
The soprano also made a very special personal recording for her friend: “He told me he would have liked to have sung the aria from the Phantom of the Opera and I told him I would record it – and I recorded it in the studio for him.”