My headphones are often absconded.
“I’m in the control tower. Roger roger!”
“Mommy, we have to join the pit crew so Lightning can race across the finish line. Oh no, Doc Hudson crashed!”
Because of this, I have to watch what music I play while writing during the day. Sure, the kids know ACDC and The Who, but we’ve taken care to play only a few songs of each without certain, shall we say, bluntly crude language. I’ve already made the mistake of allowing the boys to listen to Weird Al Yankovic’s polka medley of Rolling Stones songs. Heaven help me if Biff belts out “Brown Sugar” around adults who know what he’s singing.
So of course, staring at Bo’s music collection, I grab the first kid-friendly band I see: Queen!
Yeah, yeah, I know. “Bicycle” is, um, mostly clean, and if I’m fast with the volume knob we can listen to “Don’t Stop Me Now.” But there’s always “We Are the Champions,” “We Will Rock You,” “You’re My Best Friend,” and their kickin’ theme to Flash Gordon!
One song, however, speared my memory good and deep. I love digging through music old and new for writing inspiration, but a few weeks ago Writer Me experienced a different sort of epiphany.
Just as the trauma of childhood influences how we write, so do the stories that engaged us as kids. I reveled in the adventures of discovery on Star Trek. I swung my play sword alongside She-Ra. I outwitted all the baddies from the Batman comics. Aaaand I begrudgingly liked the romance of Beauty and the Beast.
(Hey, every action junkie’s going to have that one romance that gets’em every time.)
Now I finally have the age and wit (half a wit, anyway) to see the connection between a cult movie’s theme song and my current project for Aionios Books, Fallen Princeborn: Stolen.
“Princes of the Universe” was one of three songs written by Queen for the 1986 film Highlander, a story of immortals living among humanity and dueling each other with swords because “there can be only one.” The original film wasn’t intended for any sort of sequel or series, so (spoiler alert) we find out that The Prize all immortals must fight over is the gift of mortality.
When I started writing Fallen Princeborn the fall after Blondie’s birth, I had that title before I had a setting. I didn’t really ponder why I was using the term “princeborn.” It simply fit. My immortals are created with skills and abilities that by all accounts make them “superior” to humanity. As the song says, no man can be their equal. What else are they than “born to be kings”?
In Fallen Princeborn, the antagonists are keen to do just that, while the protagonists, each broken and discarded, must learn to rise up or die trying.
Highlander went on to spawn some sequels and a television show, all of which my dad loved. So, week to week, Kid Me would hear this song while immortal men, women, and yes, even the occasional kid whipped out massive claymores, slick katanas, wicked rapiers to duel in dark alleys and ancient forests. There is almost always a Quickening: the loser beheaded, lightning floods the scene as the victor absorbs the power of the defeated immortal.
When I listen to “Princes of the Universe” now, I realize it wasn’t just the lightning and rock that stuck with me. Freddie Mercury’s lyrics buried themselves just as deep.
Here we are, born to be kings
We’re the princes of the universe
Here we belong, fighting to survive
In a world with the darkest powers
…
Here we belong, fighting for survival
We’ve come to be the rulers of you allI am immortal, I have inside me blood of kings, yeah, yeah
I have no rival, no man can be my equal
Take me to the future of you allBorn to be kings, princes of the universe
Fighting and free
Got your world in my hand
I’m here for your love and I’ll make my stand
We were born to be princes of the universe
This beaten down defiance drums as hard as Roger Taylor. Even just reading these words, you can feel glares burning through you like Christopher Lambert’s eyes. Whoever’s spitting these words may be bloody and bruised at your feet, but their faces tell you they’re nowhere near defeated. No power upon this earth can break them.
Such are the heroes I am proud to give readers.
Give your protagonists a battle-song to defy the odds, and their heroics will live on in the reader’s imagination long after the final page is read.
I LOVED Highlander!
Sent from my iPad
>
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Me, too! I still haven’t seen the third one. It can’t be as awful as the second, can it? 🙂
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It’s like the first one without the good cinematography
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Ha! Noted. 🙂
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Being in the stadium, concert type music is, I think at least, a genre of its own. Nice read.
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Excellent point. There are some bands I’d just prefer to sit and listen to at home, but Queen clearly is one of those groups meant to be experienced by multiple senses
And thanks. 🙂
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Coldplay live at The Emirates Stadium in London was good as was Metallica playing at Wembley. Both were amazing.
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Lucky duck! 🙂
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I’m less familiar with “Princes of the Universe,” than the other songs by Queen that you mention, but you’ve drawn my attention to the fact a lot of their music was anthem-like, and great for imagining unique places and personalities.
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They certainly had their own style unmatched by other bands of the time, especially with those operatic harmonies. I’ve no doubt that, had this group a more classic notion of style, they’d have been broadway singers.
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I think everyone needs a battle song!
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Me too!
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Good going with the writing! Sadly, I’ve not written a lick of my novel in months – a combination of things that I hope to surmount soon. As for the music, I was a huge Red Hot Chili Peppers fan and one day my three kids, all under the age of 10, were sitting in the back of the van singing
along to ”Californication” while my
mother was in the front saying, “what are they singing?”🎤 It was the first time they’d broke out in song for that one — they used to love to belt out Neil Young’s, “Piece of Crap” — and I quickly lowered the volume on the radio.😘 My mother didn’t follow up.🤣
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LOL! We made the mistake of grabbing a live album of The Who once instead of the normal album we knew (as in, we knew when to turn down the volume:) Would you believe Pete Townshend likes to cuss during shows?
We believe it now! 😛
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😂😂😂
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I have not watched Highlander, but now I want to. And I like the premise of your book too! The idea of giving a character a theme song makes me wonder what my own is. What would play for dramatic effect every time I entered the room? Or would it be a mix of songs–a playlist of sorts. Or would it be silence, eerie or comfortable, punctuated by rain and thunder?
I love the idea of giving my characters musical accompaniment. But, I’m fascinated now by what mine might be or what might be the soundtrack of my son’s life?
Anyway–maybe a random thought. But, its a gift to be inspired by you to think such things!
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Thank you so much for reading! Highlander is unique, I think, in that the premise hadn’t been done before. It is NOT a story for everyone, but it’s a fun viewing. Actually, my heroine’s got a lot of The Who going on behind her character. Now that I’ve made this Queen connection, I really really really want to work in a Queen song or two for my hero. 🙂
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I’d forgotten Queen did that film score.
Loved and love their music, but for long stretches I forget about them, then someone reminds me. Thanks, think I need to go and wallow them again now.
I do like something enervating to write through, and Queen rarely let me down.
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They rarely do. I know they’ve helped me power through some tough grading and editing days. 🙂
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Sorry my lovely Lady J, been away (Ooh that rhymes!!! Ha ha. But back now and of course could not NOT pop by and hear some great music and read a great post.
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Huzzah! Always happy to see your words touch my little corner of the world. Hugs to you! xxxxxxxxx
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Aw…Love ttoching your world Jean xx
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As an ex-pilot I have nightmares when I hear someone in the control tower saying Roger! Bluntly Crude Language from the Who? – Never! 😉 Sounds like you’re fighting the usual parental battle 🙂 There is a lot of rock music out there that doesn’t cause parental concerns and some of the lighter stuff is innocuous. Perhaps some Saxon or, on the lighter side, America and The Outlaws? I used to play lots of rock music to my Son when he was very young. Now he brings things to me to listen to 🙂 There will come a time when you’ll have to let them free and it will be sooner than you really want… apologies for the heads-up on that 😉
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Ha! Thanks, we know it’s coming. Our daughter’s already got a taste of the sugar-pop the other kids listen to, so it’s all the more fun to blast “Teenage Wasteland” in a parking lot full of 2nd graders. 🙂 Thanks for the recs, and for reading!
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Highlander is one of my most favourite movies. I still find it so sad, that concept of living while others around you grow old and die. The music is stunning, just a perfect fit. Often play the soundtrack. Flash was so tongue in cheek. Had some fantastic actors in as well. Love the song Flash. I always remember the line “Flash I love you but we only have 14 hours to save the universe”.
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LMAO! That movie’s such a headtrip. Camp at its campiest, and Queen’s score makes it classic. That, and Brian Blessed in that bizarre winged costume. 🙂
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Little known fact Brian supports my football team. Poor sod… He has such a wonderful voice.
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Does he sing your national anthem before games? 🙂
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Given how bad we are I suspect Brian and I would get a game for Newcastle.
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(snorts) oh pish 🙂
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