A huge part of David Bowie's legacy is empathy. Through both his music and his very existence, Bowie had the power to make you feel like you weren't in this world alone. You could find a kinship in his strangeness — his performances as the androgynous alien Ziggy Stardust and his turn as the Goblin King in Labyrinth spoke to our inner weirdos. In "Heroes,"he sings of an impossible love and longing that simultaneously feels intimate and relatable. And in "Changes," he urges us to "turn and face the strange."
"It’s the terror of knowing what this world is about," Bowie growls in the first bridge, tearing the skin off the melody and digging into its true, darker meaning. "Watching some good friends screaming, 'Let me out.'"
Of course, Bowie and Mercury aren't the first musicians to sing a song about realizing that the world isn't completely bright or how they imagined. It's clichéd and abstract. But in "Under Pressure," they will it to be something better, something grander, something that transcends what it is. And you can hear it in their vocals.
"Cause love's such an old-fashioned word, and love dares you to care," Bowie sings, his vocals climbing toward some aimless height at the end of the song. "And love dares you to change our way of caring about ourselves."
Just try not to sing along and sway. There's a shattering sadness here; it's both a plea and a surrender. And that's the magic of the song, of Bowie, and of Queen.
Even if it's just for four minutes, the world becomes a little clearer, a little less lonely. And you're a little less afraid to be yourself.
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