Farrokh Bulsara was born on September 5, 1946, in Stone Town, Zanzibar, to Parsi Indian parents. He was sent to St. Peter's boarding school in Panchgani, India, at age seven, where he formed his first band and adopted the nickname 'Freddie.' The Zanzibar Revolution of 1964 forced his family to flee to England, settling in Feltham, Middlesex. He studied graphic art and design at Ealing College of Art while working at Kensington Market, developing the visual sensibility that would later make him one of rock's most complete artistic presences. He joined the band Smile — which included Brian May and Roger Taylor — and renamed the group Queen in 1970, taking the name Freddie Mercury simultaneously.
Queen's ascent from 1973 to 1977 was rapid and definitive, producing a series of albums — Queen, Queen II, Sheer Heart Attack, A Night at the Opera — that demonstrated a breadth of musical intelligence unusual in rock: the hard rock coexisting with vaudeville, the operatic ambition alongside three-chord directness, the theatrical excess alongside genuine emotional sincerity. Bohemian Rhapsody (1975), a six-minute operatic rock composition that no single of its era had any business being, reached number one in the UK for nine weeks and became one of the most successful singles in British history — despite being initially refused for radio play as impossibly long.
Mercury's stage presence — the four-octave voice, the relationship with audiences that made 72,000 people at Wembley feel that he was performing for each of them personally, the theatrical costumes, the mustache-era leather, the campy wit and the genuine emotional vulnerability — was the ENFP at maximum expression: the charismatic improviser who was most fully himself in the act of total self-giving before an audience. His Live Aid performance on July 13, 1985 — twenty-one minutes that most rock musicians and critics regard as the greatest live rock performance ever captured on video — demonstrated every dimension of this: the command of an audience that would have been satisfied with a competent set, transformed by Mercury's particular gift into something that remains overwhelming forty years later.
Mercury was diagnosed with HIV in 1987, a fact he kept private until a statement released the day before his death on November 24, 1991. He continued recording with Queen through his illness, completing innuendo sessions from a wheelchair when walking became impossible. His posthumous cultural presence — the biopic Bohemian Rhapsody (2018) becoming the highest-grossing musical biopic of all time, his music consistently topping polls of the greatest singers and greatest rock performances — reflects a recognition that he represented something in the relationship between artist and audience that has not been equaled.