Why Have You Brought Me Here / Raoul I've Been There Lyrics - Phantom of the Opera, The

Why Have You Brought Me Here / Raoul I've Been There Lyrics

Why Have You Brought Me Here / Raoul I've Been There

RAOUL
Why have you brought me here?

CHRISTINE
Can’t go back there!

RAOUL
We must return!

CHRISTINE
He'll kill you!
His eyes will find us there!

RAOUL
Christine, don't say that.
CHRISTINE
Those eyes that burn!

RAOUL
Don't even think it

CHRISTINE
And if he has to kill a thousand men

RAOUL
Forget this waking nightmare...

CHRISTINE
The Phantom of the Opera will kill...

RAOUL
This phantom is a fable
Believe me

CHRISTINE
...and kill again!

RAOUL
There is no Phantom of the Opera

BOTH
My God, who is this man...

CHRISTINE
...who hunts to kill?

RAOUL
...this mask of death?

CHRISTINE
I can't escape from him...

RAOUL
Whose is this voice you hear...

CHRISTINE
...I never will!

RAOUL
...with every breath?

BOTH
And in this labyrinth,
where night is blind
the Phantom of the Opera is here/there
inside my/your mind...

RAOUL
There is no Phantom of the Opera...

CHRISTINE
Raoul, I've been there
to his world of unending night
To a world with the daylight dissolves into darkness...
darkness...
Raoul, I've seen him!
Can I ever forget that sight?
Can I ever escape from that face?
So distorted, deformed, it was hardly a face
in that darkness...
darkness...
But his voice filled my spirit
with a strange, sweet sound...
In that night there was music in my mind...
And through music my soul began to soar!
And I heard as I'd never heard before...

RAOUL
What you heard was a dream and nothing more...

CHRISTINE
Yet in his eyes
all the sadness of the world
Those pleading eyes,
that both threaten and adore

RAOUL
Christine...
Christine...

PHANTOM
Christine...

CHRISTINE
(whisper) What was that?


Song Overview

Why Have You Brought Me Here lyrics by Steve Barton, Sarah Brightman & Michael Crawford
Steve Barton, Sarah Brightman & Michael Crawford shape the 'Why Have You Brought Me Here' lyrics into a rooftop reckoning.

Review & Highlights

Why Have You Brought Me Here lands like a shiver after the auditorium shock. The scene breathes cold air and doubt, then hands us a pivot into romance. On record, the interplay is tight and focused: Raoul’s practicality, Christine’s fear, and that low phantom echo coiling underneath. As a bridge between spectacle and vow, the lyrics do a lot with very little - short lines, quick countermelodies, images that stick. Hearing it back to back with the next track, you feel the whole arc turn on one whispered name. It’s a stealth favorite for me - the kind of track you revisit when you’re listening for character, not chandeliers.

The lyrics reframe earlier motifs - “inside my mind” now splits in two, and the illusion turns conversational. You can hear Sarah’s vowels bloom on “darkness,” Crawford’s call almost offstage, and Barton keeping the scene grounded. It’s the calm that lets the storm choose its target.

Verse 1

Raoul’s question meets a fear response. The writing stays clipped - “Those eyes that burn” - and the orchestra leaves space for panic to echo.

Chorus

Not a true chorus, more a refrain: “The Phantom of the Opera is here.” The line returns with different pronouns, shifting power back and forth.

Exchange/Bridge

Christine recounts the lair - “world of unending night” - and the music borrows contour from earlier seduction, only now in first person. Memory as key change.

Final Build

His name in the air, barely a breath. The scene hands the baton to the next song without dropping tension. Good writing does that - it lets silence do the last line.

Scene from Why Have You Brought Me Here by Steve Barton, Sarah Brightman & Michael Crawford
Rooftop frost and second thoughts - the moment before the promise.

Song Meaning and Annotations

Original London Cast performing Why Have You Brought Me Here
Half confession, half debate - the score turns inward.

Fear is literal here. Christine is watching the crowd scatter in her head while the city holds its breath.

“Several times in the book, The Phantom’s eyes are mentioned to follow you everywhere and burn.”

That image is baked into the staging language - spotlights like searchlamps, strings like a pulse you can’t calm.

She’s not exaggerating the danger. The trail already has blood on it, and the pattern is personal.

“The Phantom will kill anyone who stands in the way of their love.”

The lyrics make the point fast so the music can carry weight without speechifying.

Raoul’s denial is a shield and a tell. He wants a normal problem he can fix - not this.

“Though Christine is frightened to death by the Phantom, Raoul refuses to even acknowledge his existence.”

That tension powers the duet that follows - comfort set against reality, both sung beautifully.

When she says “mask of death,” it’s not poetry for effect - it’s shorthand from the lore.

“Either referencing that The Phantom is ugly or in the book that everyone said that he wore ‘Death’s Head’.”

Stage versions soften the image, but the dread remains. You don’t forget the first time you see that reveal, even in shadow.

The echo is intentional. The earlier duet returns, but the partner changes.

“These lines are an exact echo of the musical’s title song, but in this case, Raoul is replacing the Phantom’s part.”

Motif as argument - who gets to narrate Christine’s mind.

Her memory of the lair borrows melody and flips perspective.

“She is copying the melody and the words of ‘The Music Of The Night’, but changing most of the words to first person.”

That switch is the crux: the spell was real, and she knows it. Owning it doesn’t mean wanting it back.

Then the contradiction in a pair of eyes - threat and plea sharing the same light.

“Those pleading eyes that both threaten and adore.”

It reads true to the character’s damage - control dressed as devotion, the lyric walking that tightrope without blinking.

Finally, the whisper. Christine hears her name from the dark and the scene freezes between choices.

“In this recording, you can hear the Phantom but very eerily in the background. He is beckoning for Christine.”

And we step into the promise song knowing it’s already compromised. That’s why it hits.

Message

Trauma doesn’t wait for timing. The song lets a survivor set terms, even as the past tries to interrupt.

Emotional tone

Fright to candor to fragile calm. The harmony finds warmth, but never safety.

Historical context

Written for the 1986 West End production, it slots between a public catastrophe and an intimate vow - classic megamusical pacing where plot and melody braid tight.

Production & instrumentation

Lean orchestration - strings, winds, spare brass accents - so the spotlight sits on breath and text. The rooftop’s chill is in the reverb more than the notes.

Language & imagery

Short declaratives, recurring metaphors of sight and shadow, and a borrowed motif reframed. Simple words, high stakes.

Creation history

Music by Andrew Lloyd Webber, lyrics by Charles Hart with additional lyrics by Richard Stilgoe. Recorded by the Original 1986 London Cast - Steve Barton as Raoul, Sarah Brightman as Christine, Michael Crawford as the Phantom - for the Polydor release that crowned the UK Albums Chart in 1987.

Key Facts

Shot of Why Have You Brought Me Here by Steve Barton, Sarah Brightman & Michael Crawford
Picture from the rooftop sequence - moonlight thick as a curtain.
  • Featured: Steve Barton, Sarah Brightman, Michael Crawford
  • Producer: Andrew Lloyd Webber
  • Composer: Andrew Lloyd Webber
  • Lyricists: Charles Hart, Richard Stilgoe
  • Release Date: February 9, 1987 - Original London Cast album
  • Album: The Phantom of the Opera - Original 1986 London Cast
  • Label: Polydor Records (later reissues via Really Useful/Decca)
  • Genre: West End megamusical - dramatic recitative into love duet
  • Instruments: strings, woodwinds, light brass, harp, timpani accents
  • Mood: anxious, confessional, then tender
  • Length: approximately 3:11 on OLCR
  • Track #: 12 (followed by “All I Ask of You”)
  • Language: English
  • Music style: motif recall from the title song, first-person reframing of “Music of the Night” contours
  • Poetic meter: mixed syllabic lines - conversational scansion
  • © Copyrights: The Really Useful Group Ltd. and associated publishers

Questions and Answers

Where does “Why Have You Brought Me Here” sit in the story?
Immediately after the Il Muto debacle and Buquet’s death, on the opera house rooftop, leading straight into “All I Ask of You”.
Is this song a duet or a trio?
Primarily a duet for Raoul and Christine, with the Phantom’s voice shadowing from offstage near the end.
Do the words quote earlier material?
Yes - lines echo the title song, and Christine paraphrases the seduction language from “The Music of the Night” in first person.
Did this track chart on its own?
No - the album topped the UK chart for three weeks in 1987, but the individual track wasn’t issued as a single.
Is there a notable film version?
Yes - the 2004 film soundtrack includes “Why Have You Brought Me Here? / Raoul I’ve Been There” performed by Patrick Wilson and Emmy Rossum, with Gerard Butler appearing on the surrounding cues.

Awards and Chart Positions

Show awards: The musical won the 1986 Olivier Award for Best New Musical in London and the 1988 Tony Award for Best Musical on Broadway. Michael Crawford also took the 1988 Tony for Best Actor in a Musical.

Album charts: The Original London Cast album, featuring this track, was released by Polydor on February 9, 1987 and spent three consecutive weeks at UK No. 1.

How to Sing Why Have You Brought Me Here?

Vocal range & placement: Lyric soprano and lyric tenor lines sit in mid to upper staff, built for clarity over force. Keep vowels tall on “darkness” and “inside my mind” so pitch centers without spread.

Tempo & breath: Moderate and speech-led. Plan a quiet, low breath before Christine’s “Raoul, I’ve been there” paragraph - it wants legato even while speaking fear.

Blend & balance: Let Raoul under-speak the first lines, then meet her intensity on the unison “labyrinth.” Save gloss for the handoff into “All I Ask of You.”

Diction & color: Consonants carry the argument. Keep “mask of death” crisp but never punched; the chill should come from tone, not volume.

Staging focus: Eyes do half the work. If the offstage whisper is used, don’t chase it - allow the audience to hear what you hear.



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Musical: Phantom of the Opera, The. Song: Why Have You Brought Me Here / Raoul I've Been There. Broadway musical soundtrack lyrics. Song lyrics from theatre show/film are property & copyright of their owners, provided for educational purposes