Meat Loaf
Bat Out Of Hell


Rock/Pop
LP, 7   Tracks, 46:25  Length
01 Bat Out Of Hell Jim Steinman 09:48
✷  Track 1  ✷
02 You Took The Words Right Out Of My Mouth (Hot Summer Night) Jim Steinman 05:04
✷  Track 2  ✷
03 Heaven Can Wait Jim Steinman 04:38
✷  Track 3  ✷
04 All Revved Up With No Place To Go Jim Steinman 04:19
✷  Track 4  ✷
05 Two Out Of Three Ain't Bad Jim Steinman 05:23
✷  Track 5  ✷
06 Paradise By The Dashboard Light Jim Steinman 08:28
✷  Track 6  ✷
I. Paradise
II. Let Me Sleep On It
III. Praying for the End of Time
07 For Crying Out Loud Jim Steinman 08:45
✷  Track 7  ✷
Music Details
Product Details
Packaging Standard LP sleeve
Sound Stereo
Extras Autographed
Musicians  &  Credits
Vocals Meat Loaf
Guitar Todd Rundgren
Bass Kasim Sulton
Keyboards Jim Steinman
Producer Todd Rundgren
Engineer Todd Rundgren
Mixed By Todd Rundgren
Personal Details
Index # 2153
Owner Dave
Tags Pop Rock
User Defined
Purchased New
Packaging Notes Autographed by Jim Steinman
Notes
There is no other album like Bat Out of Hell, unless you want to count the sequel. This is Grand Guignol pop -- epic, gothic, operatic, and silly, and it's appealing because of all of this. Jim Steinman was a composer without peer, simply because nobody else wanted to make mini-epics like this. And there never could have been a singer more suited for his compositions than Meat Loaf, a singer partial to bombast, albeit shaded bombast. The compositions are staggeringly ridiculous, yet Meat Loaf finds the emotional core in each song, bringing true heartbreak to "Two out of Three Ain't Bad" and sly humor to "Paradise by the Dashboard Light." There's no discounting the production of Todd Rundgren, either, who gives Steinman's self-styled grandiosity a production that's staggeringly big but never overwhelming and always alluring. While the sentiments are deliberately adolescent and filled with jokes and exaggerated clichés, there's real (albeit silly) wit behind these compositions, not just in the lyrics but in the music, which is a savvy blend of oldies pastiche, show tunes, prog rock, Springsteen-esque narratives, and blistering hard rock (thereby sounding a bit like an extension of Rocky Horror Picture Show, which brought Meat Loaf to the national stage). It may be easy to dismiss this as ridiculous, but there's real style and craft here and its kitsch is intentional. It may elevate adolescent passion to operatic dimensions, and that's certainly silly, but it's hard not to marvel at the skill behind this grandly silly, irresistible album. -- Stephen Thomas Erlewine (allmusic.com)