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re: Jim Steinman And The Success Of Footloose

Posted by:
steven_stuart 11:43 pm UTC 09/15/15
In reply to: re: Jim Steinman And The Success Of Footloose - rockfenris2005 11:19 am UTC 09/11/15

So every one of those represented a different head set, a mindset.

Very interesting. Well found. Dean is some kind of a genius. He really wrote the perfect Steinmanesque lyrics to get Jim interested. I liked his lyrics for Fame and I am told (even though I have never seen it) that his Carrie The Musical is brilliantly written and just needs a better production than it had when it flopped. Which might happen. Apparently it has a huge cult following.

> In putting together songs for his movie Footloose, Dean
> Pitchford used seven different co-writers and eight
> different artists, since he wanted a variety of styles. On
> this song, he wrote with the mercurial Jim Steinman, who
> wrote most of Meat Loaf's hits, including "Paradise By the
> Dashboard Light" and "I'd Do Anything For Love (But I
> Won't Do That)." In our interview with Dean Pitchford, he
> told us how this one came together: "We decided that we
> were going to go after Bonnie Tyler, who was not even
> really happening at the time. I had fallen in love with
> Bonnie Tyler because she'd sung 'It's a Heartache,' and
> the song 'Total Eclipse Of The Heart' was a hit in
> Australia when I heard it, but it had not broken in the
> United States yet. But when we went to try to find her,
> nobody at Columbia Records knew who had signed her and
> where she was. We finally tracked her A&R rep down to
> Nashville, because in the United States she had been
> signed as a country act, and that was where 'It's A
> Heartache' had first broken. But in order to get to Bonnie
> Tyler and to get her to sing something for us, I was going
> to work with Jim Steinman. And I'd known Jim Steinman's
> work from all of his Meat Loaf days. So I sat down and
> listened to a lot of Jim Steinman. And I came up with
> 'Where have all the good men gone and where are all the
> gods? Where's the streetwise Hercules to fight the rising
> odds?' I wrote that lyric with an ear toward snaring Jim
> Steinman, and it worked. He looked at the lyric and he
> immediately knew what to do with it because it was so much
> in a style that he was familiar with. So in every case I
> tried to write a lyric that was in the style of the artist
> I was working with or the writer that I knew I would have
> to write with. Bill Wolfer, for instance, was a producer
> for Shalamar, and I knew what I needed to do in order to
> snare his involvement. And 'Dancing in the Sheets' is
> different than 'Holding Out For A Hero' is different than
> 'Almost Paradise.' So every one of those represented a
> different head set, a mindset."
>
> > Although, after a quick Google search,


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