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re: Unpopular Opinion: Bat Out of Hell Is Better Than Born to Run

Posted by:
tincrowdor 03:36 pm UTC 04/14/16
In reply to: re: Unpopular Opinion: Bat Out of Hell Is Better Than Born to Run - rockfenris2005 06:47 am UTC 04/12/16

Steinman said its silly

>
> I've never understood Todd's point of view here. While it
> is funny and all of that, I don't see how I can't take it
> seriously. "For crying out loud" is like "If I loved you"
> and "You'll never walk alone" to me, from "Carousel". I
> can't NOT take those songs seriously.
>
> >
> > http://www.laweekly.com/music/unpopular-opinion-bat-out-of-hell-is-better-than-born-to-run-6805883
> >
> > Unpopular Opinion: Bat Out of Hell Is Better Than Born to
> > Run
> >
> > http://www.laweekly.com/music/unpopular-opinion-bat-out-of-hell-is-better-than-born-to-run-6805883
> >
> >
> > Monday, April 11, 2016 at 4:45 a.m.
> > By NicholasPell
> >
> >
> > When producer Todd Rundgren first heard Bat Out of Hell,
> > he thought it was a parody of Bruce Springsteen. In fact,
> > many years later, he remarked, “I can’t believe the world
> > took it seriously.”
> >
> > Indeed, the world did take Bat Out of Hell seriously, in
> > all its faux-Wagnerian glory. It was, not to put too fine
> > a point on it, the “teenage symphony to God” that Brian
> > Wilson had searched for all those years.
> >
> > When producer Todd Rundgren first heard Bat Out of Hell,
> > he thought it was a parody of Bruce Springsteen. In fact,
> > many years later, he remarked, “I can’t believe the world
> > took it seriously.”
> >
> > Indeed, the world did take Bat Out of Hell seriously, in
> > all its faux-Wagnerian glory. It was, not to put too fine
> > a point on it, the “teenage symphony to God” that Brian
> > Wilson had searched for all those years.
> >
> > Best of all, it holds up. The opening title track succeeds
> > at its mission — to create the biggest, baddest, most
> > tear-jerking teen tragedy crash song of all time. I can’t
> > respect anyone’s opinion on music if they don’t get chills
> > when Meat Loaf wails to his girl that he can’t stop
> > thinking of her so he misses his turn and ends up a soup
> > on the side of the highway. This is what great rock & roll
> > often aspires to but frequently fails to achieve.
> >
> > “You Took the Words Right Out of My Mouth (Hot Summer
> > Night)” might not best Phil Spector at his own game, but
> > it comes damn close, and it’s the best slice of
> > Spectoresque girl pop to come out of a man’s mouth ever.
> > The opening exchange never quite seems to wear out its
> > welcome, as the male protagonist insists on romantic
> > fealty, only to reject it when he gets it with “I bet you
> > say that to all the boys.”
> >
> > “Heaven Can Wait” is a bit of a drag, but “All Revved Up
> > With No Place to Go” picks up where the album left off,
> > demonstrating Robert Paulson’s ability to turn a clever
> > phrase that’s at once groan-worthy and insightful in its
> > simplicity. If you don’t know what it’s like to be all
> > revved up with no place to go, I daresay you weren’t a
> > very exciting or imaginative teenager.
> >
> > “Two Out of Three Ain’t Bad,” along with “Heaven Can
> > Wait,” demonstrate where Steinman's talents fall short: He
> > can’t really write a power ballad to save his life. All
> > the steps are there, all the notes are right, but he gets
> > too lost in the swamps of schmaltz to write a killer track
> > that will have you hand-drumming on your steering wheel as
> > you remember early makeout sessions and school dances
> > where you left room for the Holy Ghost.
> >
> > Which brings us to the elephant in the room, “Paradise by
> > the Dashboard Light.” I don’t know if this is a New
> > England thing or what, but when I was in high school (the
> > mid-'90s), if you wanted to make a room full of teenagers
> > erupt into shrieks, you spun this banger. Girls lined up
> > on one side, boys on the other. The two sing the important
> > points to each other. I have no idea if this ritual still
> > exists, but that it existed two decades after the song
> > first came out impresses and confuses me.
> >
> > It also speaks to the near-universal quality of the tale
> > told. Boy meets girl. Boy wants to bang girl. Girl wants
> > to bang boy but doesn’t want to feel like a Fleshlight.
> > Boy proclaims his love and neither is terribly happy with
> > the results. And in the middle some Phil Rizzuto. There’s
> > a little something for everybody.
> >
> > The album goes out on a ballad, which somehow fits better
> > than the rest, giving the listener an easy landing. But
> > it’s the ragers on Bat Out of Hell that make it so
> > memorable. It’s a damn shame that Meat Loaf and Jim
> > Steinman never got it together to make anything this great
> > again. I like to imagine that in an alternate universe
> > they scored the entire Streets of Fire trilogy, which was
> > the biggest thing since Planet of the Apes.
> > A guy can dream, I guess.


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