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View Full Version : the absolute WORST interview ever done.


Wario
07 Oct 2015, 22:44
http://www.jimsteinman.com/neverland2.htm


After reading this REPULSIVE article from 1981, read it for yourself its appalling what Jim says of Meat.

I get it, they work well together and jims the best songwriter ever, but Jim comes off VERY harsh towards Meat.
"No, Meat's 'Bat' persona is totally created, he's really 'Hi Y'all'. It was my idea to put him in this black tux, give him a handkerchief...I had two images for him - one was of Siegfried the Dragon-slayer, the other image was like a really horny Falstaff.

He came up with the tux idea?
Excuse me, MEAT was wearing tuxedos since Meatloaf soul and the Flying Circus days!

"He auditioned for a musical I'd written for the New York Shakespeare Festival; he'd mostly sung blues and gospel before, but he was in 'Hair', although that's not real rock 'n roll. But he'd never sung material like mine, and I just took him aside and convinced him that he would be amazing singing this kind of music with this huge operatic voice. It wasn't hard to talk him into it because in that musical he had one song that I wrote for him and used, and no-one had ever really applauded for him up to then, and I remember the first time he cried about it, he was so amazed."

WHAT.


"Because his voice, without singing those songs, would just be a blasting voice, I mean, you can hear him on Ted Nugent's 'Free For All' and it's not impressive at all.

That hurt.


"So 'Bad For Good' is definitely written, conceived and produced as 'Bat Out Of Hell Pt. 2', just that I'm singing it.
"Meat's new record, which I wrote and produced as well, is different - it's less heroic, less epic."

Ya sure less heroic? That tracklist trumps BFG's!

"I decided that most of the qualities in 'Bat' apart from Meat's voice were my qualities more than his - I mean Meat doesn't know who Wagner is, he's really just an innocent southern kid from Dallas. And he'd never even sung rock 'n roll when I met him."

No meat embodies jim's lyrics, actually teh songs are more meat's then Jims.

This was one fo the WORST interviews ive ever read and the first time doing so. Im stunned Jim said this stuff

Evil One
07 Oct 2015, 23:32
Jim was simply hyping his album. No different than Meat saying that Nikki Syxx outwrote Jim.

Wario
07 Oct 2015, 23:56
Jim was simply hyping his album. No different than Meat saying that Nikki Syxx outwrote Jim.

a lot of personal attacks tho

CarylB
08 Oct 2015, 00:42
No different than Meat saying that Nikki Syxx outwrote Jim.

Except Meat has explained until he's blue in the face that he did not say that and was mis-quoted

Wario
08 Oct 2015, 00:48
Except Meat has explained until he's blue in the face that he did not say that and was mis-quoted

I can see that

CarylB
08 Oct 2015, 00:54
Excuse me, MEAT was wearing tuxedos since Meatloaf soul and the Flying Circus days!

And his friend Armand Coullet gave him the red scarf to mop sweat .. I take the point that Steinman was hyping an album, but to seize ownership of everything about Meat is a bit much imo .. for eg Meat may not understand Wagner .. but neither I suspect do many of the fans who have been swept away by his performances over the years. That Meat as an actor creates a character for each song and delivers it with such passion is what makes those songs come to such life for many people. No-one would deny Jim wrote some amazing music and lyrics .. but in my view they are considerably enhanced by a unique contribution from Meat, and one that is all his own.

Wario
08 Oct 2015, 02:44
And his friend Armand Coullet gave him the red scarf to mop sweat .. I take the point that Steinman was hyping an album, but to seize ownership of everything about Meat is a bit much imo .. for eg Meat may not understand Wagner .. but neither I suspect do many of the fans who have been swept away by his performances over the years. That Meat as an actor creates a character for each song and delivers it with such passion is what makes those songs come to such life for many people. No-one would deny Jim wrote some amazing music and lyrics .. but in my view they are considerably enhanced by a unique contribution from Meat, and one that is all his own.

Agreed The only jim said that has any realisim is that meat is indeed very "hey y'all!" All my favorite recordings he says that least once

stretch37
08 Oct 2015, 03:15
Honestly, Steinman has always come across to me as a cynic, while Meat is an optimist.

I wouldn't go so far as to say Steinman is a jerk to Meat, because Steinman probably feels Meat is a 'jerk' to him at times. They have very different personalities, polar opposites.....But somewhere in there, they see eye to eye, and they feel for each other deeply. One of my best friends and I have a similar relationship....Email works well :P

Elijah's way
08 Oct 2015, 03:19
I can't believe someone would dig this bs up after 35 years of being buried in the past where it belongs. I refuse to read that interview. What's the saying? Let the sleeping dogs lie? :roll:

AndrewG
08 Oct 2015, 04:12
Think I read all that claptrap when I just started to go on the internet back in 1998 when Wario was playing with He-man and plastic dinosaurs. And even then it was old stuff to be taken with a pinch of salt.

But I do agree with Stretch that Jim is mostly a cynic and Meat an optimist. That was quite evident during the Rock n Roll hall of writers fame speech thing. Meat is far more emotional and wears his heart on his sleeve. Jim is not really.

There have been times when Jim wrote some cool stuff on his blog about his music and he even reacted to some things his fans wrote. I remember pointing out how awesome I thought the lyric "Looks like it's gonna be a dark one tonight" was and he appreciating that. Then he went back to moaning about politics etc. It's a shame but for a lot of people the media and the internet is a complete distraction and just gets in the way of creating and appreciating things I think... I'm making my living out of it but it can be a big time waster. You will get more pleasure out of reading a good novel than these interviews I think. No offence.

Evil Ernie
08 Oct 2015, 05:06
I think that it comes across worse in print. Jim is a very animated interview and full of exaggerations.

I agree with most of what he says. Not sure about the stage dress, but I can definitely see him being a huge influence on Meat Loafs stage persona. I also didn't find the Ted Nugent album to be very impressive compared to his other work either.

BFG is definitely more 'heroic' and 'epic' than DR, which I find more subdued. One is not definitely better than the other, even though I generally prefer BFG.

Also, if I recall, Jim was pretty pissed off at ML at this point. In regards to him being a diva, drugs, alcohol, losing his voice, etc... So an interview like this might have been expected.

No meat embodies jim's lyrics, actually teh songs are more meat's then Jims.

NO... those songs are Jim's. No one else's.

Meat is lucky that Jim let him sing his songs, and Jim is lucky that Meat was WILLING to sing his songs when everyone thought they were a joke.

But those songs are Jim's... PEROID.

rockfenris2005
08 Oct 2015, 05:55
Just a general comment: The thing that keeps frustrating me is that both Meat and Jim have done some great stuff over the years together AND apart. I really believe that. Jim didn't do "Rocky Horror" and the various movies. Meat is part of one of the most successful movies and rock musicals of all time. And Jim wasn't. There are some great Steinman vocals on non-Meat songs. Steve Barton on the OCR for "Tanz der Vampire" is right up there with Meat on Bat and Bat 2 for me. I think Steve singing "Gott ist Tot" and "Die Unstillbare Gier" is as great as Meat singing "Bad for good" in 1988. Holly is amazing on "Tonight is what it means to be young". Rory's vocals on "Making love out of nothing at all" and "Vaults of Heaven" demos are sublime. Rory has this angelic choir-like tone to his vocal which goes so well with those Jim songs that he's done. Elaine is awesome on "All coming back" and "Braver". Gina Taylor is awesome on "Safe sex" and "The future...". Karla and Ellen have some amazing moments as well. Ellen's version of "Heaven can wait" from Neverland is sublime and her recent version at 54 Below.

Sorry... better start a new paragraph, haha...

I could go on. Marcus Lovett on "Whistle down the wind" is another. Bonnie amazes me on any of the songs that she did with Jim. I know that Meat doing the songs theatrically and embodying them on stage is pretty rare, but all the same. Holly totally rules on "Tonight..." Kyle's version of "A kiss is a terrible thing to waste" is a brilliant contrast to Meat and Bonnie. I love Celine's vocal on "All coming back" as well.

Again, this is more just a general comment, but the thing that I sometimes feel, sometimes *wish* would be more recognized (or maybe I'm just imagining this? I'm not sure), is that both Jim and Meat have done excellent things, brilliant things together AND apart. Of course I love when they work together. I'm really looking forward to the next album. But do you know how many times I've listened to "Tanz" over the years? That album may well be THE ultimate experience as a Steinman fan, and how much do I love Meat? You might call me a "closeted fan" of BBIS. Hell, I don't even think you SHOULD be a closeted fan. Why do people pick on this album? Haha, I love it. It's because we compare it to the other stuff maybe? I love the remixes from the singles. Absolutely love them.

Evil Ernie
08 Oct 2015, 06:52
Just a general comment: The thing that keeps frustrating me is that both Meat and Jim have done some great stuff over the years together AND apart. I really believe that. Jim didn't do "Rocky Horror" and the various movies. Meat is part of one of the most successful movies and rock musicals of all time. And Jim wasn't. There are some great Steinman vocals on non-Meat songs. Steve Barton on the OCR for "Tanz der Vampire" is right up there with Meat on Bat and Bat 2 for me. I think Steve singing "Gott ist Tot" and "Die Unstillbare Gier" is as great as Meat singing "Bad for good" in 1988. Holly is amazing on "Tonight is what it means to be young". Rory's vocals on "Making love out of nothing at all" and "Vaults of Heaven" demos are sublime. Rory has this angelic choir-like tone to his vocal which goes so well with those Jim songs that he's done. Elaine is awesome on "All coming back" and "Braver". Gina Taylor is awesome on "Safe sex" and "The future...". Karla and Ellen have some amazing moments as well. Ellen's version of "Heaven can wait" from Neverland is sublime and her recent version at 54 Below.

Sorry... better start a new paragraph, haha...

I could go on. Marcus Lovett on "Whistle down the wind" is another. Bonnie amazes me on any of the songs that she did with Jim. I know that Meat doing the songs theatrically and embodying them on stage is pretty rare, but all the same. Holly totally rules on "Tonight..." Kyle's version of "A kiss is a terrible thing to waste" is a brilliant contrast to Meat and Bonnie. I love Celine's vocal on "All coming back" as well.

Again, this is more just a general comment, but the thing that I sometimes feel, sometimes *wish* would be more recognized (or maybe I'm just imagining this? I'm not sure), is that both Jim and Meat have done excellent things, brilliant things together AND apart. Of course I love when they work together. I'm really looking forward to the next album. But do you know how many times I've listened to "Tanz" over the years? That album may well be THE ultimate experience as a Steinman fan, and how much do I love Meat? You might call me a "closeted fan" of BBIS. Hell, I don't even think you SHOULD be a closeted fan. Why do people pick on this album? Haha, I love it. It's because we compare it to the other stuff maybe? I love the remixes from the singles. Absolutely love them.

I feel as though I could have written this.

Rory has a gentle, relaxing tone and an excellent range. I'm a huge fan of his.

And YES, I think that Tanz is the ULTIMATE Steinman album. Even though he didn't write the lyrics, and I generally think his lyrics are his most distinctive signature. That whole production in German showed how much of a musical genius he is. He re-used many songs (as usual), but he somehow still made it all sound incredibly fresh.

Wario
08 Oct 2015, 12:31
I think that it comes across worse in print. Jim is a very animated interview and full of exaggerations.

I agree with most of what he says. Not sure about the stage dress, but I can definitely see him being a huge influence on Meat Loafs stage persona. I also didn't find the Ted Nugent album to be very impressive compared to his other work either.

BFG is definitely more 'heroic' and 'epic' than DR, which I find more subdued. One is not definitely better than the other, even though I generally prefer BFG.

Also, if I recall, Jim was pretty pissed off at ML at this point. In regards to him being a diva, drugs, alcohol, losing his voice, etc... So an interview like this might have been expected.



NO... those songs are Jim's. No one else's.

Meat is lucky that Jim let him sing his songs, and Jim is lucky that Meat was WILLING to sing his songs when everyone thought they were a joke.

But those songs are Jim's... PEROID.

You are so wrong on so many levels but I'll digress with one statement:

Jim would be nowhere without Meat. Meats the ONLY MAN that can sing his stuff. Not Rory, not Rob Evan, not Air Supply. Meat owns it all and would own it all if he was given making love or whatever demos Rory recorded.

Rory's a good backing vocalist, nothing more. He has now power, no energy. BFG sounds like a bootleg of bat out of hell outtakes

Jim can't ding, Rory can't lead, meat is the only person who can bring Kim's words to life with male hormones.

I'm sorry but jim was lucky to meet the voice, cause meat sure as hell would've still had a great career. Jim, he'd still be writing plays that would never see the light of day past workshops he's a genius but he's not good for buisness

I'm sorry but I love Jim, but he's not the puppeteer. He's the songwriter and that's all. Meats non Jim work is a testament to that

Meat and Jim are two different entities, and the more optimistic, charasmatic, and emotional powerhouse always outweighs a stubborn genius

Meat Loaf_fan
08 Oct 2015, 13:32
Jim would be nowhere without Meat. Meats the ONLY MAN that can sing his stuff. Not Rory, not Rob Evan, not Air Supply ...

"Making Love ..." from Air Supply is good ... You should remember that there are fantastic versions of Jim's songs done by: Barbra Streisand Left In The Dark (although I prefer Meat's version :cool: ), Bonnie Tyler Total Eclipse Of The Heart (and many other songs), Taylor Dayne Original Sin (in fact - this is the only song ;) from Jim, that I prefer another artist version).

I'm sorry but jim was lucky to meet the voice, cause meat sure as hell would've still had a great career. Jim, he'd still be writing plays that would never see the light of day past workshops he's a genius but he's not good for buisness

Of course - Meat is the best singer that was in the road of Jim (except Taylor Dayne and her version of "Original Sin" ;) ), but ... no one will ever know what would be with Meat without Jim ... of course if he meets Paul Jacobs in early 80's, or other great songwriter, then his career had its boost, but ... there is "if".

Meat and Jim are two different entities, and the more optimistic, charasmatic, and emotional powerhouse always outweighs a stubborn genius

I agree. ;)

proctorloaf
08 Oct 2015, 13:59
I think that we need to put this interview in context. Both performers were exhausted after a gruelling 2/3 year tour to promote Bat. Jim had gone off the road to write the next record and when it was delivered Meat wasn't wiling or able to sing the album. Despite the fact that he has since performed most of the songs on the record, at the time he thought that it was a Bat copy and he didn't like it. There was much resentment to this, all the money an effort gone into making the record was wasted AND Jim was contracted to write Meat's follow up, so I can understand why at the time Jim was like 'I made you so I'll break you'. Both men have equal call to ownership of the songs. Like Elvis, Meat sells a song. When he sings a song, he owns it, no matter who writes it. Jim needs a singer who can own a song and that is why Meat is the perfect singer for him. Meat in turn needs songs and character who he can embody so Jim is perfect for him. It took 10 years to heal the wounds of BFG. But when the dust settled we got Bat II. If we hadn't had that anger, those fights and this interview, we might never had Anything For Love, Objects or Life is a Lemon. Even at approaching 70, these two guys need their heads knocking together ;)

AndrewG
08 Oct 2015, 15:02
... and the more optimistic, charasmatic, and emotional powerhouse always outweighs a stubborn genius

:roll:

Can't believe people are falling for this competition nonsense again.
Total waste of time as I said above.

Wario
08 Oct 2015, 17:53
"Making Love ..." from Air Supply is good ... You should remember that there are fantastic versions of Jim's songs done by: Barbra Streisand Left In The Dark (although I prefer Meat's version :cool: ), Bonnie Tyler Total Eclipse Of The Heart (and many other songs), Taylor Dayne Original Sin (in fact - this is the only song ;) from Jim, that I prefer another artist version).



Of course - Meat is the best singer that was in the road of Jim (except Taylor Dayne and her version of "Original Sin" ;) ), but ... no one will ever know what would be with Meat without Jim ... of course if he meets Paul Jacobs in early 80's, or other great songwriter, then his career had its boost, but ... there is "if".



I agree. ;)

I did say only MAN. The woman he's had sing his songs were perfect for their respective tracks sans IJWQ and Good Girls

Evil Ernie
08 Oct 2015, 18:30
I'm You are so wrong on so many levels but I'll digress with one statement:

Jim would be nowhere without Meat. Meats the ONLY MAN that can sing his stuff. Not Rory, not Rob Evan, not Air Supply. Meat owns it all and would own it all if he was given making love or whatever demos Rory recorded.

Rory's a good backing vocalist, nothing more. He has now power, no energy. BFG sounds like a bootleg of bat out of hell outtakes

Jim can't ding, Rory can't lead, meat is the only person who can bring Kim's words to life with male hormones.

I'm sorry but jim was lucky to meet the voice, cause meat sure as hell would've still had a great career. Jim, he'd still be writing plays that would never see the light of day past workshops he's a genius but he's not good for buisness

I'm sorry but I love Jim, but he's not the puppeteer. He's the songwriter and that's all. Meats non Jim work is a testament to that

Meat and Jim are two different entities, and the more optimistic, charasmatic, and emotional powerhouse always outweighs a stubborn genius

You're literally insane. I have to stop responding to your threads.

loaferman61
08 Oct 2015, 20:34
Jim can't ding,

I'm sure that makes him very sad. They have pills for that now, maybe Jim has no television.

Wario
08 Oct 2015, 20:34
You're literally insane. I have to stop responding to your threads.

:lol: its nothing personal Ernie, we just have different viewpoints.

loaferman61
08 Oct 2015, 20:37
To me what matters is that when Meat and Jim want to make a record together I as the listener am in for a treat. What somebody said 25 and 30 years ago I don't care too much about. Some great music, films, and etc. have been made with all types of behind the scenes issues and egos. Jim and Todd have always been like they told Meat to sing then go sit in a corner and wait, whether true or not a legitimate masterpiece was the result.

The fact that Jim and Meat are so different is probably why the collaboration works as well as it does

Wario
08 Oct 2015, 22:49
How many people did I piss off with this? sorry

EDIT: oh my....

AndrewG
08 Oct 2015, 22:53
Jim can't ding...


But does he have a dong? :D

rockfenris2005
09 Oct 2015, 00:17
I feel as though I could have written this.

Rory has a gentle, relaxing tone and an excellent range. I'm a huge fan of his.

And YES, I think that Tanz is the ULTIMATE Steinman album. Even though he didn't write the lyrics, and I generally think his lyrics are his most distinctive signature. That whole production in German showed how much of a musical genius he is. He re-used many songs (as usual), but he somehow still made it all sound incredibly fresh.

So many wonderful things came together on that show. I'm not surprised that it's been called the "most successful musical from continental Europe" or whatever the line was. You had Jim's brilliant music - and honestly the recycling doesn't really bother me (acronym for "Total eclipse of the heart" is TEOTH btw which could almost be TEETH--->Fangs--->Vampires. It FEELS like a vampire song to me). You had Steve's awesome orchestrations, Polanski's direction, Dudley's fantastic designs, Sue Blane from "Rocky Horror" on costumes, VanStone's lighting, Steve as Count Von Krolock with Cornelia and Aris as Alfred and Sarah. It all just felt... so right to me. It reminds me of "The Phantom of the Opera" really which was another show I feel where all of the elements really came together really well (although I know, OK, "The music of the night" hadn't been a massive Number 1 a decade before.)

That score just feels so right. The whole shows does. And it would have been really interesting to see what the next step would have been for Jim, with "Batman". I love listening to "Evita" after "JCS". It shows the next step for Andrew and Tim. Even "Vespers" from "Batman" makes me think of "Requiem for Evita" too. Anyway...

Just want to say again, I think both Meat and Jim have done amazing things, both together and apart. And I say, let's celebrate that.

PS. I think this might have been responsible for my dream last night of me singing "Die Unstillbare Gier" haha. I really gave it everything. Wow lol. :lol:

tonyloaf
09 Oct 2015, 01:56
Let's be honest here tho, Meat and Jim - one of the most strangest relationships ever.

lorenzoduke
09 Oct 2015, 02:28
Ancient history. Who cares, that was 35 years ago. They got over it, I'm sure we can.

stretch37
09 Oct 2015, 05:19
Let's be honest here tho, Meat and Jim - one of the most strangest relationships ever.

Sometimes the quirkiest ones are the longest lasting ;)

PanicLord
09 Oct 2015, 09:04
Jim can't ding, Rory can't lead, meat is the only person who can bring Kim's words to life with male hormones.


Superb. Top marks that man.:yep:

tonyloaf
09 Oct 2015, 11:09
Sometimes the quirkiest ones are the longest lasting ;)

Very true and very clever :)

Michael Marxen
10 Oct 2015, 01:14
Worst timing of a post, cause Jim and Meat are about to put a happy ending to their story with doing Braver Than We Are.

Their legacy was summarized by Meat himself recently in Vegas: "I have been extremely lucky to meet Jim Steinman. And Jim Steinman has been extremely lucky to meet me."

Evil Ernie
10 Oct 2015, 01:48
Worst timing of a post, cause Jim and Meat are about to put a happy ending to their story with doing Braver Than We Are.

Their legacy was summarized by Meat himself recently in Vegas: "I have been extremely lucky to meet Jim Steinman. And Jim Steinman has been extremely lucky to meet me."

ML said it best.

I think that ML was probably slightly luckier, because there probably aren't many bands or record labels that would have wanted a 300lb man as a lead singer. I think ML may have still had success, but I suspect it wouldn't have been as a singer, but an actor.

Jim is a genius, but very private. I suspect he would have been able to get artists to record his songs which would have been hits. He'd be some guy that only people who really read liner notes would know. He would make a fortune off of publishing rights.

That said, ML has been much better at turning chicken shit into chicken pot pie. His many comebacks are testament to that. Jim could have had far more success than he did; and he's a VERY successful songwriter.

anotherday
10 Oct 2015, 05:40
I wonder if WARIO is OKAY...like...WHY post this after they are about to release their final collab? I DONT UNDERSTAND WARIO

JennaG
10 Oct 2015, 10:26
To be honest I am not surprised to read this kind of thing from Stienman and it's not the first time I've read things where he has been critical towards Meat Loaf or tried to claim ownership over various aspects of the Meat Loaf character. However most people don't buy music because the people involved are 'nice', modest or whatever, they buy it because the lyrics are good and the singer is able to bring them to life in an appealing way. Whether you are a fan of Steinman as a person or not, you can't really argue that he and Meat Loaf have produced some great work.

rockfenris2005
10 Oct 2015, 16:17
ML said it best.

I think that ML was probably slightly luckier, because there probably aren't many bands or record labels that would have wanted a 300lb man as a lead singer. I think ML may have still had success, but I suspect it wouldn't have been as a singer, but an actor.

Jim is a genius, but very private. I suspect he would have been able to get artists to record his songs which would have been hits. He'd be some guy that only people who really read liner notes would know. He would make a fortune off of publishing rights.

That said, ML has been much better at turning chicken shit into chicken pot pie. His many comebacks are testament to that. Jim could have had far more success than he did; and he's a VERY successful songwriter.

It was a mutual thing, IMO. Jim had the songs. Meat had the voice and the theatricality. Meat had the energy to push the album like crazy and he never stopped. Jim got exhausted and in any event, needed to leave so he could begin work on the next album. He probably couldn't do both. The live shows had a lot to do with the success of the album. Pandora's Box "Original Sin" didn't have any live shows. I don't know why, but it didn't. But perhaps if it did, and with someone like Meat Loaf pushing them like crazy, it probably would have been bigger. If Jim had recorded BOOH himself, or if there had been another singer who was more like Jim, just looking at it from the point of view of Meat's energy, I think it would have been different.

One thing I would really like to see happen... Firstly, one thing that is different already: Meat going around saying that the dysfunctional relationship with Steinman is not what they thought it was. So what I would like to see happen now also with the new album, is just really. Hey, Meat and Jim have done great things both together and apart. And let's celebrate that. And it's true. I really believe that. Yes, they needed each other at times, but there's more to it. That's what I would love to see now.

I think they've proven that over the years.

Adje
21 Oct 2015, 03:13
Jim would be nowhere without Meat. Meats the ONLY MAN that can sing his stuff.
I'm sorry but jim was lucky to meet the voice, cause meat sure as hell would've still had a great career.
I wanted to respond to this a while back. Your reply in the Braver thread made me come back to that

Those sales numbers are terrible :( HCTB deserved more.
Not suprising though.

It's fair to say that Meat's most succesful albums are the Steinman ones (particular Bat 1 and 2) and his best selling non Steinman albums were the ones to directly follow a succesful Steinman album.

This thread started a discussion about who needs who most. For me it's obvious both couldn't have made it without the other.

Meat got in the spotlight because of that one album Bat out of Hell (sure he was in Rocky horror and had some othe things but Bat made him big).
After Dead Ringer Meat fell in a black hole. So did his career and he needed Steinman to make a comeback. Hence Bat 2. And, like it or not, Meat's career will always be connected to those two successes. Not his movie career, not his other music, no the Steinman work made Meat what he is now.
You don't take my word for it. Go to your concert the 14th, talk to none die-hard fans and the songs they mention will be of those two albums with an occasional Dead Ringer song. Hell those people bought tickets because of one of those two albums. They don't care if Los Angeloser or Giving Tree is in the set. They come to hear Bat, Paradise, TTW, TooT and AFL.

As for Steinman. A great songwriter, but only for certain artists with specific abilities. Steinman was lucky to meet Meat, who made the songs his own. Few people would have given so much life to those songs as Meat has done. The lyrics are epic and needed an epic performer, which they found in Meat.

Their blessing is both their curse. Without each other they wouldn't be where they are now. Just be happy they lived in the same era. If one of the two had been born 20 years later we would have missed out on Rock history. That I'm sure of.

Wario
21 Oct 2015, 07:22
I wanted to respond to this a while back. Your reply in the Braver thread made me come back to that

Not suprising though.

It's fair to say that Meat's most succesful albums are the Steinman ones (particular Bat 1 and 2) and his best selling non Steinman albums were the ones to directly follow a succesful Steinman album.

This thread started a discussion about who needs who most. For me it's obvious both couldn't have made it without the other.

Meat got in the spotlight because of that one album Bat out of Hell (sure he was in Rocky horror and had some othe things but Bat made him big).
After Dead Ringer Meat fell in a black hole. So did his career and he needed Steinman to make a comeback. Hence Bat 2. And, like it or not, Meat's career will always be connected to those two successes. Not his movie career, not his other music, no the Steinman work made Meat what he is now.
You don't take my word for it. Go to your concert the 14th, talk to none die-hard fans and the songs they mention will be of those two albums with an occasional Dead Ringer song. Hell those people bought tickets because of one of those two albums. They don't care if Los Angeloser or Giving Tree is in the set. They come to hear Bat, Paradise, TTW, TooT and AFL.

As for Steinman. A great songwriter, but only for certain artists with specific abilities. Steinman was lucky to meet Meat, who made the songs his own. Few people would have given so much life to those songs as Meat has done. The lyrics are epic and needed an epic performer, which they found in Meat.

Their blessing is both their curse. Without each other they wouldn't be where they are now. Just be happy they lived in the same era. If one of the two had been born 20 years later we would have missed out on Rock history. That I'm sure of.

Great post agreed