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To: SI Bob who wrote (19486)8/25/2003 9:59:24 AM
From: Done, gone.  Respond to of 32883
 
any conversation that was taking place at the time abruptly stops.

Shh!!

qgm.com
qgm.com



To: SI Bob who wrote (19486)8/25/2003 10:39:43 AM
From: Jeffrey S. Mitchell  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 32883
 
I had the pleasure to see Meatloaf play in a small club in Albany, NY circa 1980, only a couple of years after Bat out of Hell-- when he still looked like a Meatloaf and would routinely get concussions for falling off the stage or bumping into walls. He's slimmed down, calmed down, and cut his hair, but he's still touring, though supposedly for the last time. Until I looked up info on him on the net, I had forgotten he is also still doing movies, most notably Fight Club. I also got a chuckle out of the following, considering Bat Out of Hell is one of the best selling albums of all time:

He was in a few bands before he got the part in Hair. Other roles followed, including one in the LA production of the Rocky Horror Picture Show (he was also in the film). He toured in the National Lampoon Road Show, where he and Jim Steinman put together the songs for Bat Out Of Hell. When it was released in 1978, the industry response was overwhelmingly negative. Meat's own record company hated it. One critic made a point of reviewing the album two months before its release, and gave it half a star. "Melody Maker - when we played Hammersmith Odeon, they called us the worst rock and roll band in the history of rock and roll," says Meat. "But that did more for me than anything else in the world. That sold more records. I went to do Central Park, there's 35,000 people ... and there's all this press from all over the world, from Argentina, from Brazil, from the Middle East, and everybody's wanting to talk to me. Finally I was talkin' to some guy, from Greece I think, and I said, 'Why are you here?' And he says, 'Melody Maker! They called you the worst rock and roll band in the world and everybody wanted to come and see you.' And then he looks at me and says, 'I thought you were pretty good."

surfsupnet.plus.com



To: SI Bob who wrote (19486)8/25/2003 11:19:07 AM
From: greg s  Respond to of 32883
 
Bob,

When I was working on my masters degree, there was a bar across the street from the main entrance to the college. They had an awesome sound system and every night they would wait for the place to get packed and everyone had a snoot-full.

Then they would play "Paradise By The Dashboard Light" with the volume cranked. All the partiers would sing along at the top of their lungs, the guys singing Meatloaf's part, the gals singing the gal part. It was a tradition. What a hoot!



To: SI Bob who wrote (19486)8/25/2003 2:01:28 PM
From: Glenn Petersen  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 32883
 
I will always remember that the Wall Street Journal did a front page profile of Meatloaf and, in true WSJ tradition, referred to him as Mr. Loaf.

I had the pleasure of seeing Mr. Loaf in his prime. Memorable.