Meat Loaf – Bat Out Of Hell
Label: |
Cleveland International Records – 34974 |
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Format: |
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Country: |
US |
Released: |
|
Genre: |
Rock |
Style: |
Hard Rock |
Tracklist
A1 | Bat Out Of Hell | 9:48 | |
A2 | You Took The Words Right Out Of My Mouth (Hot Summer Night) | 5:04 | |
A3 | Heaven Can Wait | 4:38 | |
A4 | All Revved Up With No Place To Go | 4:19 | |
B1 | Two Out Of Three Ain't Bad | 5:23 | |
Paradise By The Dashboard Light | (8:28) | ||
B2-I | Paradise | ||
B2-II | Let Me Sleep On It | ||
B2-III | Praying For The End Of Time | ||
B3 | For Crying Out Loud | 8:45 |
Companies, etc.
- Manufactured By – Epic Records
- Manufactured By – CBS Inc.
- Phonographic Copyright ℗ – CBS Inc.
- Copyright © – CBS Inc.
- Published By – Edward B. Marks Music Corporation
- Published By – Neverland Music Co.
- Published By – Peg Music Co.
- Recorded At – Bearsville Studios
- Recorded At – Utopia Sound
- Recorded At – The Hit Factory
- Recorded At – House Of Music, West Orange, NJ
- Mastered At – Master Cutting Room
- Pressed By – Columbia Records Pressing Plant, Terre Haute
Credits
- Arranged By – Steve Margoshes
- Arranged By [Strings] – Ken Ascher
- Backing Vocals – Todd Rundgren
- Bass – Kasim Sultan*
- Consultant [Special] – Charlie Conrad
- Design – Ed Lee
- Design Concept [Cover] – Jim Steinman
- Drums – Max Weinberg
- Effects – Jim Steinman
- Engineer [Assistant] – Cliff Hodsdon
- Guitar – Todd Rundgren
- Guitar [Motorcycle Guitar] – Todd Rundgren
- Illustration – Richard Corben
- Keyboards – Todd Rundgren
- Mastered By – Joe Brescio
- Orchestra – Of Philadelphia Orchestra*
- Orchestrated By – Steve Margoshes
- Percussion – Todd Rundgren
- Photography By – Frank Laffitte
- Piano – Steve Margoshes
- Producer, Engineer, Mixed By, Arranged By [With] – Todd Rundgren
- Production Manager – Sam Ellis (4)
- Production Manager [Assistant] – Richard Maiori
- Recorded By – Mark Thomas (19)
- Remix – John Jansen
- Saxophone – Edgar Winter
- Speech – Phil "Scooter" Rizzuto*
- Synthesizer – Roger Powell
- Vocals – Ellen Foley
- Written-By – Jim Steinman
Notes
Orange labels. Issued with custom printed inner-sleeve with credits and lyrics.
Runouts are stamped except for T1 and the final digits which are etched.
Runouts are stamped except for T1 and the final digits which are etched.
Barcode and Other Identifiers
- Rights Society: BMI
- Pressing Plant ID (In runouts): T
- Matrix / Runout (Label A): AL 34974
- Matrix / Runout (Label B): BL 34974
- Matrix / Runout (Runout A, variant 1): P AL 34974-4AF 1T E3
- Matrix / Runout (Runout B, variant 1): 1T P BL 34974-3AF G7
- Matrix / Runout (Runout A, variant 2): PAL34974-4AA D 1T
- Matrix / Runout (Runout B, variant 2): PBL34974-3J 1T D
- Matrix / Runout (Runout A, variant 3): 1T P AL 34974-4AA C
- Matrix / Runout (Runout B, variant 3): P BL 34974-3BA T1 C
- Matrix / Runout (Runout A, variant 5): AL 34974-4G 1T
- Matrix / Runout (Runout B, variant 5): P BL 34974-3J 1T
Other Versions (5 of 378)
View AllTitle (Format) | Label | Cat# | Country | Year | |||
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Recently Edited
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Bat Out Of Hell (LP, Album, Stereo, Orange Labels) | Epic | ELPS 3860 | Australia | 1977 | ||
Bat Out Of Hell (LP, Album, Limited Edition, Picture Disc) | Cleveland International Records | PBL 34974 | Canada | 1977 | |||
Recently Edited
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Bat Out Of Hell (LP, Album) | Epic | S EPC 82419, EPC 82419 | Ireland | 1977 | ||
Recently Edited
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Bat Out Of Hell (LP, Album, Stereo) | Cleveland International Records | PE 34974, 34974 | Canada | 1977 | ||
Recently Edited
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Bat Out Of Hell (LP, Album, Stereo) | Cleveland International Records | LP-1265-E | Philippines | 1977 |
Recommendations
Reviews
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Don't have a mint copy of this but the sound quality is really poor. The Loaf deserves better! I've had 2 different copies and they both sound muddy and flat. Oh well, still a fun album.
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I love this album. I grew up listening to it. This pressing is quiet, but not dynamic. I gave it 4 stars as the performance is great, but it just sounds like it is behind a veil.
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A story about a horny teen trying to get laid blown up to histrionic proportions. If you took all your 70s Springsteen records, Phil Spector records, Mad Dogs And Englishmen, and Exile On Main Street and played em at the same time, you might come close to the density of BOOH. As a wee one growing up in the Bronx, recognizing Phil Rizzuto's voice on here as the guy who announced for the Yankees and did The Money Store commercials made everything in the world seem connected. Is it pure bombast? Yes, of the best tongue- in-cheek sort. Do I love it all these years later? You bet.
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anyone know what 'APEX' in the runout indicates? I have this Terre Haute pressing but it clearly has APEX etched and I'm not finding info on that designation.
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A superb piece of rock and roll theater, and a great collection of ambitious songs, all of which were very well performed But I'm still hoping for a remaster that doesn't sound so damn muddy. If you love midrange, and hate both bass and treble, this is the LP for you.
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Blind fools down there. Close your eyes and go on a damn good ride. This shit really is amazing. There is a reason people bought it. Which is when your high and living life this shit hits a chord in your soul. It's not about the potion but the magic.
Your going to die someday, so might as well regret shit you have done than regret shit you haven't done. -
Edited 8 years agoWhile laughing, even with the remastering, I find it impossible not sum up Meatloaf’s Bat Out Of Hell as anything other than bombastic ... in every sense of the word, and in every aspect of the album, beginning with the fact that the album went platinum over fourteen times, topped the US and UK charts for a staggering 474 weeks, and included the musicians Todd Rundgren [who also produced the album], Max Weinberg and Roy Bittan [of the E. Street Band], along of the Philadelphia and New York symphonies, and famed Yankees baseball announcer Phil Rizzuto. And it was all do to a little movie called The Rocky Horror Picture Show which featured Meatloaf in a bit part that included the song “Paradise By The Dashboard Lights.”
It was a hot and weird summer, and I have no idea why I purchased this album, because today I find that it has absolutely no redeeming qualities, and just makes me embarrassed that I could have gotten swept up in the hysteria, the hoopla, the spandex, and the sheer tongue in cheek atmosphere ... one that at the time had America fueled with cocaine and poppers. The album was epic, as epic as Boston’s first release, and just as impossible to follow up. The orchestra moved in a dramatic fashion, lacing the background with symphonic energy, the guitars were loud, the drumming was staggering, and it all hit the listener head on, like a bat out of hell.
I’ve come to believe that there is something that shimmers the waves of the cosmos every so often, delivering rippled effects that profoundly effect all universes, and like a free box of Tide, Bat Out Of Hell slid in under the door of nearly every white American household, where this revved up saga of frustration, sexuality, and overwhelming rock n’ roll bliss that uses up and spits out every rock cliche that ever existed stands as a lone beacon of all that should never have come into existence. Listen, I’m not saying the album was bad at the time, it was what it was, and it certainly got radio airplay, even I knew all the lyrics ... yet that doesn’t mean that I wasn’t affected by those shimmering cosmic waves, or at least that the story I’m sticking to, because looking back with wiser and more restrained eyes and ears, this album was like a chocolate cake sugar rush that felt so good at the time, but left me with a glucose hangover, and blood sugar levels that altered the rhythms of my heart.
This is one of those albums that is impossible to rate and impossible to challenge, because it exists in a space and time of its own, one that I’m sure will be repeated at some future date when the cosmic ripples hit the other side of the universe and wash back over this tiny blue planet once again, where we’ll be treated to something equally as intense, insane, silly, over the top, and as subversively spartan as anything out of Mad Magazine.
Review by Jenell Kesler
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