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  1. 27 de nov. de 2017 · Meat Loaf. 10 videos 2,418,209 views Last updated on Nov 27, 2017. Greatest MeatLoaf hits are curated in this music video playlist. Enjoy the greatest hits of MeatLoaf in this ...More. Play...

    • Meat Loaf

      REMASTERED IN HD! Official video of Meat Loaf performing I'd...

    • Meatloaf greatest hits

      Meatloaf greatest hits. A new music service with official...

    • Best

      Best MeatLoaf songs are curated in this music video...

  2. MeatLoaf - Greatest Hits. Playlist • Meat Loaf • 2017. 2.4M views • 10 tracks • 1 hour, 3 minutes Greatest MeatLoaf hits are curated in this music video playlist. Enjoy the greatest hits of...

  3. 15 de mar. de 2013 · Watch the official music video for "Two Out Of Three Ain't Bad" by Meat Loaf Listen to Meat Loaf: https://Meatloaf.lnk.to/listenYD ...more.

    • 5 min
    • 108.6M
    • MeatLoafVEVO
    • “What You See Is What You Get”
    • “Hot Patootie — Bless My Soul”
    • “You Took The Words Right Out of My Mouth
    • “Paradise by The Dashboard Light”
    • “Two Out of Three Ain’T Bad”
    • “Heaven Can Wait”
    • “Dead Ringer For Love”
    • “I’d Do Anything For Love
    • “I’d Lie For You
    • “It’s All Coming Back to Me Now”

    Long before Bat Out of Hell or even Meat Loaf playing Eddie in Rocky Horror, he was the second-billed singer in the duo Stoney and Meatloaf (the group was so embryonic for Meat, he hadn’t even split up his name yet.) Stoney, a.k.a. singer Shaun Murphy, knew Meat from the Detroit music scene, and the pair had appeared together in a production of Hai...

    Everything about Richard O’Brien’s 1973 musical The Rocky Horror Showwas a farce, from the way it sent up Fifties sci-fi movies to how it revealed love triangles between nearly all of the characters. At its center was Eddie, a corpulent Elvis wannabe who rides a motorcycle and “blows” a sax. He gets only about four minutes of stage time — belting t...

    The mini-est of Bat Out of Hell’s mini rock operas, “You Took the Words Right Out of My Mouth,” released in advance of the album in 1977, finds Meat crooning about romantic fumbling on a hot summer night with all the urgency of first love — “There’s not another moment to waste,” he sings. Jim Steinman’s music quotes the drumbeat from “Be My Baby,” ...

    When Meat Loaf was a teenager, he would drive his girlfriend out to the edge of town in his 1963 red Galaxie convertible and try to make his move. “We’d park somewhere,” he told Rolling Stone in 2021, “and she’d, in so many words, say, ‘Stop right there.’ ” He relayed that story to Jim Steinman in the early days of their partnership, and the songwr...

    There might not be a Coupe de Ville hiding at the bottom of a Cracker Jack box, but hidden inside “Two Out of Three Ain’t Bad” is Elvis. Jim Steinman heard “I Want You, I Need You, I Love You” and immediately thought of Meat, applying the song’s bare-bones melancholy to the singer’s booming heartbreak. It became his highest-charting hit to date, on...

    “Heaven Can Wait” is the respite nuzzled between “You Took the Words Right Out of My Mouth” and “All Revved Up With No Place to Go” on Bat Out of Hell. Jim Steinman originally wrote it for Neverland— his Peter Pan rock musical that Bat Out of Hellstems from — wanting the melody to sound like a music box. “That was a song that Wendy sang after she m...

    Not even a guest appearance by Cher could rescue “Dead Ringer for Love” or the album Dead Ringer, Meat Loaf’s bedraggled 1981 follow-up to Bat Out of Hell, from flopping. But that doesn’t mean that the song — which sounds a bit like “Summertime Blues” meeting “Mony Mony” in a dark alley, with a Meat Loaf twist — is bad. Prior to making the album, M...

    The idea of a Bat Out of Hell sequel album floated around for a good decade before it finally became a reality in 1993. This was the height of the grunge movement, and a Meat Loaf comeback seemed about as likely as a KC and the Sunshine Band revival. But nobody expected Meat and Jim Steinman to return with a song as memorable as “I’d Do Anything fo...

    Meat’s 1995 album, Welcome to the Neighbourhood, was a curious one, with the vocalist putting his stamp on songs by Tom Waits and Sammy Hagar (along with two Jim Steinman compositions, of course). This monster Diane Warren ballad was the standout. “I’d Lie for You (And That’s the Truth)” hit all the Meat Loaf marks: an oxymoron parenthetical title,...

    Jim Steinman originally wrote “It’s All Coming Back to Me Now” for his all-female group Pandora’s Box in 1989, but most people didn’t hear it until Celine Dion tackled it seven years later on her hit album Falling Into You. And when Meat decided to record a third Bat Out of Hell record in 2006, without the active cooperation of Steinman, he decided...

    • 2 min
    • Andy Greene,Kory Grow,Joseph Hudak,Angie Martoccio