Bat Out of Hell III: The Monster Is Loose

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Bat Out of Hell III:
The Monster Is Loose
Cover shows a muscular long-haired, blond man on a motorbike wielding a sword, while a skimpily clad woman lies by fallen pillars; a fire-breathing monster with bat-like wings is in the background.
Studio album by
ReleasedOctober 20, 2006
RecordedJuly 2005–July 2006
Genre
Length77:28
Label
ProducerDesmond Child
Meat Loaf chronology
Couldn't Have Said It Better
(2003)
Bat Out of Hell III:
The Monster Is Loose

(2006)
Hang Cool Teddy Bear
(2010)
Singles from Bat Out of Hell III: The Monster Is Loose
  1. "It's All Coming Back to Me Now"
    Released: October 16, 2006
  2. "Cry Over Me"
    Released: May 7, 2007

Bat Out of Hell III: The Monster Is Loose is the ninth studio album by Meat Loaf, and the third and final album in the Bat Out of Hell trilogy. It was released in Ireland on October 20, 2006, 29 years after Bat Out of Hell (1977), and 13 years after Bat Out of Hell II: Back into Hell (1993). It was released in the UK on October 23, 2006, and in the US on October 31, 2006.

Produced by Desmond Child, it is the only Bat album not involving Jim Steinman in its production. The album was subject to a legal dispute between Meat Loaf and Steinman, who had registered the phrase "Bat Out of Hell" as a trademark and attempted to prevent the album using the phrase. In the end, seven songs that Steinman wrote for various other projects were included.

As with its predecessors, the album received mixed reviews. A tour, named The Seize the Night Tour, followed the release, concentrating upon songs from the Bat albums.[1]

History[edit]

According to a Reuters report, Meat Loaf and Steinman started working on an album in 2001.[2] During the concerts on his Hair of the Dog tour, Meat Loaf made a point to mention that he and Steinman were putting out a new album.

The composer suffered some health setbacks around 2004. Meat Loaf said that "lawyers worked for over a year putting together a contract for Steinman to do Bat Out of Hell III. It was one of the best producer's contracts in the history of the record business." Ultimately, according to the singer, Steinman was not well enough to work on such an intense project and made what he calls the "selfish" decision to go ahead without him. In promotional interviews he said that he did not want to wait a year and a half just to find out that Steinman was still unfit.[3] Describing himself as a "really loyal person", Meat Loaf said that "the decision not to use Steinman has taken its toll on me."[2]

However, in 2006, David Sonenberg, Steinman's manager, said:

Jim's health is excellent. That's not the reason he didn't participate in (Bat III). He had some meaningful health problems about four years ago, but he's been totally healthy the last couple of years. His health in no way impacted on his involvement in the Bat Out of Hell project.[2]

The development problems and confusion over Steinman's involvement is a result of a dispute of the trademark "Bat Out of Hell", which Steinman registered in 1995.[4] Meat Loaf sued Steinman and his manager, in a complaint filed May 28, 2006, in federal District Court in Los Angeles, California, for $50 million and to prevent further use by the writer/producer.[5]

Meat Loaf has stated that he contributed lyrics to "Bat Out of Hell". He had used the phrase extensively for tours, to which Steinman had never objected "until a recent falling out".[4] Steinman and his representatives approached Meat Loaf's labels, Universal and Virgin, asserting trademark ownership and threatening litigation[4] to prevent the album's release.[6] An agreement was reached in Summer 2006. According to Virgin, "the two came to an amicable agreement that ensured that Jim Steinman's music would be a continuing part of the 'Bat Out of Hell' legacy."[7] In promotional interviews, Meat Loaf has played down the dispute with Steinman, pointing out that it was over in three weeks and was purely for the sake of business.

I consider him to be one of my best friends but the real thing is about managers: I think Steinman's manager is the devil and Steinman feels the same way about my manager. So, we had to communicate through managers and he refused to sign some papers that would have allowed for the recording of Bat Out of Hell III without a hitch. So, really, I didn't sue Jim Steinman. I sued his manager.[6]

Despite the fact that Steinman was not involved in the recording or production, the album does include seven of his songs, five of which are covers of previously released songs. The other two were covers of Steinman's demos intended for musical theater projects, at the time unreleased. The agreement enabled Steinman to work on a musical theatre project based on all of the songs from Bat Out of Hell. Describing the project as "Cirque du Soleil on acid", in September 2007, he expected it to open in London in 2010.[8]

Production[edit]

Meat Loaf had announced that Michael Beinhorn was producing the record, but Desmond Child took the helm. The singer reported that Child would say things that made him think he was sitting next to Steinman.[9] Child began recording sessions by playing Slipknot CDs to get the assembled musicians in the mood.[2] In addition to musicians from his touring band, the Neverland Express, several guest players contributed to the album. Meat Loaf said, "I didn't just want to bring in rock players — I wanted to go to extreme rock people" resulting in an album that "has all the touches of the other two Bats, but it's much more of a rock album."[2] Child said that one of the most memorable experiences working on the album was working with Brian May, who played on "Bad for Good".[10] The album also features guest performances by John 5, Steve Vai and John Shanks.

Meat Loaf said that he did not enjoy recording in studios. He compared the process to "going to the dentist and having root canal everyday". Whereas you really have to be flat for people to notice it in a live show, in a studio, every "nuance is under a microscope... and I'm a perfectionist who knows that there's no such thing as perfection but I try to get as close as I can."[3]

Todd Rundgren, who produced the first album and arranged all of the background vocals for Bat II, arranged the background vocals for three tracks. In a promotional interview for the album Rundgren has said "continuity is an important thing."[10] However, in another interview he said that his contribution was considerably less than on some earlier Meat Loaf albums.

And by the time they got it all organized and figured out, there were really only a couple of songs left for me to do anything on. So I came into L.A. for a couple of days and Kasim... came in, as was the routine, and we did maybe three songs... just so that I’d have a few fingerprints on the record. I think someone, maybe Meat Loaf, said that to keep everything covered, I had to be in there somewhere... but not necessarily running the whole thing. So my involvement was pretty much peripheral.[11]

Compositions[edit]

The album opens with the title track. "The Monster Is Loose" feature the Gothic style of John 5, who plays the main guitar parts. The song is very heavy and continues Meat Loaf's association with Major League Baseball established with Phil Rizzuto's commentary on "Paradise by the Dashboard Light".[2] "Blind as a Bat", written by Desmond Child, tells about how one is thankful for the love another has given him, even after he has done deeds to suggest that he does not deserve such love.[12]

According to Steinman, "It's All Coming Back to Me Now" was inspired by Wuthering Heights, and was an attempt to write "the most passionate, romantic song" he could ever create.[13] In interviews, Meat Loaf has said that, in his mind, the song was always meant to be a duet.[14] Norwegian artist Marion Raven, who had been working on her solo album with Child, was chosen because the timbre of her voice starkly contrasts to Meat Loaf's.[15]

"Bad for Good" was one of the many songs written by Steinman under the inspiration of Peter Pan and lost boys who never grow up.[16] This is reflected in lyrics such as "You know I'm gonna be like this forever/I'm never gonna be what I should." The song was written to appear on the follow-up to Bat Out of Hell, but which Steinman recorded himself as the album Bad for Good. Because of this, Meat Loaf was aware that there is a "core of fans that know that song", so he "had that under the microscope more than any other on the album".[10]

"Cry Over Me" is, according to Meat Loaf, a timeless song dealing with relationships of all kinds. In a 2007 interview, he said that it can be about your first or last loves, or dealing with your boss at work. Partially quoting the lyrics, the singer posits that there are times when "you want him to feel exactly like I felt when he said that to me."[3]

The Guardian said "In the Land of the Pig (The Butcher Is King)" is "five Olympian minutes crying out for a full production at Glyndebourne."[17] Guitarist Steve Vai describes it as "very Gothic; almost terrifying".[10] It is about the intense power over subordinates:

Can't you hear the choir now?
Listen to the animals sing.
Can't you hear the slaughterhouse bells?
In the land of the pigs the butcher is king.

"Monstro" is a bombastic orchestral piece layered with chorals that lead into the piano introduction to "Alive". Meat Loaf decided to hire Desmond Child when he revealed that he had written "Alive" especially for the album. The song refers to how the singer had overcome difficult periods in his life.[15]

"What About Love", a piano-based duet with Patti Russo, is a sexually charged song that echoes "Paradise by the Dashboard Light" from the 1977 album. Here, though, the singers are singing about love throughout, not bitterness. The final verse contains the most explicit lyrics about their first sexual encounter.

[Boy:]
I can't forget the feeling of your sweat upon my skin
And the tremble of your body on the day you let me in
[Girl:]
On a summer night's surrender with nothing to lose
You were scared and so was I when I gave myself to you

"Seize the Night" has a strong orchestral foundation underneath the lead vocals and a choir. A duet with Jennifer Hudson, "The Future Ain't What It Used to Be" is a pessimistic song based upon the myth that Pandora closed her jar before allowing "hope" to escape (the song first appeared on the only album performed by female group Pandora's Box). The lyrics reveal the hopelessness of the past (Were there ever any stars in the sky?) and the future (There's nothing so sad as a tomorrow gone bad).

The final song of the Bat trilogy is a short one written by Steinman. A few lyrics of "Cry to Heaven" begin rather sweet, but turning rather bitter: ("Cry baby cry/Cry, cry to heaven/If that doesn't do it for you/Go ahead and cry like hell".) The two parts are bridged by an instrumental dominated by an Irish flute.

Cover and booklet[edit]

The cover follows the style of the previous two albums called Bat Out of Hell. Julie Bell designed the cover and the artwork that appears alongside the lyrics in the booklet. She also supplied the art for the "It's All Coming Back to Me Now" single. The cover features the long-haired biker about to slay the giant bat from the second cover, while the angel from the same cover hides behind a destroyed pillar.[18] Like the first two Bat albums, Steinman's songwriting is credited on the cover, this time shared with Desmond Child.

The booklet contains all of the lyrics to the songs, with most pages featuring a small illustration. The CD liner contains a dedication "For thirty years of friendship and inspiration, Bat Out of Hell III is dedicated to Jim Steinman."

Reception[edit]

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[19]
The Guardian[20]
The Independent[21]
Q[22]
Rolling Stone[23]

The album debuted at number 8 on the US Billboard 200 and sold about 81,000 copies in its opening week, Meat Loaf's best since Bat Out of Hell II: Back Into Hell.[24] However, it slipped to number 60 after three weeks. The album also reached number 3 on the UK Albums Chart, but quickly fell off.

Q gave the album a positive review, calling it "the second-best album to bear the 'Bat' name", and saying that Child did an "impressive recreation of Steinman's Andrew Lloyd Webber-on-steroids approach", while the album was "overblown, frequently ridiculous and largely devoid of irony." They were unimpressed with the title track, suggesting that "whoever decided it would be a good idea for Meat Loaf to tackle nu metal…should be tarred and feathered." Q did, however, praise the "operatic" vocals and Brian May's "fabulously hysterical guitar" on the track "Bad for Good".[22] The Village Voice named it as 'Album of the Year This Week', calling it "absurdist, righteous majesty".[25]

Some reviews lamented Steinman's absence. According to AllMusic, "this Bat is quite obviously a patchwork, pieced together from things borrowed and recreated, never quite gelling the way either of the previous Bats did." They criticized "The Monster Is Loose" as "disarming, a grindingly metallic riff-rocker that sits very uncomfortably next to Steinman's "It's All Coming Back to Me Now", and Child as "a professional who is playing a game without bothering to learn the rules." On the other hand, the review commended Meat Loaf's voice: he sings "his heart out as he valiantly tries to make this Bat a worthy successor to the originals."[19]

Singles and music videos[edit]

"It's All Coming Back to Me Now" was the first song released as a single. It reached number one in Raven's native Norway, and the top ten in both the United Kingdom and Germany.[26] "Blind As a Bat" was scheduled to be released in the UK on December 18, but was then put back to February 26, as two CDs.[27] In turn, this single was pulled at the last minute, in favor of "Cry Over Me", which was released on May 7, 2007.[28]

P. R. Brown directed the videos for "It's All Coming Back to Me Now" and "Cry Over Me".[3][29] "It's All Coming Back to Me Now" is an elaborate production, in which Meat Loaf is being haunted by the memory of his dead lover. Told in flashback, Raven's character crashes her car to avoid a man standing in the road. She sings as an unseen spirit following Meat Loaf. It echoes Steinman's comments that the song is about the "dark side of love" and the "ability to be resurrected by it".[30]

The video for "Cry Over Me" had the lowest budget since those for the original album. A simple video, Meat Loaf has said that it only took four hours to film.[3] The animated music video for "The Monster Is Loose" is about a biker who rescues a girl from an enormous bat-like creature.

The videos for "It's All Coming Back to Me Now", "Cry Over Me" and "The Monster Is Loose" are included as bonus features on the 3 Bats Live DVD, released in October 2007.

Track listing[edit]

No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."The Monster Is Loose"John 5, Desmond Child, Nikki Sixx7:12
2."Blind as a Bat"Child, James Michael5:51
3."It's All Coming Back to Me Now" (Duet with Marion Raven)Jim Steinman6:05
4."Bad for Good" (Featuring Brian May)Steinman7:33
5."Cry Over Me"Diane Warren4:40
6."In the Land of the Pig, the Butcher Is King"Steinman5:38
7."Monstro"Elena Casals, Child, Holly Knight1:39
8."Alive"Child, Knight, Michael, Andrea Remanda4:22
9."If God Could Talk"Child, Marti Frederiksen3:46
10."If It Ain't Broke, Break It"Steinman4:50
11."What About Love?" (Duet with Patti Russo)Child, Frederiksen, John Gregory, Russ Irwin6:03
12."Seize the Night"Steinman9:46
13."The Future Ain't What It Used to Be" (Duet with Jennifer Hudson)Steinman7:54
14."Cry to Heaven"Steinman2:22

All of the Jim Steinman songs were written for other projects. Like Bat II,[31] the album contains two songs ("It's All Coming Back..." and "The Future Ain't What It Used to Be") that originally appeared on Original Sin, Steinman's 1989 concept album with Pandora's Box. Steinman's demo of "In the Land of the Pig, the Butcher Is King" was part of the preparations for the unrealized Batman: The Musical project. Steinman's "Cry to Heaven" demo was intended for the possibility that Steinman would provide songs for a musical based on the film Cry-Baby. Cry-Baby has since been staged, but without any work from Steinman. "Bad for Good" was featured as the title track on Steinman's 1981 album. Some of the songs on the Bad for Good album were once intended to be a Meat Loaf solo album. "Seize the Night" first appeared as "Carpe Noctem" in the German language musical Tanz der Vampire. It was also performed in English in the 2002 Broadway show called Dance of the Vampires, and demos of the song in English became widely available around that time. "If It Ain't Broke, Break It" first appeared in the MTV film Wuthering Heights, and a recording of the song was released on the soundtrack CD for the film.

Alternative releases[edit]

A limited edition was released with an accompanying DVD, containing a short "making of" featurette, the animated trailer, and "The Monster Is Loose" career montage video. The US version also includes a photo gallery and the "It's All Coming Back to Me Now" video.

Best Buy's version of the album came with an exclusive bonus track: a live version of "Testify" (from Couldn't Have Said It Better). This track was originally announced to be on the CD itself, but Best Buy opted to include an insert in the packaging giving customers a code to download the song. Circuit City's version came with an exclusive downloadable track: a live version of "Life Is a Lemon and I Want My Money Back". Target released a "Limited Tour Edition" with a concert ticket pre-sale offer. Wal-Mart released the album as part of an exclusive 2-pack with the Meat Loaf Bat Out of Hell Classic Albums DVD.

The version of the album available from Apple's iTunes Store includes two bonus tracks, a live version of "I'd Do Anything for Love (But I Won't Do That)", recorded at a concert in Australia, and "Heads Will Roll", sung by Marion Raven from her EP of the same name.

Tour[edit]

Meat Loaf embarked on a 112 date world tour to promote the album. He performed a concert performing some songs from all three Bat Out of Hell albums on October 16 at London's Royal Albert Hall, and performed many of those songs on the rest of his tour as well. He also performed a "Bat on Broadway" performance on November 2, 2006 at New York City's Palace Theatre, as well as shows in Toronto, Atlantic City, Uncasville, and Mexico City.

Marion Raven joined Meat Loaf for the first leg of his 2007 tour, Seize the Night tour. She was the supporting act, promoting her Set Me Free album. Meat Loaf introduced her on stage at the latter stages of the concerts to duet on "It's All Coming Back to Me Now".[32]

A DVD of the tour was released in October 2007, entitled 3 Bats Live. It also contains a bonus disc featuring the promotional videos and animations from Bat III.

Portions of the tour were captured on film in the Theatrical Documentary Meat Loaf: In Search of Paradise, directed by Bruce David Klein, which was released in 2008.

Personnel[edit]

  • Lead vocals – Meat Loaf


Session musicians

  • Backing vocals – Becky Baeling (track 11), Andreas Carlsson (track 8), Desmond Child, Marti Frederiksen (track 11), Diana Grasselli (tracks 2, 7, 13, 14), John Gregory (tracks 3, 11), Storm Lee, Jeanette Olsson, Jason Paige, Keely Pressly (track 3), Camile Saviola (track 10), Maria Vidal (track 13)
  • Programming – Randy Canto (track 10), Doug Emery (track 14), Harry Sommerdahl (tracks 2, 7, 9, 10), Chris Vrenna (track 6)
  • Gospel choir (tracks 8, 13) – Barbara Allen, Vernon Allen, Esther Austin, Bonita Brisco, Cheryl Brown, Sonya Byous, Jessica Jones, Joseph Powell, Sandra Stokes, Roshuan Stovall
  • Trumpet (track 10) – Gary Grant, Steve Madaio

Orchestra

Charts[edit]

Weekly[edit]

Chart (2006) Peak
position
Australian Albums (ARIA)[33] 9
Austrian Albums (Ö3 Austria)[34] 5
Belgian Albums (Ultratop Flanders)[35] 32
Belgian Albums (Ultratop Wallonia)[36] 94
Canadian Albums (Billboard)[37] 3
Danish Albums (Hitlisten)[38] 5
Dutch Albums (Album Top 100)[39] 7
German Albums (Offizielle Top 100)[40] 2
Irish Albums (IRMA)[41] 16
New Zealand Albums (RMNZ)[42] 5
Norwegian Albums (VG-lista)[43] 6
Scottish Albums (OCC)[44] 2
Swedish Albums (Sverigetopplistan)[45] 10
Swiss Albums (Schweizer Hitparade)[46] 3
UK Albums (OCC)[47] 3
US Billboard 200[48] 8

Year-end[edit]

Chart (2006) Position
Dutch Albums (Album Top 100)[49] 94
German Albums (Offizielle Top 100)[50] 76
Swiss Albums (Schweizer Hitparade)[51] 77
UK Albums (OCC)[52] 67

Certifications[edit]

Region Certification Certified units/sales
Australia (ARIA)[53] Gold 35,000^
Canada (Music Canada)[54] Gold 50,000^
Denmark (IFPI Danmark)[55] Gold 20,000^
Germany (BVMI)[56] Gold 100,000^
Switzerland (IFPI Switzerland)[57] Gold 15,000^
United Kingdom (BPI)[58] Platinum 300,000^
United States (RIAA)[59] Gold 500,000^

^ Shipments figures based on certification alone.

References[edit]

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External links[edit]