With bombastic rock-operatic tunes written by his closest collaborative partner, Jim Steinman (who died in April), Meat Loaf’s 1977 debut, “Bat Out of Hell,” was a 14-times-platinum mega-smash that far outsold any single album by critical darlings such as Bob Dylan or Bruce Springsteen. Many heard echoes of the latter’s “Born to Run” in “Bat Out of Hell,” not least because members of the E Street Band played on it, just as Springsteen’s audience could detect Phil Spector’s mark on “Born to Run.”
Where Springsteen was trying to deepen the philosophy of the American teenage love song, though, Meat Loaf just wanted to pack in more sensation: “I poured it on and I poured it out/ I tried to show you just how much I care,” he bellowed, his sturdy baritone wracked with pain, amid the drippy strings and booming drums of “Two Out of Three Ain’t Bad,” “But you’ve been cold to me for so long/ I’m crying icicles instead of tears.”
Meat Loaf learned to emote in musical theater, where laying it on too thick is part of the whole concept. Yet finding success in rock after stints in “Hair” and both the stage and screen versions of “The Rocky Horror Show” didn’t cool his overheated approach: “Dead Ringer for Love,” a breakneck duet with Cher from Meat Loaf’s 1981 sophomore LP, might be even more extreme than the “Bat Out of Hell” material, with the singers racing each other over a demented sock-hop beat.
Indeed, if his romance-novel bravado was hardly in vogue amid the hipper punk and disco of the late 1970s and early ’80s, Meat Loaf was still out of fashion when he scored a No. 1 comeback hit with “I’d Do Anything for Love” as grunge was dominating rock in 1993.
Unlike many of pop’s great showmen, he never dialed down the razzle-dazzle. He opened an episode of VH1’s typically mellow “Storytellers” with a rip-roaring “All Revved Up With No Place to Go.”