Jim Steinman
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Image:Jim Steinman.jpg James Richard Steinman (born November 1, 1947 in New York City, New York) (more commonly known as Jim Steinman) is an American rock and musical theater composer. He is notable for having written most of Meat Loaf's hit songs, in addition to hits for many other musical artists. His three biggest musical successes are an album Bat Out of Hell (1977), sung by Meat Loaf, "Total Eclipse Of The Heart" (1983), sung by Bonnie Tyler, and a German musical Tanz der Vampire (1998).
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The Dream Engine
While he was a student at Amherst College in Massachusetts, Jim wrote the book, music, and lyrics for The Dream Engine (1969), a musical about revolution. The story, set in the distant future, is about a young boy named Baal who, along with his rebel fellows, doesn't accept the restraints and limits of their society. Baal is the leader of a group of wild boys called The Tribe, whose mortal enemies are Max and Emily, the parents of the Girl, a young woman with whom Baal has fallen in love. Steinman himself played Baal in the original production, which was staged in the Spring of 1969. Critics hailed the musical as visionary and ahead of its time. Its Steinman-composed tagline said it all: "Makes 'Hair' look like 'Hello Dolly.'" Some themes from Steinman's later songs can already be heard here, like the "Turn Around" line in Total Eclipse of the Heart. This show was remade 8 years later as Neverland (see below).
Joseph Papp, founder of the New York Shakespeare Festival, saw the play and was so impressed he signed it up during intermission. He wanted to bring it to Broadway, but was stopped by the law because the play was much too sexually explicit to be represented in a public place.
More Than You Deserve
From the collaboration with Papp, another musical was born: originally titled "Souvenirs," it became More Than You Deserve (1974), co-written by Michael Weller. In 1974, Papp was producing a show; the author, Weller, said he was interested in adding a song or two to the show. Papp hooked up Mr. Weller with Steinman. Steinman had other ideas though. He envisioned a full blown Broadway musical, and pretty soon he had his way, with Jim writing the music and collaborating on the lyrics with Mr. Weller.
It was during the auditions for this show that history was made. This marks a very important encounter for Steinman. A young actor from Texas whose biggest show to date had been Hair showed up for a part in Jim's new show and tried out; his nickname was Meat Loaf. After hearing him sing a song from his album Stoney & Meatloaf called (I'd Love To Be) As Heavy As Jesus, they were so impressed that they gave him the script and asked him to tell them which character he would like to play. He surprised them all by picking Rabbit, a not too bright soldier who believed he was helping send his fellow comrades home by blowing them up with hand grenades and other ammo. The moment Steinman saw him, he realized that Meat Loaf was going to be his voice.
The story is set in Vietnam during the war in a non-combat camp run by a commander who is impotent and who falls in love with a reporter sent to cover the camp, who turns out to be a nymphomaniac when she is gang raped by the other soldiers in the camp. However, she realizes at the end that she will be even happier giving up her new found lust for sex to settle down with the impotent commander.
Neverland
In 1977 another musical saw the light (as a workshop in Washington, DC, and New York), Neverland. Basically a re-write of The Dream Engine, this time more overtly based on J. M. Barrie's Peter Pan, but much more of an adult version, although it's questionable how much this 1977 version has in common with Steinman's finished concept of Neverland. Thematically all, or at least most, of Steinman songs and works, can be seen as ongoing parts of his Neverland. Meat Loaf has joked about this, claiming "He (Steinman) thinks I'm Tinkerbell!"
Bat Out of Hell
1977 was important for another reason for Steinman, as it saw the debut of the album Bat Out of Hell, that he has recorded with Meat Loaf as lead singer. The album featured music of a bombastic and Wagnerian style, not quite the style that was considered hit material in the Seventies. When they started proposing it to music companies they had a lot of trouble finding someone willing to produce it. They still needed a label and it took them some more time before they finally settled with Cleveland International Records. The album was not an immediate hit but soon grew to become the second best selling album of all time.
Bad for Good
In 1981 a sequel to Bat Out of Hell was ready, but Meat Loaf's voice, after years of continuous touring, was not, so Steinman decided to sing on the album himself, as he had wanted to do a solo album anyway. Steinman and Todd Rundgren co-produced every track except "Rock and Roll Dreams Come Through", which was co-produced by Steinman and Jimmy Iovine, who later headed Interscope Records. The album was released as Bad for Good. The album produced one hit, "Rock and Roll Dreams Come Through," which rose to position 32 on the Billboard charts in a six-week run in July 1981. LP pressings of the album included, as a bonus, the tracks "The Storm" and "Rock & Roll Dreams Come Through" as a separate 7" inch single. The single's sleeve included a run down of who played what where. According to those credits Rory Dodd did lead vocals on both "Lost Boys and Golden Girls" and "Surf's Up". However, he's not credited on "Rock and Roll Dreams Come Through" (which is odd since it's obviously him doing those high pitched notes). Steinman appeared in a music video for the song, lip-synching to (pressumably) Dodd's vocals. The song "Left in the Dark" was later recorded by Barbra Streisand on her album "Emotion" (Steinman produced the track).
Dead Ringer
When Meat Loaf's voice recovered, Steinman gave him some songs he had left over from Bad for Good, and they were collected in the 1981 Dead Ringer album. Meat Loaf later re-recorded some of the other tracks which were on the Steinman album as well, and also had a hit with "Rock and Roll Dreams Come Through."
The Other Children
Bonnie Tyler
The collaboration with Meat Loaf went on hiatus, and Steinman started working on other projects; he produced Bonnie Tyler's Faster Than the Speed of Night, with the hit song, written by Steinman, "Total Eclipse of the Heart". At the same time he had written a song for Air Supply, titled "Making Love Out of Nothing at All", so in October 1983, for four weeks in a row, he had two songs at the top of the US Billboard chart: Total Eclipse at number one, and Making Love at number two. Steinman is said to be the only musician that has achieved this on the Billboard list. It would take three more years until Steinman produced/wrote/composed a second album for Bonnie Tyler.
Fire Inc.
In 1984, Steinman created Fire Inc., which was a "fake band" with the sole purpose of singing his songs on the movie Streets of Fire's soundtrack. The band featured Rory Dodd, Holly Sherwood and Laurie Sargent as lead vocals. Despite a minor chart entry with "Tonight is What it Means to Be Young", the Fire Inc. songs were a commercial flop, however his fans have persisted with loving them and they have been covered by several artists after that. [1]
In the following years, Steinman continued to write songs for artists like The Sisters of Mercy. Others, like Barbra Streisand, Barry Manilow and Celine Dion, sang covers of earlier Steinman works, widely considered inferior to the originals by Steinman fans. For example, Streisand featured a cover of "Left in the Dark" from "Bad for Good" on her 1984 release Emotion (and also filmed her first-ever video to promote the song). Manilow's version of "Read 'Em And Weep" topped the U.S. Adult Contemporary chart for six weeks earlier in 1984. Dion's take on "It's All Coming Back To Me Now" was a U.S. #2 Pop and #1 AC hit in 1996.
Pandora's Box
In 1989, Steinman gathered a group of female singers and formed the one-album band Pandora's Box. Band members were Ellen Foley (who had already played Wendy in 1977's Neverland workshop production and sung with Meat Loaf in Bat Out of Hell), Holly Sherwood (former Fire Inc.), Elaine Caswell, Gina Taylor and Jim Steinman himself.
The album was released along with a video, directed by Ken Russell, for "It's All Coming Back to Me Now" (later covered as a hit by Céline Dion), but a planned tour was scrapped. The album was not released to the United States originally. Sales for the album were modest, though Steinman continues to be very proud of it. Many fans and critics consider it one of his best works. The track "Original Sin" was recycled and featured prominently in the musical show "Tanz der Vampire." The album's final track "The Future Ain't What It Used to Be" was re-recorded for the MTV movie of "Wuthering Heights" starring Erika Christensen.
In 1994, singer Taylor Dayne covered a slightly reworked version of "Original Sin" on the soundtrack of the movie version of The Shadow. Meat Loaf also covered "Original Sin" on his 1996 album Welcome To The Neighborhood.
Bat Out of Hell 2: Back into Hell
During Christmas, 1989, Steinman made a visit to the home of Meat Loaf. Both Steinman and Meat Loaf began talks for a new collaboration. After several years worth of work, Bat Out of Hell II: Back into Hell was released in 1993. The album skyrocketed to #1 in 20 countries. Sales for the album topped 11 million worldwide. The album returned Meat Loaf to prominence in the music industry and resulted in a massive tour. Among the new songs featured on the album, "I'd Do Anything for Love (But I Won't Do That)" went on to become a top selling single. As was the case with previous Steinman records, most of the songs featured were "recycled" from Bad For Good and Original Sin, but all of them were written by Steinman.
Musicals
In the late Nineties Steinman returned to his old love: musicals. He wrote lyrics for Andrew Lloyd Webber's Whistle Down the Wind that went on stage in the US in 1996, and in London, rearranged in 1998, with much greater success. Many of the songs from Whistle Down the Wind were recorded by performers popular in Great Britain and released on a theme album in the U.K., produced by Jim Steinman. One track called "No Matter What," recorded by pop group Boyzone, became a hit in the U.K.
Tanz der Vampire
Steinman's big musical success, though, was Tanz der Vampire (in English: Dance of the Vampires), which opened in Vienna, Austria on October 4, 1997. From the day of the world premiere, to January 7, 1999, Steve Barton embodied the leading role of Graf von Krolock here. Based on Roman Polanski's movie The Fearless Vampire Killers, and directed by Polanski himself, Tanz der Vampire won six International musical awards, at the International Musical Award Germany (IMAGE 1998), in Düsseldorf. The musical has been playing in Stuttgart Germany from March 31, 2000 until August 31, 2003 and in Hamburg, Germany from December 7, 2003 until January 22nd 2006.
However, about 70% of the musical score written by Steinman was recycled from his earlier projects, mainly from his less-known shows like The Dream Engine and The Confidence Man, although it also features music from his widely known records like Total Eclipse Of The Heart (remade as Totale Finsternis) and Bat Out Of Hell 2 song called Objects In The Rear View Mirror May Appear Closer Than They Are (remade as Die Unstillbare Gier).
The English version opened on October 16, 2002 on Broadway. The german text was translated for America, but the humor did not play as well to US audiences. It was critically lambasted and closed on January 25, 2003 after 117 performances. The work of lead performer Michael Crawford, who had played the lead in "Phantom of the Opera" in the 1980's, was reviewed particularly harshly. To date, it is the biggest financial flop in Broadway history, losing roughly 17 million dollars, easily eclipsing the infamous Carrie (based on the film of the same name). The English version borrowed a lot of Steinman's lyrics for his previous English versions of his songs. Rumor has it that Steinman did not attend opening night as a showing of dissaproval for the project.
Bat Out of Hell 3: The Last at Bat
Meat Loaf is working on Bat Out of Hell III: The Last at Bat. According to Jim Steinman, he and his engineer Steve Rinkoff are "not involved with anything resembling Bat 3." Jim is instead working on a new album with a group he is forming called The Dream Engine.
At this time the trademark to the phrase "Bat Out Of Hell" for CDs and music is owned by Jim Steinman. Meat Loaf is now hoping to record and market Bat Out Of Hell III without Steinman's involvement. Meat Loaf applied for the trademark to the title but was rejected because of Steinman's trademarks so Meat Loaf is currently attempting to have Steinman's trademarks revoked and granted to him.
At the same time, he has also written several films that are yet to be made. He had been working on a musical version of Batman with Danny Elfman, David Ives, and Tim Burton, though the project has collapsed.
Discography
- Bad for Good (1981)
External links
- Dream Pollution, by the Rockman Philharmonic, The Jim Steinman Society For The Arts
- Neverland Hotel, comprehensive site including biography, discography, news, lyrics and photo gallery.
- Realm of Dreams Smeghead's Jim Steinman fan site, contains comprehensive material.
- {{{2|{{{name|Jim Steinman}}}}}} at The Internet Movie Database
See also
Categories: 1948 births | American composers | American male singers | American record producers | American rock musicians | American songwriters | Living people | Musical theatre composers | People from New York City | Record producers | Singer-songwriters | Jewish American musicians | Jewish composers and songwriters