| | Meat Loaf Bat Out Of Hell: Live With The Melbourne Symphony CD Meat Loaf Discography of CDs
(2 Customer Reviews)
To support his comeback 2003 album, Meat Loaf toured the world. In February of 2004, the tour took him to Australia where he performed in Melbourne backed by the Symphony Orchestra. The concert featured 13 songs from his catalog including 7 songs that comprised one of rock's all time best selling classic albums, "Bat Out Of Hell." This set includes a DVD of 13 tracks and CD of 7 tracks.
It can't be said that Meat Loaf never got enough mileage out of his 1977 watershed album, BAT OUT OF HELL. A string of sequels, live albums, and compilations featuring many of BAT OUT OF HELL's tracks have come down the pike over the years, and have only heightened the classic status of the original blockbuster. BAT OUT OF HELL: LIVE WITH THE MELBOURNE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA is another in this series: a two-disc set featuring an audio CD of the album performed live and a DVD of the performance. Recorded in 2004, the concert revisits the epic rock energy of the album, with Meat Loaf still turning in gut-busting, sweaty, impassioned performances. Fans of the Loaf will eat it up.
Bat Out Of Hell: Live With The Melbourne Symphony Music Bat Out Of Hell: Live With The Melbourne Symphony Music Review Purchase Bat Out Of Hell: Live With The Melbourne Symphony CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | U F O Only You Can Rock Me CD (2005) (Import) Import; Limited Edition
Bat Out Of Hell: Live With The Melbourne Symphony album
$15.75
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Bat Out Of Hell: Live With The Melbourne Symphony CD music
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| | Pirate Radio Motion Picture Soundtrack CDs (2009) Original Soundtrack
Bat Out Of Hell: Live With The Melbourne Symphony music CDs
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| | Lady Gaga Fame Monster CDs (2009) Deluxe Edition
Bat Out Of Hell: Live With The Melbourne Symphony songs
$16.25 Initially planned solely as a standard double-disc reissue in the wake of the blockbuster success of The Fame, Lady Gaga decided to release the new material as a separate EP called The Fame Monster in addition to the standard two-CD set, where it's tacked onto a now standardized version of her debut. It's a nice move for fans, plus it helps emphasize the new material, which does act as a bridge from the debut to a forthcoming full-length. Everything on The Fame Monster bears a galvanized Eurotrash finish, as evident on the heavy steel synths of "Bad Romance" and the updated ABBA revision "Alejandro," as it is on the rock & roll ballad "Speechless" -- its big guitars lifted from Noel Gallagher -- and the wonderful, perverse march "Teeth." Even the stuttering splices on "Telephone," a duet with Beyoncé, leans to the other side of the Atlantic, which just emphasizes the otherness that's become Gaga's calling card. And even as she's ...
| | Neil Young Dreamin' Man Live '92 CD (2009)
Bat Out Of Hell: Live With The Melbourne Symphony album
$14.44 Unlike previous entries in Neil Young's Archives series, Dreamin' Man Live '92 does not capture a ...
| | Lady Gaga Fame CD (2008)
Bat Out Of Hell: Live With The Melbourne Symphony CD music
$9.99 The times were crying out for a pop star like Lady GaGa -- a self-styled, self-made shooting star, one who mocked the tabloid digital age while still wanting to wallow in it -- and one who's smart enough to pull it all off, too. That self-awareness and satire were absent in the pop of the new millennium, where even the best of the lot operated only on one level, which may be why Lady GaGa turned into such a sensation in 2009: everybody was thirsty for music like this, music for and about their lives, both real and virtual. To a certain extent, the reaction to The Fame may have been a little too enthusiastic, with GaGa turning inescapable sometime in the summer of 2009, when she appeared on countless magazine covers while both Weezer and DAUGHTRY covered "Pokerface," the rush to attention suggesting that she was the second coming of Madonna, a comparison GaGa cheerfully courts and one that's ...
| | John Cale Fear CD (1974)
Bat Out Of Hell: Live With The Melbourne Symphony music CDs
$11.99 Right from the start, Cale makes it clear he's not messing around on Fear. If his solo career before then had been a series of intriguing stylistic experiments, here he meshes it with an ear for his own brand of pop and rock, accessible while still clearly being himself through and through. Getting musical support from various Roxy Music veterans like Brian Eno, Phil Manzanera, and Andy Mackay didn't hurt at all, and all the assorted performers do a great job carrying out Cale's vision. He himself sounds confident, sharp, and incisive throughout; his playing on both various keyboards and guitar equally spot-on. The almost title track "Fear Is a Man's Best Friend," starting with focused, steady piano into a full band performance before ending on a ragged, psychotic note, makes for as solid a statement of artistic purpose for Cale and the album ...
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Bat Out Of Hell: Live With The Melbourne Symphony songs
$12.95
| | Ace Hi-5 Hits CD (2004) Australia
Bat Out Of Hell: Live With The Melbourne Symphony album
$16.29
| | Lake Of Tears Moons And Mushrooms CD (2007)
Bat Out Of Hell: Live With The Melbourne Symphony CD music
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| | Olivier Florio Dissonances CD (2007) (Import)
Bat Out Of Hell: Live With The Melbourne Symphony music CDs
$23.65
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