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before 1999
The album "Bat Out of Hell" Was produced by the musician "Meatloaf", as well as being his first collaboration with Jim Steinman, it was released in October 1997 in Cleveland.
Bat Out of Hell - song - was created in 1979.
I can see paradise by the dashboard lightParadise by the Dashboard Light, Meat Loaf. From the album Bat Out of Hell.
It is on the album called City of Evil.
before 1999
American rock musician Meat Loaf recorded his second album and commercial debut in 1975 and 1976. Released in 1977, the album proved to be by far his biggest success, selling over 40 million copies internationally.
The album "Bat Out of Hell" Was produced by the musician "Meatloaf", as well as being his first collaboration with Jim Steinman, it was released in October 1997 in Cleveland.
Ellen foley
It is most absolutely not a "Meatloaf album". I was talking about fast moving objects, animals and people long before Meatloaf borrowed the cliché.
# Expression # A music album series by Meat Loaf and a somg (by Meat Loaf)
There were three Bat Out of Hell cd's made.
Bat Out of Hell was created on 1977-10-21.
Bat Out of Hell - song - was created in 1979.
I can see paradise by the dashboard lightParadise by the Dashboard Light, Meat Loaf. From the album Bat Out of Hell.
No
The saying "like a bat out of hell" has been common in the UK for decades. It means to leave a place quickly. Bats fly very quickly and erractically, often looking like they are in a panic. The phrase "like a bat out of hell" first appeared in print in 1921 - legend has it that WWI plane fighters used it to describe flying at top speed. So why "out of hell"? Bats have long been associated with the occult, so the out of hell phrase was apparently added for extra flavor. The phrase also became popular in the US after the 1977 release of the Meat Loaf album, "Bat Out of Hell."