Click here for a transcript of this episode.
In 1981 Bonnie Tyler had exactly one hit, 1977's "It's a Heartache", so it was no mystery why people were calling her a one-hit wonder. Her record label cut her loose, so she found a new manager and talked Jim Steinman, the guy responsible for Meat Loaf's Bat Out of Hell, into partnering with her for a new album. Steinman wasn't easily convinced, but ultimately he came to her with a couple of older songs that he thought she could record, and when she agreed to those, he came to her with a nearly complete package: here's the song, here's who else is going to be performing on it, you just need to come in and sing your little heart out.
That doesn't match with the popular narrative, that "Total Eclipse of the Heart" was originally written for Meat Loaf as part of his follow-up album to Bat Out of Hell, but it turns out that the guy responsible for that popular narrative about Meat Loaf was...Meat Loaf. But the story caught on, because if you listen to "Eclipse," you could easily imagine its huge levels of production as being Meat Loaf-esque. But "Eclipse" wasn't written for him, nor was the other song (a hit for Air Supply) to which he laid the same claim.
As I noted during the show, the song's video is about eleven different kinds of ridiculous, and I think New York magazine summed it up best. Click here to read the review (it's a quick read).
And you know the rest of the bit. Either you have it or you don't. If you don't, here it is:
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