
Episode 4.4 -I'm Gonna Love Her For Both of Us | Making Love out of Nothing at All
There's a spate of inadequate male lovers in this episode. Is Meat Loaf's friend a bad boyfriend? Are Air Supply just a bit too full of themselves? We stay firmly in the early 80s this time with a not-hit from Dead Ringer and an arrogant Best of from Air Supply. BUT:
- Is "white soul ballad" a compliment?
- What's Emma's bath technique?
- How sympathetic is Meat Loaf to his band's drug habits?PLUS a bit of a chat about how male behaviour is coded in media, plus a lot of the usual nonsense. Except emails, we were a bit tired and forgot to do those this time.
Keep your comments, reviews and arguments flying in to [email protected], find us on Facebook or Instagram by searching Chat out of Hell and don't forget to use the hashtag #DearA1saucewedontneedyoursaucenowwevegotourown
Chat out of Hell is a is a review podcast: all music extracts are used for review/illustrative purposes. To hear the songs in full please buy them from your local record shop or streaming platform. Don't do a piracy.
Music extracts on this episode:I'm Gonna Love Her for Both of Us by Meat Loaf from the album Dead Ringer (1981)
Making Love out of Nothing at All by Air Supply from the album Greatest Hits (1983)
Making Love out of Nothing at All by Bonnie Tyler from the album Free Spirit (1995)
Letter to Pin by Cuban Link from the album Chain Reaction (2005)
Chat out of Hell
How did two massive dorks create some of the most bombastically stupid rock opera of all time? Join equally massive dorks Emma Crossland and Sam Wilkinson as they delve into the works of Meat Loaf and Jim Steinman.
Every episode our intrepid pair both brings one of Loaf or Steinman's works to the table to dissect in meticulously lazy detail, exploring the torrid lives of music's most on-again off-again best pals one week at a time.
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