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Meat Loaf Tickets

Like a “Bat Out of Hell” Meat Loaf is back to touring the nation with his famed rock hits! Meat Loaf, the master of operatic rock, such as the hit song “I Would Do Anything For Love (But I Won't Do That)” is a must-see performer! Feed your hunger for Meat Loaf! Buy your Meat Loaf tickets now!
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[2 of 2 customers found this review helpful]

just so awesome
By a good fan from barnegat nj on 7/12/2010
Pros:
Crowd Was In To It, Great Lighting, Great Sound, Perfect Set List
Cons:
Too Short
Best For:
Everyone

well my friend and i got up to use the ladies room people stole our sits. so we had to stand in the back of the room at the hilton and it was the best because we dance our heart off. he still sound the best. i also love his new songs. i would spend my money again and again to see him again. he was just that good. so go see him if you can because he is the best.

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[1 of 2 customers found this review helpful]

best show
By mazza from new jersey on 7/11/2010
Pros:
Crowd Was In To It, Engaging Stage Presence, Great Lighting, Great Sound
Cons:
Too Short
Best For:
Everyone

it was the best show i have seen ,the band seemed to be having a great time,and for his age it was perfect.

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[0 of 5 customers found this review helpful]

Meat is a lemon - i want my money back
By Lifeisalemonandiwantmymoneyback from boston on 7/9/2010
Pros:
Crowd Was In To It, None
Cons:
Obviously impaired, Too Short
Best For:
No One

I have seen him many times in the past and he was amazing. He was OBVIOUSLY seriously impaired here. show was short, band looked disgusted (as did most of the crowd). we counted and he opened his eyes 4 times all night. Timing was SO off that the band literally didn't know what to do. It was really sad to watch. And an overpriced show to begin with but i paid the price b/c he has always delivered before. NEVER AGAIN

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[6 of 6 customers found this review helpful]

gosd show in ny- strong voice and produc
By concert fanatic from nyc on 12/11/2008
Pros:
Crowd Was In To It, Engaging Stage Presence
Best For:
Everyone

sounds like some of his earlier shows this year were not up to par- but this was a strong show at United theater in NY. voice was strong- band was tight- crowd had fun. Place wasnt close to soldout though, but its a great venue

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Meat Loaf Biography

Marvin Lee Aday is a singer and occasional actor who, for reasons never definitively answered, has recorded under the name Meat Loaf. In all likelihood a childhood nickname, the tag stuck, and many puns followed as the performer -- who tipped the scales at well over 300 pounds -- became one of the biggest chart acts of the 1970s before enjoying a commercial renaissance two decades later. Meat Loaf was born in Dallas, TX. The product of a family of gospel singers, he moved to Los Angeles in 1967 and formed a group known as both Meat Loaf Soul and Popcorn Blizzard. The band earned some renown through opening gigs in support of the Who, the Stooges, and Ted Nugent before Meat Loaf won a role in a West Coast production of the musical Hair. During a tour stop in Detroit, he and a fellow castmate named Stoney teamed to record the 1971 LP Stoney & Meat Loaf for Motown's Rare Earth imprint.

After a tenure in the off-Broadway production Rainbow (In New York), Meat Loaf earned a slot in More Than You Deserve, a musical written by classically trained pianist Jim Steinman. An appearance in the cult film The Rocky Horror Picture Show followed, and in 1976 Meat Loaf also handled vocal duties on one side of Nugent's LP Free-for-All. Soon, Meat Loaf reteamed with Steinman for a tour with the National Lampoon road show, after which Steinman began composing a musical update of the Peter Pan story titled Never Land. Ultimately, much of what Steinman composed for Never Land became absorbed into 1977's Bat Out of Hell, the album that made Meat Loaf a star. Produced by Todd Rundgren, the record was pure melodrama, a teen rock opera that spawned three Top 40 singles -- Two Out of Three Ain't Bad, Paradise by the Dashboard Light, and You Took the Words Right Out of My Mouth -- on its way to becoming one of the best-selling albums of the decade.

A sequel was planned, but in 1981 Steinman issued his own solo debut, Bad for Good. After Meat Loaf released his own follow-up, Dead Ringer, rumors began flying, and it was reported that Loaf had been unable to record the songs that comprised the Steinman album due to physical and emotional problems. Eventually, Steinman filed suit against Meat Loaf and his label, Epic, and none of his songs appeared on the 1983 Meat Loaf effort Midnight at the Lost and Found. After subsequent records like 1984's Bad Attitude and 1986's Blind Before I Stop bombed, the singer declared bankruptcy and began physical and psychological rehabilitation to restore his road-ravaged voice.

After several years in relative obscurity, Meat Loaf and Steinman reunited in 1993 for Bat Out of Hell II: Back into Hell, which continued the original's story line and duplicated its thunderous sound. The follow-up proved almost as successful as the first Bat Out of Hell, selling over five million copies and yielding a massive hit single with I'd Do Anything for Love (But I Won't Do That). Without Steinman, he returned in 1995 with Welcome to the Neighborhood. The career-long concert compilation Live Around the World followed one year later, but Meat Loaf released no more new material until well into the 2000s. Finally he recorded Couldn't Have Said It Better, which was released on Sanctuary in 2003. Three years later, after resolving the disputes surrounding its release, Bat Out of Hell III: The Monster Is Loose came out (sans Steinman, though many of his songs were used, which was what caused the problems in the first place), tracks from which were added to the production of Loaf's Bat Out of Hell play. Meat Loaf's 11th studio album, Hang Cool Teddy Bear, appeared in 2010. ~ Jason Ankeny, Rovi