Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Stoney and Meatloaf is the only album by Stoney & Meatloaf, a collaboration between Meat Loaf and female vocalist Shaun Murphy, released in 1971 on the Motown subsidiary label Rare Earth. Meat Loaf and Murphy met while performing with the Detroit cast of Hair .
1971 "What You See Is What You Get" (Stoney & Meat Loaf) 71 — — — — — — — — — Stoney & Meat Loaf "It Takes All Kinds of People" (Stoney & Meat Loaf) — — — — — — — — — — 1977 "You Took the Words Right Out of My Mouth" 39 3 4 31 22 — 4 2 — 33 ARIA: Platinum [36] BPI: Gold [23] Bat Out of Hell: 1978 "Two ...
Stoney & Meatloaf was a duet of singer Meat Loaf and Stoney (Shaun Murphy). They released one album in 1971: Stoney & Meatloaf. Meat Loaf and Murphy had met previously in the Detroit music scene, and then performed with the Detroit cast of Hair. Meat Loaf, whose name was styled "Meatloaf" on the album, had a minor hit "What You See Is What You ...
When powerhouse vocalist-actor Meat Loaf eulogized composer-producer Jim Steinman last April in Rolling Stone, the singer – who died Thursday at age 74 – said of his “Bat Out of Hell ...
Meat Loaf and Stoney (Shaun Murphy), 1971. After a period of inactivity with the new division of Motown in Los Angeles, she left Motown and contacted Detroit music producer Punch Andrews for possible opportunities. [8] Murphy then relocated back to Detroit in 1973 to work with Bob Seger. [9]
"What You See Is What You Get" is the first single by duo Stoney & Meatloaf. It was released ahead of the release of the duo's only album Stoney & Meatloaf in 1971. Track listing
The album was re-released in 2003 with the same tracks in a different order, and did so again in 2011 with the original order but now under the title The Essential Meat Loaf. Following an appearance on VH1 Storytellers in 1999 (which was released as an album and a DVD ), Meat Loaf's next studio album was the 2003 album, Couldn't Have Said It ...
His name appears on Scorpion and Meat Loaf's debut album Stoney & Meatloaf (1971). For that recording, Monette co-wrote four songs. [3] [4] That same year, he played tenor guitar on "Evolution" by Dennis Coffey & the Detroit Guitar Band, [5] and played a guitar solo on Funkadelic's "I Got A Thing, You Got A Thing, Everybody's Got A Thing".