

Jim Steinman built a sonic empire on teenage lust and Wagnerian ambition. His 1977 collaboration with Meat Loaf, 'Bat Out of Hell,' sold over 50 million copies worldwide, a rock opera that transformed the yearning of high school parking lots into epic, piano-pounding theater. Steinman's method fused rock with Broadway's narrative scale, a sound he later deployed for artists like Bonnie Tyler and Celine Dion. A common misunderstanding is that his work was mere bombast; it was meticulously calculated emotional architecture, using repetition and hyperbole to make feelings mythic. His compositions, like 'Total Eclipse of the Heart' and 'I'd Do Anything for Love (But I Won't Do That),' created a permanent bridge between pop radio and theatrical excess. Steinman's influence endures wherever music aims not just to be heard, but to be a seismic event.
1946–1964
The largest generation in history at the time. Shaped by postwar prosperity, the Vietnam War, the sexual revolution, and Watergate. They questioned every institution their parents built — then ran them.
Jim was born in 1947, placing them squarely in the Baby Boomers. The events that shaped this generation — postwar prosperity, civil rights, Vietnam, and the counterculture — shaped the world they entered and the choices available to them.
The biggest hits of 1947
#1 Movie
The Egg and I
Best Picture
Gentleman's Agreement
The world at every milestone
India gains independence; the Dead Sea Scrolls found
Queen Elizabeth II ascends the throne
Kennedy-Nixon debates become first televised presidential debates
JFK assassinated in Dallas; Martin Luther King's 'I Have a Dream' speech
US sends combat troops to Vietnam
Martin Luther King Jr. and Robert Kennedy assassinated
Star Wars premieres; Elvis dies
Black Monday stock market crash
Princess Diana dies in Paris car crash; Harry Potter published
iPhone released; Great Recession begins
#MeToo movement; solar eclipse crosses the US
January 6 Capitol breach; COVID vaccines roll out globally
“I would do anything for love, but I won't do that.”