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| title1 = The Invocation
| title1 = The Invocation
| note1 = ''[[The Chill (Macdonald novel)|The Chill]]'' (1963)
| note1 = ''[[The Chill (Macdonald novel)|The Chill]]'' (1963)
| writer1 = [[Ross Macdonald]]
| writer1 = [[Ross Macdonald]] (uncredited)
| extra1 = [[Ellen Foley]]
| extra1 = [[Ellen Foley]]
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| length1 = 0:21
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| title3 = Twentieth Century Fox
| title3 = Twentieth Century Fox
| note3 =
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| writer3 = {{hlist|[[The Doors]]|[[Alfred Newman (composer)|Alfred Newman]]|[[Jimi Hendrix]]}}
| writer3 = {{hlist|[[The Doors]]|[[Alfred Newman (composer)|Alfred Newman]] (uncredited)|[[Jimi Hendrix]] (uncredited)}}
| extra3 = {{hlist|Foley|[[Cincinnati Pops Orchestra]], conducted by [[Erich Kunzel]] (intro)}}
| extra3 = {{hlist|Foley|[[Cincinnati Pops Orchestra]], conducted by [[Erich Kunzel]] (intro)}}
| length3 = 5:32
| length3 = 5:32

Revision as of 17:31, 21 July 2022

Original Sin
Studio album by
Released1989
StudioThe Power Station, New York City
GenrePop, Wagnerian rock
Length67:19
LabelVirgin
ProducerJim Steinman; co-produced by Roy Bittan & Larry Alexander
Jim Steinman chronology
Bad for Good
(1981)
Original Sin
(1989)
Bat Out of Hell II: Back into Hell
(1993)
Singles from Original Sin
  1. "It's All Coming Back to Me Now"
    Released: 1989
  2. "Good Girls Go to Heaven (Bad Girls Go Everywhere)"
    Released: January 1990
  3. "Safe Sex (When It Comes 2 Loving U)"
    Released: 1990
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[1]

Original Sin is a concept album performed by Pandora's Box and produced by Jim Steinman. Steinman wrote the majority of this album, although there are a couple of cover versions. It was the group's only album, and was a commercial flop.

Although the album was not a commercial success (except in South Africa), many of the songs have gone platinum with other artists. Steinman is said to have been very proud of the songs on this album, even though Original Sin sold very poorly in comparison with his highest selling albums and songs. The album charted at #43 in Sweden.[2]

The album was rereleased in 2006 along with a DVD featuring the videos for "It's All Coming Back to Me Now" and "Good Girls Go to Heaven (Bad Girls Go Everywhere)", a featurette featuring interviews and performances by Steinman.

Videos

Music videos were produced for the songs "It's All Coming Back to Me Now" and "Good Girls Go to Heaven".

Ken Russell directed the video for "It's All Coming Back to Me Now". It was filmed at Pinewood Studios in Buckinghamshire. Steinman wrote the script, based on Russell's segment in the compilation opera movie Aria.[3] Elements include leather, snakes, tombstones and cockrings with shrunken heads, and the video featured Caswell as a girl near death—from a motorcycle crash—being ministered to by paramedics, fantasising and being 'sexually aroused by a large python and writhing on a bed that lit up in time with the music, while surrounded by a group of bemused, semi-naked dancers'.[4] When Steinman's manager saw it, he responded 'It's a porno movie!'[3] The two-day shoot ran over schedule and budget, costing £35,000 an hour. Russell and Steinman even designed a sequence where a motorcyclist would cycle up the steps of a local church-tower, jump out of the turrets at the top, and then explode; alas, the wardens of the church refused permission.[4]

The video for "Good Girls Go to Heaven", directed by Brian Grant, was set in a prison. It shows the arrival of a new inmate called Jenny (the name featured in the first chorus) and her induction. As the song begins, the other inmates dance around her. As the prison is signposted as "Pandora's House Of Detention", matching the phrasing in the song "City Night" from Jim Steinman's Neverland / Bat 2100, we can assume this video was intended to depict something within Steinman's "Obsidian" mythos (the 40+ year project which culminated with Bat Out of Hell The Musical). The only member of Pandora's Box to appear in the video is Ellen Foley (and only as part of the dance ensemble) - although vocals for this song were performed by Holly Sherwood, not Ellen Foley.

Track listings and cover versions

All tracks are written by Jim Steinman, unless otherwise noted

No.TitleWriter(s)Performer(s)Length
1."The Invocation" (The Chill (1963))Ross Macdonald (uncredited)Ellen Foley0:21
2."Original Sin (The Natives Are Restless Tonight)" 
  • Foley
  • Gina Taylor
  • Elaine Caswell
  • Deliria Wilde
  • Holly Sherwood
  • Laura Theodore (intro and outro)
6:27
3."Twentieth Century Fox"
5:32
4."Safe Sex" Taylor6:24
5."Good Girls Go to Heaven (Bad Girls Go Everywhere)" Sherwood6:25
6."Requiem Metal" (excerpt from Requiem, instrumental)Giuseppe VerdiWarsaw National Philharmonic Orchestra, conducted by Kazimierz Kord0:52
7."I've Been Dreaming Up a Storm Lately" (monologue) Steinman3:03
8."It's All Coming Back to Me Now" Caswell8:22
9."The Opening of the Box" (excerpt from "The Storm", instrumental, produced by Andrew Kazdin[5]) New York Philharmonic, conducted by Steven Margoshes2:00
10."The Want Ad" (monologue) Foley2:44
11."My Little Red Book"Foley4:11
12."It Just Won't Quit" Caswell6:39
13."Pray Lewd" (solo piano medley of "Original Sin", "It's All Coming Back to Me Now" and "It Just Won't Quit", instrumental) Margoshes3:38
14."The Future Ain't What It Used to Be" Taylor10:32
Total length:67:10

[6]

Steinman regularly reworked previous material for a newer project, and much of Original Sin was recycled, as listed in the table below. Some demo versions of tracks recorded by others are listed. Some tracks were intended to be released on The Dream Engine's debut album.

Track no. Title Subsequent cover versions
1 The Invocation Featured in Jim Steinman's musical Neverland, and subsequently reused in Bat Out of Hell: The Musical.
2 Original Sin (The Natives Are Restless Tonight) Taylor Dayne on the soundtrack to the 1994 movie version of The Shadow; Meat Loaf on Welcome to the Neighborhood; rewritten as "Gott ist tot" ("God is Dead") and "Einladung zum Ball" ("Invitation to the Ball") for Tanz der Vampire (Dance of the Vampires)
3 Twentieth Century Fox Cover version: The Doors (1967), though the gender pronouns have been switched to indicate a male "fox". The song opens with the 20th Century Fox Fanfare before sampling Foxy Lady by Jimi Hendrix and includes a snippet of "Light My Fire" at the end. A new lyric during the bridge refers to "In the Midnight Hour" by Wilson Pickett.
4 Safe Sex A demo of "Safe Sex" performed by Canadian vocalist Karine Hannah has been leaked onto the internet from the period when she was working with Steinman on an ill-fated album; it was expected to appear on The Dream Engine's debut album[7]
5 Good Girls Go to Heaven (Bad Girls Go Everywhere) The first version of this song ever released was in Japanese, by Megumi Shiina [ja] under the name 悲しみは続かない ("Kanashimi wa tsuzukanai") in 1986, and used as opening theme for 1986-1987 Japanese drama このこ誰の子? (Kono ko dare no ko?) [ja]. Meat Loaf on Bat Out of Hell II: Back into Hell. Also performed in early Manchester previews of Bat Out of Hell: The Musical and included in the Official Cast Recording.
6 Requiem Metal Re-used as backing track for "Wasted Youth" on Meat Loaf's Bat Out of Hell II: Back into Hell
7 I've Been Dreaming up a Storm Lately An earlier version of this piece featured in Steinman's 1969 musical The Dream Engine. Re-used in an early draft of Dance of the Vampires, and in Bat Out Of Hell: The Musical.
8 It's All Coming Back to Me Now Céline Dion on Falling into You; Meat Loaf and Marion Raven on Bat Out of Hell III: The Monster Is Loose. Featured in all versions of Bat Out Of Hell: The Musical.
9 The Opening of the Box The first incarnation of this melody was heard as the introduction to "Hymn to Fire" within Jim Steinman's play The Dream Engine in 1969. Re-used in Dance of the Vampires
10 The Want Ad Featured in Jim Steinman's musicals The Dream Engine (1969) and Neverland (1977)
11 My Little Red Book This is a cover version: written by Burt Bacharach; the arrangement closely follows the cover by Love on their first album.
12 It Just Won't Quit Meat Loaf on Bat Out of Hell II: Back into Hell. Featured in Bat Out of Hell: The Musical in the initial Manchester and London runs, and included in the Original Cast Recording.
13 Pray Lewd Covered at some Dream Engine/Over the Top concerts
14 The Future Ain't What It Used to Be Erika Christensen on Wuthering Heights OST (re-using the original Roy Bittan piano track); Meat Loaf and Jennifer Hudson on Bat Out of Hell III

Rory Dodd mostly contributed background vocals and his voice was barely distinguishable in the songs, unlike that of Fire Inc, where he is definitely more audible in the background. Todd Rundgren also helped out with the background vocals this time. Another Bat Out of Hell veteran who contributed with her voice was Ellen Foley.

Note: When the song Safe Sex was released as a single, it was released under the title "Safe Sex (When It Comes 2 Loving U)".

Personnel

Pandora's Box

Band

2006 Special Edition re-issue

In the slipstream of the release of Meat Loaf's Bat Out of Hell III: The Monster Is Loose, Virgin / EMI released a two disc special edition. The first disc contains the remastered original album, while the second disc is a DVD, containing the two promo videos, and some additional promotional footage.

DVD track listing

  1. "Jim Steinman Opens Pandora's Box" – 18:18
  2. "Prologue (A Teenager In Love)" (video) – 0:58
  3. "It's All Coming Back to Me Now" (video) – 6:38
  4. "Good Girls Go to Heaven (Bad Girls Go Everywhere)" (video) – 6:12

DVD credits

  1. Produced and Directed by Mark Wightwick, Executive Producer: Sue Winter
  2. Directed by Ken Russell, produced by Vasconcellos
  3. Directed by Ken Russell, produced by Vasconcellos
  4. Directed by Brian Grant, produced by Jonathan Cooke

DVD Produced by Abbey Road Interactive

References

  1. ^ Guarisco, Donald A. "allmusic ((( Original Sin > Review )))". Allmusic. Retrieved December 31, 2010.
  2. ^ swedishcharts.com - Pandora's Box - Original Sin
  3. ^ a b Simmons, Sylvie (1989). "Sex, Lies & Videotape" (Reprint on website). RAW magazine. Retrieved 2006-09-04.
  4. ^ a b Hotten, Jon (September 2000). "Bat Out Of Hell – The Story Behind The Album" (Reprint on website). Classic Rock Magazine. Retrieved 2006-09-03.
  5. ^ Steinman, Jim (performer) (April 1981). Bad for Good (album). Retrieved July 2, 2022.
  6. ^ Pandora's Box (performer) (1989). Original Sin (album). Retrieved July 2, 2022.
  7. ^ A short clip was made available on their MySpace in August 2006: http://www.myspace.com/thedreamengine