What made Total Eclipse of the Heart a global smash hit that endures to this day?published at 13:51 BST
Fraser Morris
BBC Studios Culture
Image source, Corbis via Getty ImagesBonnie Tyler performing onstage during a concert in Estoril, Portugal, as part of a tour celebrating the 40th anniversary of Total Eclipse of the Heart
One day in the summer of 1982, Canadian vocalist Rory Dodd was summoned to the Power Station recording studio in New York City to lend his vocals to a song, written and produced by his colleague and friend Jim Steinman for Bonnie Tyler.
"Jesus! Where's the kitchen sink?" Dodd cried, when he heard the final, jaw-dropping mix of the track.
The song was Total Eclipse of the Heart. It became an unprecedented international success that pushed the boundaries of melodrama in pop music.
The song is considered one of history's most iconic "power ballads". It is easy to understand why: the full-length album cut is seven minutes of unfettered bombast.
It is ultimately the pairing of Steinman's epic writing with Tyler's ferocious delivery that continues to enthral listeners.
The song exceeded the category of the power ballad before the power ballad had even established itself as a dominant musical idiom.
"I can't think of any other songs of that era that bit so much as that," Dodd told the BBC. "It was a totally different concept of a song. It's a story, it's theatre, and it worked.





















