The album was a commercial hit, and has sold more than 14 million copies around the world. It was
number one for one week in the US on the
Billboard 200, the
UK Albums Chart for eleven non-consecutive weeks,
number one in Australia for four weeks, and eight weeks at number one in Canada. Meat Loaf won a
Grammy Award for Best Solo Rock Vocal Performance for "I'd Do Anything for Love" and received two
Brit Awards nominations (Best International Male and Best Selling Single). Despite its huge commercial success, critical reception was mixed. The specialist music press were generally positive.
Q magazine proclaimed, "truly this... is the genuine follow-up to the most over-the-top rock album of all time." Like most critics,
Q referred to the excesses of Steinman's style, citing the length of the songs (
Q says that "Objects..." running for 10 minutes and 12 seconds is "not necessary"). Unlike the original, where the epic loud songs were "offset by the softness of stuff like '
Two Out of Three Ain't Bad'...even the ballads are Roman orgies of sound and fury." This, they said, means "the album's probable theme—the crushing effect growing up has on teenage dreams—seems to get lost among the thud and blunder." Overall, though, Q was positive, concluding with the sentiment that "Ultimately,
Back Into Hell may not trash its predecessor, but as a mad, crunching, stadium rock album, it's probably the best thing of its kind you'll hear this year." In
The Tip Sheet,
Jonathan King labelled it a "glorious, splendid album", celebrating Meat Loaf's "operatically gorgeous" voice and Steinman's "superb" songs, arrangements and production. "You'll be blown away. Better still you'll catch yourself openly laughing out loud at times with delight. You know what to expect yet it's constantly better, fresher and brighter than you hope. If they had a
Mercury Music Prize for American albums, this would win it hands down." In a 1999 documentary celebrating the original album, Meat Loaf said that
Bat Out of Hell polarized people: "Some hate it, and some worship it." The bombast did not meet some critics' approval. As with the first album,
Rolling Stone gave the album a mixed review. They called it "harmless, low-octane operatic drivel" with "insufferably long Steinman compositions with equally long names". Non-specialist publications gave the most negative reviews. The
Fort Worth Star-Telegram also referred to the length of the songs, in which they said Steinman "vomits up 75 minutes of endlessly repeated choruses". The newspaper branded it "the worst pop album of 1993".
The Des Moines Register thought that the album was "wallowing in excess so gratuitous as to make
Michael Bolton, by comparison, seem a master of understatement... Mountains of banshee-like wailing guitars! Thunderous
drums!
Herniated vocals! Profoundly stupid lyrics! Gack. This isn't pandering to the
lowest common denominator—it's lowering the lowest common denominator." Like the original, retrospective reviews have been appreciative.
AllMusic appreciated the bombast and "the pseudo-operatic splendor of Jim Steinman's grandly cinematic songs." Responding to concerns about length and overstatement, they replied, "that's precisely the point of this album, and is also why it works so well. No other rock 'n' roller besides Meat Loaf could pull off the humor and theatricality of
Back Into Hell and make it seem real. In that sense, it's a worthy successor to the original." ==Track listing==