"Making Love Out of Nothing at All" is a power ballad written and composed by Jim Steinman and first released by Australian soft rock band Air Supply for their 1983 compilation album Greatest Hits. It reached number 2 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 for three weeks (behind "Total Eclipse of the Heart" by Bonnie Tyler, giving Steinman a consecutive peak of two songs). The song has been covered by other artists.
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"Making Love Out of Nothing At All" | ||||
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Single by Air Supply | ||||
from the album Greatest Hits | ||||
B-side | "Late Again" | |||
Released | July 1983 | |||
Recorded | August 1982 | |||
Genre | ||||
Length | 5:43 (album version) 4:29 (single version) 5:38 (video version) | |||
Label | Arista (US) Geffen (UK) | |||
Songwriter(s) | Jim Steinman | |||
Producer(s) | Jim Steinman | |||
Air Supply singles chronology | ||||
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Music video | ||||
"Making Love Out of Nothing At All" on YouTube | ||||
The song is a reworking of the main title theme from the 1980 film A Small Circle of Friends, for which Jim Steinman wrote the score.[3] It was first recorded by Air Supply, giving them a number two hit on the Billboard Hot 100 in the U.S. for three weeks. It was held off from the top spot by another Steinman production, Bonnie Tyler's recording of "Total Eclipse of the Heart". This is the group's last Top Ten hit in the United States.
The song was subsequently released as a new track from their 1983 greatest hits album. The B-side of the single was "Late Again".[4] They have included the song on their numerous greatest hits and live albums, and recorded an acoustic version for their 2005 album The Singer and the Song.[5]
Steinman offered the song, along with "Total Eclipse of the Heart", to Meat Loaf for his Midnight at the Lost and Found album; however, Meat Loaf's record company refused to pay Steinman for the material so Meat Loaf ended up writing compositions for the album himself. Steinman's songs were then offered to Bonnie Tyler and Air Supply. However, in an interview with journalist Mick Wall shortly after the release of Meat Loaf's 2006 album, Bat Out of Hell III: The Monster Is Loose, Steinman stated: "I didn't write [Total Eclipse of the Heart] for anyone but Bonnie." Steinman believed that CBS were expecting him to write something similar to "It's a Heartache", but he had different ideas.[6]
By 1983, Air Supply had changed much of its classic musician line-up, both in the recording studio and on tour. But Steinman, known for his lavish, rock-opera-ish type productions, used Bruce Springsteen's E-Street Band members Roy Bittan on keyboards and Max Weinberg on drums, to musically underscore the recording with like energies. Rick Derringer, who was previously the guitarist for The McCoys and Johnny Winter, provided the electric guitar solo that made the sound of "Making Love Out of Nothing at All" stand so drastically apart from most other Air Supply songs. In an interview, Hitchcock and Russell confirmed Hitchcock did his vocals in one take. When Steinman asked "What do we do next?" Russell replied "We go home".
Two versions of the music video were produced. The initial version begins with a couple driving to an airport; the man (Graham Russell) is "leaving for a tour" and asks the woman (played by Graham Russell's real-life spouse, Jodi Russell) to join him:
Exterior house
Man: So, won't you reconsider?
Woman: So, won't you?
Driving to the airport
Man: Come with me, I can give you anything.
Woman: I've been there, all I want is you.
Airport tarmac
Man: But it's just one more tour, then I'll be back.
Woman: But I won't...I can't...
The plane seen in the video is a Learjet 35. The remainder of the video intersperses Air Supply onstage with various scenes of the man and woman's relationship. Hitchcock and Russell leave their dressing room for the stage; as they sing with the band, the woman (Jodi Russell) is shown packing to leave. Nevertheless, she changes her mind and does a u-turn on the freeway, and now drives to the airport. She meets Russell at the side of the stage near the end of the song and they embrace.[7]
The subsequent official version is set in 1960s New York City and involves a Marine and a young woman and the various challenges they encounter in their relationship, interspersed with scenes of the band singing the song.[8]
Weekly charts
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Year-end charts
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+ In initial releases of Air Supply's 1983 Greatest Hits album, Steve Buslowe was not included as the bassist in the album credits.[17] However, this error was corrected in future pressings.[18]
"Making Love (Out of Nothing At All)" | |
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Single by Bonnie Tyler | |
from the album Free Spirit | |
Released | 1995 |
Studio | The Hit Factory (New York City) |
Genre | Pop rock |
Length | 7:49 |
Label | East West |
Songwriter(s) | Jim Steinman |
Producer(s) |
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The song was later covered by Welsh singer Bonnie Tyler on her album Free Spirit. It opens with a wordless choral vocal followed by sounds of thunderclaps and a bell before the melody begins, played on piano. Over the piano section is an excerpt from "Un bel dì vedremo", the aria from Puccini's Madama Butterfly, sung by Tyler's mother Elsie Hopkins.[19]
AllMusic called this version "fantastic, clocking in at nearly eight minutes, and seems perfectly suited for her voice. [Air Supply's] version was already great, but hers is awesome."[20] It was produced by Steinman, with Steven Rinkoff as co-producer, at The Hit Factory, New York City.
These lines were changed for the Tyler version, and also for the subsequent Karine Hannah version, as well:
I can make you find your power
I can make you lose your fear
I can make your body do some very magical things
I'll make your inhibitions all disappear
Chart (1995–96) | Peak position |
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European Border Breakers Airplay (Music & Media)[21] | 5 |
Netherlands (Dutch Single Top 100)[22] | 17 |
Netherlands (Dutch Top 40)[23] | 12 |
UK Singles (OCC)[24] | 45 |
A version from 1982 sung by Rory Dodd also exists. The only accompaniment is Steinman playing piano, and he includes several variations on the primary melody in the intro and bridge.[25]
After the bridge, there are two verses that appear before the final two verses of the Air Supply version. The verse from the Tyler version is not included.
I can make your money double
Or I can make you lose your shirt
I can make the old wounds start to heal
Or I can make the new ones hurt
I can make the music louder
Or I can make the songs all fade
I can make every girl just wanna get up and dance
And make the boys in the band start to play
Air Supply's version of the song is also featured in the 2005 film Mr. and Mrs. Smith during the car chase-gunfight scene, and is also featured on the film's soundtrack album. It was also used in the films Click and Dumb and Dumberer: When Harry Met Lloyd. It was also used in the TV series "Claws" in the ending scene of episode 3 in season 2.
In 1983, Air Supply performed the song on stage, in "lip-sync" form with full back-up band for the popular early 1980s television program Solid Gold. Absent were many of the musicians that producer Jim Steinman used to record the original tracks. However, original Air Supply members Frank Esler-Smith on keys and Ralph Cooper on drums participated, and former Babys lead guitarist Wally Stocker "synced" so well, studio player Rick Derringer's guitar solo, without the slightest of glitch.
Singer-songwriter Rhett Miller referenced the song in the lyrics of "Hover" from his 2003 album The Instigator: "Wrapped up in each other / Making loving out of nothing like the air supplier said."[26]
The song was used for a Wendy's commercial, where a "burger" is "singing" a part of the song, part of a promo being used in conjunction with online music service Rhapsody. The song was also used in the episode "Chuck Versus the Predator" of the American TV series Chuck.
A cover of the song by Mari Nallos is the theme song of the Tagalized (means "translated" in Tagalog) version of My Husband's Woman, an Asian series which is aired in the Philippines on GMA 7.
In 2012, this song, along with "Total Eclipse of the Heart", was a central plot point in "Unknown Subject", the twelfth episode of season seven of US TV series Criminal Minds. In the show, a bar piano player attempts to convince a victim that he isn't the one who attacked her. He claims she thought she heard him play "Total Eclipse of the Heart" (which the attacker had played during her attack), when he had actually played "Making Love Out of Nothing at All", and says they sound similar because they were composed by the same person.
The song is the theme song of the film Monga, covered by Nicky Lee.
The song was background music for much of the 2016–17 season finale of the ABC show The Goldbergs.
The song was included in Bat Out of Hell: The Musical, created by Steinman.
The song was also used during the final act of The Strangers: Prey at Night, where the character Kinsey is chased by the Man in the Mask who is driving a fire-covered car.
In 2019, Bang Chan, the leader of the Australian-Korean K-pop boy group Stray Kids under JYP Entertainment, mentioned this song during a live broadcast on the website 'V LIVE', which was titled '찬이의 "방"'. Bang Chan named this song as one of his song recommendations.[27]
In 2019, during Episode 6 of Netflix's Daybreak, a character performs the song in a performance where his life is at stake.
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Studio albums | |
Live & compilations | |
Singles |
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Related articles |
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Bonnie Tyler songs | |
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The World Starts Tonight | |
Natural Force | |
Diamond Cut | |
Goodbye to the Island |
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Faster Than the Speed of Night |
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Secret Dreams and Forbidden Fire | |
Hide Your Heart | |
Bitterblue | |
Angel Heart | |
Silhouette in Red | |
Free Spirit | |
All in One Voice | |
Heart Strings | |
Simply Believe |
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Rocks and Honey | |
Collaborations | |
Other songs |
Authority control ![]() |
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