Modern Girl (song)

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“Modern Girl”
“Modern Girl” cover
Single by Meat Loaf
from the album Bad Attitude
Released 1984
Genre Rock
Length 4:27
Writer(s) Paul Jacobs / Sarah Durkee
Meat Loaf singles chronology
"If You Really Want To"
(1983)
"Modern Girl"
(1984)
"Nowhere Fast"
(1984)

"Modern Girl" is a song written by Paul Jacobs and Sarah Durkee, first performed by Meat Loaf. It was also the first single from his 1984 Bad Attitude album, resulting in one of his few hits during the 1980s.

Contents

[edit] Different Formats

The "Modern Girl" single was released in several versions: the regular 12- and 7-inch singles, a 12" picture disk and a 7" shaped picture disc. All versions contained "Modern Girl" and "Take a Number", a non-album B-side. In the United States, the song was released as "(Give Me the Future with a) Modern Girl" with the album cut "Sailor To a Siren" as B-side.

[edit] 12" maxi single and picture disc

  • "Modern Girl" (extended version / freeway mix) — 5:54 (Paul Jacobs / Sarah Durkee)
  • "Take a Number" (extended version) — 5:28 (Jacobs / Durkee)

[edit] 7" single and shaped picture disc

  • "Modern Girl" — 4:27 (Jacobs / Durkee)
  • "Take a Number" — 3:27 (Jacobs / Durkee)

[edit] US 7" single

  • "(Give Me the Future with a) Modern Girl" (single version) — 3:56 (Jacobs / Durkee)
  • "Sailor to a Siren" — 5:09 (Jacobs / Durkee)

[edit] Other Versions

[edit] Music Video

Meat loaf and Paul Jacobs in the ending climax of the Music video
Meat loaf and Paul Jacobs in the ending climax of the Music video

During the music video, Meat Loaf is sporting a leather jacket and walks by various scenes dealing with 'modern' women. It starts out with a "Miss America" and "Mr. Right" who are newfound parents. Then it gets into a biker-type charade and leads into the big gospel-type chorus near the end. It fades towards the end, which in the cut of the audio version, it doesn't fade-out.

[edit] Live Performances

Meat Loaf has performed "Modern Girl" many times during the '80s as a regular on his set list. It made a comeback during the "The Very Best of Meat Loaf" and "Storytellers" tours in the late 1990s.

Live versions of the song can be found on the Live at Wembley album and the Bad Attitude - Live! video.

When performed live, Meat Loaf does not sing the "Gimme the future" part of the chorus, as he left it to the backing vocalists. He used similar arrangements for a number of songs in his set, including "Blind Before I Stop", "Masculine", and "Dead Ringer for Love".