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Celine Dion’s "It's All Coming Back to Me Now" is more than a 1990s power ballad; it is a sprawling, "Wagnerian" rock opera that explores the terrifying and obsessive side of love. Written by , the songwriter famous for Meat Loaf’s grandest hits, the track was intended to be the most passionate and romantic song ever created, drawing heavy inspiration from the dark, gothic themes of Emily Brontë's Wuthering Heights . The Dark Inspiration: "A Ballad for a Corpse"
: AllMusic described it as a "mock epic" where Dion’s crystalline soprano rises above "melodramatic arrangements" with theatrical flair.
: It opens with a haunting piano melody that builds into "thundering crescendos" and "bruising, violent downbeats". Celine Dion - It's All Coming Back To ME Now (Lyrics)
Though it peaked at #2 on the Billboard Hot 100, the song has since been recognized as a "timeless classic":
: The full album version on Falling Into You clocks in at nearly eight minutes, an unprecedented length for a mainstream pop single in 1996. Celine Dion’s "It's All Coming Back to Me
While many listeners view the song as a story of rekindled romance, Steinman himself described it in far more macabre terms. He compared the song's intensity to a scene he imagined (but which never appeared in the novel) where digs up Catherine’s corpse to dance with it in the moonlight.
: The lyrics suggest that a single touch or gesture can resurrect long-buried feelings, turning a person from being "defiant and disgusted" back into a state of total, terrifying "subservience" to an ex-lover. A Masterclass in Excess : It opens with a haunting piano melody
: Filmed at Ploskovice Castle in Prague, the video leans into these gothic roots with a storyline involving a fiery motorcycle crash and haunting visions in mirrors. Impact and Critical Legacy