Not to be overshadowed by the success of other Internet search engines, Atlanta-based find.com has found a perfect space on the Internet by providing an unforgettable domain name and simplified, precise search results for consumer products and services. Whereas other search engines will supply users with millions of search results, including academia and non-relevant items, find.com ensures definitive filtered content to its users.
"My first favorite four letter word is KISS. My second favorite four letter word is FIND," says Gene Simmons, who is better known for his blood-spitting and fire-breathing stage presence as a co-founding member of KISS, and more recently as the star of his own reality show Gene Simmons Family Jewels. "Everybody uses the word 'FIND' dozens of times per day in ordinary conversation. The team at find.com has found a way for everybody to use the word FIND when on the Internet. find.com is the easiest web address to remember… and whether you are 5-years-old, or 55-years-old, you intuitively know what find.com's purpose on the web is. Stop searching the web. FIND it on the web on find.com."
In addition to promoting find.com as a site everybody will want to visit, Simmons Abramson is also helping find.com leverage its relationships with major affinity groups to build a customized Internet Browser plug-in, complete with a find.com search bar, hotlinks to the Internet, and RSS feeds allowing real-time news to be created for anyone from political groups and charitable organization to music groups, sports teams and colleges.
Jay Rein, CEO of find.com, says, "The team here at find.com couldn't have found a better team than Gene Simmons and Richard Abramson to pair up with. Within the first few weeks of our working relationship, Simmons and Abramson have introduced the find.com team to more 'out of the box' opportunities than what other companies are exposed to over an entire year. The collaborative environment we are creating together will surely serve to create one of the fastest growing websites to hit the Internet over the past 10 years."
In the next few weeks more details will be unveiled about the steps Simmons Abramson Marketing will take to popularize the website find.com.
KISS last performed at the Bell Centre on June 22, 2000.
Houbben was asked to go home and change his shirt, which he promptly did. While at home, he received a phone call from Buysse, who informed him that he should not bother to come back to work, and she proceeded, according to Houbben, to compare him to De Gelder, the murderer from Dendermonde.
"Too much has happened here," Buysse told the De Standaard newspaper. "I think it would be better for him if he could start over with a clean slate somewhere else. It would also be too hard on the parents, who would have to see him every day."
Houbben is reportedly planning on suing the day care center for wrongful termination.
Dr Pepper's "Trust Me I'm a Doctor" commercials promote the message that "because there are 23 flavors in Dr Pepper to experience, it tastes best when you drink it a little slower."
"When we first heard this idea, we sort of cocked our heads — after all, most great soft drink advertising is not usually associated with scientific research. But then we realized that's exactly what could make it come to life. It's totally unique and unexpected enough to work," said Eric Hirshberg, President/Chief Creative Officer of Deutsch LA, which developed the campaign.
Other celebrities that have taken part in the campaign include Dr. J (basketball legend Julius Erving) and Dr. Frasier Crane (award-winning actor Kelsey Grammer).
Concert promoter Harold MacKay announced at a media conference on Tuesday morning that the veteran makeup-and-leather-clad classic rock act will headline Halifax Rocks 2009 on the Halifax Commons on Saturday, July 18, with a limit of 40,000 tickets going on sale this Friday.
"There’s a lot that’s been written and said about the types of music that Halifax wants to see, and what we keep hearing is it wants good ol’ rock ’n’ roll," said MacKay, who has been trying for two years to persuade Kiss to bring its pyrotechnics-filled spectacle to the Maritimes for the first time since the mid-’70s.
MacKay’s company Power Promotional Events produced last year’s Country Rocks 2008 show with Keith Urban, which drew about 25,000 people, and a series of country concerts on Moncton’s Magnetic Hill.
Members of the Kiss Army have been crossing their fingers since November, when the band’s fire-breathing bassist Gene Simmons leaked the news that the band would be playing a series of Canadian dates this summer and named Halifax as one of the stops. Over the past few weeks, newspaper ads featuring the distinctive Kiss kabuki-style makeup designs have been directing the curious to a Halifax Rocks 2009 website.
On Monday, the website kissonline.com revealed the event was a go as well as the Friday sale date.
The show will feature the current Kiss lineup of band founders Simmons and Paul Stanley, with drummer Eric Singer and guitarist Tommy Thayer, plus four other major rock acts whose names will be released in the coming weeks.
"Obviously these will be rock ’n’ roll bands; there won’t be any rap acts on the bill," said MacKay.
"Actually, Gene Simmons has made it very clear in the contract that they must approve all of the bands that play for us.
"One of the things we hope to do is have a battle-of-the-bands contest with the help of our media partners, which will allow us to have a local act open the show. We did that in Moncton, and it worked very well."
Power Promotional Events is working with Events Halifax to produce the day-long event, while Halifax Regional Municipality will provide services including transit, policing and off-site cleanup, at a cost of up to $150,000.
Grant MacDonald of Events Halifax predicted the concert would "provide economic spinoffs in millions of dollars," while the combination of Halifax Rocks and the Tall Ships Nova Scotia Festival that same weekend would keep things busy at downtown hotels, restaurants and shops.
As with previous Commons concerts, such as the Rolling Stones in 2006 and Country Rocks 2008, there are concerns about damage to the downtown green space.
But District 12 Coun. Dawn Sloane said after the conference that the municipality is learning from previous experience how to reduce the events’ impact on the area.
"We’ll be striving to make sure the effect on the Commons is minimal and maintain good communication with the residents around the Commons," said Sloane.
"There’s always room for improvement, but I’m pretty comfortable that this will be a success for the downtown core."
Tickets on Friday will be at an "early bird" price of $89 (including taxes) for general admission and $279 (including taxes) for a limited number of VIP-area tickets. They will be available via the Ticket Atlantic box office (451-1221 or www.ticketatlantic.com) and select Atlantic Superstore outlets.
For more info, including how to order tickets, click here.
"I Was Made for Lovin' You" originally appeared on KISS' 1979 album "Dynasty". It was released as the A-side of their first single from the album. It was the band's second gold single, selling over 1 million copies. The single reached No. 11 on the U.S. Billboard singles chart. The song also became a Top 10 hit in Australia reaching No. 6 on the ARIA charts in 1979. The song fared the best in Western Europe (Where it became a Top 20 hit in Sweden, a Top 10 hit in Norway, made it to the No. 2 position in France, Germany, Switzerland, and Austria, and in Holland it became a No. 1 smash).
KISS will close the Quilmes Rock Festival at River Plate Stadium in Buenos Aires and perform for the first time in Argentina in over a decade. This stop in Argentina will continue the KISS Alive/35 tour which launched in Australia with a performance at the opening season Formula One race where 60,000 race fans rushed the stage to watch KISS perform their classic hits. The tour continued on to Europe where they played shows in nineteen countries. KISS' stadium shows in Stockholm, Sweden sold 32,000 tickets in twenty minutes and shows in Helsinki, Finland and Oslo, Norway also sold out in minutes.
A truly unique spectacle, Monster Circus combines a high-octane live rock concert with sexy dancers, human circus acts, aerialists, freaks and of course, a tour bus full of platinum certified rock stars. An irreverent ringmaster along with Sicko The Clown, Monster Circus' mascot, lead the audience along the 75-minute journey through the powerhouse rock and metal anthems of the '70s, '80s and '90s.
"The great rock 'n' roll stars from some of the great bands of the last three decades in a circus atmosphere. . .it doesn't get any better than that," said Ken Ciancimino, executive vice president, Las Vegas Hilton. "Las Vegas has never seen a show like this."
Rock star debauchery begins with an all-star lineup of the jaw-dropping Monster Circus band featuring artists Rudy Sarzo (OZZY OSBOURNE, QUIET RIOT, WHITESNAKE, DIO), John Corabi (MÖTLEY CRÜE, RATT), Fred Coury (CINDERELLA), Bruce Kulick (KISS), and Tony Montana (GREAT WHITE). Various guest artists will "join the circus" and perform the hits they personally rock out to, creating an evolving set list. In addition to these rock and metal masters, special theme nights will be dedicated to the songs of a single legendary band.
"I've toured all over the world and this is the most fun I've had," said Monster Circus creator Tony Montana, who conceived the show. "This show gives rock fans an up-close and personal encounter better than any backstage pass," added Montana. Tim Molyneux will serve as the producer/director/co-writer of Monster Circus.
Monster Circus opens to all rock fans on Thursday, March 19 inside the legendary Las Vegas Hilton Theater where the biggest names in music, from Elvis Presley to Barry Manilow, have performed. The circus is in town six nights a month on Thursday, Friday and Saturday nights with an 11 p.m. show time. March dates are: 19-21 and 26-28. Tickets go on-sale Saturday, Feb. 7 at 10 a.m. A nightly after-show party will keep the circus going.
Tickets for Platinum Masters' Monster Circus are $39-$66. A rock star VIP package is available for $86 and includes a meet-and-party pass, seating on the stage, photos and an opportunity to hang with the band after the show. All ticket prices exclude tax and fees. Tickets can be purchased at the Las Vegas Hilton box office, online at www.lvhilton.com, www.vegas.com, www.ticketmaster.com or by calling 702-732-5755 or 1-800-222-5361. Guests 12 to 17 years of age must be accompanied by an adult.
For more information, visit www.myspace.com/monstercircuslasvegas.
Tickets go on sale to the general public on February 6th. A KISS ARMY Members-only ticket presale will run from Feb. 3 @ 11AM-EST to Feb. 5 @ 6PM-EST on KOL.
Both general admission and VIP tickets will be available. The VIP ticket area is special bleacher seating with a fantastic view, private VIP washrooms, catering and bar service.
One of Russia's most popular metal/rock bands, PUSHKING has released over 15 albums. The band's new CD, "Pushking - Duets", will contain 19 songs covering PUSHKING's entire discography since 1996 and featuring contributions from some of "the greatest vocalists and musicians" from the world rock scene.
The album's producer, Fabrizio Grossi, stated about the project, "I was intrigued by the level of their musicianship and the very open approach they have to their music. Their music includes all the great ingredients of my favorite '70s bands, with QUEEN, ZEPPELIN and PURPLE on top of it. The record it's going to be a concept album and along with the band, there will be lots of great guest stars."
"Pushking - Duets" will feature appearances by the following musicians, among others:
* Glenn Hughes (DEEP PURPLE, BLACK SABBATH) on the songs "Why Don't You?", "Private Own", "Tonight" and "Kukarracha"
* Eric Ragno
* Jorn Lande (MASTERPLAN) on the song "Heroin"
* Joe Bonamassa on the song "Tonight"
* Steve Stevens (BILLY IDOL) on the song "Blessing Traveller"
* John Lawton (URIAH HEEP) on the song "Blessing Traveller"
* Alice Cooper on the song "Trouble Love"
* Keri Kelli (ALICE COOPER) on the song "Trouble Love"
* Jeff Scott Soto (JOURNEY, YNGWIE MALMSTEEN, TALISMAN) on the song "I Believe"
* Eric Martin (MR. BIG) on the songs "Open Letter to God" (also known as "Christina Talks to God") and "Kukarracha"
* Steve Lukather on the song "Kukarracha"
* Matt Filippini on the song "Private Own"
* Dan McCafferty (NAZARETH) on the songs "I Love You" and "My Simple Song"
* Graham Bonnet (ALCATRAZZ, MSG, RAINBOW) on the songs "God Made Us Free" and "Kukarracha"
* Joe Lynn Turner (RAINBOW, DEEP PURPLE, YNGWIE MALMSTEEN) on the songs "Head Shooter" and "Kukarracha"
*Udo Dirkschneider (ACCEPT, U.D.O.) on the song "Nature's Child"
Then Gene Simmons showed up.
“My friend said, ‘Oh my God, it’s Gene,’ and then he bolted — he just left,” said Ross Janzen, who was manning the booth for the Faction Collective. “I turned around and it was Gene. People were standing three-deep around him. I was completely dumbfounded. He’s an imposing figure.”
ecially imposing because Faction Collective had not received permission to use the trademarked image.
Last year, one of the company’s founders, Tony McWilliam, decided to pay homage to the music world with a new series of graphics — pointy guitars, tape decks. Simmons’s iconic face was put on their powder ski, Thirteen.
ne Simmons is a big inspiration to three generations now,” McWilliam said. “He communicates to a lot of people.
“We knew there might be a risk, but we wanted to get some impact.”
McWilliam said he tried to get a license to use the image but Simmons did not respond, so the company manufactured sample skis to display at the SnowSports Industry America trade show.
Faction took up about a dozen square feet, making it a blip on a convention floor occupied by more than 820 brands, 445 exhibitors and 3,479 booths. The four-day show, which ended Friday, drew 18,000 people — one of whom happened to be Simmons.
Surrounded by an entourage of barely clothed women, Simmons was there to promote a snowboard and ski accessory line called MoneyBag, a label he runs with Jason Dussault.
On their way to an interview, weaving through the maze of booths, Dussault spotted the Faction skis, then watched as Simmons approached Janzen.
“If you’re a bootlegger, and you think you’re going to get by and put something out illegally, it will cost you more to defend that than simply getting a license,” Simmons said in a telephone interview Friday. “They think they can get by being a nuisance, just pests, until they meet Gene Simmons, who kills pests dead.”
Janzen offered to give Simmons the skis. Instead, Simmons gave Janzen his lawyer’s contact information.
Bill Byrne, who runs a public relations firm in San Diego and works for several outdoors brands, said: “Graphic take-offs or blatant use of a brand’s likeness without consent is one way a lot of brands build product awareness or controversy. The downside is, there could be some unanticipated legal issues.
“Gene is known for going after people that use his likeness. My guess is that ski guys think they are under the radar enough to do it. What are the chances that Gene Simmons is going to walk through S.I.A.? Does he even ski?”
Simmons does ski, apparently. And Kiss has licensed more than 2,500 products.
"I found [footage] of my 'Just for Fun Tour' in '92 shot at a cool venue called the Limelight in New York City. It was an old church converted into a night club. Here's [see clip below] a version of 'Torpedo Girl' off the KISS record 'Unmasked'. By the way, my band members at the time were Sandy Slavin (drums), James Lomenzo (bass) and Richie Scarlet (rhythm)."
That is, assuming you are Canadian.
The legendary rocker is now soliciting electronic video demos from unsigned Canadian bands for his record label, Simmons Records.
Simmons, in partnership with Universal Music Canada, announced in November that he planned to develop and sign Canadian bands for his label.
An article published on U.S.-based blog Idolator on Monday caught Simmons’s ire, with the writer guessing that “lots and lots of merchandising will likely be involved” with the project.
Simmons, whose longtime romantic partner Shannon Tweed is Canadian, responded with a blog post on his label’s site the same day, dismissing the “arrogance of the U.S. media” and elaborating further on his plans.
“We’re going to find, develop, nurture and launch new talent emanating from — CANADA!!!,” he wrote. “That’s right, baby. Why here? Because you actually DO have the talent. And now, you have a WAY.
“ME.”
Stanley: I'm very pleased because all my rock 'n' roll heroes have been great showmen. Everyone from Steve Marriott of Humble Pie to Slade's Noddy Holder. Showmanship is key to all my favourite bands. Although I must admit I was surprised to receive the award, given that I'm not quite as commanding on stage as I used to be! (Stanley is quoting Classic Rock's review of KISS' appearance at Download 2008 -Ed.) in Fairness, it has taken me some time to recover from a torn shoulder - I had to have my left rotator cuff replaced. Plus I've had hip replacement surgery. I'm 57 years old now and being a member of KISS is very demanding physically. But at this point it feels like I've just had my 50,000-mile check-up. I'm good for another 50,000 at least.
What does the future hold for KISS?
It looks like we'll be touring Europe as well as the states. You'll be getting more of what you saw at Download - the KISS Alive! vibe amped up to the max. There might even be a new KISS album at some point. I have been ambivalent to the idea in the past but I'm much more open to it now. I thought I'd be content for KISS to remain a heritage act, just playing our greatest hits - Detroit Rock City and all that. But the new KISS line-up with Tommy Thayer (guitar) and Eric Singer (drums) is proving to be so good, so strong in spirit, it would be interesting to see how we perform in the studio. The intention would be to make a KISS album in the style of our 1970's recordings. A classic KISS album, unmistakably.
These days, do as many people clamour for the return of original members, Ace Frehley and Peter Criss?
The fact that Ace and Peter are not seen on stage with us doesn't seem to bother people as much as it used to. That's a testament to the ability of the new guys, obviously. But in all honesty, many people's image of 'classic KISS' is based on fantasy. A myth. It's like they're looking through rose-tinted glasses, most nights, it was all we could do to struggle through the set that we'd rehearsed.
You couldn't attend the Classic Rock Awards because your wife, Erin, is due to give birth soon.
Our daughter is due in January. It will be my second child with Erin. We already have a son, Colin, who is two years old. I also have a 14-year-old son, from a previous marriage. I'm looking forward to having a daughter, you bet. I feel like it's payback for my wanton life. I can see myself being very protective... protecting her from people like the man I used to be, back when KISS used to run riot all over the world. She'll be daddy's little girl and no one else's.
Kulick wrote about the jam on his web site: "I was asked by the Rock 'n' Roll Fantasy Camp to be part of a jam gig for Bugera amps, made by a very large famous company called Behringer. Kip Winger was on bass and vocals, Mark Hudson on guitar and vocals, Earl Slick on guitar and Chris Slade on drums rounded out the all-star band, and we kicked off the pre-NAMM show with our songs Wednesday at the Hilton next to the convention center. We did BEATLES, AEROSMITH, LED ZEP, AC/DC etc., and the president of the company, Uli Behringer (who is a great keyboard player), got up and jammed along on some of the songs."
The band lineup for the jam was as follows:
Earl Slick (DAVID BOWIE, ROBERT SMITH, JOHN LENNON) - Lead Guitar
Mark Hudson (AEROSMITH, RINGO STARR, HANSON) – Guitar, Vocals
Kip Winger (WINGER) - Bass
Chris Slade (AC/DC, THE FIRM, DAVID GILMORE) - Drums
Bruce Kulick (KISS, GRAND FUNK RAILROAD) - Guitar
Dussault and Simmons will be showing their latest collaborations of the Snowboard and Ski accessory line including hats and beanies to be released later this year under the MoneyBag™ moniker, as well as wallets, belts and luggage. Each item features the Gene Simmons created and designed MoneyBag™ logo. www.genesimmonsmoneybag.com
Simmons will be shooting an episode of his award-winning hit reality series Gene Simmons Family Jewels at the SIA.09 Show with Jason. This is the third episode featuring Jason and the Dussault Apparel™ and Gene Simmons MoneyBag™ brands.
April 07 - Sao Paulo, Arena Anhembi
April 08 - Rio De Janeiro, Praca De Apoteose
Tickets will go on sale on February 11.
In an unpublished opinion, Div. Seven affirmed Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Haley J. Fromholz’s dismissal of Steven Greenstein’s claim against the alleged producer and distributor of “Gene Simmons Family Jewels” for compensation based on Greenstein’s appearance in the program.
A production company headed by Leslie Greif hired Greenstein’s production company to film a segment of the documentary-style 30-minute television show following Simmons when he made an appearance in New Orleans for the Mardi Gras Parade.
Greenstein claimed Greif had told him he would not be able to appear on camera, but once Simmons arrived in New Orleans, Greenstein interacted with Simmons several times before the cameras while acting as an escort for Simmons and his entourage.
Greenstein testified that he knew that his interactions with Simmons were being filmed for the television show, and he wore a microphone so that his voice could be recorded. He also reviewed the raw footage at the end of each day to ensure the quality of the work performed by the camera crew.
As part of his production duties, Greenstein prepared a sign to be held up at all times during filming which stated that the television show was being videotaped and informing persons in its vicinity that they may be photographed.
“Your presence in this area shall be deemed consent to photograph you, to record your voice, and to exploit such image, photographs and sound recordings in this program and other programs in all media, worldwide, in perpetuity,” the sign stated.
The sign was intended to inform the public that filming was taking place in a public area, and anyone who was filmed had to sign a release for their appearance, Greenstein claimed.
Although Greif and another producer testified that they had seen Greenstein sign a release, Greenstein asserted that he had never done so because he believed that he would have to be compensated if he appeared in the final version of the episode and did not sign a release.
Over a year after the New Orleans filming was completed, a representative from Greif’s company asked Greenstein to provide a signed release but Greenstein refused.
Greenstein claimed that his attorney attempted to negotiate a release in exchange for compensation but received no response. Greenstein did not introduce any evidence of discussions with the show’s producers either before or during filming about his unwillingness to sign a release unless he was paid.
A&E Television Networks subsequently broadcast the episode in which Greenstein appeared. Greenstein did not receive any payment for his appearance on the program and filed suit against Greif’s company and the network for the alleged unauthorized use of his persona.
The defendants filed a special motion to strike the complaint, which the trial court granted, finding that the action arose from a protected activity because the television show concerned an issue of public interest and Greenstein had consented to the use of his persona in the program.
Writing for the appellate court, Justice Laurie D. Zelon explained that Simmons was clearly a public figure and the television program about his celebrity lifestyle was therefore an issue of public interest. The fact that the show was a reality-based series as opposed to a traditional news program did not preclude it from receiving constitutional protection, Zelon added.
Although Greenstein was not a public figure, Zelon reasoned that he had knowingly and willingly become involved in an issue of public interest when he was filmed interacting with Simmons and his entourage.
“The purpose of the television program was to show the audience what happened when a film crew followed a celebrity as he went about his unscripted daily activities,” Zelon wrote. “By voluntarily interacting with Simmons as the cameras were rolling, Greenstein interjected himself into an issue of public interest.”
As for the lack of a release, Zelon explained that neither the statutory nor common law cause of action for misappropriation requires consent be given in writing.
Apart from Greenstein’s assertion that the sign he prepared that was displayed at all times during the New Orleans filming was not intended to be a substitute for a written release, Zelon noted Greenstein did not offer any evidence as to what the defendants’ intent was in having him display the sign or the basis for his claimed belief that the sign could not constitute consent.
Based on the plain wording of the sign, which stated that an individual’s presence in the area was deemed consent, Zelon concluded the sign was sufficient establish Greenstein had consented to appearing in the episode.
Even in the absence of the sign, Zelon noted Greenstein conduct in interacting with Simmons, wearing a microphone during filming, and reviewing the raw footage in which he appeared evidenced his consent.
Because Greenstein did not set forth sufficient facts to demonstrate his lack of consent, Zelon concluded, he could not prove a probability of prevailing on the merits of his common law or statutory misappropriation claims and so the trial court’s grant of the special motion to strike was proper.
Presiding Justice Dennis M. Perluss and Justice Fred Woods joined Zelon in her opinion.
Timothy A. Hall and Stephanie R. Ables of the Law Offices of Hall & Lim represented Greenstein, while Walter R. Sadler and Thomas J. Peistrup of Leopold, Petrich & Smith represented the Greif Company and A&E.
The case is Greenstein v. The Greif Company, B200962.
Watch a low-quality three-minute clip of Gene's speech here.
Plot outline: A New Jersey police detective comes across new evidence in the Kennedy assassination.
Check out photos from the "Frame of Mind" set at this location.
The DVD can be pre-ordered at Amazon.com.
ALL RIGHT BUENOS AIRES...YOU WANTED THE BEST AND YOU GOT THE BEST!!!
Argentina! Are you ready? Cause the wait is finally over. Today iconic rock band KISS announces they will close the Quilmes Rock Festival at River Plate Stadium on April 5, 2009 and perform for the first time in Argentina in over a decade.
This stop in Argentina will continue the KISS Alive/35 tour which launched in Australia with a performance at the opening season Formula One race where 60,000 race fans rushed the stage to watch KISS perform their classic hits. The tour continued on to Europe where they played shows in nineteen countries. KISS’ Stadium shows in Stockholm, Sweden sold 32,000 tickets in twenty minutes and shows in Helsinki, Finland and Oslo, Norway also sold out in minutes.
Tommy Thayer, rocking with all-time legends KISS, will put his autograph willingly on whatever fans consider suitable at the Hughes & Kettner, booth 6555 in Hall A. Just make sure to arrive right on time, because it will definitely be crowded. And once you're already there, please don't forget to check out the Tommy Thayer Signature Edition Duotone Amplifier. More info www.hughes-and-kettner.com.
Simmons' record label, Simmons Records, recently joined forces with Universal Music Canada (UMC), the country's leading music company. This partnership will construct a multi-platform vehicle to seek out, develop and promote Canadian talent from both the domestic market and international stage.
In a posting on his official web site, Kulick writes, "What an amazing day in the studio! I asked Steve Lukather from TOTO (anyone who knows guitarists knows he is a guitar legend) to do some dueling guitars for my instrumental that I told you all about back in October. He is simply hard to watch cause his fingers fly and the tone and ability that he has on the guitar is a wonderful to experience right in front of your own eyes. The song is in Eb tuning and his signature model guitar was in concert tuning so he told me he could play one of mine.
"Any fan of mine, or Luke (his nickname in the biz), would agree that this track not only rocks, it moves you without anyone singing. Having that strong rhythm section of Kenny Aronoff and Jimmy Haslip on drums and bass, didn't hurt of course. The next day I did some edit ideas for the song, and we cleaned up the tracks and finalized the edits and guitar parts. Ready to be mixed!
"I want to thank Luke for playing as he knows best, amazingly, and Jeremy [Rubolino; producer/engineer] for working hard on the parts to make it NOT seem like just a 'guitar players, look at me, look at me' song, but a musical statement from both of us. Can't wait for you all to hear this one and the others.
"Some of the songs are already mixed although it is still hard to state positively when I can package and release my CD. But I am very proud and want the music to be the best it can be."
The large LED displays shining KISS logo and the game board is equipped with dynamic sound system which enables the players to listened to well known KISS songs such as Love Gun, Rock and Roll All Nite, I Love It Loud, Black Diamond and Deuce along with various videos from the live concerts as well as computer graphics animation characters of Star Child, Demon, Cat Man and Space Man.
This exciting Pachinko Game Board, "KISS World Tour" is now at pachinko parlors throughout Japan. Visit the KISS Pachinko site.
Advertisements scheduled to appear in today's Times & Transcript were telling readers to check a website for more information, but that website was not up and running yesterday afternoon.
The ads simply say "get ready" and include the well-known makeup faces of KISS members Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley. Harold MacKay, a Halifax promoter associated with Power Promotional Concepts in Dartmouth, was not available for comment yesterday.
The ads seem to lend more credence to the rumor that KISS will appear in Halifax.
KISS co-founder and bassist Gene Simmons was quoted recently by news media saying a short summer tour was planned for the rock icons next summer, including a date in Halifax.
"I know Halifax is one," Simmons said.
Paul is a keen artist and has two exhibitions being staged at the Wentworth Gallery in Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts in March.
Dussault and Simmons will be showing their latest collaborations of hats and beanies to be released later this year under the MoneyBag moniker, as well as wallets, belts and luggage. Each item features the Gene Simmons-created and -designed MoneyBag logo.
The SIA.09 SnowSports Trade Show, the world's foremost ski and snowboard convention, takes place Tuesday, January 27 to Friday, January 30, 2009 at the Mandalay Bay Convention Center. This trade, professionals and superstar participants' show will deliver the largest, most concentrated and authentic trade event in the snow sports industry with nearly 20,000 attendees. The show launches the styles, technologies, innovations, culture, and energy of snow sports presented by close to 1000 brands.
Jason Dussault comments, "Growing up in the snow sports capital of Canada, British Columbia, the ski and snowboard industry is one that I admire, have first hand knowledge of and respect for. I am pleased to be finally making my mark as a designer in this ever-growing marketplace. Since every top brand, and every elite retailer and dealer from the U.S. and Canada will attend this show, we are excited to display our goods and submit them for orders to domestic and international sales representatives."
Dussault Apparel sales agent Michael Rosen of LivinTheDream, Inc., and SIA SnowSports Regional Rep of the Year Award 2006/2007, states, "Having Gene Simmons in town to promote the new MoneyBag line of apparel will really heat up attention for the brand in this new territory for them. The product is of great design and fantastic quality and I look forward to helping sell and promote the product at this great event."
For more information on how KISS came to record "King Of The Night Time World", read this preview from the "Kiss: Behind The Mask" book.
Paul Stanley's Wentworth Gallery Appearances
Wentworth Gallery - The Mall at Chestnut Hill
199 Boylston Street
Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts
Friday March 27, 2009 7 - 9 PM
Saturday March 28, 2009 5 - 8 PM
To RSVP or for details on the VIP Reception, please call 617-630-9163 or 800-732-6140.
KISS has always been THE HELLACOPTERS mainman Nicke Andersson's (also ex-ENTOMBED drummer) favorite band and in this TV special, he talks about his all-time favorite album "Rock and Roll Over".
For more information, click here.
The Simmons family was en route to Whistler, B.C., for a skiiing vacation.
Sports reporters had hoped to interview Mats Sundin before he is officially introduced to the Vancouver Canucks and the media on Tuesday. But the Swede wasn't talking.
Commented Simmons: "I was asked to play... me." He added, "The show is about a family whose house burned down, so they get into their motor home and travel the country. The script was very funny."
According to Variety, "Glenn Martin" revolves around a dentist who persuades his family to embark on a cross-country road trip — in their toothbrush-topped "dental mobile."
A photo of Gene and actor/comedian Kevin Nealon (who provides the voice of Glenn Martin on the show) recording their parts in the studio can be found at GeneSimmons.com.
Event: KISS EXPO 2009
Date: Saturday, Feb. 21
Where: GLASSHEIM, JEVNAKER, NORWAY
Doors open from 1pm - 6pm
- Dealers from USA, Sweden and Norway including KISSONLINE / KISS Shop / Kiss Army Sweden and more!
- Videos on big Screen / KISS DJ all day long!
Guests include KISS drummer, Eric Singer & former KISS guitarist, Bruce Kulick.
Eric and Bruce will be there to sign, talk and take photos with you!
Expo guests will be able to stay for an exclusive soundcheck!
Get your KISS EXPO 2009 Ticket here: www.billettservice.no .
All times Eastern & Pacific (check local listings to confirm). Merry KISSMAS!
9 AM KISS at Dodger Stadium - Los Angeles '98 (fr. Kissology Vol. 3)
11 AM Hanging With KISS (w/Eddie Trunk - The Kissology Volume 1 Special)
Noon KISS at the Summit - Houston '77 (from Kissology Vol. 1)
1 pm The KISSOLOGY Volume 2 Special
2 PM KISS Live From Sydney - Australia 1980 (from Kissology Vol. 2)
3 PM Hanging With KISS (w/Eddie Trunk - The Kissology Volume 1 Special)
4 PM KISS at Dodger Stadium - Los Angeles '98 (fr. Kissology Vol. 3)
6 - 6:30 PM That Metal Show (w/guest Ace Frehley)
7 PM The KISSOLOGY Volume 2 Special
8 PM KISS at the Summit - Houston '77 (from Kissology Vol. 1)
9 PM Hanging With KISS (w/Eddie Trunk - The Kissology Volume 1 Special)
10 PM KISS Live From Sydney - Australia 1980 (from Kissology Vol. 2)
11 PM The KISSOLOGY Volume 2 Special
Midnight KISS at Dodger Stadium - Los Angeles '98 (fr. Kissology Vol. 3)
If you live in the U.S., you can listen to the show live on the Internet between 11:00 p.m. and 2:00 a.m. at this location.
Here is Alice's performance of "Heaven's On Fire" from the finals show:
"The Chop Shop's Top 100 Most Complete Guitar Players of All Time":
01. Jimmy Page 87.94
02. Jimi Hendrix 84.92
03. Eddie Van Halen 84.81
04. David Gilmour 82.72
05. Keith Richards 82.48
06. Pete Townshend 80.66
07. Steve Vai 79.74
08. Les Paul 78.61
09. Angus Young 78.56
10. Jeff Beck 77.77
11. Stevie Ray Vaughan 75.86
12. Tony Iommi (BLACK SABBATH) 74.67
13. Eric Clapton 74.62
14. James Hetfield (METALLICA) 73.62
15. Ritchie Blackmore (RAINBOW, DEEP PURPLE 72.61
16. Slash (GUNS N' ROSES, VELVET REVOLVER) 71.60
17. Frank Zappa 71.57
18. George Harrison 71.49
19. Randy Rhoads (OZZY OSBOURNE) 70.89
20. Ted Nugent 70.83
21. Dave Murray/Adrian Smith (IRON MAIDEN) 70.72
22. Carlos Santana 70.44
23. Steve Lukather (TOTO) 70.41
24. Joe Satriani 69.71
25. Chuck Berry 69.53
26. Kirk Hammett (METALLICA) 69.48
27. Zakk Wylde (OZZY OSBOURNE) 68.73
28. Brian May (QUEEN) 67.57
29. Alex Lifeson (RUSH) 67.51
30. Billy Gibbons (ZZ TOP) 67.45
31. Malcolm Young (AC/DC) 66.56
32. Joe Perry (AEROSMITH) 65.60
33. Joe Walsh (EAGLES, JAMES GANG) 63.44
34. B.B. King 63.30
35. Kurt Cobain (NIRVANA) 63.17
36. Dimebag Darrell Abbott (PANTERA) 62.55
37. Neal Schon (JOURNEY) 62.45
38. John Lennon 62.44
39. Mark Knopfler (DIRE STRAITS) 62.43
40. Dickey Betts (ALLMAN BROTHERS BAND) 60.47
41. Tom Scholz (BOSTON) 60.42
41. Robby Krieger (DOORS) 60.42
43. Buddy Guy 60.38
44. Tom Morello (RAGE AGAINST THE MACHINE) 60.37
45. The Edge (U2) 60.34
46. Gary Rossington/Allen Collins (LYNYRD SKYNYRD) 59.49
47. Glenn Tipton/K.K. Downing (JUDAS PRIEST) 58.64
48. Peter Frampton 58.59
49. Mick Mars (MÖTLEY CRÜE) 58.34
50. Steve Howe (YES, ASIA) 57.36
51. John Frusciante (RED HOT CHILI PEPPERS) 55.46
52. Brad Whitford (AEROSMITH) 55.45
53. Scotty Moore (ELVIS PRESLEY, RICK NELSON) 55.35
54. Rik Emmett (TRIUMPH) 54.58
55. Yngwie Malmsteen 54.56
56. Leslie West (MOUNTAIN) 54.50
57. Dean DeLeo (STONE TEMPLE PILOTS) 54.46
58. Ace Frehley (KISS) 54.38
59. Bo Diddley 54.37
60. Muddy Waters 54.36
61. John 5 (MARILYN MANSON, ROB ZOMBIE) 53.63
62. Gary Moore (THIN LIZZY) 53.55
63. Paul Gilbert (MR. BIG, RACER X) 53.51
64. George Lynch (DOKKEN, LYNCH MOB) 53.41
65. Adam Jones (TOOL) 53.20
66. Robin Trower 52.62
67. Michael Schenker (UFO, MSG) 52.52
67. Johnny Winter 52.52
69. Michael Hedges 52.40
70. Robert Johnson 52.36
71. Dave Mustaine (MEGADETH) 52.34
72. Warren DiMartini (RATT) 51.49
73. Dave Davies (THE KINKS) 51.36
74. Nuno Bettencourt (EXTREME) 50.5
75. Mark Tremonti (CREED, ALTER BRIDGE) 50.40
76. Dan Donegan (DISTURBED) 50.39
77. Warren Haynes (ALLMAN BROTHERS, GOVT. MULE) 50.36
77. Matthias Jabbs (SCORPIONS) 50.36
79. Freddie King 50.33
80. Chris DeGarmo/Michael Wilton (QUEENSRŸCHE) 50.28
81. Neil Young 50.23
81. Steve Cropper 50.23
83. Frank Marino (MAHOGANY RUSH) 49.51
84. Ty Tabor (KING'S X) 49.46
85. Eric Johnson 49.44
86. Mike McCready (PEARL JAM) 49.34
87. Steve Miller 49.33
88. John Fogerty 49.26
89. John Sykes (THIN LIZZY, WHITESNAKE) 49.20
90. Vivian Campbell (DEF LEPPARD) 48.41
91. Dick Wagner (ALICE COOPER) 48.40
91. Kim Thayil (SOUNDGARDEN) 48.40
93. Jerry Cantrell (ALICE IN CHAINS) 48.28
94. Glen Buxton (ALICE COOPER) 47.55
95. Rick Nielsen (CHEAP TRICK) 47.44
96. Rod Price (FOGHAT) 47.41
97. Frank Hannon (TESLA) 47.38
97. Buckethead (GUNS N' ROSES) 47.38
99. Steve Stevens (BILLY IDOL) 47.36
100. Trevor Rabin (YES) 47.36
This year's camp "counselor" lineup includes Duff McKagan (ex-Guns N' Roses, Velvet Revolver), Mark Farner (ex-Grand Funk Railroad) Bruce Kulick (ex-Kiss), Slim Jim Phantom (Stray Cats), Alan White (Yes), Rusty Anderson (McCartney), Teddy Andreadis (ex-GNR and Alice Cooper) and songwriter/producer Mark Hudson, who's worked with Ringo Starr, Aerosmith and Ozzy Osbourne.
Camp organizer David Fishof promises some "special guests," while celebrity chef Guy Fieri will prepare the opening night meal.
As in previous years, the campers will organize into bands and record an original song at Capitol Studios with Eddie Kramer, as well as play as part of a concert at the Whisky A Go Go. This year's camp will also feature a companion package offering music lessons, dinners and access to the camp activities for plus-ones.
Registration has opened at RockCamp.com, with a $500 discount for those signing up before Dec. 22.
Fan-filmed footage of the event can be viewed here: (all but the last clip uploaded by "rybones1311") 1, 2, 3, 4, 5
"Dear Earthlings, I'm happy to say that I finally got a good Internet connection up here on Jendell and can now present to you my official website — AceFrehley.com! Thanks for your patience and support over the years... it's meant everything to me.
"Now, let's ROCK!! AceFrehley.com is going to provide a link between us and be something unique and different from the 'usual' website. What you will see is exclusive pictures and video clips from my archives, news, tour dates and appearances announced here first, and a chance for you to be a part of this website by sending me your photos and questions.
"I'll be emailing all my members very cool 'extra stuff,' so don't forget to sign up! And despite the rumors, you'll be hearing my new CD real soon... stay tuned.
"I hope you have as much fun on AceFrehley.com as I've had putting it together."
Catch Ace this weekend on VH1 Classic's "That Metal Show" hosted by Eddie Trunk. The program will premiere this Saturday night, December 20 at 11 p.m. and will repeat several times in the coming weeks.
Commented Gene: "Our 'Gene Simmons Family Jewels' [Gene's reality-TV show] TV crew went downtown L.A. to film a spectacular event — the Derby Dolls (the sport of Roller Derby) knocking heads and butts for one of our episodes. Nothing you will see on the episode of the roller derby event is either staged or fake in any way. They really get their butts handed to them. Head really get knocked around. The girls on roller skates are the real thing — hell on wheels. And Soph, Shannon and I had the distinct honor of singing the national anthem at the event, in front of a big, excited crowd."
Check out a photo of Sophie Tweed-Simmons, Shannon Tweed, and Gene Simmons performing the national anthem at this location.
Alex Lifeson: That was our first kind of "big tour." We had started touring in '74 - we were opening for a few different bands. But the KISS tour...and this was the start of their career, as well. The tour that we did with them, we opened for them, and we were playing 3,000-5,000 seat halls. They were a new band, and no one had really heard of them. So we did a lot of work with them — we probably toured with them for 60 or 70 shows. Back in those days, we were doing 200 to 250 shows a year anyways. But we toured with them over a fairly long period of time. We were very close and we had a lot of fun. We were both young bands, and quite different from each other - I think that was a nice compliment playing together. But like a lot of things, you sort of drift apart over the years. We stayed in touch for a while, but not so much in the past ten years or so.
You grew up during the beat generation. In that time the drums were recorded with only two microphones and the sound was, let’s say, slight. Nowadays drummers have much more possibilities. Where do you see further capabilities?
‘I was influenced by a lot of 60s music, but probably more by the 70s stuff. I was born 1958 so by the time the early 70s were around I was a teenager. That’s the age when music has the most impact. Well, I think everybody should explore whatever different styles and technologies that they like.
For me I still like the idea of just playing real drums and live in a band. In some bands it works good with backing tracks or loops, you know, especially in bands like those of Madonna and Beyonce. Something like this would have these really big productions on record and to reproduce it live you almost have to do it. And also they have everything with the lights synchronized with the computers and with the dancers, it is very important to keep in. To me one of the most important things in rock-’n-roll is the human aspect.
You know, playing the instruments and keeping it real and live. The beauty is, sometimes you are not having such a good night and you make mistakes. But the great thing is, when you play the next show you have the chance to make it better or try something different and experiment. And that’s the beauty of playing live drums. To me, you can’t reinvent the wheel. I mean, a drummer is basically a drummer. The function of a drummer in the band is to hold the beat and to provide the rhythm. A drummer like Terry Bosio really took drumming to another level and created it more to an individual voice of an instrument, he has done some incredible things like making drums an instrument that is not just only there to keep time. But that’s not the kind of drummer I am. I enjoy just playing live in a band and doing my part of creating this chemistry of sound.’
Why did you started playing drums and haven’t you chosen for a career as a singer?
‘I don’t know. I remember that when I was very young my older brother and sister played the piano, because both my parents were musicians. They both played the violin, and my father played saxophone as well and my mother was a singer too, they were both musical. My father was a bandleader. They had me take piano lessons for a really short time when I was kid. My father insisted that I should play an instrument and I chose playing drums. I guess the only thing I can remember is watching those TV shows in the 60s with The Beatles, The Rolling Stones and all the bands that were playing the Sunday Night TV Show, because they always had a musical guest. Every family sat at home and watched the show together. This was very impressive and most kids wanted to play an instrument.
I think The Beatles were the biggest influence to most musicians at that time. As time went on in the music, especially rock and hardrock became more popular and more mainstream and you had more and more bands that influenced a wider audience in different ways. Like Black Sabbath, I really liked them when I was a kid and of course Led Zeppelin, everybody loved Led Zeppelin. Even if I loved guitar so much, I always found myself watching the drummer. I guess that’s natural. Whatever instrument you are playing, you will find yourself watching the person that plays it too. If you are a drummer you watch the drummer, if you are guitarplayer you the guitarplayer. I have always had a lot of energy and I think playing drums is a good way to express that energy.’
I heard you singing with Kiss and Avantasia, your voice is really good. I guess you should do it more often!
‘The Avantasia thing was just for fun. We did this very fast. It was the last night of the recording, 1.30 or 2 o’clock in the morning and Tobi said, try to sing this song and I said okay. So we recorded the song. Tobi played the bass, Sascha played the guitar and we sat up in the room and played it live as band. He heard me singing in the studio and he heard me singing this song. Actually doing that song, Ride The Sky, was just fun. I had told Tobi about the singer John Lawton and about the band. He didn’t know this band and so we were talking to the owner of the studio and he said “Oh I have one of these records because I was the engineer”. I told Tobi that he just had to hear these songs and Tobi said “I love this song, I wanna record it”.
As we were working on it he heard me singing, goofing around, ‘cause when I am in the studio I am always singing and talking a lot. Tobi then said that I should try singing it. We sang it only two or three times and that was it. Tobi sang along with it as well, and it all just happened by accident. I loved this song and the record when I was a kid. When I was 15 I was listening to it a lot. I had couple of friends in school, we were all big music fans. We always bought records and rock magazines and we always knew about all the different bands. I was more into English and European bands than American bands as a kid.
I remember I was one of the first that was into the Scorpions in America, I mean in Ohio where I grew up. We used to have a radio show on a very famous radio station in Cleveland called WMMS. On Sunday night this radio station used to have a radio show called Import Hour and they played songs from import records that were not regularly released in America, like albums from the Scorpions, Crow or Raven. Most of the time the records never came out in America. I remember hearing the song Speedy’s Coming from the album Fly To The Rainbow. It was not the first record I heard , that record was Lonesome Crow with Michael Schenker on it, but the next one with Uli Roth was Fly To The Rainbow. I remember hearing this song and the great guitar playing and I fell in love with the Scorpions because I loved Uli Roth guitar playing. So many people in America were attracted by Uli Roths guitar playing. The Scorpions of course became very famous and popular a couple of years later.
The first show they ever played in America was in my hometown in Cleveland. They used to do these shows in the 70s called World Series of Rock, four, five or six bands on one day. I don’t know, they had 40, 50 or 60 thousand people coming to these shows. I remember I couldn’t go, I played drums in my father’s band when I was growing up and I had to work. But I remember listening to the radio station and they were on air. They had an interview with Klaus Meine and Rudolf Schenker live from the event, while I sat in the car on my way to work. A lot people don’t know, but it was their first show ever here. I saw them earlier this year when they came to the Kiss show in Hannover and I told them that I remembered their first show. Rudi was surprised that I knew this and I told him as well that I wasn’t able to attend it because I had to work, but that I remember hearing him on the radio.’
How did you get to learn playing drums? Did you had lessons?
‘Yeah, I started when I was ten or eleven years old in the fifth grade and my father, as I said, told me I had to play an instrument. The drummer that played in his band gave me some lessons for a short time. Then we moved to another part of town, that summer I didn´t take lessons. You know, when you are a kid you take the summer off and just play and have fun. Then I went to a new school and the kids in school were more rock-’n-roll kids, they were listening to Led Zeppelin and all that stuff, and they were smoking cigarettes and pott, only 12 years old, at a very young age! Of course I found it all was exciting and great, because I loved the rock music and all that stuff.
A couple of the guys were taking drum lessons from this other guy, Buddy. A really nice guy and everybody seemed to like him, because he knew how to communicate. He used to say ‘to be good at something you don’t have to be good at doing it, you must be good in communicating the information.’ To be a good teacher is really about that, you know. And sometimes when you are a teacher you have to have the ability to maybe sometimes teach the same thing in many different ways. He had this ability. But he also made it fun and he didn’t put pressure on you. Because of that I will always feel thankful that I met him. Before I moved to California, I took lessons from a teacher that had gone to the Barclay School of Music.
People that went there had a more advanced knowledge and advanced way of teaching, I should say. Then I moved to California in 1983 and I was planning to go to the P.I.T. Music Institute. But at the time I was thinking about it, I had to wait six months for the next semester to start. Then I looked into the paper and I saw some famous drummers and they taught privately. We don’t have this in Cleveland, but in New York City or Los Angeles there are these famous guys that would teach privately. I took lessons from a drummer named Casey, he had played with Gino Vannelli, was more like a jazz drummer but I had heard that he was really great. Sometimes what you don’t do is the best thing in life. After having some lessons for a few months he said “Eric (and he was a teacher at a music school as well) I don´t think that you need to go to this music school.
It’s a good school and you will get a lot of information, but I think you seem to know what kind of drummer you want to be and what direction you want to go. My advice is that if you wanna take lessons, you should get lessons from one guy at a time, but you should really just get in bands and play.” At this point I was already 25 years old. It turned out to be a good advice, even if he was a teacher of that school, he was honest with me. So, that’s what I did. I went to join a band. Within a year in L.A. I met some people and I auditioned for Lita Ford. I got the gig and from that point on, that was in, I think, November 1984, I have been touring and making records.’
How and how long do you practise nowadays? Do you have a special programme?
‘I don’t practise. I just go and play. My practise is playing a show. Okay, I can’t say I never practise. When we are done with this tour I won’t play drums for a while, I will take a break. Just keep my body rest. We had a break before this tour with Whitesnake and I didn’t play for two weeks. My body needed it, I was sort of run down. When I do practise I go and usually spent half an hour or an hour, put on the drum machine and play along with the machine. Sometimes I put on the radio and play along with songs played on the radio. Even if I don’t know the music I put on like a rap station. It makes you work in your own time, it’s good practising too. I usually practise when I am learning the songs for a tour. Sometimes, let’s say for example, when I am preparing for a Kiss tour I may take a live show or a recording and play along with myself.’
In the 80s it seemed that a lot of drummers wanted to be fast and faster like Dave Lombardo for example. What do you think about it?
‘I call it the Drummer Olympics. It’s like who can be the fastest human in the race. I gotta say, there are some amazing drummers nowadays. I think the reason is that nowadays they have much better tools to learn from than when I grew up. At that time we didn’t have DVDs, videos, MTV and all these instruction tapes and private lessons. Now you can go and take lessons from some of these drummers by buying their instruction DVDs, using computer programmes. Now you have all this best information available to you. These kids have a lot of great learning tools nowadays. I also realized that I never had the ambition to be faster than everybody. That is not important to me. I leave it up to the guys that enjoy it. When I see it I am blown away by these guys’ fantastic technique. I admire what they do but it is not something that I aspire to do.’
How many drumheads do you need for a tour?
‘Well, my drumtech changes the drumheads just about every day, not the whole kit, but almost the whole kit. I have in this particular kit six toms and a snare. We don’t change the bass that often, we don’t need to, but the tom heads and the snare are changed every day. So probably a least five heads every day, a hundred shows do the mass. Three or four pairs of sticks in a show. We are just refreshing up everything at some point of the tour, switch some of the hardware or things like that. I don’t get a new kit that often. It’s just because I don’t see any need for. When you are young, you always wanna have everything, when they start giving you stuff for free – “I want this one, I will take red, blue and green”. But when you are getting older, you start thinking “I can only play one at a time. I only need the one for a tour”. Right now I have two complete sets of drums in road cases, complete ready to have one at one place. Just to send one with Kiss and one with Alice. Of course I have many drumkits at home.’
You have your signature snare drum with Pearl. Did you have influence on it and where did you put your focus on?
‘When Pearl started doing signature snare drums, they had done a couple for a few other drummers before they asked me. I have a drum that I really like. But I am actually now talking to Pearl to come up with a new one. The problem is, this drums are very expensive. It´s a great drum, but not affordable for most of the drummers. So I’d like to come up with a set that has a much lower price, that can be afforded by especially younger kids, we’d rather come up with something that is about 300 USD list price.’
I read that there is a gig planed with ESP in Europe?
‘Yes, but we haven’t announced any dates. We are definitely playing in about three cities in Germany. We are playing in Holland, Norway, Finland, Italy and one show in Switzerland. We will do about 13 shows. It’s very difficult to try and put these stuff together, ‘cause obviously we are doing it on a very small level in clubs. All the musicians have to be available at the same time. It’s something we will do just for fun.’
I read that there is a gig planed with ESP in Europe?
‘Yes. We are definitely playing in about three cities in Germany. We are playing in Holland, Norway, Finland, Italy and one show in Switzerland. We will do about 13 shows. It’s very difficult to try and put these stuff together, ‘cause obviously we are doing it on a very small level in clubs. All the musicians have to be available at the same time. It’s something we will do just for fun.
ESP concert dates:
Feb. 06 - Kaiserslautern, Germany - Fritz Walter Stadion
Feb. 07 - Freiburg, Germany - Brauerei Ganther
Feb. 08 - Oberhausen, Germany - Schilderhalle
Feb. 09 - Uden, Holland - The Nieuwe Pul
Feb. 10 - Prague, Czech Republic - Retro Hall
Feb. 13 - Roncade, Italy - New Age Club
Feb. 14 - Pinarella di Cervia, Italy - Rock Planet Club
Feb. 16 - Verviers, Belgium - Route 66
Feb. 17 - Memmingen, Germany - Kaminwerke
Feb. 18 - Pratteln, Switzerland - Z7
Feb. 20 - Bergen, Norway - Garage Club
Feb. 21 - Jevnaker, Norway - Glassheim
Feb. 22 - Helsinki, Finland - Nosturi Club
Kulick has issued the following recap of the event: "Well, the big day came and went fast, and it was simply amazing. No one really knew what to expect (including me) but the idea of having great players rocking on stage backed by a totally cool Vegas style experience was pulled off without a glitch at the Hilton in Las Vegas on December 9.
"'Monster Circus' was formed by Tony Montana (GREAT WHITE), Rudy Sarzo and John Corabi (ex-MÖTLEY CRÜE). These three asked Bobby Rock (SLAUGHTER, VINNIE VINCENT INVASION) to play drums and myself to join them on stage, with Dee Snider and Dave Kushner as the special guests to play nine classic hits along with a great show that included fire breathers, pyro, dancers and tight rope style performances in a totally Vegas over-the-top manner.
"The Hilton stage, home to Barry Manilow of late but most famous for Elvis Presley from his Vegas years, was simply put an amazing place to perform. Using Elvis's dressing room and getting a tour of some of the private rooms built for Elvis for his famous performances was quite a thrill.
"The band rehearsed in L.A. for a week and then it was off to Vegas for a day and a half of rehearsal with the dancers etc. It was a miracle how quickly it all came together.
"Admission to the show was free for agents, fans and press alike, all were definitely impressed, and I was very proud of everyone involved. Dee Snider is a great performer, and I was very proud of John and the band for being tight and exciting.
"The way 'Monster Circus' is set up, the band can have different members rotate in and out depending on the individual players' schedules, and I look forward to a chance to do the show again when possible. So let's hope it gets picked up in Vegas, as it is was a great night and I got to have some fun in a place where Elvis made history.
"Keep your eyes out for more 'Monster Circus', and I would like to thank everyone involved again for making this a very rewarding experience. Thanks for the invite!"
Check out photos from the event at Kulick.net.
"It's going to be very much a vintage, classic, '70s KISS album without much regard to what's happened since then; it's back to the roots," said singer/guitarist Paul Stanley, who will produce the album.
He told askmen.com in a recent interview that the band planned to hit the studio shortly.
In recent years, bassist Gene Simmons has been vocal about his lack of enthusiasm about making a new album, which he attributes to the state of the business.
"The record industry is in such a mess," he told Billboard last year. "There is nothing in me that wants to go in there and do new music. How are you going to deliver it? How are you going to get paid for it if people can just get it for free?"
It's unknown how Kiss will distribute the album, which will feature original members Stanley and Simmons alongside guitarist Tommy Thayer and drummer Eric Singer.
"Psycho Circus," a Mercury Records release nominally featuring original members Peter Criss on drums and Ace Frehley on guitar, debuted at No. 3 on the Billboard 200, but quickly slid down the chart.
Following its 35th anniversary tour, which primarily played Europe this summer, Kiss is expected to hit North America at some point in 2009.
Friday - February 27, 2009 - 7:00 PM - 9:00 PM
Wentworth Gallery
The Shops at Riverside
171 Riverside Square
Hackensack, NJ
For details on the VIP Reception with Paul Stanley or to RSVP please call 201-488-7661 or 800-732-6140.
Saturday - February 28, 2009- 4:00 PM - 7:00 PM
Wentworth Gallery
The Mall at Short Hills
1200 Morris Turnpike
Short Hills, NJ
The KISS ARMY Australia will hold a Sydney KISSMAS Party at 8PM on Saturday, December 20 at the Forest Inn 4467 Forest Rd, Bexley , NSW. The fan run event features an unplugged set from KISS Tribute band, KISSTERIA, trivia & prizes and official KISS merchandise!
For more information click here.
Celebrate KISSMAS together with other KISS Fans!
Visit www.kissfanclub.de for more information.
Feb. 06 - Kaiserslautern, Germany - Fritz Walter Stadion
Feb. 07 - Freiburg, Germany - Brauerei Ganther
Feb. 08 - Oberhausen, Germany - Schilderhalle
Feb. 09 - Uden, Holland - The Nieuwe Pul
Feb. 10 - Prague, Czech Republic - Retro Hall
Feb. 13 - Roncade, Italy - New Age Club
Feb. 14 - Pinarella di Cervia, Italy - Rock Planet Club
Feb. 16 - Verviers, Belgium - Route 66
Feb. 17 - Memmingen, Germany - Kaminwerke
Feb. 18 - Pratteln, Switzerland - Z7
Feb. 20 - Bergen, Norway - Garage Club
Feb. 21 - Jevnaker, Norway - Glassheim
Feb. 22 - Helsinki, Finland - Nosturi Club
Simmons sees himself as an early prospector of our country's untapped, future musical gold mine, internationally.
Working with Universal, he wants to find bands who posses both that undefinable "it" but also the egoless willingness to let an experienced rocker like him call not just some, but all the important shots.
KISS WILL HIT EDMONTON
In a sit-down interview at the Hotel Mac Friday, he reminisced, threw a proposal to take over the NHL's marketing on the table and confirmed a number of basics. KISS will be touring again this summer and back in Edmonton as soon possible - one of their very first gigs as a band was at the U of A, after all.
Repeatedly referring to himself as someone who sees the big picture, I asked him what he would do if he was president of the United States.
With some shocking and fascinating ideas, the bass legend with the giant tongue did the rest of the talking.
"You couldn't pay me enough. Because a lot of people would try to knock me off. Because I don't give a s---. I have a Schwarzeneggerian point of view. Which is if you have enough money to say, to do ... what you think is right that you're elected for, there are no political repercussions and you don't care. Not about your party, not about anything.
"So Schwarzenegger disagrees with the Republicans down there and wants women to have the right to determine their birthing rights - and the Republicans down there go nuts.
"I (also) like guys like Joe Lieberman, a Democrat who supported John McCain. Because, 'My country, right or wrong,' is actually a foolish idea. No, my country right, and if it's wrong I gotta try and fix it. If your political party's wrong, you've got to have the integrity of self.
"So if I became president, if you deal drugs, I'd have public executions on the spot. Watch how fast drug use goes down. And [points to our photographer] if he's a drug addict, into cocaine and stuff like that, and he's been given (an ultimatum) and you're not off of it, you will find your (butt) in the tundra of Alaska chopping wood.
"Because you're not allowed to be in this society and torture everybody else, by stealing money from your mom (for example), because nobody has the guts in this permissive society to get the cancer out.
"And some of that means that individual rights have to be curtailed. Too (expletive) bad. Because nowadays, everybody locks their doors because they're afraid that, you know, crack addicts will come in and you can't even kill the guy. 'Excessive violence.' What are you talking about? The guy just broke into your home! Kill him!
'YOU'LL BE DEAD'
"So, you don't want to put me in charge. Drug problem? It would disappear. Gangs? I'd have snipers. Ooh, take them out, fast. You won't have gangs for long. [Affects street swagger]: 'Man, we like to go shoot!' [Back to Simmons]: You'll be dead. You won't know who got you."
Simmons widens his scope.
"The problems of the U.S. are the problems of the world because the economic structure is tied in. It used to be based on the gold standard, but don't kid yourself, they're all looking to America, even China. China's got more cash on hand, less debt. But it depends on America, the biggest consumer.
"Barack Obama - I voted for him. I was going to vote for McCain because I don't believe in Mr. Obama's foreign policy.
"Pure fantasy would be, let's pull all the troops and al-Qaeda wakes up and says" - Simmons momentarily pulls off sunglasses for effect - "'Great, we're going to become civilized now! We're not going to strap bombs on our kids and try to blow you up. With nuclear weapons if we can do it.'"
The sunglasses go back on.
"Pure fantasy. That war's going to continue in that part of the world, and Somalia, maybe other parts of the world, for 100 years. And it's worth fighting it. Because it's better to fight a non-nuclear war than a nuclear one. Don't kid yourself.
"And so Mr. Obama has got a two-pronged problem. One, he's the president that's the most socialist and concerned with the welfare of the people. Two, everybody's got to tighten their belts. That means everybody."
Simmons holds up his right hand for effect.
"The working people, who get up everyday, are going to have to live with less. Which is why I believe in a flat tax. It's been proven that a flat tax of about 20% balances the budget in about two years.
"So, I believe in a benevolent dictatorship with Gene Simmons as the dictator. I told you I wouldn't pussyfoot around - that's what I believe in. Give me six months, give me a year. And in that time, dictatorial power - you get it anyway in time of war, and I think you've got war going on. Foreign wars and economic wars.
"But you've got to pay me a lot of money. Cause if I'm going to save you, I'm gonna get paid.
"You guys are good. I never talk about politics."
The L.A. Ri-Ettes are an all-star team comprised of the best skaters from the four L.A. Derby Dolls' teams. From Arizona to Seattle, Santa's Little Helpers are a team of star skaters from different roller derby leagues throughout the nation. These all-star teams will be facing off on the banked-track in a special exhibition roller derby bout.
Derby Dolls is the premiere all-female, banked-track, quad-skating rock 'n' roller derby league in the Southern California area. Athletic and alluring, the L.A. Derby Dolls strive to be the fastest, most fearless ladies in fishnets. Within the league there are four teams: The Fight Crew, The Sirens, The Tough Cookies, and the Varsity Brawlers. While their uniforms may be stylish and their names playful do not be fooled by appearances — the L.A. Derby Dolls only skate pure, unscripted, real roller derby.
For more information, visit www.derbydolls.com/la.
That’s right, for the third time this year, Gene Simmons is going to be gracing Edmonton with his larger-than-life, fire-breathing presence — this time by cutting the ribbon on a gigantic new electronics store.
As part of a somewhat odd PR move, the rock god turned reality-TV star will be signing autographs and welcoming adoring fans into the new Future Shop at South Edmonton on Dec. 6.
The 52,000-square foot store is a new hybrid electronics/high-end instrument big-box, that will sell everything from 100-inch LCD TVs for a cool $30,000, to guitars, drums and exercise equip-ment.
The last time Simmons hit Oil Country in August, he took the city by storm in an Indy-car frenzy, making appearances at various clubs and city hot spots.
Quick Bio: Humble beginnings -- that’s what we like to hear, and Paul Stanley certainly had those. He was born in Queens, New York in 1952, and soon after KISS was formed in 1973, he took up a job as a cabbie to help fund the band’s expenses. Prior to his gig with KISS, Paul Stanley worked in a factory and a deli. He founded his first band, The Post War Baby Boom, when he was 15, before joining Rainbow, then Uncle Joe, and, last but not least, Wicked Lester, in which he met Gene Simmons. Along the way, Paul Stanley has dated numerous celebrities, pillaged numerous cities and rose to the top of his industry. He’s been married twice (his second and current wife is Erin Sutton), he’s a proud and glowing father and he’s a successful painter. His critically acclaimed painting career emerged as a result of the divorce from his first wife in 2000 -- all this from a largely self-taught guitarist from Queens who failed art at the Manhattan School of Music and Art.
The Interview
Q1:First off, congratulations on the future new addition to your family. Do you have any fatherly advice you’d like to offer to our readers who are first-time dads?
Yeah, I’m expecting a daughter in January. If you’re not prepared to surrender the center of the universe, don’t do it.
Q2:Can fans look forward to new KISS material in the near future?
Actually, it looks like we’ll be going in the studio shortly to do the first new KISS album in 10 years. It’s going to be very much a vintage, classic, ‘70s KISS album without much regard to what’s happened since then; it’s back to the roots.
Q3:Generally speaking, you were the last Kiss member to pursue outside interests; how does it feel to be actively promoting your music from Live to Win and One Live KISS? Are there any surprises on the DVD for fans?
Maybe I just do my outside interests more quietly than others; it doesn’t mean less successfully. There’s a difference between standing up and telling people what you’re planning to do and standing up and going and accomplishing something. I tend to fly a bit under the radar. Certainly, doing a solo album 28 years after the first one, there was some time between them, but I wanted to protect KISS and make sure that there was a KISS.
In terms of shooting the DVD, it was very important that it be more than just a cheesy concert video. So it was shot with 14 cameras and a great director, Louis Antonelli. The purpose in my doing that tour was really to reconnect with the roots, my roots, in the sense that I remember going to the Fillmoore in New York where 2,500 people would see Jimi Hendrix or Led Zeppelin or The Who or Derek and the Dominos, and it was really a very communal thing -- [there's just] something about a band on stage communicating and having this bombastic and yet very intimate relationship with an audience.
Q4:How did painting start being more than a personal outlet; how did it become public? What style do you consider yourself?
Doing my art came out of something very solitary and something that I had no intention of showing anybody, and yet once people saw pieces in my house, it became really clear that there was a great demand for my art. Again, it all stems from the foundation, being: I want to please myself. Perhaps the art connects so much with other people because it truly is connected to me in the best way; I’m not second guessing what someone else wants to see, I’m trying to do something I like.
The only thing I can say is consistent in all my paintings is vivid color. Because I’ve had such great success so quickly, people really see me on this journey [and] they’re almost on this journey with me. People see my art taking all kinds of turns because it’s exciting and new for me. It certainly goes from abstract to abstract-impressionist to almost an ‘80s Pop Art feel, so it’s something that’s always changing, but that’s part of the excitement, for me at least. I’m also very grateful to know that people love what I’m doing and it’s not only KISS fans, but [that] it’s finding its way into some collectors’ collections with some other artists that I’m certainly happy and proud to be with.
Q5:What’s your priority right now in terms of promoting: painting or music?
It’s really not about promoting, it’s about doing. Promoting is just the end product of creating. You want people to know what you’re doing if you want to be successful at it, and if people enjoy what you’re doing, you certainly want them to know. I’d have to say that I’ve been devoting a lot of my time to art, although when I was on tour with KISS I never picked up a paint brush or thought about it.
Q6:You’ve also been busy promoting the KISS Alive/35 tour, celebrating the 35th anniversary of KISS. Can you share some details about that?
Alive/35 has been the celebration of 35 years since KISS Alive! We did 30 shows in Europe in seven weeks; it was the biggest most successful KISS tour in Europe, ever. We played the entire KISS Alive! album and we also did about six encores of all kinds of other great classics. It was very invigorating and very reassuring to us that the KISS Army is more than alive and well; it’s vibrant and vicious. We played to about 400,000 people, and we’ll pick up where we left off [in] the middle of next year, summer/fall, and to the States and Europe.
Q7: In your years with KISS, what has been your favorite moment?
Oh my God. I think the most momentous occasion and moment for me was probably in Dayton, Ohio, or Toledo when I realized that we were virtually selling out every show and that was something new for us. And I realized, looking out at a crowd before going on, that we were going to be everything that we planned; we were going to be as big as we designed it and as big as we fought for.
Q8:What’s your favorite KISS album and why?
I think Destroyer is a great album and I think KISS Alive! is a very important album. I love KISS Alive! because it’s the album that broke us on a much bigger scale; it’s the album that made us superstars.
Q9:Back in the ‘80s, a decision was made in order to respect the fans that Vinnie and Carr would have to wear new face makeup; why was the decision made to allow Singer and Thayer to wear the makeup of original members?
It wasn’t to respect the fans; it was a misstep if anything. The idea that we should dilute the four icons, which are world-known (not by name, but by character) and come up with like "Frog Man" or "Turtle Boy" was a big misstep. Those iconic figures are known worldwide; you show anybody in the world a photo of KISS and they’ll tell you it’s KISS. So, it just sold everybody short to think that when somebody left the band that they should take those characters with them. In a sense, we all created each others’ characters because it was the four of us together and the synergy between the four of us that made those characters. Could we have done it on our own? I don’t think so. It was all of us together that came up with it.
Q10:Is there any truth to the rumors about a KISS II reality show?
It’s kind of gotten distorted into something that it really isn’t. The idea that some guys are going to take our place and we’re going to go home is never going to happen. Really, what it was and remains is the idea that Gene and I have created and nurtured something for 35 years… [and] as successful and consistent as we’ve been kind of makes people wonder what it would be like if we put together another band and gave [them] that experience. It’s much closer to that.
Q11:You’ve suffered some physical ailments in recent years; what are you doing to stay in shape these days?
Today I did a workout that would probably give most people a heart attack. My physical injuries (what a lot of them have been) really come from the amount of punishment I [do to] my body. That’s just par for the course. My workout is pretty exhaustive and exhausting; I do a lot of hill-climbing, a lot of abdominal work and crunches, upper body weights, lower body stretching and weights -- it’s a lot of light weights and lots of reps, a lot of floor stuff and core exercises.
Q12:What’s your biggest career secret, and what advice do you have for readers wishing to become rock stars?
My advice to anybody who wants to succeed is: Stop listening to advice. The most important thing is to assess yourself as honestly as possible and then pursue something that you feel you can do. Only a fool would attempt something that they weren’t reasonably sure they could attain; that’s a dangerous waste of time and life. So, if you listen to people who tell you what’s impossible, they’re usually the ones who failed. My advice is always: Don’t listen to advice. You have all the support and knowledge you need inside.
Q13:What’s the one quality you think all men should have?
Integity.
Q14:Who’s the hottest woman alive?
Thank god the world is full of beautiful women. I love women. As an artist and as a man, the aesthetics of women, the physicality of them -- they’re all pretty stunning.
The brainchild of re-mix keyboardist/writer Brian Stewart (BACKSTREET BOYS, ROBERT PLANT, HALL & OATES, POE) and produced by industry veteran Ken Mary (HOUSE OF LORDS, TRIK TURNER, ALICE COOPER, BEACH BOYS), NLO is designed to create a total musical experience combining the powerful drama of Webber and Rice's "Jesus Christ Superstar" with the emotionally moving musical styles of ELECTRIC LIGHT ORCHESTRA, YES, and KANSAS. Vocalists and musicians appearing on NLO have been responsible for the sale of over 200 million albums worldwide and include members and former members of household names such as the BEACH BOYS, SLY AND THE FAMILY STONE, ALICE COOPER, SURVIVOR, STEELY DAN, FIREHOUSE, MEGADETH, SISTER SLEDGE, QUIET RIOT, VANILLA FUDGE, WINGER, BOB CARLISLE, GUNS N' ROSES, GRAND FUNK RAILROAD, KISS, HOUSE OF LORDS, and WHITESNAKE, just to name a few. Live performances will highlight a spectacular light and video presentation, theatrical movements, as well as incredible musicianship all assembled to tell the story of the birth of Jesus Christ over two thousand years ago.
The new nine-track release of NORTHERN LIGHT ORCHESTRA, "The Spirit of Christmas", provides merely a hint of what is to come, with nine additional tracks already in production for next year!
NORTHERN LIGHT ORCHESTRA musicians:
Vocals:
Phil Bardowell (BEACH BOYS, MAGDALEN)
Bob Carlisle ("Butterfly Kisses")
Eddie James (gospel singer)
Jon Gibson (JON GIBSON)
Robin McAuley (SURVIVOR)
Debbie Sledge (SISTER SLEDGE)
Rose Stone (SLY AND THE FAMILY STONE)
Guitars:
Doug Aldrich (WHITESNAKE)
Kendall Bechtel (FIFTH ANGEL)
Lanny Cordola (HOUSE OF LORDS)
Jason Hook (ALICE COOPER, MANDY MOORE)
Bruce Kulick (KISS, GRAND FUNK RAILROAD)
Bill Leverty (FIREHOUSE)
George Lynch (DOKKEN, LYNCHMOB)
Elliot Randell (STEELY DAN)
Bass:
David Ellefson (MEGADETH, F5)
Chuck Wright (QUIET RIOT, VANILLA FUDGE)
Drums:
Ken Mary (ALICE COOPER, HOUSE OF LORDS)
Strings:
Kip Winger (WINGER, ALICE COOPER)
Keys:
Dizzy Reed (GUNS N' ROSES)
Brian Stewart (BACKSTREET BOYS, POE)
For more information, song samples and a list of who's who, go to this location.
ALL TIMES ARE EASTERN
2p-4p - KISS' '98 Dodger Stadium concert from KISSOLOGY Vol. 3
4p-5p - Rock Fest Kiss (an hour of various KISS videos from all eras)
5p-6p - KISS Live from the Summit ('77 Houston, from Vol. 1)
6p-7p - Hangin' With KISS (w/Eddie Trunk: the KISSOLOGY Vol. 1 special)
7p-8p - KISS Live from Sydney (Nov. 22, 1980 from KISSOLOGY 2)
8p-9p - KISSology: The Volume 2 Special
9p-11p - Kiss Live from LA (repeat of '98 Dodger Stadium from Vol. 3)
...stay tuned for more KISSmas TV coming soon!
In a posting on his official web site, Kulick writes, "As you all know, I have been recording [the new CD] for a few years, but I finally do see the light at the end of the tunnel. In the past few months I have really made great progress, doing some killer songs with both Gene [Simmons, KISS] and Nick Simmons [Gene's son], Tobias [Sammet] from EDGUY and AVANTASIA totally rocked on one, and I am making plans for John Corabi to sing a strong rock riff tune very soon in early December. So, I can't wait to finally finish."
Read more at Kulick.net.
Such is the life of KISS bassist-singer-songwriter Gene Simmons, who is in Canada this week checking out new groups to sign to his relaunched Simmons Records label, in a deal with both Universal Music Canada and Belinda Stronach, the former MP turned businesswoman again.
"I want to find the next great three Canadian acts from different genres (each year)," Simmons, 59, said in a chic Toronto hotel bar. "And don't let them go to America. Provide the care and support that they need here, make them monsters here, and then take them to the rest of the world."
One possible signing is Toronto prog-hip-hop act Down With Webster.
"But if they do it the way they want to do it, they will fail," said Simmons, who was attending three nights of music showcases. "You gotta do it my way. It's a benevolent dictatorship."
Simmons Records was originally launched in the late '80s with BMG, and "we had a few hair bands," said Simmons, "and then music changed."
The label was relaunched to put out Simmons' 2004 solo record, A--hole. The new deal partners him with Universal and Stronach, whose family Simmons has known through business.
"I'll be in the studio with the bands," he said. "I'll be there to beat them up regarding their image, their names. If one of them is a drug addict he's going to be gone. And I've had experience with that. There's no room for idiots in bands. Because aside from the luck of the draw, it really is hard work. You have to get up every day, and 'cool' is a moving target, so it's a very hard target to hit."
Simmons is also proposing a reality-TV show for a Canadian network, to document the selected bands' journey to the studio.
"We're going to film the development of these bands, so when the record hits the TV show will hit at the same time."
Speaking of TV, Simmons said he sees no end in sight for his reality show on A&E -- Gene Simmons Family Jewels, which will begin its fourth season in March despite the fact that his partner of 18 years, Canadian Shannon Tweed, is tired of the cameras. Also featured on the hit reality show are the couple's two children, 19-year-old Nick and 16-year-old Sophie.
"Since the kids don't really have to set up lemonade stands and work for a living, they can work on the show 'til I say," Simmons said. "They don't understand that it's actually going to help them in life later on to have done this, but that's my responsibility. Shannon hates to do this. Oh, she can't stand it. 'That's okay, you'll do it anyway.' Who says you have to like everything you do?"
As for his day job with KISS, Simmons confirms the veteran glam-rockers are writing songs for a new album that he expects they will record next year and release next summer. KISS singer-guitarist Paul Stanley will produce the disc. The band will follow the album's release with a limited tour.
"We'll do a handful of shows just to keep in the game (next) summer, maybe 10 (dates), some Canadian shows. I know Halifax is one, but before you get out there and start the baseball season, they hold exhibition games, that's what we're doing. 'Cause once we go out, it's going to be for a year and a half."
As for rumblings of a co-headlining tour with Queen, Simmons said, "Oh, I've heard that, but we don't know until it's real. I would be happy to step up on that stage. I'd (also) love to step up on a stage with the Stones."
Tweed says business is in her partner's nature
What does Shannon Tweed, Gene Simmons' Canadian-born housemate of 18 years, think of him spending so much time now in Canada?
Apparently, it's just another day with Gene.
"Every day of the week I get up and it's some new venture," he said.
"There are any number of new projects all the time, and so she always just rolls her eyes. She goes, 'Oh boy, here we go again.' The point of it is when I wake up and I get passionately involved in something, she knows I'm not going to stop until I make it a success.
"But she knows I've always been in love with Canada."
Unfortunately, that doesn't extend to the outdoors. Simmons recently bought a house in Whistler, B.C., for Tweed and their teenage kids, which was documented on their reality show, A&E's Gene Simmons Family Jewels.
"I went up for a little bit, but I don't like nature," he said. "I like buildings and activity 'cause when I look at a mountain I can't make deals. I get something from cream cheese and a good hot bagel and some jam. I get Jewish soul. You know, my people wandered through the wilderness a long time ago, I'm done with nature. Give me a Four Seasons hotel."
"I have a new business model that will get Canadian bands out on tour, onto television and into the world's mainstream," Simmons said last night as he laid out some of the details behind plans to relaunch his dormant Canadian label, Simmons Records. It's a new joint venture between the star of the hit reality TV series Gene Simmons Family Jewels, Magna auto parts heiress and former Tory/Liberal MP Belinda Stronach, and Universal Music Canada.
"The idea is to have the bands we sign develop a strong Canadian identity first in Canada, then move them onto the world stage," said Simmons, who is in Toronto "for a few days" to finalize the deal, scout talent and take care of the Canadian ends of other businesses – books, comic books, advertising and merchandising – that he helps run under the Los Angeles-based umbrella company Simmons Abramson Marketing.
"For years, the only way Canadian acts could make it was to go to the States and more or less become an American band. In the new music marketing age, that doesn't have to happen."
The connection with Stronach, for four years a silent partner in a Canadian talent development company, Big Bold Sun Music, was coincidental, Simmons said.
"I've known the Stronach family for years. Our company handles the promotion and merchandising for Frank's Energy Drink, which was created by Frank Stronach, Belinda's father.
"When (Universal Music Canada president) Randy Lennox and I were talking about the new label, and the philosophy of new business models, he mentioned Belinda might be looking to invest in a new music company. It made sense to me."
Simmons is looking to sign three Canadian acts a year to his label – "pop, pop-rock and rock, and we're even interested in rap artists, as long as they've got something different going for them, like a sense of humour."
He has his eye on the Toronto progressive hip-hop band Down With Webster as his first signing.
"They're peculiar and eccentric, a cross between Arrested Development, Sly & The Family Stone and Red Hot Chili Peppers," Simmons said. "Their music is like a stew that's made out of familiar ingredients but tastes different because of the way it's blended and cooked."
Acts signed to the label will also star in a Canadian-made reality TV series for a network Simmons is not at liberty to name.
"We'll follow them from the time they start making their first album, and make moves to say goodbye to their families and girlfriends, and go out on the road ... like leaving home to join the circus."
The bands and their music will also be featured in merchandising and product advertising campaigns, and movies and TV shows, Simmons said, adding that financing for the new venture amounts to "millions."
The label will offer its artists a version of the all-inclusive and controversial "360-degree" deal, which will make the record company a partner in touring, merchandising, publishing, licensing, television and product placement revenues, Simmons said.
"Canadian labels have been trying to do something like this for years. What's different this time is me. I know how to make things happen."
A collection of Stanley's acrylic paintings are showing at the Wentworth Gallery at the Court at the King of Prussia Mall. Prices range from $1,500 for limited edition prints to $70,000 for original pieces.
Stanley started painting seriously about eight years ago and told us Friday that it's another outlet "for me to express myself emotionally. . . . I go into my studio and time lapses and everything that's on my mind slips," he says.
As for what the rock legend is listening to now, he says he still loves the classics. "Still Zeppelin, still the Beatles, I like the Raconteurs, I like the Killers," he told us before sharing that he paints to the Sound of Philadelphia groups as well as "the Four Tops, Temps, Martha Wells. To me that music is timeless."
The following artists are scheduled to appear:
Rudy Sarzo (OZZY OSBOURNE, QUIET RIOT, WHITESNAKE, DIO)
Bruce Kulick (KISS)
Tony Montana (GREAT WHITE)
Bobby Rock (SLAUGHTER, VINNIE VINCENT INVASION)
John Corabi (MÖTLEY CRÜE)
Dee Snider (TWISTED SISTER)
Doors open at 5 p.m. and the show starts at 6:30 p.m. Admission is free, but everyone is encouraged to bring a new, unwrapped toy to be collected by the National Guard as part of the Toys For Tots campaign. If you would like to bring canned goods, those will also be donated to families in need with the support of the National Guard.
Come along and let’s celebrate KISSMAS together!
For more information click here.
That's what Gene Simmons would like to know.
"There are disco bands, rap bands, Yiddish folk song bands in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, but not Kiss," the band's outspoken frontman said during a speech at the Billboard Touring Conference on Thursday. "I believe we have more gold records in America than any other group, but it's OK."
Having released their first album in 1974, Kiss easily fulfill the requirement that an eligible act must have released its first single or album at least 25 years prior to the year of nomination.
But the band is not among the nine acts on this year's shortlist, which includes metal icons Metallica, rock guitarist Jeff Beck, and soul singer Bobby Womack. The final five, determined by a ballot of more than 500 industry voters, will be announced in January, ahead of the 24th annual induction ceremony in Cleveland on April 4.
Simmons also took a dig at the top officials at the hall of fame's foundation, which is chaired by Rolling Stone magazine publisher Jann Wenner.
"A lot of those guys on the board can go and get my sandwich when I want, and I mean that in the nicest way," he said.
The speech was filmed for an episode of his reality show "Gene Simmons Family Jewels," currently in its third season on the A&E cable channel.
The track features Jeff Scott Soto (TALISMAN, YNGWIE MALMSTEEN, JOURNEY), Bruce Kulick (KISS, UNION), Bob Kulick, Chris Wyse (THE CULT), Ray Luzier (KORN, DAVID LEE ROTH, ARMY OF ANYONE)
A new e-card for the collection is available at this location.
Referring to Kiss as the "juggernaut of all rock'n'roll brands," Simmons said the band is currently working out future tour details. "We've been talking with [manager Doc McGhee] about Europe and then doing a year-long tour maybe this coming summer, but we'll see," Simmons said. "Kiss and Queen, that would be a smash. That would kill. So far (it's) 50/50."
During the address, Simmons, who is also a reality TV star and entrepreneur, stressed the duties of being a live performer. "I don't care if you're Axl Rose, forgot to tie your shoelaces or your father molested you when you were three -- you're a bitch if you don't show up onstage when it says 9 o'clock," he said, drawing loud applause from the audience.
"You need to have the integrity and self-respect to respect the promoter who paid you the money in advance, the hall and the people who makes all our lives possible," he continued.
Speaking to an audience of primarily concert promoters, venue officials and booking agents, Simmons warned those in the live entertainment industry that it wouldn't be wise to lower concert ticket prices. "Don't do that, you're training an entire generation of people to pay less for something and then more for something else," he said. "They won't know what the value is and they'd rather pay less every time."
Simmons stressed that the touring business needs to quickly think about the future of its model. "Thank God you're the last vestiges of a dying breed, because the record industry is already dead, because we trained the people [that] they don't have to pay for stuff that they used to pay for," he said. "The record industry allowed that and people are shocked they're out of business."
Meanwhile, Simmons expressed his discontent with the fact that Kiss, which he co-founded in 1972, has not yet been inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. "A lot of those guys on the board can go and get my sandwich when I want, and I mean that in the nicest way," he said. "There are disco bands, rap bands, Yiddish folk song bands in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, but not Kiss. I believe we have more gold records in America than any other group, but it's OK."
Billboard executive director of content and programming for touring and live entertainment Ray Waddell conducted today's Q&A with Simmons. The keynote address was filmed for an episode of his A&E reality show "Gene Simmons Family Jewels," currently in its third season.
This "lost toy" was apparently only offered for sale at a few of the shows on the tour and was quickly forgotten by the KISS Army — who (at the time) might not have been able to afford such a high-end item. The metal key chain bears the band's official merchandise marking "Copyright 1976 Aucoin by agreement with 'KISS.'"
This virtual prototype item is only one of 2,000 items to be offered by former "KISS Alive Forever" co-author Curt Gooch. Other high-end items to be included in the auction: a Paul Stanley smashed stage guitar, an original KISS-Hotel Diplomat concert poster from 1973, and even a Gene Simmons blood cup plus several 1970s signed KISS items.
A short interview with Simmons conducted today on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange can be viewed at 236.com.
KISS rhythm guitarist/vocalist Paul Stanley has confirmed to the Clog that the band are seriously considering recording a new album. Rumours of a brand new KISS release first surfaced last week on photographer Ross Halfin’s blog. Now Geoff Barton has taken it upon himself to grab the Classic Rock poker and agitate the embers of speculation (poetic, huh?!).
Barton recently talked to Stanley and asked him:
What does the future hold for KISS?
It looks like we’ll be touring Europe as well as the States next year. You’ll be getting more of what you saw at the Download festival this past summer – the KISS Alive! vibe amped up to the max. There might even be a new KISS album at some point. I have been ambivalent to the idea in the past but I’m much more open to it now.
Why is that?
Well, I thought that I'd be content for KISS to remain a heritage act, just playing our greatest hits – Detroit Rock City and all that. But the new KISS line-up with Tommy Thayer (guitar) and Eric Singer (drums) is proving to be so good, so strong in spirit, it would be interesting to see how we perform in the studio. I must stress that no recording time has been booked at this point. But it if we were to go into the studio, the intention would be to make a KISS album in the style of our 1970s recordings. A classic KISS album, unmistakably.
(Read more in the January issue of Classic Rock, on sale December 10.)
In 1973, Paul Stanley painted a star on his face and became a rock star. It seems fitting that he's now enjoying a successful career as an artist 35 years after he helped create one of the most well-known rock bands in the world.
As lead singer and rhythm guitarist for Kiss, Stanley is a master at performing in front of tens of thousands of screaming fans night after night.
As a painter he's learning the joy of interacting with a smaller and more subdued audience. He will do just that this weekend with three art show appearances in Florida at Wentworth Galleries in Orlando, Palm Beach Gardens and Boca Raton.
"Well obviously I've got a shirt on and I'm not screaming and I'm not blowing things up," Stanley joked via phone from his Beverly Hills residence regarding the difference between Paul Stanley the artist and Paul Stanley the rock'n'roll front man. "It's a different atmosphere and a different arena so to speak.
"The collectors certainly are there in good numbers, and then there are people who perhaps have a connection to the band or through that a curiosity of what I was doing. And there are people who have come into the galleries, so I'm told, that inquire about pieces without knowing who did them. It runs the gamut.
"There are certainly people coming into the galleries who would never go to a Kiss concert, and there are certainly people at Kiss concerts who will never go to a gallery. It's nice to see somewhat of a mixture of both."
Stanley, 56, said he's done about 20 art shows in the past 18 months. Fans hoping to get some face time with the rock legend may be disappointed. The rocker-turned-painter said it's just not possible to meet with everyone who comes out.
"Because of the size of the crowd I don't get to meet everybody. It's impossible," he said. "Unless you're actually purchasing a piece we really don't get a chance to spend time together. I certainly make sure I come out and say a mass hello to the people in the gallery, but beyond that it's really a matter of practicality. It's not an autograph session and it's not a memorabilia session. It's an art gallery."
For those who shell out the cash for a piece of Paul Stanley art there is a VIP reception and a bit more personal attention from the man himself.
"Fame for me was never about getting away from the people who made me famous, so anytime I can do something that connects with people either through art or music or theater, I like to meet those people," he said.
Interested in a Paul Stanley painting? Prices start at $1,500 and climb from there according to Wentworth Gallery president/owner Michael O'Mahony, who said Stanley's art has generated "well over $2 million in the past year and a half."
Not bad for a kid from Queens who failed art at the High School of Music and Art (better known as the "Fame" school from the 1978 television movie that later became a series.)
Stanley called the quick success of his art sales "staggering" but said painting is not about the money.
"I was never going to be a starving artist, so I didn't have to worry about the rent," he said. "I started painting for myself without any ambition to show my pieces to anybody. It was purely a kind of cathartic means of self expression, very personal and solitary. When people at my house would ask who did a particular piece hanging on the wall, and it was mine, I realized that I was connecting with other people."
While Stanley's celebrity as a music icon garners some obvious attention, O'Mahony said the paintings are selling on their own merit.
"I'm an art dealer, not a rock'n'roll impressario," said O'Mahony. "I told Paul 'you're a famous guy, and that can help get your foot in the door,' but (the artwork) was good. It was very good."
O'Mahony said he's "sold a lot of Paul's paintings to very serious (art) collectors."
Painting is not the first time Stanley has stepped off the arena rock stage to try his hand at other forms of art and performance. In 1999 he performed two stints as the Phantom in Andrew Lloyd Webber's "Phantom of the Opera" in Toronto. As a musician, Stanley has always strived to play for the masses rather than the critics. He approaches his other ventures in much the same manner.
"Art and theater have such incredibly elitist connotations and connotations of certain snobbery that is intimidating to people on the street, and it's kind of designed that way," he said. "I think there's a segment of the population that wants everyone else to believe that they either don't belong at those kind of events or that they don't know enough to have an opinion. And that's crazy. You don't need any educations to have an opinion, because the only opinion that ever matters is yours."
That notwithstanding, Stanley said he enjoys meeting with fans to discuss what his artwork means to him.
"I always think that when you can meet an artist and know what's behind a piece of art, that's such a bonus," he said.
Fancy painting aside, Stanley assures his fans that his rocker days are far from over. Coming off their Alive 35 tour of Europe, Kiss is still wowing audiences. More European dates and a U.S tour is forthcoming in 2009, and a possible new studio album is not out of the question in the future.
"I was against it for quite awhile, but I'm toying with the idea that perhaps we'll go in the studio and make another album," Stanley said.
Kiss's longevity and multiple lineup changes have been the butt of many pop culture jokes, but Stanley said the current version of the band is perfect for its time and place.
"This band is more Kiss in reality than Kiss was in quite sometime," he said, alluding to a myriad of personal and professional problems that plagued the band since Stanley and Gene Simmons reunited with original members Peter Criss and Ace Frehley in 1996.
Currently Kiss is Stanley, Simmons, drummer Eric Singer (who replaced Criss, who replaced Singer, who replaced Eric Carr, who replaced Criss) and guitarist Tommy Thayer (who replaced Frehley, who replaced Bruce Kulick, who replaced Mark St. John, who replaced Vinnie Vincent, who replaced Frehley).
In 2006 Stanley released a solo album "Live to Win" and toured the nation without the trademark fireworks and blood-spitting of a typical Kiss show. The Live to Win shows were smaller and more intimate performances where Stanley was able to play a wider range of material from his discography, including a number of cuts from his 1978 solo record.
Playing as a solo act is something else Stanley would like to do if his schedule permits.
"I had a great time. I loved doing it, loved my band, and if there was time I'd love to do it again. It's really tough to find time to do everything and also be a husband and a dad and everything else."
Paul Stanley in Orlando:
When: 1-4 p.m. Sunday
Where: Wentworth Gallery at The Mall at Millenia, 4200 Conroy Road, Orlando
Info: Call 407-903-9055 for details or to pre-purchase artwork
Admission: Free and open to the public
Billboard executive director of content and programming for touring and live entertainment Ray Waddell will conduct the Q&A with Simmons on Nov. 20 at the Roosevelt Ballroom. The Q&A will be filmed for an episode of his A&E reality show "GENE SIMMONS Family Jewels," currently in its third season.
"GENE SIMMONS' fingerprints are on virtually all segments of the music industry, particularly as it relates to the live music business," Waddell says. "We are thrilled to have him on board for our milestone fifth Touring Conference and we know his insight and the 'GENE SIMMONS world view' will be a compelling must-see for our attendees. Buckle up."
Born in Haifa, Israel, in 1949 and the only child of a Holocaust survivor, Simmons found global fame as the co-founder and bass player for KISS, which got its start in 1972. KISS scored eight top 40 hits in the '70s and was one of the leading hard rock acts of its day.
The band remains a touring, licensing and merchandising powerhouse, with its officially licensed ventures including the KISS Coffeehouse in Myrtle Beach, S.C., the first in a planned chain of franchises; KISS comic books, KISS condoms and Kiss-branded Visa cards.
Simmons also pursues other business interests independent of the band. His Simmons Abramson Marketing is the worldwide marketing/branding entity for the IndyCar Series, and he and co-CEO Rich Abramson's NGTV.com (No Good TV) is a YouTube sensation.
His other businesses include a line of T-shirts and accessories called GENE SIMMONS Moneybag, the Simmons Comic Group, Simmons Records and his publishing imprint Simmons Books, which published his best-selling "Sex Money KISS" and "Ladies of the Night."
Now in its fifth year, the Billboard Touring Conference unites today's top touring professionals to discuss the current state of the industry through potent panel topics, provocative discussions, and productive round-tables, as well as networking opportunities with touring industry power players and decision makers.
The conference is capped off by the Billboard Touring Awards on Nov. 20, which honors the concert industry's top artists and professionals based on actual data compiled through the Billboard Boxscore chart.
MEGADETH, KISS, BLACK SABBATH, DIO, BADLANDS, THE CIRCLE JERKS, THE CULT, RATT, LILLIAN AXE, DEEP PURPLE, L.A. GUNS, WARRANT, WHITE LION, ROBERT PLANT'S THE HONEYDRIPPERS, IGGY POP BAND, HANOI ROCKS, ALICE COOPER BAND, SLASH'S SNAKEPIT, DANGEROUS TOYS, JOHNNY THUNDERS BAND, ZEBRA, DAVID BOWIE BAND, ACE FREHLEY BAND, RAINBOW, BILLY IDOL BAND, ROGER DALTREY BAND, QUIET RIOT, CIRCLE II CIRCLE, RIOT.
The set also includes liner notes by legendary record producer Ron Nevison (LED ZEPPELIN, THE WHO) and a bonus CD sampler featuring millennium rock/metal bands influenced by LED ZEPPELIN.
For more information, visit www.versaillesrecords.com.
About 6 months ago I began working with Paul and Washburn’s Rudy Schlacher, Nick Ellingsworth, Bill Abel and Terry Atkins. The project I came up with was to reach out and find a way to get more organic with the Washburn Paul Stanley Preacher. To get more ‘raw’ while still remaining a fully spec’d and classy version of the Preacher.
I also had a goal of possibly getting a USA Washburn Custom Shop Preacher with a street price of just under $2K! That would include hard-shell case and a Certificate of Authenticity signed by Paul!
And I’m here today to announce the PS5. A USA Custom Shop Paul Stanley Preacher guitar - exclusive to Boogie Street Guitars!
The guitar has true ‘organic’ feel in that it is completely - OIL FINISHED! Plus - the guitar will have an ALL MAHGAONY body back AND carved top! Plus the neck will made of MAPLE! Again - all with an OIL FINISH!
The guitar is far from a stripped down model! The body has black binding. The hardware is gold including a TonePros bridge and Grover 18-1 tuners with Keystone buttons.
The headstock on the BSG commissioned PS5 run of Preachers is with full art-deco inlay! Just like the PS9200 USA Customs!
The 22 fret fingerboard is Ebony with large Mother of Pearl blocks starting on the 1st fret…spec’d just like the PS9200.
The first group of numbered PS5 USA Custom Preachers will have Gold covered Seymour Duncan humbuckers. In the bridge will be a JB humbucker. The neck will have a Pearly Gates humbucker.
We expect these guitars to hit around Decmeber or the first of January and have a street price of UNDER $2K for everything! Now - how about that!
For more information email me at eric@boogiestreet.com or call me directly at 412-716-3150.
There are photos at http://boogiestreet.com/?p=537.
Along with Henry Juszkiewicz, Chairman and CEO of Gibson Guitar, Ace spoke about his guitar of choice and demonstrated some of his signature riffs.
Check out photos from the event at the Talking Metal blog.
The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum, Case Western Reserve University and Gibson Guitar is honoring the extraordinary Les Paul with a week-long series of events culminating in a retrospective of Les Paul's life and legacy at Case Western University and an all-star tribute concert at PlayhouseSquare's State Theater.
Stay tuned to KOL for additional VH1 / KISSOLOGY programming news!
CLICK this link to watch the KISSOLOGY commercial.
"I had breakfast with [KISS guitarist/vocalist Paul Stanley [on Sunday, November 9]. Paul told me they may make a KISS record, which he'll produce. A real '70s KISS-style record. If Paul can stop painting, which is his other career."
Yet his new line of “regular” clothing, if that term can be used with anything related to Simmons, has Simmons & designer Jason Dussault excited as the pair celebrated their first anniversary of their Los Angeles store this Saturday November 8th.
Canadian Jason Dussault also nicknamed “Deuce” of Dussault Apparel and Gene Simmons launched their first Los Angeles store exactly a year ago while filming “Family Jewels”.
The store is located at 8010 Melrose and their only Westcoast store besides the Kustom retailer in New York’s Financial district.
Their first two clothing lines, Dussault Apparel and Moneybag were earlier available over the internet and at the Vancouver flagship store Deuce.
The concept of the store is “Dussault Apparel Motel” and the setup is a hotellobby at the checkout counter.
The Motel store sells street garb — a ready-to-wear collection of high fashion hoodies, denim jeans, tops and exclusive luggage from their Moneybag label.
Dussault said “Gene Simmons and I started the Moneybag label in May 2007 but Gene owns the logo for over 25 years that he uses for his record company, book imprints and magazines”
The Moneybag Limited Edition products and Gene’s t-shirt line are truly one of a kind custom feel because every piece is hand painted and detailed.
The line has a touch of nostalgic inspired materials, each t-shirt is made of two separate colors of cotton,woven together-then bleached and hand dyed.
The garments are signed by Simmons himself and no shirts are exactly the same.
Before shipping the T-shirts are enzymed-washed to soften and appliqued with embroidery.
For Spring 2009 fashion the designer team decided to debut a new line called “Trashed” denim at Phoenix fashion week in October earlier this year. The “Trashed line” later continued its launch in New York and was presented at a special event sponsored by Pave’liquer at Kustom retail store during the fashionweek here in LA .
Gene and Jason make people understand that “Each piece of “Trashed” denim is hand-sewn, hand-painted, dyed and washed thirteen times.
This process creates depth and layers and make them very unique to look at-just like 70’s rockstar”
Ten dollars of every 375$ Trashed jeans sold is donated to Canuck Place Children’s Charity and five dollars of other Dussault jeans line.
During the same New York launch Jason Dussault and jewerly designer Malcom Norman presented two pair of denim jeans embellished with a marquis rose gold wallet chain containing 1080 grams of 18K gold,colored diamonds and carat rubies.The jeans are worth a whopping 250.000$ each.
A prototype worth 10.000 $ was recreated in bronze with semi-precious stones during Phoenix fashionweek.
Dussault Apparel is best known as a young line of high end urban street wear.
The design has always been inspired by rockers, tattoo artists,rappers and 70’s fashion icons.
Vancouver based Jason Dussault says he wanted to “create a line that blends a sense of nostalgia with promises of a better future”.
He likes material like Chinese silk linings and ornate patchwork on the one of a kind hoodies-which are sold hand painted and embellished with tattoo inspired embroidery.
The women he likes in curve hugging jeans-skinny cigarette style in colors grey, black and blue.
The men in rockabilly style jeans with wider legs in red,white and blue selvege.
The Bloodline Design is the name of the jewerly line at the Dussault Motel and the result of the very first collaboration with jewerlydesigner Norman.
All jewerly are handmade and manufactured in sterling,gold and bronze. The pieces are inspired by the 70’s rock era and featured in fleur bucklets,demon rings,skull bracelets and razorblade necklaces. Bloodline’s jewerly has been seen in films like Fantastic 4,X-Men 3 and Cat Woman.
His latest design is featured in Nickelback’s European tour and on magician Criss Angel for his “Believe” show .Even Marah Carey has carried special manufactured Bloodline design on stage.
Since last year Dussault Apparel has unveiled a program to become a carbon neutral company, and has chosen Carbonfund.org as its partner.They want to promote environmental awareness about global warming and announce the creation of the carbon conscience program.
The first step taken by the company has been to determine its associated carbon dioxide emission footprint and its annual energy usage.
Dussault Apparel is willing to continue make donations to carbonfund.org and to help completely stop its carbon footprint to zero.
A unisex silver ring has been created for the cause and featuring the word “carbon” engraved on the outside.
VP Corporate Communicator Tina Baird announced during the first ear of opening there is plans to open up a Dussault Motel in New York and Tokio in the near future.
Wentworth Gallery - Prospect Square - 1025 Prospect Street - La Jolla, CA
Friday, December 5, 2008 -- 7-9 PM
Saturday, December 6, 2008 -- 6-9 PM
For details on the VIP Reception with Paul Stanley or to RSVP please call 858-551-7071 or 800-732-6140.
Here are the stations for the second round of Paul's 18-city Radio Media Tour in support of 'ONE LIVE KISS'.
The three hour tour will take place Monday, November 10 from 8:00 a.m. until 11:00 a.m. Eastern Time.
8:00 WRIT - Milwaukee - Dave & Meg
8:10 WHCN - Hartford, CT - Renee DiNino
8:20 KQRC - Kansas City - Johnny and Carrie
8:30 WXZZ - Lexington - Twitch
8:40 KTEG - Albuquerque - Buck & Dex
8:50 KLBJ - Austin - Dale, Bob & Charlie
9:00 WRQK - Canton, Ohio - Todd Fisher
9:10 KBOB - Quad Cities - Dave & Darren
9:20 KUFX - San Jose-SF - Greg Kihn
9:30 WKKT - Charlotte - Paul & Sarah
9:40 WXKR - Toledo - Mark Benson
9:50 WHTZ - New York - David Brody
10:00 KLSZ - Fort Smith - Geri Richards
10:10 WRBT - Harrisburg - Nancy & Newman
10:20 KXGE - Dubuque - Scott Thomas
10:30 WBNS - Columbus - Charley & Kate
10:40 KZOZ - San Luis Obispo - Jeff, Jeremy & Lindsay
10:50 KDKB - Phoenix - J.R., Mary & Watson
Simmons earned $500,000 for the Glazer Pediatrics AIDS Foundation but he declined on the $1,000,000 question that came from fifth-grade science. The question was, "What does the K represent on the Periodic Table of Elements?" If he would have answered the question, his answer would have been Krypton, which was incorrect. The correct answer was Potassium.
"Now that we have a firm release date for the new GUNS N' ROSES CD, one of the most popular questions I get through this site and on the radio shows is, 'Where's the new Ace [Frehley] album?' Ace has been asking me to come to his home studio and give him my thoughts on what he is working on for a few months, but with my schedule and upcoming TV show on VH1 Classic, it's been a little hard to free up the time.
"Well, I finally made the trip to his place in Westchester, New York yesterday [November 5] and we had a great time as always.
"Ace has been a close friend for over 20 years now and was the first artist I ever signed and worked with at a label in the '80s. Amazingly he has not done a new CD since. Obviously, much has gone on in his life since 'Trouble Walkin'', KISS reunions, career ups and downs, and most importantly he got sober. Another huge thing that has happened is a radical change in the music business and how people make and market records and how many they can sell. Ace knows he can trust me and knows I will give it to him straight, which is why he really wanted me to come and help him make some decisions on what to do next and hear where he's at with a CD he has been talking about for years.
"Ace lives in the woods of Westchester, New York. A really nice country area. There are a couple houses and his studio on the property. The studio is a converted barn. A really cool place, to say the least. The studio is a very lived in rock and roll place. Original KISS gold and platinum records are on the walls, many falling apart in the frame due to being over 30 years old. Still cool and authentic. Other KISS/Ace memorabilia from the years is all over the place, including stuff from the reunion and some of Ace's KISS stage clothing.
"Ace has been a close friend forever, but it's still so cool as a fan to take all this in and go back in time. We even looked at some photos from the '80s and early '90s from the original solo bands and tours and it brought back many memories! Needless to say there are guitars and instruments all around and a really cool main control room to the studio with the latest computer recording equipment. Ace was one of the first guys I ever knew really into computers, so it's natural he has fully embraced it for recording.
"As for the music. I first heard three songs Ace was mixing about a year ago at a studio in New York City. All sounded good to me, but obviously I hadn't lived with them like Ace has. He now has about 15 total songs, six of which have been mixed by two different people. Jay Messina, who has worked with KISS and AEROSMITH, to name a few, in the past, and Michael Barbiero, best know for the production team in the '80s of Thompson/Barbiero (TESLA, GUNS N' ROSES) also mixed some stuff. There are also many songs not mixed, some not complete, and some still being written. You can already see where the delays are. This is an album in several phases of completion. If he wanted to put out a five-ong EP it's pretty much done, but the challenge is figuring out the direction he wants the album to be, what songs make it, and what mixes. Some of the songs I heard include 'Sister', which has been around for years and was played live, 'Pain In The Neck', which Ace said could be the album's title, 'Genghis Khan', which may be an instrumental, and my favorite so far, 'Change The World', which has a very heavy BEATLES vibe.
"As far as the direction, the album is more in line with classic KISS than anything that has been on any original members' solo releases thus far. Gene's [Simmons] last album was a little quirky and all over the map, Paul's [Simmons] glossy and pop leaning, Peter's [Criss] more ballads- and standards-influenced. This is straight-down-the-middle, in-your-face, loud-guitars hard rock. Exactly what KISS fans would expect.
"I urged Ace to make a CD for him and his fans, not to follow trends. It was important I stressed to him that the days of having a hit record are likely over. Nothing to do with material, just the reality of the business now for classic-based artists (of course, I'd love to be wrong!).
"The guitars sounded great on what I heard and Ace's playing was in top form. He sings lead on all the songs, is producing the record and wrote everything. The band on the recordings is his current touring band. Most striking to me about what I heard was Ace's voice. It has never sounded better on record. Clean and in that high register, with the Ace attitude. He credited this to his sobriety, as well as the quality of his playing.
"All in all, what I heard is very promising, but I would not expect it to be released anytime soon. Ace still has some questions to answer about this material, what will make the CD, what it will sound like, and he is still getting new song ideas, which is making him rethink things. When you have your own home studio, no label telling you deadlines, and the demand from the fans that want an Ace album as good as the first FREHLEY'S COMET or 'Trouble Walkin'' (or, of course, the '78 all-time classic!). There is no release date except for when Ace feels its ready. He also has some interest from a few labels and has to decide if he wants to go that route or do what many artists are now doing and sell direct. He also needs to get up an official website. So there is still much to do on the business and recording fronts, and again, no deadline but his own. He understands fans are frustrated and want new music from him, but until he thinks it right, it's not coming out. I am helping him where I can and can tell you I really think it will make KISS fans and Ace fans happy when it does come out, but the release is not imminent, in my judgment.
"After the studio, we went to dinner and caught up on all sorts of stuff. For me personally, I am most proud of the man Ace has become the last few years. He is sober, logical, and reflective about his career. Very simply, he now 'gets it' and is a survivor, to say the least. I've seen everything over the decades with the guy, but I am most proud for the changes he made in his lifestyle. If he stays focused, maybe brings in an outside producer, finds a manager he likes (all things he's considering) and maybe makes some personal deadlines, we might see this sometime next year. But again, don't hold me to that. It all depends on how he's feeling about things. Trust me when I say that it exists, it rocks, and I think KISS/Ace fans will love it when it's ready, if he stays on track. I, of course, will keep you posted."
In an early 2008 interview with Billboard, Frehley stated about his forthcoming solo album, "Basically, I'm trying to get back into the mindset I was in when I did my first solo record [1978's 'Ace Frehley']. That record seemed to have all the elements everybody liked — a real cool instrumental, a hit single, some real heavy rockers, a nice variety of different genres of music."
Among his favorite new tracks are "A Little Below the Angels", hard-rocking "Pain in the Neck" and an instrumental called "Fractured Quantum", which is a follow-up to his previous instrumentals "Fractured Mirror" and "Fractured Too". Another favorite is "groove song" titled "Genghis Khan", which he likens in tone to LED ZEPPELIN's "Kashmir".
Frehley told MyrtleBeachOnline.com that he's shooting for 12 tracks on his next album, his first in 18 years. Studio work has spanned more than 6 months, and some of the songs go back 12 years.
Frehley recently spent time on the road fronting a band that featured second guitarist Derek Hawkins, drummer Scot Coogan (ex-BRIDES OF DESTRUCTION) and bassist Anthony Esposito (ex-LYNCH MOB).
In a posting on his official web site, Kulick writes, "Tobias Sammet is not a name you all know, but he fronts a band called EDGUY from Germany and is also in another one that is very popular called AVANTASIA. I knew of him from KISS drummer Eric Singer [who played on the most recent AVANTASIA album] and finally heard his voice in Japan this past February when someone played the AVANTASIA CD at the meet-and-greet before our show in Tokyo. I asked Eric about him and he told me how talented he is and I should contact him. I had a song for 'BK3' that I had reserved for Gene [Simmons], which gave birth to a completely new different song that I told you all about in previous blogs. So what could I do with this great track???
"Fast forward to Jeremy [Rubolino; producer/engineer] and [me] going to the Key Club (yes, that place! For those who remember, a crazy time I had back in 2003 when some guy with a gun got crazy, and I was lucky to see the morning light) for a performance of EDGUY with Tobias leading the German hard rock band. They were great, and I was really impressed with the band and how well Tobias sang. Of course, I had sent him the song as an MP3 weeks before to see what he thought and he was excited to work on it. We made plans to record while he had a few days off in L.A. before his long trip back to Germany.
"We had dinner at the famous Rainbow on Sunset Blvd. the night after his show, and then the next day it was time to hear what he came up with. We discussed lyrics on the Internet and we had agreed on an old title I had for a song called 'I Am The Animal'. I was really blown away with what he sang me in his hotel room, and I knew the next day he would get the song done right. The day we planned to record I figured it would be cool to get some pics of Tobias at the famous RockWalk on Sunset by Guitar Center.
"After that we were off to the studio in the [San Fernando] valley. With some beers close by (he is German, you know!), Tobias made his magic and Jeremy and I were completely blown away. His voice is powerful and melodic, and we had him do backgrounds and some doubles for texture. A perfect session from a cool guy. I hope to work with him again in the future.
"So this track is a bit of a reunion of sorts as Eric Singer is on drums and, of course, he and Tobias have a connection, and I don't have to remind you of the great stuff with KISS that Eric and I have accomplished in the studio. So, obviously, I can't wait for you all to hear this song!"
Check out photos at Kulick.net.
Watch the entire documentary in six parts below. It can also be seen and downloaded at NRK.no.
Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5, Part 6
Mark Burnett Productions, headed by renowned television producer Mark Burnett, is the home of iconic series like "Survivor," "The Apprentice" and "Are You Smarter Than a 5th Grader," among others. Burnett himself has been inducted into the Broadcast and Cable Hall of Fame and is credited with starting the non-scripted television craze in North America.
NO GOOD TV is the leader in unscripted, celebrity based entertainment programming. Free from gossip and paparazzi fare, the network has redefined original broadband entertainment. First launched in February, 2007, NO GOOD TV has exceeded the 300 million clip view milestone on YouTube in record time.
The first project announced is a late night talk show hosted by Carrie Keagan. Keagan, a break-out talent in her own right, is the main anchor for NO GOOD TV, as well as the network's EVP of Programming. In addition to the aforementioned late night talk show, NO GOOD TV and Mark Burnett Productions will also be co-developing game shows, unscripted entertainment series, scripted comedies, movies and specials. These co-productions will be created to air across multiple programming platforms in North America and abroad, including broadcast, cable, online and wireless.
"As the media landscape changes, creating content for multiple platforms is essential to success," said Mark Burnett, President of Mark Burnett Productions. "NO GOOD TV already built a great brand, and we look forward to collaborating with them to extend its reach."
"Rich Abramson and I are proud to announce that Media Icon Mark Burnett has joined our family," said Gene Simmons, Chairman of the Board of NO GOOD TV. "Mark is an extraordinary visionary, entrepreneur; creator and producer. He has created some of the most successful television shows worldwide and we look forward to a long and fruitful relationship."
"Mark Burnett is a singular and distinguished pioneer in entertainment and I can think of no other partner more perfect than he to help take the NO GOOD TV brand to the next level," said Kourosh Taj, Founder & Co-President of NO GOOD TV. "We set out to push the envelope and we're honored to continue our tradition of trailblazing with the original trailblazer himself!"
Along with Henry Juszkiewicz, Chairman and CEO of Gibson Guitar, Ace will speak about his guitar of choice and will demonstrate some of his signature riffs. This "guitar clinic" will prove that in the right hands, a guitar is an uplifting beacon of creativity.
The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum, Case Western Reserve University and Gibson Guitar will honor the extraordinary Les Paul with a week-long series of events culminating in a retrospective of Les Paul's life and legacy at Case Western University and an all-star tribute concert at PlayhouseSquare's State Theater.
Artists that have been added to the lineup include Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee Duane Eddy as well as Jeff "Skunk" Baxter, Eric Carme, Lonnie Mack, and Katy Moffatt.
The concert will also feature Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductees James Burton, Billy Gibbons and the VENTURES along with Jennifer Batten, Dennis Coffey, Lenny Kaye, Steve Lukather, Barbara Lynn, Alannah Myles, Richie Sambora and Slash.
Tickets are $30, $40 and $50 and can be purchased at playhousesquare.org and at the PlayhouseSquare box office (216) 241-6000 or by visiting www.rockhall.com. A limited number of Rock Hall VIP event packages (priced at $250 and $500 each) are available by calling (216) 515-1207.
"Caring for children and their medical needs is so important to me. Children's Hospital Los Angeles is dedicated to providing the highest quality pediatric care anywhere in the world and they make it happen every day," said Tommy in a statement.
A photo of Thayer meeting some of the senior physicians and staff during his recent visit to the hospital to present the first check to Henri Ford, Vice President, and Surgeon-in-Chief, can be found at this location.
Hughes & Kettner conducted an interview with Tommy Thayer in May 2008 while KISS was in Cologne, Germany rehearsing for this past summer's European tour. Watch the seven-minute chat here.
Singer Ozzy Osbourne was given the living legend award by ex-Guns N' Roses guitarist Slash.
Kiss guitarist Paul Stanley was showman of the year while Australian rockers Airborne were named best new band.
The central London ceremony also celebrated the 10th anniversary of Classic Rock magazine.
Editor-in-chief Scott Rowley said the rock scene was in rude health.
"Ozzy's a household name and bands like AC/DC, Led Zeppelin, Metallica and Guns N' Roses are getting more headlines and front covers than ever, breaking box office records and topping the charts," he added.
"The Classic Rock Roll of Honour is a celebration of rock music as the most vital and vibrant genre of music."
Foo Fighters singer Dave Grohl accepted the band's award in a video-taped acceptance speech.
Led Zeppelin won event of the year for their tribute gig to late Atlantic Records boss Ahmet Ertegun at the O2 in London last December.
It was their first show for 19 years.
http://www.nrk.no/lydverket/tidenes-verste-rockefilm/#more-4935.
NRK has made the following presentation of the documentary:
On Wednesday Lydverket will show a documentary about KISS where current and former band members as well as other associates tell the unmasked story about the madness we know as Kiss. To record a TV film in 1978 was just one of the things Kiss did to make money out of the Kiss brand and some 30 years later Paul Stanley has got a pragmatic view on this "acting" career. - What doesn't kill makes you stronger, Stanley says to Lydverket about his experiences from the cult film "Kiss Meets The Phantom Of The Park".
WZLX - Karlson & McKenzie Interview.
WNKS - ACE & TJ Interview.
Feb. 12 - Legend 54 – Milan, Italy
Feb. 13 - New Age Club - Roncade (Treviso), Italy
Feb. 14 - Rock Planet - Pinarella Di Cervia (Ravenna), Italy
Feb. 18 - Z7 Konzertfabrik - Pratteln (Basel), Switzerland
Feb. 21 - Glassheim - Jevnaker, Norway
PAUL STANLEY Friday 10/31/08 interviews (all in the A.M.):
8:00 KSLX Phoenix - Mark Mayfield
8:10 WZLX Boston - Karlson & McKenzie
8:20 WGRF Buffalo - Larry, Rob and Chris
8:30 WLVQ Columbus - Wags and Elliott
8:40 WHEB Boston-Portsmouth - Greg, Blacksmith, Roadkill & Laura
8:50 WPLR Hartford-New Haven - Chaz and A.J.
9:00 WAXQ New York City - Jim Kerr
9:10 Mancow National (32 stations) - Mancow Muller
9:20 WNKS Charlotte - Ace and T.J.
9:30 Bob&Tom National (150 stations) - Bob and Tom
9:40 WHQG Milwaukee - Bob and Brian
9:50 KYCH Portland - Dr. Doug and Skippy
10:00 KZPS Dallas-Ft. Worth - Bo and Jim
10:10 WRKR Grand Rapids - Mike, Diane and Kluck
10:20 KISW Seattle - B.J. Shea
10:30 WHMH Minneapolis - Kevin Key
10:40 WRIF Detroit - Mike and Trudi
10:50 Premiere National - Sal Cirrincione
*** Oct. 28 at Divebar - Special guests: Ron Keel (KEEL), Paul Shortino (ROUGH CUTT, QUIET RIOT)
*** Oct. 30 at Wasted Space (Hard Rock Hotel) - Special Guest: Eric Dover (SLASH'S SNAKEPIT, JELLYFISH, ALICE COOPER)
*** Oct. 31 at Diablo's Cantina (Monte Carlo) - Special Guest: Eric Dover (SLASH'S SNAKEPIT, JELLYFISH, ALICE COOPER)
*** Nov. 11 at Divebar - Special guest: Steve Riley (L.A. GUNS, W.A.S.P.)
*** Nov. 13 at Wasted Space (Hard Rock Hotel) - Special guest: George Lynch (DOKKEN, LYNCH MOB)
*** Nov. 20 at Wasted Space (Hard Rock Hotel) - Special guest Bruce Kulick (KISS, GRAND FUNK RAILROAD)
SIN CITY SINNERS is currently working on CD of original music.
For more information, visit www.myspace.com/scsinners.
On the positive message of the band's music:
"I've always tried to blend the darkness with a big dose of positivity. With our (dark) imagery, it obviously get lost a bit. But for me it's always been about giving people a reason to live rather than a reason to give up."
On the band's stage show:
"There's obviously a genre of theatrical rock, but for us it's just a piece of the puzzle. It's always been about the content and why we wear what we do. There's a lot more art than there is shock. KISS and ALICE COOPER really broke down a lot of barriers, but we're different to them. I've always felt that we were like if PINK FLOYD started a metal band. I doubt you're gonna see SLIPKNOT shoot cereal anytime soon — KISS really have become the Disney of rock."
Back in August, we were invited to attend the festivities at the Coffeehouse, but neither James nor Ken nor I could make it. Fortunately, our correspondents Geoff and Mike traveled long distances through ominous weather and came through like the champs they are! Surely, they are among the highest-ranking officers in the KISS Army!
Once there, Geoff and Mike were given the V.I.P. treatment, with unfettered access to the sights and sounds of this KISStoric event.
They interviewed fans, chatted with well-known members of the KISS camp, and met the maker of the new KISS ketchup! Best of all, they scored an exclusive interview with none other than current KISS lead guitarist Tommy Thayer!
Tommy could not have been nicer! He took the time to answer our many questions, and provided us with some very unique and exciting insights into the KISS world!
We’re already hard at work on PodKISSts 11 and 12, and we’re so glad you’ve enjoyed what we’ve had to offer. BIG thanks to everyone who downloads the shows, to Ken for his great artwork, to Mike and Geoff for being superfans, and to Tommy Thayer for his time and attention!
So join us down at the KISS Coffeehouse, and get ready for some great surprises. Listen here!
This guitar controller features all sorts of cool additions like an analog whammy bar and super responsive frets. But most of all, this thing is cool looking and isn’t that the whole point? And I guess it makes fake guitar-playing easier, too.
The Gene Simmons Axe Guitar works with both Guitar Hero and Rock Band, making it the perfect accompaniment for those of you that are equal-opportunity rock-outers. It seems to be an official Simmons product. So, if you love KISS and rock games, this is the perfect accessory.
CLICK HERE to pre-order the Gene Simmons Axe Guitar at Amazon.
Those three topped a list of the 20 creepiest celebrities, released by market research firm e-Poll, which tracks the popularity of actors, musicians and others for Hollywood's major film and TV studios and other companies.
Manson was No. 1 with an overall creep factor of 76 percent and a popularity rating of just nine percent, meaning that more than three-quarters of people responding to e-Poll found him creepy and only nine percent found him appealing.
He was followed by Jackson with 67 percent creepy/14 percent appeal, and third was Simpson who was recently convicted of robbery and kidnapping charges in Las Vegas. He had a 59 percent creepy/three percent appeal rating.
There are two kinds of creepy in Hollywood celebrity, explained e-Poll's chief executive Gerry Philpott.
There are the kind -- like the three above -- from whom some people might run and then there are types like horror novelist Stephen King, whom many people find fascinating precisely because they are spooky.
King made the list at No. 4 with a creep factor of 51 percent but strong fan appeal of 61 percent.
"Who would you rather have a beer with: Stephen King or Andy Dick?," said Philpott to illustrate his point.
He was, of course, referring to comedian Dick who recently pleaded guilty to battery in California for pulling down a teenage girl's top in a sports bar.
Dick, 42, was No. 6 on the list with a creep factor of 44 and an appeal rating of just 17. He was preceded in the No. 5 spot by radio shock jock Howard Stern with a creepiness rating of 45 and popular appeal of just 13.
Some celebrities, such as Manson, make a name for themselves outside mainstream pop culture, so it's okay to be creepy, said Philpott. Then there are others, like director Woody Allen, who would probably prefer people don't think of them as creeps. He made the list at No. 16.
Finally, there is a practical side to being a celebrity creep, Philpott said. When spookiness is required, it is easier to get a job, and in this gloomy economy, that is a good thing.
The complete list is as follows:
Name Creepy Appeal
1 Marilyn Manson 76% 9%
2 Michael Jackson 67% 14%
3 O.J. Simpson 59% 3%
4 Stephen King 51% 61%
5 Howard Stern 45% 13%
6 Andy Dick 44% 17%
7 Ozzy Osbourne 43% 29%
8 Criss Angel 43% 45%
9 Flavor Flav 41% 17%
10 Paul Reubens 41% 22%
11 Courtney Love 40% 7% 12 Carrot Top 39% 17% 13 Don Imus 38% 12% 14 Keith Richards 38% 26% 15 David Blaine 37% 36% 16 Woody Allen 35% 24% 17 Gene Simmons 33% 30% 18 Tom Green 31% 30% 19 Tommy Lee 29% 25% 20 M. Night Shyamalan 27% 53%
Paul Stanley's Wentworth Gallery Appearances:
Friday – November 14, 2008 6-9 PM – Palm Beach Gardens
Saturday – November 15, 2008 6-9 PM – Boca Raton
Sunday - November 16, 2008 1-4 PM - Orlando
Friday November 14, 2008
Wentworth Gallery – The Gardens Mall
3101 PGA Blvd
Palm Beach Gardens, FL
*call for details on Special VIP Reception with Paul Stanley 561-624-0656 or 800-732-6140
Saturday November 15, 2008
Wentworth Gallery – Town Center Mall
6000 Glades Road
Boca Raton, FL
*call for details on Special VIP Reception with Paul Stanley 561-338-0804 or 800-732-6140
Sunday, November 16, 2008
1 – 4 p.m.
Wentworth Gallery - The Mall at Millenia K296
4200 Conroy Road
Orlando, FL
*call for details on Special VIP Reception with Paul Stanley 407-903-9055 or 800-732-6140
The product description reads as follows: "A revamped 'Kiss & Related Recordings Focus', which went out of print earlier this year. Much fat has been trimmed from the second edition with the removal of material too tangential. The work has been extensively rewritten, edited, reorganized and updated. Originally debuting as a feature on the KISSFAQ website, this unofficial and unsanctioned work is a companion book to the 'Kiss Album Focus' trilogy. It delves specifically into the recording history of KISS, and the associated past members, on a song-by-song basis."
Born in 1949, Simmons got into comic books and monster and science fiction magazines upon arriving in the USA as it helped him learn the language. Among some of the fanzines Klein (Simmons) edited and published during the 1960’s were Cosmos, Tinderbox, Adventure, Mantis, Faun and others. His most successful was Cosmos. Cosmos eventually merged with Stilletto fanzine becoming Cosmos-Stilletto with issue #7 and then with issue #13 he changed the title to Faun.
In addition to writing and drawing for his own fanzines, Klein (Simmons) also contributed articles and artwork for a variety of other fanzines including such titles as Bombshell (he had a regular column called ‘Hokum’), Comic Comments, Gore Creature, Dynatron, Ecco, Comic Feature, Splash Page, Men of Mystery, Spectre, Fantasy News, Exile, Iscariot, Ragnarok (I used to order that one!), Ray Gun, RBCC (another favorite of mine), Sanctum, Pulp Era, Web Spinner, One Step Beyond and a number of others.
Klein (Simmons) was most prolific with fanzines, his and others, primarily from 1966-1969.
Simmons commented a couple of times about his days of fanzine publishing on his website: “Yes, these are fanzines (fan-magazines) I published and edited when I was around 14 years old out of my mom’s house. The content was sci-fi/comics — reviews, articles and so on. I published/edited a number of titles: COSMOS, COSMOSTILETTO (a merger with Stiletto fanzine), FAUN, TINDERBOX, ADVENTURE, MANTIS and a few others.”
“I also edited a fanzine called MANTIS. Only about 100 were printed. I also had a column in a New Jersey fanzine called RAY GUN. There are more, but offhand, I can’t recall all of them (Note: See the list compiled above). I do have a box full of my old fanzines.”
“Nothing’s changed much. Back in my school days (around 7th grade through the 12th), I played in a rock band (Long Island Sounds, Lynx, and others). I was in the school choir. I acted in school plays. I published my own fanzines. And still had time for the girls.”
So I guess ‘The Demon’ and I had something in common, we both published fanzines in junior high school (and I owned some that he published and contributed to) and we both played bass guitar (although I gave that up a year or two after starting high school – the only thing I can play now with any ability is a jukebox). I guess that’s where the similarities end although I did dress up like him for Halloween 1976 with interesting results but that’s another story for another time (if the statue of limitations has expired!).
Commented Simmons: "Todd McFarlane and I have had a wonderful relationship and the KISS action figures his group made, as we all know, rocked. Todd was kind enough to draw the premier issue of 'Gene Simmons House Of Horrors' (Simmons Comics Group/IDW Publishing). And in return, I offered to go to Arizona and do a signing. But a mishap occurred when his well-intentioned staff were brought into this. Though they meant well, things occurred I never saw, nor okayed. One was a release of a press release without my approval. The other was that people had to buy $35 worth of goods in order to get an autograph. Now, while the above may or may not be an issue in and of themselves, the fact that I was never shown any of the details regarding my name and likeness is.
"When Todd and I work one on one. It works. When inbetweeners come into it, it does not."
Every KISS FEST paid attendee will receive a free entry to the raffle at no charge. You must be present to win the guitar!
The 2008 INDY KISS FEST celebrates Paul Stanley and his 'ONE LIVE KISS' concert DVD.
The 2008 Indianapolis KISS FEST info:
October 26th from 12:00PM to 7:00PM
Ramada Indianapolis
7701 East 42nd Street
Indianapolis, Indiana 46226
Tel: 317-897-4000
CLICK HERE for more info on the Party.
Feb. 18 - Pratteln, Switzerland - Z7
Feb. 21 - Jevnaker, Norway - Glassheim
Given that the elections are right around the corner, we wanted to get Gene's take on the presidential candidates and who he'll be voting for.
"I would rather vote for me. I have as much qualification as some of the candidates," Gene told Hollyscoop exclusively. "Actually there are people who are out voting for me but the job doesn’t pay enough. We are going to be voting and I don’t think, by the way, celebrities should open their traps about anything except promoting their new stuff.
"Just because you’re in front of people doesn’t mean you’re qualified to do crap. I don’t want my foreign policy to be decided in Malibu…by Sean Penn for fucks sake…I mean that in a good way."
The Kiss legend hit the red carpet in Los Angeles for the premiere of new comedy movie Role Models.
Speaking before the screening, the rocker joked that he enjoys making Gene Simmons: Family Jewels a bit too much, saying: "If I can make a deal where I can do it from the grave I would do that to, just put me in the coffin with all the cameras."
Gene added there's no easier way to make money than having your life filmed: "As opposed to working for a living? Come on!"
The rocker also revealed he'd be up for resurrecting his School Of Rock series - which saw him trying to turn a class of school children into a rock band - back on UK shores.
"I loved those kids, it was difficult to leave them because you get so attached and just like I said in the show, Lil Chris became a star didn't he?"
"Just back from a trip to Tennessee! I had some free time so I took a short holiday to visit my girlfriend Leslie, who lives there. She was happy to have me in her state, and all my guitar friends are well aware that Memphis is not only a great music city, it is home to a custom Gibson factory for the past 8 years. They specialize in the hollow body style guitars that are so iconic. I met the operations manager David Winters of this Memphis plant, at the NAMM show in L.A. back in January. I kept in touch, as he promised me a tour, and Saturday was the special day we arranged."
Read more at Kulick.net.
"Will you be surprised he is Gene's son? Not really; you can hear some of the Demon's dark undertones in his voice. But his take on singing comes from a much bluesier place than you could guess from a 19-year-old. Nick loves some serious blues singers like Skip James and artists that came from the Deep South."
Read more at this location.
It’s just after 8 o’clock in Stuttgart, Germany, when there’s a knock on Paul Stanley’s hotel room door. “You know what? Hold on a second,” he says into the phone, cutting into the conversation mid-sentence. There are some muffled sounds, the close of a heavy door, and then he’s back on the line. “The housekeeping people here have a very interesting thing they do,” he explains, half-amused. “At some point, if you have the ‘Do not disturb’ on the door, they turn it around so it says, ‘Make up the room’ and then knock on the door.” The tactic didn’t work: “I’m still not dressed, actually. I just decided to stay in my room today and catch up. I’m kicking back.”
With good reason. On his 30-shows-in-seven-weeks European tour celebrating Kiss’s 35th anniversary, the singer-songwriter and guitarist has been rocking—hard. “It’s been pretty crazy,” he boasts. “You can’t beat 55,000 people screaming your name. The demand has been huge and the crowds have been rabid.” For Stanley, performing Kiss’s grueling lineup and stage act night after night is revitalizing: “There are two or three hours a day that are euphoric, and 21 or so that are necessary.”
In fact, to hear him tell it, the physical challenge of touring is part of the glory—a small price to pay for staying on top of the world. “I train like any athlete,” he says. “There isn’t time to find out you haven’t trained long enough once you get in the ring, so I’m very dedicated to making sure that not only am I physically and mentally capable of doing the show, but that the fans get at least what they expect if not more. There’s a photo of me from a few nights ago jumping four feet in the air with my boots on.”
Pressed further, Stanley, who underwent hip surgery in 2005, acknowledges that he—and the band—have experienced growing pains. “The truth is there are no football players my age,” he concedes. “I’m just thankful that as things wear out they can kind of be tweaked and replaced. At this point, I feel like I had my 50,000-mile checkup and am good for another 50,000. At this point, I have no competition but myself.”
Pushing himself to the limit is nothing new for the star. Born in Queens, New York, in 1952, Stanley worked as a cabbie before forming Kiss in 1974 with Wicked Lester band mate Gene Simmons. Since then, he has performed the title role in the Toronto production of Phantom of the Opera, released solo albums, been inducted into the Long Island Music Hall of Fame, and kept one of the biggest bands in the world together, albeit with a rotating roster. Drummer Peter Criss, who first left the band in 1980, and guitarist Ace Frehley, who left in 1982, rejoined Stanley and Simmons for a top-grossing reunion tour in 1996 and 1997, but have since been replaced by Eric Singer and Tommy Thayer.
“One might say I’m lucky,” Stanley writes on Paulstanley.com. “But I tell you, the harder you work the luckier you get. You can either be a victim in life who surrenders to failure and bitch about all your adverse experiences or you can take a deep breath and charge forward."
Uncompromising, yes, but Stanley walks the talk. When his first wife, Pamela Bowen, filed for divorce in 2000, he took a deep breath, picked up some art supplies, and charged forward on an emotional journey that finds him, seven years later, enjoying financial success and critical acclaim as a painter.
Of course, at a time when celebrity is more commercial than ever—eBay had 188,630 items listed as “entertainment memorabilia” on a recent day—rock star-turned-artist is an increasingly popular catch phrase. David Bowie, Grace Slick, Natalie Merchant, Brian Warner (aka Marilyn Manson), Bono, Jewel, and Tony Bennett have all shown work to varying success. Tori Amos sells hand-drawn winter greeting cards on her Web site.
What makes Stanley’s endeavor unique is his motivation. Whereas other artists may revel in expressing “another side” of themselves to adoring fans, marketing their work as virtual encounters, Stanley, perhaps because he approached painting as self-help and without the intention of starting an additional career, paints strictly by and for himself. “I never planned on showing anybody [my art],” he says. “I painted with the idea of doing something therapeutic and exciting for myself. I think if you approach things with too much concern for others you are kind of sabotaging yourself from the get-go.”
This internal focus gave way to the authentically self-conscious riff brightly captured in the reds, greens, yellow, and blues of his works. “I tend to paint a sense or reflection of what’s going on inside me and sometimes that is as much a discovery for me as it is for anybody else,” he says. “I don’t plan my work and I don’t sketch them out. I’d rather purge and see where I am at any given time. I certainly walked into it feeling, you know, not sure how it would turn out, but I have to say at this point it is one of the most rewarding things to walk into a gallery full of things created by me and basically for me.”
That’s not to say his pieces lack mass appeal. In 2007, he raked in about $2 million in painting sales through Wentworth Galleries—ironic for a child who failed art at the Manhattan School of Music and Art. That “had more to do with my own issues with authority figures,” he says. “I’m the hardest-working person in the world when I am doing what I want to do. I’m not great at fulfilling other people’s ambitions.” Early sales estimates for 2008 Stanleys art are double 2007, and his work has been evenly embraced by the art community and fans alike. Simmons even requested a piece for his house.
“Paul clearly works very hard on his art,” says David W. Streets, gallery director of the Celebrity Vault in Beverly Hills. “He really is striving to be a fine artist, and I think he is.”
A fine art advisor, broker, and appraiser for 22 years, Streets points out that garnering—and keeping—critical praise is no small feat for a celebrity artist. “Art critics generally pan actors and musicians because they start out at a different point,” he explains. “They have fame already, they start in major shows at major galleries, and there’s a lot of backlash and jealousy. It puts extra pressure on these stars to justify the art, justify its price. If all you have is crap with your name attached, you might make it big for a moment, but you won’t endure. Paul’s evolving as an artist.”
It’s an evolution Stanley can feel. Painting “has changed my life,” he says. “I define myself by the challenges I take on and I define myself by how well I do by my own assessment, and finding painting has allowed me to express a side that is much more solitary and much more intimate and personal than music.”
Stanley’s sense of accomplishment makes critical acclaim sweet—if unsolicited—icing on the cake. “I’m not schooled and perhaps that is my greatest strength,” he says slowly, as if just now realizing it. “I can certainly arrange music with an orchestra, but I am clueless at how to transcribe it. So I see any kind of critical acceptance of anything I do as a nice addition. What is so much more important to me is what someone who would want to take a piece home with them thinks. My problem with critics can sometimes be that they can intimidate people who wouldn’t find a lot of joy in art into never exposing themselves to it by telling the public your opinion isn’t valid because it isn’t educated. That doesn’t make any sense.”
When I point out he has just expressed Kiss’s anti-authority, against-the-rules, and against-all-odds manifesto, Stanley doesn’t miss a beat. “Well, it got me this far!” he laughs.
He’s right. Except that where he is might surprise fans who know him as Starchild, the hard-living, fire-breathing shock rocker who wrote such hits as “Strutter” and “Detroit Rock City.” Today, Stanley shares the Beverly Hills home he purchased in 1996 with his attorney wife, Erin Sutton, and their 3-year-old son, Colin, who is happiest in the bathtub with his dad. The couple will welcome their second child this winter.
When Stanley mentions his wife, his artistic bluster melts into affection. “We spend virtually all our time together,” he says. “When I hear about people needing breaks from each other then I think they probably married the wrong person. Erin is, for lack of a better term, my partner, my soul mate. There is no one I would rather spend my time with. There’s no one more stimulating or beautiful or fun.”
Theirs is a Beverly Hills love story. Stanley first laid eyes on Sutton when, while dining with a friend at Ago, he saw “this strikingly beautiful woman came walking in and just had an air about her that was totally captivating in a way that I had never quite felt,” he says. “I felt compelled to go talk to her. It was one of those situations where a higher power intervened.”
Since marrying in a “magical” ceremony in front of 175 guests at the Ritz-Carlton Huntington in Pasadena in 2005, the couple has settled in to everyday life in Beverly Hills: dinners out at Spago (“somewhere you can’t go wrong”), entertaining friends at home, and spending quiet nights in with Colin and Evan, Stanley’s 14-year-old son with Bowen.
“Parenting is something that you can’t do purely on reflex or on what’s familiar from what you saw at home,” he says. “You have to find what you believe is the right way to do it. Perhaps even my parents scratched their heads, but I am extremely proud of Evan. He is a terrific young man and it makes me that much more sure that the road ahead for Colin is a great one.”
When I ask if he ever dreamed he would be living this all-American domestic ideal, Stanley sighs. “Maybe when I was younger I wasn’t smart enough to realize how terrific that would be. I think for all the amazing times I had when I was at a different point in my life, there is a depth to my life now that probably wasn’t there, and didn’t need to be there then.”
Stanley’s devotion to his family makes this particular tour bittersweet—especially on days when his only visitor is a misguided housekeeper. “This is the longest I have been from my wife and family,” he says. “I’m coping as well as I can, but a day off is a blessing and a curse. It’s great to rest, but it gives me time to miss my family that much more. Between a [3-year-old] and a 14-year-old and a wife I’m crazy about, it’s hard to be gone.”
Luckily, there’s plenty to look forward to. In just a few short weeks after this interview, Stanley’s parents, Erin, her parents, Colin, and Evan will meet Stanley for a two-week family vacation at a Medici villa in Italy. After that, there’s singing, drawing, and painting with Colin (he uses crayons and colored pencils), renovating and redecorating their home (where the as-yet unsigned painting that first caught the art world’s eye hangs squarely in the living room alongside acoustic guitars and family photos), preparing for the baby, and possibly the development of Kiss II, a reality show the band is currently considering to form its next generation, which Stanley assures me would “in no way ever take the place of Kiss.”
“I’m not going anywhere that I know of,” he says as we wrap our conversation. “The band is rock solid. We have never been better. But life is supposed to continually evolve. Hopefully you are always on the train. Always moving forward. I can’t imagine reaching a point where I think I’ve gotten where I am going.”
The journey, at least, will be colorful.
The 60-minute podcast can be downloaded at this location.
The KISS Army invaded the Crowne Plaza Hotel (Moncton, Canada) yesterday, and they were armed.
Hundreds of fans of the band KISS, loaded down with posters, records, CDs and other band memorabilia, lined up for a chance to meet Eric Singer, the genial drummer for legendary KISS.
Singer, who arrived fashionably late, proved a good host, spending as much time as he could with each fan and signing just about anything put in front of him, including T-shirts that were still being worn at the time.
"He's a good guy," Monteith said, clutching two ancient vinyl presses from the venerable rockers.
"Here's a guy who plays with two historic rock bands and it never went to his head. He could be out golfing today but no, he's here meeting the fans."
Singer's appearance was engineered by Marty LeBlanc, the brainchild behind yesterday's first-ever KISS Expo, held in conjunction with the twice-yearly record expo put on by LeBlanc's LiveWire Music Emporium, located on Mountain Road.
"I just e-mailed him on his private site," LeBlanc recalled yesterday.
"From there it's history."
That's pretty typical for Singer, LeBlanc said, explaining the drummer is noted for holding fans close to his heart.
Indeed, in an earlier interview, Singer told Canadaeast News Service he doesn't think of himself as anything special.
"I never look at myself as anything more than anybody else. I'm just a regular guy that plays drums," he said.
"But I know I'm in a unique position where I'm very fortunate and blessed that I've been able to have the career I've had, that I've gotten to play with the bands I've gotten to play with."
Casual drummers drool over Singer's career. He's twice been drafted by the KISS Army, joining the group first in 1991 and again a few years ago. Besides the equally legendary Alice Cooper, he's drummed for Black Sabbath, Lita Ford and other big-name acts.
It's a testament to the professionalism and the skill the 50-year-old Singer has exhibited in his lengthy career.
The Bracelets allowing fans to meet Singer were snapped up in advance. Yesterday, the fans were lined up clear around the Fundy Lounge in the basement of the hotel, just waiting for the chance to chat with him.
Since forming in 1972, KISS has sold over 80 million albums, were pioneers in the band merchandising business with everything from KISS toy cars and dolls to their own cartoon show and were the band who popularized the trend of musicians donning wild make-up and costumes during performances.
Thirty-five years later, they remain one of rockdom's most popular, and profitable, acts.
For the opportunity to have an item autographed by Simmons, a minimum purchase of $35 at the McFarlane store is required on Thursday, November 6. At the time of purchase, the customer will be given a wristband, required for admittance to the autograph line. (Purchase does NOT guarantee autograph.) The signing event will end at 7:00 p.m. regardless of line length. The McFarlane store will open at 8:30 a.m. on the day of the event, and fans can arrive at Westgate as early as 6:00 a.m. in their best KISS garb.
Enter for your chance to meet Gene Simmons! Five extremely lucky winners will be chosen at random to meet this rock god before the signing. Visit www.mcfarlane.com/meetgene to enter. (Note to out-of-state entries: Prize does not include travel, lodging or any other expenses.)
Commented Simmons: "I was surprised to find out that the actual award of the MTV Latin American event is...MY TONGUE! Yep. The Academy Awards have their Oscar. The People's Choice Awards has their Crystal Award...and MTV Latin America has...my tongue. It was a hoot seeing the various artists receiving my tongue. METALLICA played and were in great form. Jared Leto and his MARS guys sat nearby (You're welcome, Jared!!!).
Video footage of Gene's appearance can be viewed here.
KISS Front Man Goes from Concert to Canvas
Wentworth Gallery is pleased to present art exhibitions by artist, rock icon, and charismatic front man of KISS, Paul Stanley. He will make three special appearances at Wentworth Gallery in Palm Beach Gardens, FL, Boca Raton, FL and Orlando, FL.
Paul Stanley's Wentworth Gallery Appearances
Friday – November 14, 2007 6-9 PM – Palm Beach Gardens
Saturday – November 15, 2007 6-9 PM – Boca Raton
Sunday - November 16, 2007 1-4 PM - Orlando
Friday November 14, 2007
Wentworth Gallery – The Gardens Mall
3101 PGA Blvd
Palm Beach Gardens, FL
*call for details on Special VIP Reception with Paul Stanley 561-624-0656 or 800-732-6140
Saturday November 15, 2007
Wentworth Gallery – Town Center Mall
6000 Glades Road
Boca Raton, FL
*call for details on Special VIP Reception with Paul Stanley 561-338-0804 or 800-732-6140
Sunday, November 16, 2007
1 – 4 p.m.
Wentworth Gallery - The Mall at Millenia K296
4200 Conroy Road Orlando, FL
Call 407-903-9055 for details or to pre-purchase artwork.
Commented Trunk: "I am so happy with how things are going with this show and have my good friends Jim Florentine and Don Jamieson as co-hosts. The ball-busting that goes on is awesome and many in the audience and crew at the tapings so far say they have never seen a show like this before. Even those not into metal seem to be loving it. I've been working on developing this for almost two years, and now that it's real and we are close to debuting the first show, it's really getting exciting!"
Regarding Lifeson and Lee's upcoming appearance on the program, Trunk said, "I am honored to say that Geddy Lee and Alex Lifeson of RUSH will be coming in from Canada just to do the show! I've had the privilege of working with the RUSH guys several times, and I can not thank them enough for making the effort to do the show. Needless to say this will be a HUGE one."
"That Metal Show" will premier on November 15 at 11:00 p.m. EST/PST on VH1 Classic and will repeat several times through the week. A new episode will air every week thereafter on Saturday nights at 11:00 p.m.
No stranger to art, Stanley studied at New York’s High School of Art and Music, the inspiration for the film Fame. “My best subject must have been lunch,” he says. “I didn’t get along with authority and it turned me off art.” Failing art class, he dropped painting for music. Years later, while going through a painful divorce in 2000, Stanley found solace in painting and picked up his brushes again. Now, he clearly takes pleasure in knowing his art reaches different crowds — both Kiss fans and art collectors.
“I see people at the gallery who will never go to a Kiss show and people at a Kiss show that will never go to the gallery. And then there are some people in between.” His pieces, mostly four-by-five foot acrylics done in bold colors with intense strokes, brought in $2 million last year. His originals fetch as much as $70,000, with limited-edition prints going to $1,000. Even Kiss co-founder Gene Simmons, known more for his shrewd business practices than for his eye for art, bought one of Stanley’s works titled “Statue of Liberty.” “The monetary aspect validates it that much more for him,” Stanley says.
Meanwhile, Kiss has been gigging consistently for its legions of fans known as the Kiss Army. Fresh off a 30-show Kiss European tour, where the band sometimes played six shows a week, Stanley says the group is fit and finely tuned these days. “The band has never been better, never looked better,” he says, adding that Kiss is planning a 35th anniversary tour this spring.
Like his band, Stanley’s largely abstract art is big and bold, with bright colors on large canvases. "I love art that’s vibrant and has a lot of color," Stanley said. "I think life is vibrant. On its worst day, life’s always a miracle." This is why, no matter his mood, his palette is never somber, he said. "In a warped way, depression is as vibrant as anything else."
Stanley said he was interested in art from a young age, and he graduated from the High School of Music and Art in Manhattan. "I was originally, according to a lot of people, a young talented artist," he said. However, he added, "I found I wasn’t fond of people telling me what to do or how to do it." So he found an outlet for his artistic knack in the creation of a rock band that is as famous for its visual impact as its music.
STANLEY’S HAND was behind the makeup and costumes that helped make KISS world-famous, as well as some of its set designs, album covers and apparel. "I always had a very clear vision for the band and what I wanted it to be," he said. He created the KISS logo sitting at a table in his parents’ house while he lived there. "That’s why the two S’s are not completely parallel," he said, adding that when the band’s design team offered to straighten them, he declined.
He didn’t start painting again until about eight years ago, when he was going through a divorce and a friend suggested he resume the hobby. "It became a very interesting way of confronting a lot of things that were going on, and it turned out to be a journey I’m still on," he said. Stanley said he’d had no intention of showing his art, but when he hung one of his paintings in his house, visitors wanted to know whose work it was.
So he did a few small shows about four years ago. He has now done 18 shows in the last year and a half, "and it’s been successful beyond anything I could have imagined," he said. "If money is a measure of success, I’m told my art generated $2 million last year, so I guess it’s not too bad." He said he appreciated the commercial success because it meant people connected with his work. "The idea that I might be a starving artist — that wasn’t going to happen."
THE SIMILARITY between his approaches to music and art is that he sets about both "with the idea of no boundaries and pleasing myself," he said. "I think that when you approach something to please yourself, you can’t go wrong. Even if no one else likes it, you’ve got one big fan."
He listed Pablo Picasso, Mark Rothko and Vincent Van Gogh as some of the artists who had influenced his work, adding, "Loads of people have been influences on my art. I think anything you’re exposed to will turn up in your art one way or another."
The art is not a side project to his work with KISS, he said. "I think I give 100 percent to everything I do. I don’t bring paint brushes onstage, and I don’t bring guitars into my studio."
Whatever the art form, Stanley said he was grateful that he had been able to do what he loved and that his work had resonated with others. "I’m on a journey I’m enjoying immensely."
Tommy Thayer performed at a star-studded outdoor concert October 1 at Branson Airport in Branson. He played alongside members of musical groups such as HOOTIE & THE BLOWFISH, LOVERBOY, TRICK PONY and the BEAVER BROWN BAND, plus Samantha Cole, Steve Azar, Bob Anderson, Johnny Lee and Moe Bandy.
According to the Hollywood Reporter, the new season of "Myths and Legends" premiers on October 8 on TV Land.
For more information, click here.
"It was a busy day for CAMP FREDDY yesterday [Saturday, October 4], as the band performed two shows in one day. First of all, the band helped celebrate the opening of the new John Varvatos store in Malibu with an acoustic performance that included Royston Langdon (SPACEHOG), Steve Stevens (BILLY IDOL), Corey Taylor (SLIPKNOT) and Perry Farrell (JANE'S ADDICTION). And then later that night at an exclusive, unrelated party in Malibu, the band played an electric set that culminated in Paul Stanley from KISS joining the band for killer versions of 'Whole Lotta Love', 'All Right Now' and the KISS classic 'Strutter'."
Setlist for John Varvatos store opening in Malibu:
01. Just What I Needed
02. I'm Eighteen
03. In The Meantime
04. Suffragette City
05. Rain
06. Maggie May
07. Got Me Wrong
08. People Are Strange
09. Feel Like Makin Love
Guests: Perry Farrell, Steve Stevens, Corey Taylor, Royston Langdon.
Setlist for exclusive, unrelated party in Malibu:
01. Hello There
02. Just What I Needed
03. In The Meantime
04. Suffragette City
05. Rock And Roll Star
06. Rebel Yell
07. Ain't Talkin Bout Love
08. It's So Easy
09. Chinese Rocks
10. EMI
11. Whole Lotta Love
12. All Right Now
13. Strutter
Guests: Paul Stanley, Duff McKagan, Corey Taylor, Steve Jones, Paul Cook, Steve Stevens, Royston Langdon.
CAMP FREDDY recently parted ways with Los Angeles' acclaimed Indie 103.1 radio station, which has aired the band's weekly show every Saturday for nearly five years.
CAMP FREDDY is continuing work on what is expected to eventually be released as the band's debut album. Among the cuts that are set to appear on the effort are "20th Century Boy" (also featuring Steve Jones from THE SEX PISTOLS on lead guitar) and THIN LIZZY's "Jailbreak" (featuring ALICE IN CHAINS guitarist Jerry Cantrell on vocals and Billy Duffy on lead guitar). Other guest musicians include RED HOT CHILI PEPPERS drummer Chad Smith and singer Macy Gray.
Since its formation six years ago when they rocked the opening of The Standard Hotel in Downtown Los Angeles at the invitation of Brent Bolthouse, CAMP FREDDY has performed on both coasts of America and on national television shows ("The Tonight Show with Jay Leno", "Jimmy Kimmel Live!", "Late Late Show With Craig Kilborn", "Last Call with Carson Daly").
Watch fan-filmed video footage of the performance below (clips shot and uploaded by Justin Kuhns).
The concert was part of the Lion's Heart Invitational Golf Tournament and Concert, which was held Tuesday, September 30 through Wednesday, October 1, 2008 on Murder Rock Golf Course at the acclaimed Communities at Branson Creek and featured PGA pro golfer John Daly and dozens of his celebrity friends. The two-day event benefitted the Ozark Mountain Family YMCA and the John Daly Foundation.
"Mustang Sally" featuring Johnny Lee (lead vocals; country legend that started the "Urban Cowboy" movement in the early '80s that spawned the movie "Urban Cowboy"), Tommy Thayer on guitar, Mark Bryan of HOOTIE & THE BLOWFISH on guitar and Steve Azar (country star) singing a verse: Video1
"Looking for Love" featuring Tommy Thayer on vocals backing vocals around the one-minute, 30-second mark; John Daly on backing vocals: Video2
"Knocking on Heaven's Door" featuring John Daly, Tommy Thayer and Mark Bryan of HOOTIE & THE BLOWFISH: Video3
The cruise is open to the public. Tickets: 615-458-3900 or www.generaljackson.com.
His appearance will be open to the public and free of charge.
Paul Stanley’s Wentworth Gallery Appearance
Saturday -- October 11, 2008, 12 p.m. – 3 p.m.
Wentworth Gallery – Tysons Galleria
1731 M. International Dr.
McLean, VA 22102
703-883-0111 or 800-732-6140
VIP Reception 11 a.m. – 12 p.m. (Call for details)
Dussault Apparel is set to take over the runway for the event's featured show on Saturday, October 4, at 8:30 p.m, at Hayden Ferry Lakeside. All three lines will showcase selections from their Holiday 2008 and Spring 2009 collections, featuring premium, custom designed hoodies, denim, hats, t-shirts and leather goods.
"We are very excited to be a part of Phoenix Fashion Week," said Chris Detert, Dussault's U.S. publicist and president of American Rebel PR. "Phoenix is one of the fastest emerging fashion markets, with a large contingent of young, attractive and affluent consumers. Phoenix Fashion Week is the perfect platform to present our lines to the consumers in this market."
The executive director of Phoenix Fashion Week Brian Hills says, "I am thrilled to have Dussault Apparel on board for this year's event. We feel the quality and uniqueness of their designs will appeal to our audiences and enhance the overall success of our shows."
Dussault Apparel, Inc., is a designer, manufacturer, wholesaler and retailer of high-end quality apparel, its expanding product line includes custom designed hoodies, jeans, jewelry, t-shirts, hats and leather goods.
Gene Simmons!
Yep, it was the humorous, self-assured entertainer and entrepreneur whose entertainment business empire has expanded far beyond his KISS rock band. His reality TV shows Family Jewels, Gene Simmons' Rock School and now Jingles have made Gene one of America's most recognizable characters.
Simmons was here just nine weeks ago as the honorary marshal of the Edmonton Indy - for which he handles the marketing. That was a breeze-through-wave-at-the-crowds appearance.
This time, it was Simmons face to face. For his $100,000 speaking fee, what did the younger entrepreneurs get? Multiple tips from the most confident person they'd ever meet, resplendent in his own style.
Simmons is so confident that he has transcended his rock-star persona to be a down-to-earth human being with a great sense of humour, who genuinely likes to talk to others.
It all came from his mom, says Gene. His 82-year-old mother survived the Holocaust, raised her only son in poverty in wartime Israel, separated from Gene's soldier dad, came to America and worked two factory jobs for the sake of her eight-year-old boy who didn't speak a word of English.
Somehow Gene became the hipster that studied, worked and played hard, saved his money, never got drunk or did drugs, then conceived - with KISS partner Paul Stanley - the "band we'd always wanted to see."
The following musicians are slated to appear, among others:
Ace Frehley (KISS)
David Ellefson (MEGADETH, F5)
Eerie Von (DANZIG, SAMHAIN)
Kip Winger (WINGER)
Lita Ford
Ron "Bumblefoot" Thal (GUNS N' ROSES)
Wednesday 13 (MURDERDOLLS)
For more information, go to this location.
"Jigoku-Retsuden", a new KISS greatest-hits CD featuring all-new recordings of 15 KISS classics, was released late last month in Japan via DefSTAR Records/Sony Music Japan. The tracks were recently recorded and feature Paul Stanley, Gene Simmons, Eric Singer and Tommy Thayer. A limited-edition version of the CD includes a bonus "Kissology Special" DVD with live footage from KISS' legendary 1977 performance at Budokan.
"Jigoku-Retsuden" (new recordings CD):
01. Deuce
02. Detroit Rock City
03. Shout It Out Loud
04. Hotter Than Hell
05. Calling Dr. Love
06. Love Gun
07. I Was Made For Lovin' You
08. Heaven's On Fire
09. Lick It Up
10. I Love It Loud
11. Forever
12. Christine Sixteen
13. Do You Love Me
14. Black Diamond
15. Rock And Roll All Nite
"Kissology Special" DVD (limited edition only):
Live At Budokan Tokyo, Japan '77
01. Detroit Rock City
02. Let Me Go, Rock 'n' Roll
03. Ladies Room
04. Firehouse
05. I Want You
06. Cold Gin
07. Nothin' To Lose
08. God Of Thunder
09. Rock And Roll All Nite
10. Shout It Out Loud
11. Black Diamond
Check out audio samples at this location.
This year's lineup includes:
Bruce Kulick (KISS, GRAND FUNK RAILROAD)
Mark Rivera (BILLY JOEL)
Hugh McDonald (BON JOVI)
Jeff Carlisi (.38 SPECIAL)
Steve Conte (NEW YORK DOLLS)
Christine Ohlman ("Saturday Night Live")
Anton Fig ("Late Show with David Letterman")
Jeff Kazee (SOUTHSIDE JOHNNY AND THE ASBURY JUKES, BON JOVI)
Tickets are required for admission to the event.
For ticket information, please visit the Casey Cares Foundation or call 443-568-0064.
Sep. 27 - Edmonton, AB - Mother's Music Store
Sep. 28 - Lethbridge, AB - Note-Able Music
Oct. 01 - Regina, SK - Long & McQuade
Oct. 06 - Hamilton, ON - Pongetti's Musical Instruments
Oct. 07 - Newmarket, ON - The Arts Music Store
Oct. 08 - Oshawa, ON - Long & McQuade
Oct. 11 - Ottawa, ON - Long & McQuade
Oct. 17 - Halifax, NS - Long & McQuade
Oct. 18 - St. John, NB - Long & McQuade
Oct. 19 - Mocton, NB - Live Wire Record Expo
Oct. 21 - St. John's, NF - Long & McQuade
For more details on these events, please contact the stores directly.
To celebrate the October release of Paul's concert DVD, 'ONE LIVE KISS', the stage has been set for the World Theatrical Premiere of the film! This unique event will be the first time the movie will be exhibited on a massive 50 foot theater screen in stunning High Definition Digital Cinema with full Dolby Digital concert sound! The premiere is the highlight of a day long “KISS PARTY’ which will be held at the historic Arcada Theatre in St. Charles, Illinois. (a short distance from Downtown Chicago.) The event will also feature KISS Memorabilia dealers, never before seen videos from Paul Stanley’s 2006 ‘Live To Win’ Tour, trivia prizes, and an after show event at local restaurant, Onesti Dinner Club.
Director Louis Antonelli will introduce the movie and hold an audience Q&A about his experiences working with Paul to create the film before the screening. Antonelli told KOL via a phone interview, “This is the event we have all been waiting for! I approached making this movie with an idea of presenting Paul Stanley both intimately, and also as his true essence is - LARGER THAN LIFE, and LOUDER & MORE POWERFUL THAN A SUPERSONIC JET! This screening will realize that vision fully for an audience!”
As a bonus for celebrating with us, EVERYONE attending the event will receive a 'ONE LIVE KISS' collectible Laminate and other special surprises!! Requires paid admission.
Venue: ARCADA THEATRE - Phone # - 630-587-8400
105 E. Main Street
St. Charles, Illinois
*Free parking available all around the venue.
Tickets will go on sale this Wednesday.
For more info, CLICK HERE to visit the Theatre's website.
Ticket price should be $15.00 per person (children under 5, free.)
11:00 AM - Doors Open. Tons of great KISS/Paul Merch. Available.
1:30 to 2:30 - 'Live To Dream' Featurette with D.P Carlson (incl. Q&A.)
3:00 to 3:45 - Mr. SPEED's Rich Kozak will perform a live acoustic set of Paul Stanley songs.
4:00 - 6:00 - Premiere Showing, "Paul Stanley * One Live KISS' (with Antonelli intro.)
END OF EVENT AT THE MAIN VENUE.
6:30 to ? : After show reception party at nearby restaurant (open to all ticket/laminate holders):
ONESTI DINNER CLUB
18 North 4th Street
St. Charles, Illinois
(short walking distance from the theatre!)
“Sugar-free ice pops are an invention of God,” Gene Simmons said in the Celeb Fridge feature of the October issue of Everyday with Rachael Ray magazine. “They hardly have any calories since they're mostly water. I eat about 15 pops every two days. Instead of smoking or drinking, you should just eat an ice pop.”
Frozen dinners also take up a lot of space in his freezer.
“Shannon (Tweed) and I don't diet because the tendency is to cheat. I keep Lean Cuisines in the house because I don't cook very often. Instead, I just pop a meal in the microwave whenever I get hungry.”
The following musicians are slated to appear, among others:
Ace Frehley (KISS)
David Ellefson (MEGADETH, F5)
Eerie Von (DANZIG, SAMHAIN)
Kip Winger (WINGER)
Lita Ford
Ron "Bumblefoot" Thal (GUNS N' ROSES)
Wednesday 13 (MURDERDOLLS)
For more information, go to this location.
His appearance will be open to the public and free of charge.
Paul Stanley’s Wentworth Gallery Appearance
Saturday -- October 11, 2008, 12 p.m. – 3 p.m.
Wentworth Gallery – Tysons Galleria
1731 M. International Dr.
McLean, VA 22102
703-883-0111 or 800-732-6140
VIP Reception 11 a.m. – 12 p.m. (Call for details)
Members of one of rock’s legendary bands visited Portland Thursday night, showing that their hearts are just as big as their reputation.
Several members of the band KISS appeared on behalf of their friend Jeff Young, who has lived with ALS – also known as Lou Gehrig’s Disease, for nearly 25 years. Young is one of the longest living survivors of the illness.
“This is proof positive that Portland isn't just a nice place to live in, but it actually has nice people,” said Gene Simmons, longtime leader of KISS. “Everybody here has come with big fat wallets full of cash and we're going to relieve them of all that money and actually do some good.”
A support group called "Friends of Jeff" organized the benefit auction, dinner and concert in Lake Oswego.
The track listing is as follows:
01. Prologue
02. Live To Win
03. Hide Your Heart
04. A Million To One
05. Got To Choose
06. Move On
07. Bulletproof
08. Tonight You Belong To Me
09. Lick It Up
10. Wouldn't You Like To Know Me?
11. Magic Touch
12. I Still Love You
13. Strutter
14. Everytime I See You Around
15. Do You Love Me?
16. I Want You
17. Love Gun
18. Lift
19. Detroit Rock City
20. Goodbye
Paul Stanley's backing band is the house band from the CBS-TV show "Rock Star" — Paul Mirkovich (keyboards), Jim McGorman (guitar), Rafael Moreira (lead guitar), Nate Morton (drums) and Sasha Krivstov (bass). They appeared on the first — and so far only — two seasons of the show: "Rock Star: INXS" and "Rock Star: Supernova".
"Live To Dream!" is an insider's glimpse into the creative process of Paul Stanley and his concert film titled "One Live Kiss", which was directed by filmmaker Louis Antonelli. The cameras shadow Antonelli as he works behind the scenes to capture Stanley's solo performance in Chicago. Stanley's back-up band for the tour is the house band featured on CBS-TV's "Rock Star".
"Live To Dream!" features interviews with Paul Stanley, Louis Antonelli, KISS manager Doc McGhee, band members Jimmy McGorman, Rafael Moreira and Nate Morton, as well as a dozen fans from the Chicago show.
Director D.P. Carlson shares producer, camera and editing credit with longtime collaborator Mike Weber. Brian Kobeluch created the graphics and animations.
6:30 a.m Zakk Tyler Morning Show / Dave 92.9 FM LIVE in-studio
7:15 a.m 790 The Zone AM / Mayhem in the AM Phone-In Interview
8:00 a.m. Good Day Atlanta WAGA/Fox 5 LIVE in-studio
9:30 a.m. The Regular Guys / Rock 100.5 LIVE in-studio
10:45a.m. Atlanta & Company 11Alive/WXIA LIVE in-studio
Simmons flew to Japan last March for five days of shooting after director Toshio Lee tracked the rocker down with the help of Sony Music Japan. "He was a complete professional," Lee tells Spinner with the aid of an English-speaking translator. "He didn't even want to rest. He said, 'I'm here for business.'"
At first, Lee and Simmons communicated through an interpreter, but Lee soon just started showing him physically what to do. "[Gene would say] 'Let me see that one more time so I can really master it,'" Lee says. When Lee screwed up, Simmons responded promptly: "That's not the same thing you did the first time." "He was really watching and very attentive," Lee says.
As for the character's attire, Simmons wears an outlandish horned costume with most of his face hidden under a mask. And yes, even his guitar has spikes. The rocker utters a few English lines, including "Command the beast" and "You're still wet behind the ears."
"It would be weird if he spoke Japanese," Lee says. "He had to speak in English. He's the king."
You’ve stated that you began painting to overcome the emotional hardships of going through a divorce. Now that you’re through that period, what does the process do for you now?
I think that got played up quite a bit, but the fact is my background was originally an art background. It could have been at any point that I felt a desire to express myself in some way other than music.
Where did you draw inspiration for the works that will be in this show?
I just paint from my gut. Most of the time, I find a lot of satisfaction in not planning what I’m going to paint. Obviously, there are pieces that are more thought out in terms of theme, though once I start painting, I just let myself go where I’m going to go. I think if you don’t wake up every day inspired, you need to go back to sleep or change your life.
Your stage persona has always had a visual flair. How would you say your creative energies have translated from stage to canvas? Have they progressed since you’ve gotten back into painting?
The work is all connected by my love of color, but how I utilize that seems to go through significant changes because I’m not going to put limitations or boundaries on myself. That’s why I started painting, because I don’t have to work to anybody else’s expectations, only to mine. So I paint for myself. That other people love the work is a bonus.
As a rock star, you’ve attained a seemingly untouchable status. How close will fans be able to get to you at these openings?
Because of the crowds, there’s really no way for me to spend one-on-one time with everybody who is there. The only way there is any real time to be spent individually is with people who are acquiring art. I get some great time with [buyers], and we get to take a photo and I give a personal message to them. Other than the art collectors, there’s a large segment of people who perhaps have never been in a gallery before, and I think that’s great.
THE 411: Paul Stanley at Wentworth Gallery. Free. 6-9 p.m. Sept. 19. Wentworth Gallery, Phipps Plaza. 3500 Peachtree Road N.E., Buckhead. 404-233-0903. And 5-8 p.m. Sept. 20. Wentworth Gallery, Perimeter Mall. 4400 Ashford Dunwoody Road, Dunwoody. 770-913-0641 or 800-732-6140.
One of your most famous pictures of all time, is the one that ended up being the album cover for KISS’ breakthrough-album, KISS ALIVE, from 1975. Unlike anything from their three first album covers, it captures the show, the music and their attitude perfectly.
How did you end up working for KISS?
COSTELLO: I went to live in USA in 1973 with Deep Purple, who I was an art director and photographer for, and a graphic designer I knew was working on an album cover for KISS, called Dressed To Kill. He was very unhappy with it, because the picture was funny but not right. He told me to come and see them play, because they were playing at the Beacon Theatre in New York. That day I had been working with the Brecker Brothers, which is a jazz thing. So I went up there, with my camera and everything. And it was like Dante’s Inferno. As I walked in, I realized I had never seen nothing like it in my life. And this was just the first song.
By this time, they were completely broke. They had no money. I stayed in New York that night, processed the film in an overnight lab, and rang their manager Bill Aucoin in the morning. I told him who I was, mentioned some of my work, like Deep Purple’s Made In Japan, and said that I’d like to him show the pictures I took at the show the night before. He said: «Sure».
So I went up there, and their office was about half the size of this studio.
Really? ‘Cause this is a very small studio.
COSTELLO: Yeah, but that was the KISS Empire. Joyce Biawitz (co-manager) and Bill Aucoin had desks standing against each other. Well, I showed them the photos, and I was smart enough to bring with me a projector from the graphic design place. I asked Aucoin where the projection room was, and he just laughed. Lovely man, by the way. He just laughed and said project them against the wall». I got about 4 pictures projected, and then he said: Don’t show me any more. Then he rang Gene (Simmons) and said: Come on down here, I want you to meet this guy.
So the four of them came down to Aucoin’s office. Ace (Frehley) arrived late and didn’t know what he was there for. But Paul (Stanley) and Gene were very sharp, Gene in particularly. The minute he saw how I’d captured the show, he said: Right, we’re doing a live album. It’s a last chance-thing. If it works, we’re in business. If it doesn’t work, we’re dead. Then we went to Detroit and we shot the live album in rehearsal. It’s not a live photograph.
And it wasn’t shot in Cobo Hall in Detroit, even though some of the album was recorded there?
COSTELLO: That’s right. It wasn’t Cobo Hall. It was shot in the Michigan Palace, which is a car park now, sadly. That was where Iggy, MC5 and all those guys got it together. It was a fabulous place, a very nice Victorian music hall.
Gene got really annoyed in the end. Everybody got very tired, so it became the same pose over and over again. We couldn’t think of a new pose. What we were doing was something Gene called The Status Quo-pose. They love Status Quo and that simple, straight-ahead poppy rock. And they did this classic pose, which they had incorporated into their show.
So I said: Do the Status Quo-pose again. And Gene said: For fuck’s sake, enough of this Status Quo-thing. We’re KISS, not Status Quo». We were that tired, we started getting irritable.
The next day we went to Cobo Hall. And they were amazed that so many people showed up. The place was almost full. What they didn’t realize, was that the word had already gone out. They were taking a huge risk by playing there. Agents weren’t booking them into big halls. I don’t know if they had to pay for the hall themselves, and were risking getting deep into debt.
Before I went in and did the photo for ALIVE, Bill Aucoin said: We got no money, we can’t pay you – but we can cover your expenses. But that was no good for me, as I had just moved there, I had two kids and had just bought a house. I needed to work, I needed to get paid. So he said: We’ll give you a deal. I won’t get into details, but it was depending on the success of the album. If the album did well, I did well. It was the only deal of my career that’s been like that.
Judging from the phenomenal sales of the album, it’s safe to assume that the deal turned out pretty good?
COSTELLO: Oh yes, absolutely. Looking back, it was a fabulous deal. But what was interesting, was that they took a chance on me. Because I had just arrived in America, and had never worked on a big project like that.
Were the members of KISS familiar with your work?
COSTELLO: Gene and Peter (Criss) were. The cover is actually influenced by Uriah Heep Live, a cover with a gatefold and a four page booklet of photographs. That was what they wanted – lot of pictures of the live show.
The interesting thing is, if you look at the back cover on ALIVE, on the seats right besides the two guys holding the banner, there are two young teenage guys with long hair. They’re on the right side of the picture as you look at it. One is Chad Smith from the Red Hot Chili Peppers, the other one is his brother. I just found out a few years ago.
The feedback I get on that album is phenomenal. Not only because of the cover, but because it’s an iconic album. It turned American music around.
I worked for an American pop band a seven or eight years ago. I can’t remember their name, they had just one big hit. Anyway, the press lady told me to live in a different hotel than the band, but I said: That’s not how it works. I need to meet the band. And the tour manager came down, and told me: We’ll do the photos at the gig. I told him we needed to figure out what to do first. He said: The band doesn’t do it like that. Before he went back up, he asked me what my name was. Within two minutes, the entire band was down in the lobby, shaking my hand and everything. I could have asked them to stand on their heads in the bay, and they would have done it. All because of KISS ALIVE.
Are you happy with the picture in photographic terms?
COSTELLO: Yes. I have always been. Technically, it’s all wrong. It’s out of focus, it’s grainy, rough and ready. There’s all sorts of things wrong with that picture. But in atmosphere terms, it’s absolutely perfect. It’s the same thing with Deep Purple’s «Burn». Everything about that says it’s a bad idea, but it works!
There’s been rumours that the back cover photograph on KISS ALIVE was actually taken at another band’s concert, and that the text and images on the banner held up by the two guys was airbrushed. Any truth to that?
COSTELLO: No. This is a very strange story, that involves Rush and Rainbow, it doesn’t involve KISS at all. And it’s been attributed to Sean Delaney (long term KISS-associate), which is again strange, because I had stopped working with him long time ago by that point. By the way, some KISS-fans are really odd. I once met a fan who was really abusive to me because he didn’t believe my story. He said Sean Delaney said it, it must be true. I said: I don’t care who said it. I was there, I did it. This is the truth.
And Koval, who reveals she signed away her rights to the sex tape in 2003, has suffered more shame and humiliation than her famous one-night stand.
She tells Hustler magazine, "I'm the victim. I didn't try to capitalise on this situation... I've lost longtime friends like (director) Michael Bay and (actor) Crispin Glover.
"I was at one of (rapper) Ja Rule's houses in Southern California, just chilling with him and his friends, and he freaked out about the Gene Simmons sex tape. He kicked me out of the house." Koval admits she has since renewed her friendship with the rapper.
"Jigoku-Retsuden" was released last month via DefSTAR Records/Sony Music Japan. The tracks on the CD feature Paul Stanley, Gene Simmons, Eric Singer and Tommy Thayer. A limited-edition version of the CD includes a bonus "Kissology Special" DVD with live footage from KISS' legendary 1977 performance at Budokan.
Check out audio samples at this location.
Watch the program in two parts: Part 1, Part 2
And what better way to honor our main man then to show his amazing new concert film, 'ONE LVE KISS'! Paul Stanley has authorized a special preview screening of his new concert movie, ‘PAUL STANLEY* ONE LIVE KISS’ for this Expo event. The feature length movie was shot during Paul’s sold out ‘Live To Win’ solo tour of America in 2006, capturing the power and intensity of Paul’s legendary songwriting and showmanship at full throttle! The movie will be shown in its entirety, in High Definition on a large screen.
Director Louis Antonelli will introduce the screening, and do a Q&A with the audience following the movie. Antonelli recently told KOL, “ These fullscreenings of the movie are very special, they will give fans a chance to see this highly anticipated film in a unique, entertaining way! In the past when we have done previews of scenes from the film it was great because fans felt like they were at the concert right in the front row singing along with Paul, cheering, and doing their all to SHOUT IT OUT LOUD! Seeing the movie like that with a packed house of the great KISS ARMY is a very immediate ‘live’ experience! I’ve had fans tell me many times now that watching the movie that way made everyone feel Paul was right in the room rocking with them!”
As a bonus for celebrating with us, EVERYONE attending the event will receive a 'ONE LIVE KISS' collectible Laminate and other special surprises!! Requires paid admission.
KISS Tribute bands, MR.SPEED and KIDS both will perform, and KISS merchandise dealer, including KISSONLINE, will be on hand selling great KISS collectibles throughout the day. We'll also have a Paul Stanley trivia contest and merchandise giveaways too!
The 2008 Dayton KISS Expo will be held Saturday
October 11th from 12:00PM to 8:00PM
Holiday Inn Hotel & Suites
2455 Dryden Road
Dayton, OH 45439
Tel: 937-294-1471 (Please do not call the hotel about tickets they will not have that information.)
Ask for the KISS Expo rate!
Visit www.getalifeinc.com for more info on the event.
The Set will be released in October 21.
The packaging and artwork for KISS: IKONS is outstanding, featuring a 24 page booklet filled with classic KISS photos! The actual KISS Icons and the IKONS logo on the box cover are printed in silver foil.
Gene Simmons CD:
'God Of Thunder', 'Almost Human', 'Calling Dr. Love', 'Ladies Room', 'Christine Sixteen', 'Deuce', 'Rock And Roll All Nite', 'Cold Gin', 'Parasite', 'Larger Than Life', 'Love 'em And Leave 'Em', 'Plaster Caster', 'Radioactive', 'Charisma'.
Paul Stanley CD:
'Detroit Rock City', 'Love Gun', 'Take Me', 'Strutter', 'C'mon And Love Me', 'Hotter Than Hell', '100,000 Years', 'Rock Bottom', 'Do You Love Me?', 'All American Man', 'Mr. Speed', 'I Stole Your Love', 'Wouldn't You Like To Know Me', 'I Was Made For Lovin' You'.
Ace Frehley CD:
'New York Groove', 'Shock Me', '2,000 Man', 'Rocket Ride', 'Snow Blind', 'Speedin' Back To My Baby', 'Talk To Me', 'What's On Your Mind', 'Rip It Out', 'Save Your Love', 'Hard Times', 'Two Sides Of The Coin', 'Dark Light', 'Into The Void'.
Peter Criss CD:
'Hard Luck Woman', 'Baby Driver', 'Hooligan', 'Beth', 'I Can't Stop The Rain', 'Black Diamond', 'Mainline', 'Don't You Let Me Down'', 'Dirty Livin'', 'Getaway', 'Strange Ways', 'That's The Kind Of Sugar Papa Likes', 'Easy Thing', 'I Finally Found My Way'.
As a teenage rock fan in 1968, Goldberg lucked his way into the music industry, finding an entry-level clerical job with the music trade magazine Billboard — only realizing after the first day, he claims, that it had nothing to do with roadside advertising. From there, his career advances as he receives one lucky break after another, beginning with a press trip to Woodstock after Billboard's other staffers pass up the assignment.
Over the following decades he proves to be an able publicist and executive, handling public relations for Led Zeppelin at the peak of their fame before moving on to other artists including Kiss, Stevie Nicks, Bonnie Raitt and, late in his career, Nirvana and Warren Zevon. Eventually, he is asked to lead Atlantic Records, later accepting similar roles at Warner Bros. Records and Mercury Records Group.
Goldberg simultaneously occupies the worlds of art and commerce, and he is well aware that the two don't always mix. His book straddles the same line, as he shifts between the roles of rock fan and entrepreneur. Some chapters — including the one on his most legendary client, Led Zeppelin — read more like a business memoir than anything else. But he lavishes attention on Nirvana, offering some choice opinions on conspiracy theories surrounding the suicide of front man Kurt Cobain, and his admiration for Fleetwood Mac singer Stevie Nicks borders on worship.
There are at least as many faceless behind-the-scenes people in this book as actual rock stars, and their names will mean little to all but industry insiders and the most die-hard rock nerds. That is perhaps an unfair criticism for a book about rock's business side, but readers looking for lurid tales of rock 'n' roll excess should be forewarned.
And the book is not without entertaining anecdotes about familiar artists. There's this gem, for example: Goldberg was on the receiving end of an impassioned discourse on rock by Gene Simmons — the blood-spitting alpha-male mastermind of Kiss — when Simmons' Jewish mother unexpectedly showed up offering a plate of matzoh and eggs.
There is tragedy, too. Goldberg's recollection of a terminally ill Zevon recording his final album is particularly moving, as is his description of the aftermath of Cobain's suicide.
Goldberg portrays himself as a man of principle, but he is candidly unapologetic about some of the sneaky tricks he deployed with his partners in crime, including lying to the press, fabricating endorsements from local politicians and enticing a Billboard staffer to fudge sales chart figures.
However, he appears to draw the line at suckering his own artists. While he acknowledges that the rock business often leaves musicians with the short end of the stick, if Goldberg was ever less than on the level with his own artists, he doesn't share it here.
Taken as an "Almost Famous"-type rock fable, "Bumping Into Geniuses" is a disappointment. But for readers wanting a look behind the curtain, Goldberg offers valuable personal experience that only the music industry's elite are equipped to share.
"Now you might ask, with less GRAND FUNK dates what about my 'BK 3' solo disc? Well, progress is being made and some very exciting news about some guest appearances will be announced soon.
"Nick Simmons [Gene Simmons' son] stopped by the recording studio, so we could chat about his music. Seems like Nick is excited to create some new music and, of course, I was happy to hear his voice and the ideas he is working on. Great kid, but taller than you can imagine! His voice is very strong. Deep and has a quality that makes him stand out.
"By the way...speaking of standing out in the crowd, I am NOT used to looking up to someone, but at 6'7" I have to look up to him!
"He is bright and talented and I know why Gene and Shannon [Tweed] are so proud of him."
Read the entire message at this location.
Eric Singer, drummer for Alice Cooper and KISS, as well as a one-time drummer for Black Sabbath, will appear at a KISS expo to be held in conjunction with Marty LeBlanc's record expo in the Fundy Room of the Crowne Plaza hotel on Main Street.
LeBlanc, who runs Live Wire Music Emporium on Mountain Road, holds record expos -- a record and CD sale featuring vendors from across the Maritimes -- a few times a year. When LeBlanc heard about Alice Cooper coming to Moncton, he thought it might be a good chance to hold an expo dedicated to one of his favourite bands -- KISS -- since Singer drums with both bands.
LeBlanc worked for the last six months on getting Singer to appear at the event.
Singer will be signing autographs and taking pictures for fans in the afternoon of the expo.
The drummer originally joined KISS in 1992, replacing the late Eric Carr, who had replaced KISS' original drummer Peter Criss in 1980. Singer had already made a name for himself playing with Black Sabbath and Lita Ford by that point.
The musician played with KISS until Criss rejoined the band in 1996 and he later replaced Criss again a few years ago. Since rejoining KISS a few years back, Singer has been performing with Criss's trademark cat makeup on stage.
Since 2000, Singer has bounced between drum stools for KISS and Alice Cooper.
LeBlanc's record and KISS expos will take place on Sunday, Oct. 19, the same day Alice Cooper and Econoline Crush will perform at the Moncton Coliseum.
Singer is expected to appear at the expo at 1 p.m. and is guaranteed to sign at least 200 autographs, though he may sign up to 300. He may arrive late as he will be performing in Saint John the night before.
LeBlanc says there's always the chance -- though it's doubtful -- that there could be a surprise guest as well.
"We're trying to get Eric to bring Alice Cooper down for an hour or something," he says with a laugh.
Tickets to the record expo are $8 for early bird vinyl fans (from 8-10 a.m.) and $5 for those who show up after 10 a.m. For those wanting to meet Singer, an additional $10 bracelet will be required. The bracelet comes with an 8X10 photo that can be signed. Singer will also pose for one photo per bracelet and he may sign a few items for each person, depending on turnout. The bracelets to meet Singer are on sale now at Live Wire Music Emporium at 183 Mountain Rd. Admission to the fair itself can simply be paid at the door. For more information, call 383-9473.
"Live To Dream!" is an insider's glimpse into the creative process of Paul Stanley and his concert film titled "One Live Kiss", which was directed by filmmaker Louis Antonelli. The cameras shadow Antonelli as he works behind the scenes to capture Stanley's solo performance in Chicago. Stanley's back-up band for the tour is the house band featured on CBS-TV's "Rock Star".
"Live To Dream!" features interviews with Paul Stanley, Louis Antonelli, KISS manager Doc McGhee, band members Jimmy McGorman, Rafael Moreira and Nate Morton, as well as a dozen fans from the Chicago show.
Director D.P. Carlson shares producer, camera and editing credit with longtime collaborator Mike Weber. Brian Kobeluch created the graphics and animations.
In this episode, Paul Stanley discusses his line of guitars by Washburn, his 56th birthday, shoulder surgery, and a bit about his artwork. Tommy Thayer recalls his long association with KISS and RCTV, dating back to his days in COLD GIN, and Jason Bonham talks about reforming FOREIGNER with Mick Jones and his stint behind the kit with LED ZEPPELIN.
The episode airs this coming Friday, September 12 at 1:00 a.m. on San Francisco Comcast cable Ch. 29. A FREE screening will happen at the 540 Club, located at 7th Ave. & Clement St. in SF this Thursday, September 11 at 7:00 p.m. sharp; 21+ with ID only.
Watch clips from the episode here.
KISS COFFEEHOUSE, sponsored “Name that KISS tune” in which contestants were picked during the intermission and challenged to name the KISS tune that was being played. The contest ran for the entire homestand of the Pirates sixteen games played at SportsZone arena in Little River. Winners received a KISS COFFEEHOUSE travel mug and a bag of KISS COFFEE. The manager of the KISS COFFEEHOUSE, Debra, also attended several Pirates games and supported the team in their endeavors. “No doubt, Debra was a huge help with our inaugural season”, Jones continued.
As the team hit the rink for warm-ups, they were accompanied by the recognizable strains of “I Love it Loud” for each and every home game this past season. Gene Simmons also had the team and it’s 2007 – 2008 picture featured on his site under letters to Gene Simmons during the regular season.
The expansion franchise finished the regular season 25 – 5 – 2 good for first place in their division of PIHA (www.thepiha.com) and also eliminated the Raleigh Assault in semi finals and Richmond Robins in the division finals to win their division and be crowned 2008 Southeast Division champions. The Pirates then were eliminated in the East Coast conference finals by the Connecticut Blaze (game one 5 – 4 and game two 3 – 2) who then went on to the league championships with the Arizona Dragons.
Just recently, Debra confirmed the KISS COFFEEHOUSE will be back for a second year as a sponsor with the Pirates professional hockey team. “We are excited and thrilled to have an icon like the KISS COFFEEHOUSE behind us for the 2008 – 2009 season. We hope to repeat the performance of last year and win the whole thing this time”, Jones, added. “If we do, we’ll bring the championship trophy to COFFEEHOUSE for a celebration with everyone!!!”, Jones finished.
Top two favorite KISS COFFEEHOUSE flavors of the 2008 Southeast Division Champion SC Pirates are:
1) Let Me go Rocky Road
2) Blueberry Coffeecake
To learn more about the SC Pirates, you can go to their website at www.scpirateshockey.com or their myspace at www.myspace.com/scpirateshockeyclub the Pirates are always looking to add members of the KISS ARMY to their myspace friends!
As the fire-spitting front man for the rock band KISS, Gene Simmons has put on his kabuki make-up and donned his platform dragon boots for the past 35 years. But for Simmons, KISS is just, well, his night job. Born Chaim Witz in Haifa, Israel, Simmons came to America as an eight-year-old boy and says he has been living the American Dream ever since. Known for both his music and his business acumen, he's the force behind thousands of licensed KISS products and numerous ventures, including his discontinued magazine Gene Simmons' Tongue, Simmons Records, clothing line Moneybag, and the brand marketing firm Simmons Abramson Marketing, the outfit behind the "I Am Indy" Campaign. He's also continuing to keep his brand in the public spotlight: His reality TV show Gene Simmons Family Jewels is coming back for a fourth season on A&E, he has a new reality show called Jingles on tap, and in July he released his tome on prostitution, Ladies of the Night.
Simmons recently spoke with staff writer Stacy Perman about entrepreneurship, failure, and all things Gene Simmons. Edited excerpts of their conversation follow.
Which do you consider yourself first, a rock star or an entrepreneur?
That's an interesting question and the simple answer is a bit of both. Nobody does just one thing. But the real difference between being an entrepreneur and everyone else in the world is the ability to monetize. I am an entrepreneur in the classic mold. No matter what I do—outside of sticking my tongue out—I tend to make money, and quite a bit in non-KISS stuff.
How did you understand so early that you could leverage KISS into other business ventures?
When the band was starting off, we noticed that T-shirts and non-music items were earning a substantial amount of money. KISS quickly became a multi-headed beast: rock band and rock 'n' roll brand—and the only one to have endured the ages and decades of fads and fashions. Today we have 3,000 licensed products, everything from condoms to caskets. We have you coming and going.
Where would you say got your business education?
The United States of America. The best school is the street, and most successful entrepreneurs did not go to Wharton. Both Google (GOOG) and Hewlett-Packard (HPQ) were created in a garage. The difference between those that become a Buffett success—and I don't mean Jimmy—have an innate inborn connection. Their snouts are close to the ground. If you look at the CEOs of some the most successful companies in the world like IKEA, they never fly first class. They always goes economy. Sam Walton of Wal-Mart (WMT) had a second-hand car and lived in the middle of nowhere.
So are you saying you don't fly first class?
I fly economy. I do often fly first class, but I don't travel with a posse, or bodyguard, or an assistant. I use other people's infrastructure. For instance, I am going to address the AARP convention in Washington, D.C. I will fly first class to New York on AARP's dime, get into a town car, stay not in a grand suite, but a nice hotel room. I don't pretend to be poor, but somewhere in the middle is O.K.
How do you identify a business opportunity?
I trust my gut. I have to have an emotional connection to what I am ultimately selling because it is emotion, whether you are selling religion, politics, even a breath mint. If you study Warren Buffett, he only invests in what he knows—and he knows what he doesn't know. Never throw money at what you don't know. Maybe I'm conservative that way.
Does anything from the experience of being in KISS translate into being an entrepreneur?
Besides the fact that fame is fleeting-except for me-it's also a door opener. Never underestimate the power of being popular in pop culture. You have to be able to do something. You can have a good seat at the restaurant but you still have to pay for the meal. Fame is important, but to be rich is more important.
Most rockers seem content to just make music. What drives you?
Rockers are idiots, come on. If strapping a guitar around their neck hadn't worked out, thanks to the grace of god, they'd be putting on an apron and asking the person next to them if they'd like fries with that.
One of the things that distinguishes most entrepreneurs is their ability to fail and pick themselves up and try again—has that been your experience?
I fail all of the time. It means nothing.
What would you say has been your biggest failure?
I haven't had too many big ones but for the past two years, I've been dancing with Gary Bettman [the NHL commissioner], trying to figure out some way to [get him to] hire Simmons Abramson. It hasn't happened yet.
That's a failure, your inability to seal a deal with Bettman?
I'm used to being in a meeting and grabbing it. Failure is relative to everyone. In the 1929 stock market crash, people jumped out of buildings although they were healthy and could do it again. In the real world, there is no failure because you are alive. My mother survived the Nazis and she taught me an ideal: If you are alive you've won, no matter what.
Who in business do you admire?
The Warren Buffets and the Bill Gateses of the world—they are not interested in putting on big shows, they are real, hard-core capitalists. It's a very romantic ideal. I am an avowed self-made capitalist. I earned every penny I made and I'm proud of it and I'm hungrier than ever.
With your level of success, you're still hungry for more?
There is no such thing as enough. Only small minds put barricades in front of themselves. If you perceive death, it is only a matter of time until you are dead. The guys with the most amount of money don't get caught up in the trappings—it's the lottery winners that buy all the stuff. Money, ironically enough, is beside the point. It's the hunt, not the kill.
At times you've been called more of a marketer than a business, what do you say?
Gee, I don't know what the difference is.
At one point in your varied career you managed Liza Minelli. She doesn't seem to automatically come to mind when one thinks of KISS and Gene Simmons.
All business models are the same: It's coming up with the price of goods and marketing and trying to make a profit. Capitalism is the same unless you are a charity, and even there you are figuring out how to pay yourself first.
What would you consider to be your best business advice?
Be a voracious reader. When I first came to America, I was blown away and blessed the day the founding fathers gave us free libraries. It was the first time since the Gutenberg Bible that all information became available to all levels of society. Everyone has the same access to information, which is access to power.
Conventional wisdom holds that small business is the engine of the American economy—what do you think?
No, it's not. It's big business. Wal-Mart is the largest employer. If Wal-Mart goes out of business, how many millions will be out of work? It is the biggest businesses that run the economy. That is why I say, be nice to rich people. I don't remember the last time a poor person gave you a job.
Tommy will be on hand to sign autographs and take photos with the fans, and KISSONLINE will have Tour Merchandise and collectibles!
Where | KISS Coffeehouse, Celebrity Square, Broadway at the Beach, Myrtle Beach, off 29th Avenue North
When | Noon-10 p.m. Saturday
How much | Free admission
Also | Activities include a traveling KISS Museum and KISS face painting for children, both all day, and:
5 p.m., Rock 'n Roll Chorus, a cappella set
6 p.m., Longest Tongue on TV Contest
6:30-8 p.m., KISSin' Time tribute band
8 p.m. "Sing with KISS" performance of "Forever"
8:30-10 p.m., Mr. Speed, KISS tribute band
Steve Brown: It was a dream come true, for sure. The "Revenge" album and tour was one of their best efforts from the non-makeup era and to be a part of that was historic and cool. Gene Simmons was so much fun to hang out with and Eric Singer is a bro. He's like the fifth TRIXTER! Ha! Just a joke, buddy! Gene once even said to me, in his spooky low voice, "You should have Eric Singer join TRIXTER and give me 10%." Paul Stanley was actually very low key. The first night I met him, he said to me, "Heyyyyyyyyyy... I hear you're a great guitar player." Very, very, very fuckin' cool!
How did you go about arranging your acoustic interpretation of "A Million To One"?
Steve Brown: First of all, "A Million To One" is a great, great song! Great melody, stellar chord progression and most importantly... an emotional, believable vocal. I knew right away where I wanted to go with it... a little modern, a little retro. I hope Stanley Eisen approves! I added everything but the pool and hot tub. The track has absolutely massive production! Mutt Lange would be proud. It's just killer. Everyone I've played the song for asks, "Why isn't this on the radio right now?" They say it sounds current, like DAUGHTRY or NICKELBACK. The best part is when they ask me, "Who wrote this song?" When I tell them it was Paul Stanley and Vinnie Vincent, they're floored! Those two wrote some awesome tunes. Recording "A Million To One" really got my creative juices rocking again! I honestly think it's one of the best songs I've ever recorded.
Arrested on suspicion of trespassing after refusing to leave the property were Tim Raposa, 40, of Davis, Calif.; Cherae Cozzi, 23, of Reno; Samuel Revers, 22, of Marina, Calif.; Phillip Bowman, 23, of Stateline; and Ken Danielson, 35, of San Mateo, Calif.
Glenn Johnston, 33, of Reno, was arrested on suspicion of obstructing a peace officer. Janette Bak, 22, of Stateline, was arrested on suspicion of battery against a casino security officer.
Billboard executive director of content and programming for touring and live entertainment Ray Waddell will conduct the Q&A with Simmons on Nov. 20 at the Roosevelt Ballroom. The Q&A will be filmed for an episode of his A&E reality show "Gene Simmons Family Jewels," currently in its third season.
"Gene Simmons' fingerprints are on virtually all segments of the music industry, particularly as it relates to the live music business," Waddell says. "We are thrilled to have him on board for our milestone fifth Touring Conference and we know his insight and the 'Gene Simmons world view' will be a compelling must-see for our attendees. Buckle up."
Born in Haifa, Israel, in 1949 and the only child of a Holocaust survivor, Simmons found global fame as the co-founder and bass player for Kiss, which got its start in 1972. Kiss scored eight top 40 hits in the '70s and was one of the leading hard rock acts of its day.
The band remains a touring, licensing and merchandising powerhouse, with its officially licensed ventures including the Kiss Coffeehouse in Myrtle Beach, S.C., the first in a planned chain of franchises; Kiss comic books, Kiss condoms and Kiss-branded Visa cards.
Simmons also pursues other business interests independent of the band. His Simmons Abramson Marketing is the worldwide marketing/branding entity for the IndyCar Series, and he and co-CEO Rich Abramson's NGTV.com (No Good TV) is a YouTube sensation.
His other businesses include a line of T-shirts and accessories called Gene Simmons Moneybag, the Simmons Comic Group, Simmons Records and his publishing imprint Simmons Books, which published his best-selling "Sex Money Kiss" and "Ladies of the Night."
Now in its fifth year, the Billboard Touring Conference unites today's top touring professionals to discuss the current state of the industry through potent panel topics, provocative discussions, and productive round-tables, as well as networking opportunities with touring industry power players and decision makers.
The conference is capped off by the Billboard Touring Awards on Nov. 20, which honors the concert industry's top artists and professionals based on actual data compiled through the Billboard Boxscore chart.
Complete with makeup, 8-inch heels, explosives, pyrotechnics and smashed guitars, Kiss thrilled fans, many of them whom also donned outlandish white, black and bloody garb in the spirit of their heroes.
Simmons, aka “Demon,” Paul “Starchild” Stanley, Tommy “Spaceman” Thayer and Eric “the Cat” Singer played two sets featuring much of their material from the “Alive!” album, before a charged-up crowd on the chilly night of Aug. 30 at Harveys Outdoor Arena.
Simmons, he of the enormous, constantly flicking tongue, performed a bass solo 50 feet atop the stage lights, spit flames and, of course, spit blood.
Stanley, the loquacious voice of Kiss, started off each song introduction by shouting “People!” Often at the end of songs, in a thick New York accent, he would yell, “Thank you Lake Tahoe, and the surrounding ‘Air-eee-ahhs,’ Reno, Las Vegas and Los Angeles.”
He instructed and sometimes browbeat the crowd into chanting and singing louder than the fans did at the previous night’s concert.
“Do you want us to leave thinking about Las Vegas or Lake Tahoe?” Stanley said, revving up an already vociferous, enthusiastic audience.
“It was a real circus,” said John Packer, Harveys and Harrah’s director of entertainment, who confirmed that the Douglas County fire marshal had approved all of the explosive special effects.
Two huge flames, which occasionally flanked the fearsome foursome — comic book characters turned to life — could be felt in the first 100 rows.
While the crowd included many as old as 60, there were plenty of younger fans and even children.
George Kramer’s stepson Ricky, 13, said it was the greatest night of his life, according to Kramer’s friend Robey O’Day, whose back tattoo of Kiss’ “Destroyer” album was on the cover of last week’s Lake Tahoe Action.
“They sure haven’t lost it by any means,” O’Day said. “They are good as they’ve always been, if not better. They are inspiring the kids to just keep it going.” O’Day, who has played guitar in Tahoe metal bands for decades, was impressed with Thayer’s musicianship.
“Thayer played Ace Frehley’s leads note for note, and he had the same poses,” he said. “There couldn’t be a better replacement.”
Singer, who first joined Kiss in 1991, replaced Eric Carr, who died of cancer. Carr replaced original Kiss drummer Peter Criss.
Alexis Criss, the drummer for the Los Angeles-based Kiss tribute KISSES, appreciated the work of Singer, who performed an extensive solo as the drum set elevated and the bomb crew reloaded.
“Singer plays more fills, and sometimes maybe he speeds it up a little bit, but that’s his style,” said Alexis, who performed with KISSES the night before at Whiskey Dick’s Saloon.
Alexis said she enjoyed hearing “I Was Made For Loving You.”
“I love it; it’s a popular song and a big hit for them,” she said. “Everybody around me was singing with it. They loved it too.”
Stanley grabbed his guitar, and soared across a wire onto a platform next to the bleachers. He proceeded to play “Love Gun” before giving the crowd another instruction and singing “Detroit Rock City.”
“Don’t drink and drive,” he said. “We want to see you when we come back next year.”
More than 25,000 AARP members and their friends from across the country and around the world will gather in Washington, D.C. to connect with others, learn something new, and have fun during Life@50+. In addition to exciting concerts by Paul Simon, Natalie Cole, Chaka Khan and CHICAGO, attendees will also experience extensive lifestyle and education exhibits and speakers featuring such notables as poet Maya Angelou; television icon Regis Philbin; baseball hall-of-famer Cal Ripken, Jr.; music impresario Quincy Jones; fashion consultant Clinton Kelly; legendary folk singer Judy Collins; political pundits Paul Begala and Tucker Carlson; Academy Award winner Shirley MacLaine; TV fitness guru Bob Harper; sex expert Dr. Laura Berman; and "Desperate Housewives" actor Ricardo Chavira, among others.
AARP is a nonprofit, nonpartisan membership organization that helps people 50+ have independence, choice and control in ways that are beneficial and affordable to them and society as a whole.
Watch fan-filmed video footage of the verbal exchange here: Video 1, Video 2, Video 3.
Allan Brown on Wednesday sued Simmons and two business partners, claiming the group cut him out of a 2006 deal between the Kiss bassist and the racing league.
Brown is seeking unspecified damages and is claiming fraud and slander. His suit alleges he helped broker the deal between Simmons and the IRL, but was cut out of the contract while on a personal vacation.
He also claims Simmons and his business partners mischaracterized him as "lazy" and "rich" to racing league officials.
Simmons promoted IndyCar racing in 2006, and even co-wrote a song, "I Am INDY."
An e-mail message left for Simmons' lawyer was not immediately returned Wednesday.
Tommy wants to thank the more than 600 fans that called in and gave it a shot. He was speaking with Paul Stanley about the contest last weekend and Paul mentioned that "Forever" is probably the hardest KISS song to sing!
1st runner up was Adrienne Asterita from NYC and 2nd runner up was Patrick Harr from Tennessee.
Brian Galvin, the franchisee of the KISS Coffeehouse at Broadway at the Beach, invites Grand Strand residents to enter its "Sing with KISS" contest. The winner will sing "Forever" with KISS guitarist Tommy Thayer at the KISS Coffeehouse's daylong second-anniversary party Sept. 6.
A North Carolinian will the KISS song "Forever" on Saturday in Myrtle Beach with the group's lead guitarist, Tommy Thayer.
Todd Cage of Huntersville, north of Charlotte, was among more than 600 people who left a sing-along voice mail to enter the "Sing with KISS'" contest, said Brian Galvin, president of the Galvin Group, franchisee of the KISS Coffeehouse at Broadway at the Beach.
The contest winner's performance is part of a slew of activities scheduled for the coffeehouse's second anniversary party, noon to 10 p.m. Saturday. Details at 626-5477 or www.kisscoffeehouse.com.
Galvin said Cage, after learning this morning that Thayer had chosen his name as the best singer of the first verse and chorus to an instrumental recording of "Forever," was shocked and thrilled with the news.
Cage said he had called in his entry from his car last month on a break from work in the service department of a car dealership.
He said he plans to crank a KISS greatest-hits CD to practice "Forever."
"I used to play that song with my band when I was 16 in high school,'' said Gage, 34.
KISS co-founders Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley were on hand in 2006 when the KISS Cofffeehouse opened, and original KISS lead guitarist Ace Frehley paid a visit there earlier this year.
Paul Stanley is enjoying a honeymoon-styled Vegas vacation with his newly pregnant wife, Erin Sutton -- all built around his KISS concert tonight at the Pearl in the Palms. The happy couple checked in first to their very own penthouse condo atop George Maloof's new Palms Place tower.
It's their first weekend in the palatial pad, which has a spectacular 360-degree panorama view all the way from the Red Rock range on the West out to the mountain peaks on the eastern edge of the valley.
I toured it with George while it was in final construction and can tell you it's so amazing you'd never want to leave! Paul is a long-time friend going back 30 years now and we even share the same New York City stock broker! He won't mind me telling you that his platinum multi-million-dollar playpen comes complete with a secret outdoor oversized sunken jacuzzi for two!
Then they headed off to see The Beatles LOVE show by Cirque du Soleil at the Mirage. Before the show started they swiped the credit card for a small shopping spree in the LOVE Boutique. Paul purchased a $180 Outpost brand, studded long-sleeved Beatles T-shirt for his wife but only spent $40 for a junk food-brand hunter-green Beatles logo T-shirt for himself.
After the show, Paul and Erin went backstage too meet the cast and crew of the spectacular musical journey of the Beatles' life. He signed the stars' wall of fame with a special message "All You Need is LOVE and KISS."
But it paled in comparison with the foot-long portrait of Gene Simmons on his left calf.
"Other than the Grateful Dead, there is no other fan base like the KISS fan base," he said, waiting along with 4,200 other fans (who paid between between $150 and $214 for tickets) Sunday night for his white-faced icons of stadium rock to take the stage at Konocti Harbor.
It didn't matter that only two of the four founding members -- Simmons and Paul Stanley -- were still around for the 35th anniversary tour. Or that Simmons just turned 59 last Monday.
"KISS is kind of like a loner's band for the kid that really didn't fit in," he said. "We feel an acceptance here."
Outside in the parking lot, die-hard fan Huey Lewis (no relation to the '80s hitmaker) mugged for photos with fans who wanted to pose with him all dressed up in makeup, dragon boots and spandex like Gene Simmons' Demon character.
"I get to be a rock star for a day," he said on his 46th birthday. "Where else am I going to do this?"
Taking the stage in full makeup, KISS kicked off the set with "Deuce," pulling out all the classic props of stadium rock: Fire canons. Simmons snake-like tongue. Guitars that shoot fire. Mouths that breathe fire. A never-ending guitar solo played behind the neck by Tommy Thayer, who has taken over for Ace Frehley. An extended drum solo by Eric Carr, who takes over for Peter Criss. The intro to Led Zeppelin's "Stairway to Heaven." And a zip wire for Stanley to fly over the crowd.
"We just got back from playing stadiums all over Europe," said a bare-chested Stanley. "You people are going to prove that size doesn't matter!"
The crowd ate it up, chanting along with every chorus (especially "Rock and Roll All Night" and "Black Diamond"), raising devil horns for the pyrotechnics.
"There's no reason why they can't go on for another 35 years," said fan Shawn Hammond, 39, of Clear Lake. "I just love those guys."
But would he like to be buried in an official KISS coffin sold by the band?
"Without a doubt, man. That would be awesome."
The group's setlist was as follows:
01. Deuce
02. Stutter
03. Got To Choose
04. Hotter Than Hell
05. Nothin' To Lose
06. C'Mon And Love Me
07. Parasite
08. She (Tommy's Solo)
09. 100,000 Years (Eric's Drum Solo)
10. Cold Gin
11. Let Me Go Rock 'N' Roll
12. Black Diamond
13. Rock And Roll All Nite
Encore:
14. Shout It Out Loud
15. Lick It Up
16. I Love It Loud
17. I Was Made For Lovin' You
18. Love Gun
19. Detroit Rock City
Check out photos at this location.
Fan-filmed video footage of the performance can be viewed below.
Intro + "Deuce"
"Lick It Up"
"Let Me Go Rock 'N' Roll"
"I always liked the entertainer-type drummers,” said Singer, who first joined Kiss in 1991. “For me, I feel Kiss is the perfect band as a musician, a performer and an entertainer.”
Singer wears the cat-face makeup, which began with original drummer Peter Criss, who came up with idea because he said he has nine lives. The long-tongued bassist Gene Simmons is the Demon with bat wings, guitarist Paul Stanley the Starchild, and former guitarist Ace Frehley was the Spaceman.
Singer enjoys wearing the makeup: “It allows you to let loose and be whoever you want to be,” he said. “It’s almost like when Superman would put on the cape or Batman would put on the mask. In some ways, it gives you the ability to take on a character or a persona of whatever you have inside of you or how you want to perform.”
Risks from sitting on a drum riser include breathing pyrotechnic smoke and being peppered with flames when Simmons spits fire. But that’s the price you pay to be part of the biggest spectacle in the history of rock music.
Simmons explained the philosophy behind Kiss, which has marketed itself skillfully. The singular rock band featuring pop harmonies has sold 100 million albums. Kiss has probably sold more merchandise than any other band, and the Kiss Army fans are the most fanatical in rock ‘n’ roll, Singer said.
“We had our show, we had our levitating platform, we had our bombs, we had our costumes and we had our Kiss logo,” Simmons said in “Kiss, the Early Years” (Three Rivers Press). “Kiss would always perform on time, period, and would always deliver the goods.”
“Gene and Paul are not just musicians — they’re entertainers,” Singer said. “It’s always supposed to be the greatest show on earth and an over-the-top presentation. I get it because I was a fan. Once you saw them, you were hooked because they really gave you a visual presentation, not just the music.”
Singer met Stanley when Stanley was working on his first solo project in 1989. Two years later Kiss asked him to fill in for the ailing Eric Carr, who had replaced Criss. Singer, a watch collector who has marked time for Queen guitarist Brian May and Black Sabbath, first worked with Kiss on a movie soundtrack and later on the album “Revenge.” After Carr died of cancer, Singer joined Kiss full time.
“And the rest is ‘Kisstory,’ ” Singer said. “It was a really awkward time for me. It was mixed emotions. I was really excited, but I also felt really bad.”
Singer left the band in the mid-90s, when Criss and Frehley rejoined the group. They both left again later. Tommy Thayer now plays guitar. Other guitarists have been Bruce Kulick, Vinnie Vincent and Mark St. John.
Singer also plays in Alice Cooper’s band with bassist Chuck Garric, a 1985 South Tahoe High School graduate.
“Kiss, in my opinion, took it to the next level,” Garric said. “When I was a kid, I would run home from school put on ‘Kiss Alive’ and think to myself, ‘One day, one day I’ll rock the world with one of the best drummers in rock ‘n’ roll from one on the hottest bands in the land — Kiss!”
Simmons and Stanley are the constants over band’s 35 years. Replacing either of those two, who do most of the singing and songwriting, might be impossible, Singer said.
“Like in all things in life, never say never, and anything’s possible,” he said. “But I think it would be really hard to replace Gene or Paul. Nobody can forget, nor will we forget the original four guys. It’s because of them that I am talking about Kiss to you today. But bands change and bands evolve.
“I don’t say this to kiss anyone’s ass but to me there’s only one Paul Stanley. You could never find somebody who can do what Paul does. Not only is he the voice of Kiss and as a frontman, Paul’s going to go down in history as one of the best frontmen of all time of rock. He’s one of the few guys whose done it with a guitar strapped around his neck the whole time.”
Stanley’s wife is expecting her third child, which means Kiss’ four shows this month will be the last chance to see them for a while. But don’t worry — Kiss will return.
“I’m sure there will be more Kiss touring in the future,” Singer said. “After the success we had this year, it makes perfect sense to keep going out and do this again.”
Singer also plays with Garric in ESP, an acronym for the Eric Singer Project.
“ESP just a fun side project for me,” Singer said. “It’s a chance for me to play some cool songs with my friends. I played in my father’s band, which was American songbook, like Cole Porter and Gershwin and all those standards, as well as big band and swing. I’d never played in a cover band. We play songs by Deep Purple, Zeppelin, Sabbath, Kiss and Queen. I like having Chuck, because he can sing. He likes to do the Mötorhead. And I don’t have to tell you what a great guy he is. He’s a bandmate and a real friend.”
By playing in three bands together, Singer and Garric have developed into a solid rhythm section, Garric said.
“When we play live, we listen to each other — nobody’s pushing or pulling,” Garric said. “We’ve been playing together for so long and in different bands, I know what he’s thinking. It’s a powerhouse when we get down to business.
deal calls for LivinTheDream and Jeff2 Sales to represent the entire Gene Simmons eXtreme MoneyBag(TM) lines of products across the entire state of California, gaining access to new retail chains and locations that the Company is not currently associated with. Items represented under this line shall include headwear including hats and beanies (toques), gloves, t-shirts, bandanas and other related merchandise.
Dussault Apparel(TM) Founder Jason Dussault comments, "I personally talked to many California-based reps before choosing LivinTheDream and Jeff2 Sales. I was really impressed by their level of professionalism. They and their companies are committed to the Dussault(TM) and MoneyBag(TM) preference of long-term retailer partnerships, while only working with the cream of the retail marketplace. The ski and snowboard retail arena is a new one for the Company and we always welcome new growth into new markets."
Michael Rosen, Founder of LivinTheDream, will also be brought on as a strategic partner to introduce the Dussault(TM) and Gene Simmons MoneyBag(TM) lines of products to other sales reps within the North American marketplace. Rosen has relationships and an extensive network of sales representative contacts both in the United States and Canada and will help Dussault(TM) procure other reps within the ski and snowboarding community to help sell and bring to market Company product in all states and provinces in the near future.
LivinTheDream, Inc. was founded in 2001. The agency principal Michael Rosen is joined by sales associates John Lyons, Rob Furtney and Jim Linnberg. LivinTheDream covers the territory of Northern California and Northern Nevada and generates over 8 million dollars in annual sales. LivinTheDream's goal has always been to provide their customers with relentless service coupled with the most knowledgeable sales force in the industry. As a testament to this, Michael was awarded the SIA Snow Sports Rep of the Year Award for 2006. This Award was based on retailer nominations and is representative of the entire agency's efforts. LivinTheDream currently represents K2 skis, K2 snowboarding, K2 Skate, Morrow Snowboards, and Yakima Products.
Jeff2 Sales, Inc. was established in 1998. The agency principals are Jeff Anderson and Jeff Darby. Combined, they both have over 17 years of manufacture representative and retail experience. In addition, Tommy Short and Lani Darby are full time sales associates each with over 10 years sales experience. They currently manage over 8 million in annual sales in the Southern California, Arizona, Clark County, Nevada and Hawaii markets. The goal of Jeff2 Sales is to offer their customers the very best in service combined with the most knowledgeable manufacturer representatives in the business. In addition, supplying their retailers with quality and profitable products. Current Lines Represented include, K2 Ski, K2 Skate, Level, Yakima and Obermeyer.
Jeff Darby comments, "I am really excited to be on board with Dussault(TM) and Gene Simmons MoneyBag(TM). I think that this brand is perfect for the action sports market and will directly speak to the Snowboard, Ski, Skate, Motto and Mountain Bike markets."
Dussault Apparel, Inc. is a designer, manufacturer, wholesaler and retailer of high-end quality apparel, its expanding product line includes custom designed hoodies, jeans, jewelry, t-shirts, hats and leather goods. An accelerated growth company, Dussault Apparel, Inc. trades on the Nasdaq OTC: BB as DUSS.
CLICK HERE to visit the site and check out the clips.
KISS JIGOKU-RETSUDEN, a new KISS Greatest Hits CD featuring all new recording of 15 KISS Classics! The tracks were recently recorded and feature Paul, Gene, Eric and Tommy. The CD is scheduled to be released in Japan on August 27. A Limited Edition version of the CD is also being released, and includes a bonus KISSOLOGY Special DVD with live footage from KISS' legendary 1977 performance at BUDOKAN.
Have the chops to sing with a member of KISS?
Brian Galvin, the franchisee of the KISS Coffeehouse at Broadway at the Beach, invites Grand Strand residents to enter its "Sing with KISS" contest.
The winner will sing "Forever" with KISS guitarist Tommy Thayer at the KISS Coffeehouse's daylong second-anniversary party Sept. 6.
Call 312-252-9965 for instructions to record vocals and enter the contest.
Thayer will choose the best vocalist, and the winner will be announced Sept. 2 and join Thayer to perform it at KISS Coffeehouse.
Galvin said Thayer recorded a new instrumental version of "Forever" for the contest. The single was hit for the group in 1990 and written by Michael Bolton and KISS co-founder Paul Stanley.
"We've gotten about 200 entries so far," said Garvin, welcoming area residents to put their best voice forward. "I don't know if we've found a winner yet."
Ten finalists from across the United States and Canada were posted as of today at www.kisscofffeehouse.com.
A longtime fan of KISS who joined the band this decade, Thayer said since starting 35 years ago, the group has spanned different eras, such as the 1970s or 1980s.
"Forever is kind of out of the heart of the '80s," he said by phone today from Los Angeles.
Contest entrants should prepare to sing for about a minute, through the end of the first chorus, in their voice mail.
The lyrics are:
"I gotta tell you what I'm feelin' inside, I could lie to myself, but it's true. There's no denying when I look in your eyes, girl I'm out of my head over you.
"I lived so long believin' all love is blind. But everything about you is tellin' me this time.
"It's forever, this time I know and there's no doubt in my mind. Forever, until my life is through, girl I'll be lovin' you forever.''
Both appearances are open to the public and free of charge.
Paul Stanley’s Wentworth Gallery Appearances:
Friday, September 19, 5-8 p.m.
Wentworth Gallery – Phipps Plaza
3500 Peachtree Road
Atlanta, GA
RSVP 404-233-0903
Saturday, September 20, 5-8 p.m.
Wentworth Gallery – Perimeter Mall
4400 Ashford Dunwoody Road
Atlanta, GA
RSVP 770-913-0641 or 800-732-6140
The following tracks are slated to appear in Rock Revolution:
01. All My Life" - FOO FIGHTERS
02. All the Small Things" - BLINK-182
03. Am I Evil?" - METALLICA
04. Are You Gonna Be My Girl" - JET
05. Bad Reputation" - JOAN JETT
06. Blitzkrieg Bop" - RAMONES
07. Chop Suey!" - SYSTEM OF A DOWN
08. Cum on Feel the Noize" - QUIET RIOT
09. Dance, Dance" - FALL OUT BOY
10. Detroit Rock City" - KISS
11. Diary of Jane" - BREAKING BENJAMIN
12. Dirty Little Secret" - ALL-AMERICAN REJECTS
13. Dr. Feelgood" - MÖTLEY CRÜE
14. The End of Heartache" - KILLSWITCH ENGAGE
15. Falling Away from Me" - KORN
16. Given Up" - LINKIN PARK
17. Heading Out to the Highway" - JUDAS PRIEST
18. Highway Star" - DEEP PURPLE
19. Holy Wars… The Punishment Due" - MEGADETH
20. Joker & the Thief" - WOLFMOTHER
21. Kiss Me Deadly" - LITA FORD
22. Last Resort" - PAPA ROACH
23. Magic Man" - HEART
24. No One Like You" - SCORPIONS
25. Our Truth" - LACUNA COIL
26. Pain" - THREE DAYS GRACE
27. Paralyzer" - FINGER ELEVEN
28. Pull Me Under" - DREAM THEATER
29. Round and Round" - RATT
30. Run to the Hills" - IRON MAIDEN
31. Sk8er Boi" - AVRIL LAVIGNE
32. Somebody Told Me" - THE KILLERS
33. Spoonman" - SOUNDGARDEN
34. The Spirit of Radio" - RUSH
35. Still of the Night" - WHITESNAKE
36. Stone Cold Crazy" - QUEEN
37. Walk" - PANTERA
38. We’re Not Gonna Take It" - TWISTED SISTER
39. White Room" - CREAM
40. Won’t Get Fooled Again" - THE WHO
41. Youth Gone Wild" - SKID ROW
Come along and meet you fellow KISS ARMY AUSTRALIA members so we can celebrate the existence of the GREATEST BAND IN THE WORLD!
Grab the microphone and sing a KISS song or 2 !!! There is a bistro at the venue if you would like to grab a bite to eat.
Date: October 11th 2008 6:30 PM
Camperdown Hotel, 138 Parramatta Rd, Camperdown
Corner of Layton St (Across the road from Camperdown Cellars)
FREE ENTRY TO KISS ARMY AUSTRALIA Fans & their friends!
Kids are allowed until 10pm.
CLICK HERE for more info on the party!
192 pages, color, trade paperback (W & A: Various)
Order here for just $21.83
Horror anthologies always seem to be the great anomaly of the comic book industry. They're attractive to fans of horror and fans of comic books, but rarely seem capable of successfully pleasing both audiences. The most famous entry in the field is, of course, the great EC Comics from the 1950's. With titles like Vault of Horror and Tales From the Crypt, William Gaines' lone-wolf line of scare books entertained thrill-seeking kids and properly horrified their outraged parents.
Where horror anthologies seem to lose their way on the dark and winding road to the inevitable shock ending are the stories themselves. By design, the short story and morality tale format of the genre don't exactly make it easy for the artists and writers to do anything fresh and inventive. The good news for spook fans is that Gene Simmons House of Horrors manages to deliver creepy cool stories with thoughtful writing and some splendidly dark and diverse art.
Being an anthology, this compilation of the three-issue miniseries contains both hits and misses, but quite a few stories tip in favor of the former. "Circle Seven" concerns a man who takes a job exploring a portal to hell, against the wishes of his wife. His slow descent into isolation and madness as he observes hell and all of its unfortunate occupants is goose bump-inducing. The truth he finds once he reaches his ultimate destination is a nice tip of the hat to conspiracy paranoia and is the stuff of theological nightmares. The grainy, photo-realist artwork perfectly portrays the shadowy turmoil of a man being slowly consumed by darkness. Other highlights include the Desert Storm parable "Crude", the unexpected slasher role-reversal of "The Blacktop Killer", and the bloody eco-thriller "Nymph".
The rest of the pieces, while not quite reaching the quality of the aforementioned titles, still contain concepts and conceits that are more than worth the time spent checking them out. Of particular note are the otherworldly flying beasts of "Wings of the Deep" and back-alley fighters of "Chicken Warrior". The great fun of compilations like this is the experience of enjoying so many artists in quick bursts of energy and color, and the book does not disappoint here.
Each of the three issues are introduced by our favorite neighborhood God of Thunder, scrubbed clean of his demon makeup, who casts himself as a sort of macabre master of ceremonies. Proving that nepotism isn't always necessarily a bad thing, Gene's son Nick Simmons offers up some appropriately sinister prose throughout the book.
A quick glance at the Simmons Comics Group and IDW Publishing sites tells us that future Gene Simmons House of Horror volumes are not in the cards. It's too bad, because the first three issues showed enough promise and forward momentum to turn out increasingly good, quality stories. If you're a fan of horror comics, you won't be disappointed dropping some dough to pick up this collection.
The KISS Coffeehouse's 2nd Anniversary Party will be held on Saturday, September 6th in Myrtle Beach, SC.
Model Kathy Ireland will kick off the game show's third season at 8 p.m. Friday, September 5. Also playing this season will be actor Dean Cain, boxing legend Sugar Ray Leonard, TV personality Star Jones, "Beverly Hills, 90210" alumna Jennie Garth, astronaut Robert "Hoot" Gibson, zookeeper Jack Hanna, astrophysicist George Fitzgerald Smoot III (a Nobel laureate) and "Jeopardy!" all-star Ken Jennings.
According to Pop Tower, "Are You Smarter than a 5th Grader?", hosted by comedian Jeff Foxworthy, is a typical game show measuring adults' lack of knowledge – as revealed by how much they've forgotten since grammar school. Grownup contestants find themselves in a classroom setting on "Are You Smarter than a 5th Grader?", revisiting their youth, as they tackle subjects they've already been taught, ranging from art to geography and math to social studies. However, the players are not alone on "Are You Smarter than a 5th Grader?", and there is a way for contestants to "cheat" in this classroom. The adults have the opportunity to get some help – in the form of elementary advice from real grade-schoolers who have hit the books.
A description of the contents reads as follows: "A Rock God and a Playmate of the Year, 'happily unmarried' for twenty-two years, have given us an all-access backstage pass to their personal lives. They might not be Ozzie and Harriet, but they are witty, warm and great to spend time with.
"Season 3 of 'Gene Simmons Family Jewels' starts with a whimper — the whimper of Gene recovering from his epic reunion concert — and passes quickly through the Big Apple, the hospital, the desert and don't forget the lie detector! In this complete DVD collection you get every one of these outrageous moments and many, many more!
"When the sanest people in the house are teenagers, and with nearly unlimited wealth and ego at their disposal, there's almost no end to the outrageous behavior and hi-jinks this made-for-TV nuclear family gets up to! And the complete Season 3 DVD set puts you right in the front row."
His appearances will be open to the public and free of charge.
Paul Stanley's Wentworth Gallery Appearances
Friday – August 22, 2008 7-9 PM
Saturday – August 23, 2008 5-8 PM*
Wentworth Gallery
5 Woodfield Shopping Center
Schaumburg, Illinois 60173
*VIP Reception 4 -5 p.m. (Call for details)
847-995-1190
“Is this the most beautiful sight you’ve ever seen?’’ asks Peter Criss as he takes in the panorama. “And we’ve got it all to ourselves.’’
As the original drummer for the pancake makeup-wearing rockers Kiss, Criss has seen his share of beautiful sights: cheering audiences in the tens of thousands, fine hotels in major cities the world over and – from his vantage on the drum stool at Kiss shows – the best seat in the house for the greatest rock ’n’ roll circus on Earth.
So when Criss extols the beauty of the Spring Lake beach, well, he can be considered something of an authority.
At 62, the Brooklynite has traded the rewards, and rigors, of the road for a quieter life in Monmouth County with his wife, Gigi, a former model and Jersey Shore native. In May, the Crisses celebrated two 10-year anniversaries: that of their wedding and of moving into their Monmouth County home.
Criss wore “cat’’ makeup in the costumed band Kiss, but for him, the experience was sometimes like a rat race. There’s a lot about the rock-star lifestyle that Criss doesn’t miss, and his contentment is apparent.
“People who see me go, ‘God, you look great. You look really at peace with yourself,’ ” he says. “So I guess it shows.’’
FAVORITE LANDMARKS
Strolling through Spring Lake, Criss excitedly points out some favorite landmarks.
One is a house, visible from Ocean Avenue, with a vaguely Gothic look: It has a Hulk-green roof with pointy spires that particularly appeal to Criss. “I call that the ‘Munster’ house,’’ he says. “I would set my drums up on the top floor.’’
Another is St. Catharine’s, a magnificent Catholic church on West Lake Avenue.
Criss, who wore cross symbols on his Kiss costume and has a cross tattoo, attends St. Catharine’s about once a week.
“It’s a beautiful church; it’s been here for eons,’’ says Criss (whose surname as an altar boy at Transfiguration Parish in Brooklyn was Criscuola).
“I’m a Roman Catholic. Raised Irish-Catholic, Italian. I went to Catholic school for nine years. I still follow my religion. I’m not a major by-the-rules guy. But I find it tranquil for me to stop by.’’
Criss – who keeps fit by treadmilling – is a rock ’n’ roll grandfather. His daughter from a previous marriage, Jenilee, has a daughter.
He calls the Jersey Shore “paradise.’’
“For me,’’ Criss says, “I’m finally in a place where I belong now. I feel like I’m a senior rock star.’’
Or an elder statesman? In his 40-year career – a highlight of which was singing Kiss’ biggest hit, “Beth’’ (which went to No. 7 in 1976) – Criss has certainly earned the respect of his peers.
“Late Show with David Letterman’’ bandleader Paul Shaffer played on Criss’ 2007 album, “One for All.’’
Says Shaffer via e-mail: “Peter is a terrific all-around musician, a hit vocalist and more importantly, a hell of a guy.’’
Blondie drummer Clem Burke acknowledges inroads Criss made for fellow drummers. “I think he brought the profile of drummers to the forefront,’’ Burke says. “When I hear a song like ‘Rock and Roll All Nite,’ the drums rock. He knew what he was doing.’'
CARTOONY PERSONAS
Kiss’ original and best-remembered lineup – guitarists Paul Stanley and Ace Frehley, bassist Gene Simmons and Criss – released its self-titled debut album in 1974. For a decade, band members kept their faces hidden behind their Kabuki-inspired makeups. Their cartoony personas skyrocketed Kiss’ appeal beyond the turntable and the stage; toys, lunch boxes, comic books, model kits and even Halloween costumes were marketed.
Around 1980, Criss became the first member to leave the band, followed two years later by Frehley. Stanley and Simmons carried on with replacement musicians, eventually dispensing with the makeup.
Following an introduction by the late rapper Tupac Shakur at the 1996 Grammys, the original Kiss – back in makeup – heralded its reunion tours, which played to sold-out arenas. But by 2003 (by which time Frehley was no longer in the band), Criss felt the writing was on the wall.
“That was it for me,’’ he says. “That was like: Ace ain’t here. This ain’t the original band. I said to Gigi, ‘I can’t do this with these guys. I made this band what it is. I’m one of the founding fathers. No matter who they get to put stuff on their face, it ain’t us. You can take the mask off the Lone Ranger and put it on someone else, but it ain’t the Lone Ranger.'
“We ended it on my 58th birthday, which couldn’t have been more apropos.’’
ROAD TO THE SHORE
Following the 2003 tour, Criss returned to his Monmouth County home, where he built a recording studio and began work on “One for All.’’ (Today, Criss is about 15 songs into his follow-up album, and is at work on his memoirs.)
But how did Criss find his way to the Jersey Shore in the first place? It turns out that, like many New Yorkers, Criss had something of a relationship with the area early on.
“I used to go to Asbury (Park) back in the day, when I was a kid,’’ he says.
Decades later, Criss suddenly found himself yearning to revisit the Shore.
“In ’87, ’89, I was living in Darien, Connecticut,’’ he recalls. “Talk about a WASP-y, snobby place to live. My ex at the time liked it; she was high maintenance. We were living there.
“I got the bug to come to the Jersey Shore. I hadn’t been here in years. I heard about Spring Lake. I heard it was really beautiful. There was this old hotel called The Essex and Sussex, which we stayed at. They closed it the next year. I fell in love with this old hotel and the ambience.
“When we went back home, I couldn’t get it out of my system. I came back again, alone, and stayed here. I thought, ‘This is really beautiful. I could live here.’”
JERSEY GIRL
Every husband and wife gets the “How did you meet?’’ question from time to time, and usually, they’ve long since gotten their stories straight. But about five years ago, as Gigi Criss listened to her husband’s version of events, she felt she had to correct his memory.
“Peter told this one story which was totally not how we met,’’ Gigi, 40, says with a laugh. “I looked at him, like, ‘What are you talking about?’ ” It’s funny how the rock star wants to tell one story, and the girl who meets the rock star wants to tell another.
“His story was: He sees this beautiful girl standing in the audience, and he tells the security guy, ‘I wanna talk to her.’ And I’m totally not that kind of girl. If some guy came up to me and said that, I’d say, ‘Get away from me.’”
Born in Point Pleasant and raised in Wall, Gigi studied theater and worked in modeling for about 15 years. Gigi was transitioning into model scouting when she met Peter.
She recalls: “I was with my friend (drummer) Rob Affuso, who’s in Skid Row. He asked me to go to a Kiss concert (at Madison Square Garden). Long story short, I’m backstage and Peter sees me. I asked him for an autograph for another friend of mine who was a drummer. He checked me out on the way out.’’
Days later, Gigi and Affuso attended another Kiss concert.
“I saw Peter again at the after-party,’’ Gigi says. “He wanted to talk with me. (Kiss manager) Doc McGhee asked me to go up to his room. I said, ‘Absolutely not. He can come down here and talk to me. I’m not going to his room. I don’t know this guy.’ He said, ‘Oh, no, Peter’s not like that. He would never do anything.’ I said, ‘Well, I’m not going to his room.’
“After an hour of them coaxing me – ‘He can’t come down here,’ ‘There’s too many people,’ blah blah blah – I said, ‘OK, but I know a lot of people in this city, and if this guy puts one hand on me ...’
“I went over and talked with Peter. We talked for a really long time. That’s how we met.’’
Peter soon learned that Gigi was a Jersey Shore girl.
He recalls: “When I met Gigi and she said she lived in Jersey, I wasn’t really thinking of the ocean. I was thinking, the ‘Garden State,’ this and that. She said, ‘No, I live near Spring Lake.’ I said, ‘You’re kidding me.’ I said, ‘Oh my God, it’s one of my favorite places. I don’t believe this.’ I didn’t believe this girl lives where I really found a place for me.’’
Later on, an omen sealed the deal for Criss.
“The year before we got married,’’ he says, “I came out here for Christmas. I hadn’t had a Christmas with snow for eons. I really missed it in California. We were dating then. I was taking the garbage down. There were all these deer surrounding the garbage area. They were beautiful, man. I just love deer anyway. Some people can shoot them. I don’t get that.
“Something happened – an epiphany, call it what you want. But I just felt God said, ‘You’re gonna marry this girl, and you’re gonna live here.’
“I said (to Gigi), ‘Go find a house. Buy it. Make sure it’s got a pool, a lot of privacy and land.’ Gigi looked at a bunch of places. I came here. We named the house Harmony. I fell in love with it. I’ve got land, I have privacy, I have my studio downstairs, I have a pool. I have all the great things a kid from Brooklyn – trust me – never had. What more do you really want in life?
“I find here and now is a great place for Peter Criss. I love it here. It’s paradise.’’
PETER CRISS: IN HIS OWN WORDS ON POLITICS, PIZZA & KILLER CLOWNS
I changed my life around. I get up at 7 now. I’m really living the life of a country squire.
I’m a Democrat living in a Republican neighborhood. That’s for sure.
The people here love me. I mean, it’s really so cool. It’s not that rock ’n’ roll, rock star crap. I go to Blockbuster. They say, “Hey, Pete.” I’ll say, “I hate that; call me Peter.’’ And then I’ll go get pizza. If I’m short, they’ll go, “Ah, pay me when you see me.”
My favorite pizzerias are Andy’s, Attilio’s and Vinnie’s (all in Wall).
The cops all know me. I can drive around with my windows down and my music blasting and people go, “There goes Peter.”
I’m near New York City again, which is my home. I love being near the “Apple”; I love being near Broadway. I love the fact that I’m so close to home, in Brooklyn. My family is still there.
I still listen to Sinatra. I still listen to Tony Bennett. I still listen to Led Zeppelin, The Beatles, the Stones and Tom Petty.
My favorite book is “To Kill a Mockingbird.”
My favorite movies are “Being There,” “Ed Wood’’ and “Killer Klowns From Outer Space.”
Stanley will make a special appearance 7-9 p.m. Aug. 22 and 5-8 p.m. Aug. 23 at the Wentworth Gallery in Schaumburg where the gallery will be devoted to an exhibition of some of his colorful artistic creations on canvas.
Some have commented that the model for Stanley's "Mona Lisa" is none other than the artist himself.
Mona Lisa
"Very possibly," said Stanley, 56, in a recent phone interview from his home in California. "It is certainly not conscious, but the painter is in all his works. Van Gogh said at one point to his brother, 'I am no longer content to be the artist, I want to be the paint.' I guess, at some point, we want to be as much a part of our work as possible."
Stanley, the driving force behind such KISS anthems as "Love Gun," "Detroit Rock City" and "Forever," said that his attraction to creating art surfaced early in his life.
"I actually went to the High School of Music and Art in New York, the sister school of the High School Of Performing Arts that the movie 'Fame' was based on," he said. "It was the same format. You had to audition and take tests and show your work. The best 300 kids in the city would get in there and get all their academics plus and one and a half hours of art a day."
Stanley admitted he had the dubious distinction of getting a failing grade in art from this prestigious institution.
"The problem with me was that I am not the most cooperative with authority figures. I always loved art but I just didn't like the idea of doing it according to anybody else's schedule or anybody else's criteria, which is basically the same as I am with music and everything else I do."
Outside of designing some album covers and creating the KISS logo, Stanley pretty much shelved his interest in art until about eight years ago when a friend suggested he take up painting.
"I was going through some tough times and that resonated with me and it very quickly felt like the right way to reconnect with my love for art," he said. "I got some paints and some canvasses without a clue of what I was going to do and went on a journey without a map. And so far I had not only liked every place that I have gone, but so has every one else."
Stanley began exhibiting his work in public in 2005.
"I had hung a piece in my house. I didn't even sign it because I was too self-conscious. Invariably people would come over and ask who did the painting and then they wanted to know where they could get something similar. So I knew that in connecting with myself emotionally I was also making that connection with others."
That piece was entitled "Green Planet" and it hangs on his wall at home still unsigned as a reminder of where he started.
Stanley's work started appearing in the Wentworth Galleries a little over a year ago.
Art for all
"I am a big believer that art is for everyone. When someone says to me, I love this piece but I don't anything about art, I am also reminded of people who say I love that song but I don't know anything about music.
"What do you need to know about art or music to like it? I would like to think that not only does my art bring in collectors, it also brings in people who perhaps have never been in a gallery. I am the first to say, if you live in a van or a villa, your environment will look better with art."
Stanley bristles a bit when asked if it matters if his art is being sold because of his celebrity or if the buyer felt the art speaks to them.
"Of course, they will be people who come because of who I am. But I can kind of doubt that someone will spend a considerable amount of money because they like the way I sing 'Love God,'" he said. "There is nothing wrong with using your fame or recognition to perhaps jump ahead and have a certain advantages over others because ultimately you are still going to have to stand on the merits of what you do."
On Saturday there will be a special VIP reception at the gallery with the artist starting at 4 p.m. for those who have purchased pieces in advance.
"I certainly make it a point to come out and wave and say hi and welcome people into the gallery. But realistically, the only people I can spend time with are the ones that are actually taking something home with them," he said. "Although everyone has a special CD, photograph, T-shirt, hat, that they would like to have signed, this is the wrong place for that. I try to be fair upfront and say this is an art gallery. It is not a rock concert, but you will have fun."
7-9 p.m. Aug. 22 and 5-8 p.m. Aug. 23 at Wentworth Gallery, 5 Woodfield Shopping Center, Schaumburg. Gallery hours are 10 a.m.-9 p.m. Monday to Saturday; 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Sunday. The free show is open to the public. (847) 995-1190, www.wentworthgallery.com.
The first Jonesboro, Arkansas, KISS Fan Expo is scheduled for Friday, August 22, and Saturday, August 23, and will be a two-day fan celebration of KISS’s 35th anniversary. Events planned include a screening of “Detroit Rock City” and a KISS look-alike contest on Friday, and memorabilia, auctions, games, and more on Saturday, ending with a KISS tribute concert on Saturday night.
Tickets are on sale now for the event, and the proceeds will go to the Gary W. Henry, Jr. Scholarship Fund and to the Arkansas Children's Hospital. For ticket and reservation information, please call 870-931-4777.
A little background on Gary W. Henry, Jr.:
Gary W. Henry, Jr. was born on August 18, 1989. At an early age, Gary developed an interest in art, spending time drawing heroes, monsters, and the like. Due to his dad’s love of KISS, Little Gary, as he was affectionately known, became an avid fan as a youngster, able to name most songs and every member of the band. As he grew older, he developed an interest in cartooning. He and two friends even started their own comic book company with their own original characters. He had a serious desire to continue his studies in sequential art (storyboarding and comic book illustration).
On May 6, 2007, at the age of 17, Gary suffered a drowning accident at Lake Norfork in Mountain Home, Arkansas, and spent nine days in the Arkansas Children's Hospital on life support. Unfortunately, his brain damage was too severe, and he was removed from life support on May 15, 2007, leaving behind a loving family, girlfriend, and a great many friends.
Erin, 36, an attorney, is due this winter.
"Erin and I are thrilled and can't wait to meet our newest addition," Stanley, 56, said in a statement to PEOPLE. "We've been extremely blessed and we're excited to see what the future holds. I often joke that I've traded the Viper Room for the diaper room, and it looks like my tour's been extended!"
The couple, who married in 2005, live in Beverly Hills with their son Colin, who turns 2 in September, and Paul’s 14-year-old son, Evan, from a previous marriage.
News of the pregnancy comes as Stanley recently completed the European leg of The Kiss Alive/35 World Tour, which encompassed 30 sold-out shows in seven weeks.
Whereas, KISS, who’s classic hit Rock And Roll All Nite became a rock anthem for an entire generation of fans; and,
Whereas, KISS has tirelessly supported the brave men and women who wear the uniform of the United States of America with performances, base visits, and video tributes; and,
Whereas, KISS is kicking off the Sturgis Rally with a concert that includes all the incredible pyrotechnics and fireworks display for which the band is famous; and,
Whereas, - The Mount Rushmore State, home of the four great faces carved from rock, welcomes four more great faces who made rock history:
Now, Therefore, I, M. Michael Rounds, Governor of the state of South Dakota, do hereby proclaim August 4, 2008, as KISS ROCK & ROLL DAY in South Dakota, and I join their families, fans and friends in wishing KISS a memorable day.
In Witness Whereof, I have hereunto set my hand and caused to be affixed the Great Seal of the State of South Dakota, in Pierre, the Capital City, this Fourth Day of August in the Year of Our Lord, Two Thousand and Eight.
Signed by Governor Michael Rounds and Secretary of State Chris Nelson.
Self-produced by guitarist/composer Chris Hill (who cites KISS, LED ZEPPELIN, VAN HALEN, and PARLIAMENT/FUNKADELIC as major influences), these 12 tracks bristle with melodic invention, heavy guitar riffs and huge hooks.
The woman behind the mic for this SOCIETY is Leah Kirby. Raised on a steady diet of AC/DC, BLACK SABBATH, JUDAS PRIEST and Motown, Leah cites Aretha Franklin and Ronnie James Dio as vocal influences. She is definitely not your typical rock frontwoman!
Nick Campbell's the man behind the big drum kit, technically gifted, intricate, and raised in the Neil Peart (RUSH) and Danny Carey (TOOL) school of bombast.
The bottom is filled out in its own spectacular JAM PAIN way with two bassists! Matt Frederick (from a band, DRILL 187, that Hill produced) and Greg Putnam (he of the six-string bass) puts the prog into the proceedings. DREAM THEATER enthusiasts both, they combine for one voice…and in so doing, make this JAM totally unique!
"Black Light Messiah" track listing:
01. So Here It Is
02. Wasted
03. You Made Me
04. Secret
05. Monster Mind
06. Second Smile
07. The Ride (feat. Ace Frehley)
08. Erase You
09. Choose Your Machine
10. Wrapped Around
11. Hero
12. Flavor
Check out audio samples at www.myspace.com/jampainsociety.
Though Vinnie Vincent himself has not released any new material in over a decade, "Kiss My Ankh" will pay tribute to the undeniable musical legacy of the former KISS guitarist. Vinnie's compositions are widely regarded as a highlight of the KISS catalog and remain a staple of the live KISS set list. Included on the tribute are selections from the three KISS albums to which Vinnie contributed, as well as the two albums he released with the VINNIE VINCENT INVASION.
"Kiss My Ankh: A Tribute To Vinnie Vincent" track listing:
01. Killer - DOUBLEVIRGO
02. I Still Love You - GODS OF FIRE
03. Lick It Up - FUTURE 86
04. A Million To One - STEVE BROWN
05. Boyz Are Gonna Rock - MIKE WEEKS (with Andre LaBelle and T.J. Racer)
06. Back on the Streets - JAZAN WILD
07. That Time of Year - SHELDON TARSHA, RYAN ROXIE, MARKO PUKKILA, TROY PATRICK FARRELL
08. Love Kills - VIC RIVERA / KELLI MCCLOUD
09. Unholy - CURSE GOD AND DIE
10. I Just Wanna - THE DEAD ZOO KEEPERS
Check out audio samples at www.myspace.com/kissmyankh.
His appearance will be open to the public and free of charge.
Paul Stanley's Wentworth Gallery Appearances
Friday – August 22, 2008 7-9 PM
Saturday – August 23, 2008 5-8 PM*
Wentworth Gallery
5 Woodfield Shopping Center
Schaumburg, Illinois 60173
*VIP Reception 4 -5 p.m. (Call for details)
847-995-1190
The classic rock band KISS will appear at Glencoe Campground/Rock’n the Rally on August 4 to accept a proclamation from Governor Mike Rounds, presented by Sturgis Mayor Maury LaRue, prior to their concert.
WHAT: A proclamation to make August 4 KISS Rock and Roll Day in South Dakota.
WHERE: Backstage at Glencoe Campground/Rock’n the Rally – Sturgis, S.D.
WHEN: August 4, 2008
WHY: KISS has tirelessly supported the United States military, and has visited numerous American military bases around the world to meet the troops, sign autographs and show their support for the military.
This is the band’s 35 year anniversary, and this will be their first time playing the Sturgis Motorcycle Rally.
Marc (aka Rock Star) and his twin brother Kris recently filmed a mocumentary video entitled, Rock Star Exposed. It's a long video but worth watching. According to Marc, they took their favorite parts from KISS' Exposed video and incorporated them into their own. "We wanted the chance to show people how infatuated we are with this man." All kidding aside, Kris says that they really saw this as an opportunity to show fellow members of the KISS army how much they admire this man and his work. Indeed, it's this admiration that led Marc and Kris to begin recording their first CD entitled, Putting the "F" Back in Rock & Roll. Explains Kris, "People are going to flip when they find out who we are working with!" "Yeah, don't think for a second we didn't have KISS in mind when we came up with this concept," says Marc. Besides working on the CD, the twins are putting the finishing touches on a book, a reality show about them is the works, and they have just launched a non-profit venture called, We Are One. "It's an effort to give kids in the community the chance to find themselves musically and to keep them away from the vices that have personally kept me down and out for so many years," says Kris. "We are using Paul's career as a template," says Marc. "Drums or drugs, guitars or gangs? I'd say guitars! After all, I'm Rock Star !
Golf and rock n' roll peacefully coexisted at The Reserve Vineyards and Golf Club in Aloha July 27 and 28 in an event designed to support Pacific University's 20-sport athletics program.
The second annual Legends Golf Classic, hosted by Pacific Board of Trustees member and lead KISS guitarist Tommy Thayer, started Sunday with an auction, dinner and concert featuring performances by Thayer, rising country star Crystal Shawanda and Eagles lead guitarist Don Felder.
The good times continued on Monday, and by the time the PGA pro Shaun Micheel's golf clinic ended, it was clear that the Classic would live up to its name.
Over 30 groups of golfers, music celebrities and professional athletes took to The Reserve's two courses to compete in the scramble-format tournament. Warrant's Joey Allen encouraged his group to just "get up and rip it," and comedian George Lopez kept his foursome relaxed with some good jokes and his in-cart radio.
And the golf was good, too. When Thayer stopped by the clubhouse to do a live radio interview with 95.5 The Game's (KXGM-FM) Gavin Dawson, his group was 9 under par. But they had a little work to do to catch former Major League pitcher Jaret Wright's group, which boasted an 11 under par score at the same juncture.
In only its second year, the Legends Golf Classic is growing. This year's celebrities included NASCAR driver Jeff Bodine, singers Johnny Lee and Ray Kennedy, "Happy Days" television star Donny Most, former major league baseball players Chili Davis and Scott Erickson and former football all-pro Preston Pearson.
The Classic concluded Monday evening with dinner and awards for the participants.
Pacific Director of Athletics Ken Schuman was pleased with the result.
"This is a very unique event," said Schuman. "I know of no other university that has something like this. This is great for the university and the community."
KISS is currently on its 35th anniversary tour, which has seen the beloved band stop in Australia, Russia and all over Europe. But Stanley is taking some time off the road — sans Starchild makeup — to visit St. Louis and show off his paintings.
One might expect the art from a member of a band whose initials were thought to stand for “Knights in Satan’s Service” to be a bit on the twisted side. “Like human sacrifices or something? I never have gone on record or told anybody that my life was dark or heavy or ominous,” Stanley said.
Instead, when he visits West County Center’s Wentworth Art Gallery on Aug. 1 and 2, expect to see colorful, textured images of hearts, peace symbols and moons. It’s the softer side of Stanley.
The busy rocker with two successful careers in the arts took some time for a Q&A.
COREY STULCE: Do you remember what art classes were like when you were in school?
PAUL STANLEY: Funny enough, I probably hold one of the distinctions in that school of having failed art, but that says volumes about my problems with authority figures.
CS: Do you use any reference materials?
PS: None. I’m on a trip and I don’t know where I’m going — but I know when I’m there.
CS: Can you describe the environment in which you’re working?
PS: Clutter. Clutter and loud music.
CS: What kind of music?
PS: I pretty much wore out listening to every R&B tune of the last 40 or 50 years. I’m about to move on and try something else. I’ve gone through everything from the Chi-lites to James Brown to the Spinners to the Temps to Shep and the Limelights — all the way back.
CS: What inspires you most when you’re painting?
PS: Nothing. I don’t want to paint with my head; I want to paint with my heart and my instincts. I just go for it.
CS: How often are you surprised at what ends up on the canvas?
PS: Most of the time. It’s either very much a depiction of what’s going on in me in the moment or something that I’m pulling up from some other point. My track record in terms of my own approval is pretty good.
CS: Was it a process to get to the point where you knew a painting was done?
PS: Yeah, it’s very easy to pass the point. That’s part of the trick, knowing when you’re done. You can go past the point. I tend to look at something for a while and go back the next day, and often it’s better to leave well enough alone.
CS: How did the decision come about to go public with it?
PS: I just saw that the response was very positive. It was more a lark; it just evolved to that. I have to say I was kind of taken. Initially when the pieces were in a gallery, people would be drawn to them or want to know who did them without knowing they were mine. No doubt I’d be kidding myself if I didn’t say my success and who I am truly gets my foot in the door. But there’s no rule against slamming the door on my foot. I get an access that other people might not, but ultimately you stand or fall by what you’re doing. Nobody’s gonna buy my painting because they like my songs.
CS: It might get people in the door, but from there it’s on the quality.
PS: Sure. Sooner or later it really does come down to if someone is willing to part with money. That says everything. The amount of people who have been purchasing the art has been phenomenal, way beyond anything I thought. That’s tremendously validating; really gives me a great satisfaction.
CS: Do you get the looky-loos?
PS: Of course. That’s great. I don’t care why somebody comes to a gallery show. Many people have never been to a gallery or seen art because they’re intimidated. … I’m a big believer that everybody should have art and your likes and dislikes are every bit as valid. Particularly for you, they’re more valid than anybody else’s.
CS: What kind of art did you collect before you started painting?
PS: At one point, I was into a lot of art nouveau. I was collecting a lot of lamps and Tiffany things. Paintings, some of my few regrets are things that I let pass by, like a large Picasso I didn’t buy at one point. Or Andy Warhol offering to do my portrait and I said, “Some other time,” and there’s no more Andy Warhol. For the most part, my taste is pretty eclectic.
CS: How would you compare the powers that be in the art world to the music world?
PS: It’s much more of a direct connection to the people. You don’t need to go through some big corporate conglomerate to get your painting seen. You don’t have everybody having a title and putting in their two cents — not that I listen anyway. It’s much more direct. There’s me, the gallery and the person who collects. What’s great is there are quite a few collectors who really have no connection to KISS. They’re buying art.
For more information about Paul Stanley’s appearance, visit wentworthgallery.com or call (314) 821-8884.
Tommy Thayer will be the special guest! A detailed schedule of the day’s events will be released soon.
KISS' main man Paul Stanley is trekking back to St.Louis for what is sure to be another successful, packed-to-the-gills art-show at Wentworth Gallery. Last time he was in town, the line stretched outside the gallery and two rows down the mall corridor. While you won't get bombs, babes and classic tunes, you'll be able to take a look at some of the Starchild's highly sought-after collection of abstracts, painted by the man himself. We had a brief window of time in which to speak, and at the sound of my "Lick It Up" ring tone, Stanley was on the line.
Last time we spoke, you said you were going to be getting into sculptures. Have you started any pieces yet, and how soon will we see them?
The final drawings are done, and we're probably a couple of weeks from taking the next step. They're steel sculptures, and I actually painted over them. The color is baked in, and then they're sealed in a clear coating. So, they're very striking and I'm really excited about it.
KISS just came off their most successful tour of Europe ever. Is there any chance you will be going over there to show your paintings?
It's something that has been mentioned, but between doing KISS and all of the gallery showings here in the States, it just comes down to time and how many hours there are in a day. I just did a great show in Philly, and St. Louis is this weekend. Next is Chicago, Atlanta and Washington DC. It's kind of like a never-ending tour, so to speak.
Painting started out being a personal endeavor for you, and now that you have gallery showings and fans of your art, is it more difficult to get inspired to create new works?
I still paint for the same reasons I always have, to make myself happy. Ultimately, if I'm not pleased with the way a piece turns out, it doesn't see the light of day. Certainly the demand for the paintings has changed, but the criteria for being creative hasn't.
At your last gallery showing, someone commented on how busy you are between your art and music careers. The implication I think was that rock stars just sit around all the time.
Maybe some do, but the idea of just sitting back never appealed to me. Being challenged is what life's all about. Having down time for relaxation is great, but creativity is in my blood.
I know with songwriting you can wake up in the middle of the night and have to record an idea so you don't lose it. Have you found any of that immediate inspiration with painting where you kind of have to drop what you're doing and put it on canvas?
Not really. I tend to think that inspiration is always there, and certainly when I paint, I don't like to premeditate what I'm going to do. So, when I put paint to canvas, I will get something out; it's just a matter of whether I like it or not.
At your last gallery showing here, there was quite a wide variety of people interested in the artwork.
Sure, there are the art collectors who come out who want to collect something valuable. We also get people who haven't necessarily been to an art gallery before. Unfortunately, someone propagated the idea that you had to have an education to appreciate art, and that's absurd. Anyone can appreciate art, and it's all subjective. It's like food; one person can be a vegetarian, another person can like steak. Which is more valid? It all depends on the individual.
Will you be revisiting the idea of doing any theater soon? There was a rumor that you were going to be part of Phantom of the Opera in Las Vegas.
Again, it just comes down to how many hours are in the day, you know? I have a 22-month-old, my older boy, and a wife who need to see me; and I need to see them, as well.
I actually played you in Magic Smoking Monkey's stage version of KISS Meets the Phantom of the Park.
[Laughs] Did you?
Yeah, and people had a really good time with the show, and I wanted to thank you for not suing us.
Well, that movie was certainly an interesting point in my life. I hope everyone had a good time with it.
Last year you recorded the Chicago stop of your solo tour. Do you know when we can expect it to be released?
It's funny you should ask that, because I was just on the phone with my manager asking, "When the hell is this DVD coming out?" Hopefully we can make an announcement soon.
Wentworth Gallery
St. Louis, Mo.
Aug. 1-2, 7-9 p.m.
For more information about Stanley's St. Louis appearance, visit www.wentworthgallery.com.
Despite decades of honing his voice and instrumentals, Stanley, born Stanley Harvey Eisen, in Queens, New York, never ignored the art training he received at New York City’s High School of Music and Art. He designed the group’s signature make-up, album covers, several costumes, and numerous stage sets.
Following some personal and physical setbacks late in his career, Stanley craved a new creative outlet. A friend suggested he try painting, which he never really pursued during his school days. He pondered the notion, then bought supplies, established his home studio, and discovered a new love, beginning with a self-portrait. In 2005 he presented his work to the world.
The Wentworth Gallery, 406 Mall Boulevard, brings Stanley’s Abstract Impressionist paintings to its King of Prussia Mall location on Friday and Saturday, July 25 and 26, with appearances by Stanley on Friday, 7 to 9 p.m., and Saturday, 5 to 8 p.m. A reservation-required VIP reception occurs on Saturday from 4 to 5 p.m.
Stanley will sign purchased giclee prints and originals, but stated that fans should leave albums and other memorabilia at home. Only those who buy his pieces will receive an autograph on the artwork. He will welcome all comers with a wave and friendly “hello,” but maintained that the gallery venue is not a rock concert or signing event, particularly due to the large crowds his presence commands.
“The great thing about these shows that I do at Wentworth Galleries is that it gives people a chance to meet the person who created the art,” Stanely said. “You know, I’m a big believer that if you’re going to acquire a piece of art you ultimately have to come to your own reality and sense of what it means, but there’s nothing like getting some insight from the person who created it. It gives everybody a chance to have that kind of personal contact.”
Stanley stated that although he began to paint as a solitary, personal endeavor, his exhibitions allow those who might be intimidated by art academicians or have never visited a gallery to come and explore something different. He added that he didn’t start exhibiting to “show off,” but that he enjoys sharing his work, hoping it will connect with people whether they are collectors, buyers, fans, or art aficionados.
The accomplished artisan begins with an acrylic-gessoed canvas, preferring spontaneity as opposed to a preconceived idea or sketch. He uses a bright palette packed with bold reds, greens, blues, yellows, and oranges. He rarely leaves white space, instead filling the canvas with whatever mood strikes him that moment and sometimes works in series, such as a collection of spheres, the symbol of life and eternity.
His “Green Planet” features a multi-colored orb in the canvas’s center surrounded by a spectrum of reds, oranges, and lavender. The circle contains a mix of those same hues with greens and blues blending almost to brown and possesses an iridescence reminiscent of polished labradorite(?). Cracks appear in no particular pattern similar to earth’s mountain ranges viewed from space.
Stanley frequently builds texture with modeling paste and layers of acrylic paint of varying viscosities. His tools consist of brushes, palette knives, and his fingers. He enjoys the intimacy of touching the media and lack of restrictions presented by painting.
He draws from inside himself for subject matter, pouring his emotions on the board before him, but occasionally seeks to recreate life around him like portraits of his bandmates in make-up, the Statue of Liberty, and his version of DaVinci’s Mona Lisa. He views his process as instinctive and cathartic, loving its challenges and rewards.
“It’s almost a snapshot of whatever’s going on at any given time, so rather than try to finesse that or shape it into something other than what it is, I like it to just be organic,” explained Stanley. “It’s so much reflection of who I am but it’s much more pleasurable. Seeing my own art is much more pleasurable than looking in a mirror and yet it does the same thing.”
The musician gains inspiration from all artistic movements from the Old Masters to Photorealism, but gravitates to Abstract Impressionism with its inventive depictions of reality, brilliant colors, and limitless boundaries. His free-flowing style resembles modern artists like Wassily Kandinsky, Paul Klee, Mark Rothko, and Peter Max.
Stanley’s work garners profits in the millions. He believes that his fame got him noticed on the gallery circuit, but that his talent keeps him there. He disdains people who bandy the words, “lucky break,” adding that, “People who fail (would) rather believe that you succeeded because of luck. Luck is seeing the opportunities that someone else doesn’t see.” He insists that his paintings speak for themselves since collectors typically buy them more than fans do.
Stanley recognizes his advantage of being famous, however. When asked if he thought he’d be as far as he is now without them, he pondered for a moment.
“It’s a great question, and after 35 years of being successful at what I do, I couldn’t possibly answer it with any accuracy. I mean, would I be this successful? I don’t know. It would’ve meant that I would’ve had that much more time to concentrate on art.
“I think a strong work ethic is paramount. I think that you’ll find out how much something is worth to you by how hard you’ll work to get it. Just because something is within your reach doesn’t mean it will come easy; it just means that it’s there to be had.”
The creative artist wishes to attempt sculpting next. He feels it’s a natural step and wants to try glass and bronze, learning how to mold and cast. Stanley knows he will succeed, certainly by his own standards, not caring about anyone’s opinion.
“The world is full of people who have failed, and the ones who tell you what’s impossible are the ones who failed. I guess I have issues with authority and I’ve always believed that what I want to do is what I should do. It’s something innate; I’ve always believed it and it’s proven itself to be right time and time again.
“I think that if you break out of any restrictions that others have put on you or that you’ve put on yourself, you’ll amaze yourself with what you’re capable of. There’s so much talent in this world (that’s) stifled firstly by others and then stifled by us. Once you give yourself the freedom to create then the possibilities are endless.”
For more about Paul Stanley and his amazing art, visit his website at www.paulstanley.com.
Light didn't reveal further details about the trek, which will come in support of AC/DC's upcoming Wal-Mart exclusive release. A single is expected to hit radio in August.
In addition to AC/DC, other acts touring in the near future include Eric Clapton, Stevie Wonder, Mariah Carey, Christina Aguilera, Depeche Mode, Shakira, Green Day, Kid Rock, Usher, Robin Williams, Mylie Cyrus, Slipknot, John Mayer, Keith Urban, Tim McGraw and Daft Punk, according to Light. Also, "We have a great idea for KISS to go out and do big arena tour," Light noted.
Others touring in 2009 include OneRepublic, Plain White T‚s, Jack's Mannequin, Cross Canadian Ragweed, a non-Christmas Trans-Siberian Orchestra tour, Brad Paisley, Rascal Flatts, Weezer, the Killers and Journey, according to various booking agents on the panel, which was moderated by Billboard executive director of content and programming for touring and live entertainment Ray Waddell.
Listen to a small audio-snippet and check out the gallery at here!
Please call the gallery for more information at 314-821-8884.
In town to marshal the Rexall Edmonton Indy, Gene Simmons took a moment after a press conference yesterday to send out a message to Canadian soldiers.
"Hi guys, it's Gene Simmons. We know you're in Afghanistan, we know it's a tough one, I just want you to know from my heart we love you," Simmons said for the camera just before he had to stop and wipe his eyes.
Sgt. Dan Milburn with Army News was in awe that someone of Simmons' stature would be moved to that extent for soldiers not even from his own country.
"I'm speechless. We had to pause the camera so he could have a moment. He's quite a person," said Milburn.
It was the second time that Simmons recognized the two soldiers filming for the military.
A well-known supporter of the American military, Simmons took time out of the press conference that had been focusing on his time in Edmonton and his association with the IndyCar series to salute the soldiers.
"I like the fact that there's a bit of civility when the Canadian flag goes up and your national anthem is sung everybody quietens down a bit," said Simmons.
"You don't have to salute, no one's forcing you to do anything, but just for a few minutes you shut your mouth and give it the respect it demands. I think that's part of our lives that's been tossed aside.
"Culture has become cynical and we don't even respect what we should.
"The two powerful and attractive gentleman (pointing to the soldiers) back there are wearing your uniform. They're the ones who make your lives possible."
The room began clapping and when the applause wound down, Simmons continued.
"And they deserve your respect because they have earned it. The rest of us just yack, they walk the walk."
Army News was at the Indy races all three days gathering wishes from the drivers to soldiers overseas or at home.
"It's a big push for them to see someone like Gene Simmons or Paul Tracy. That's pretty cool," said Milburn.
A KISS fan himself, Milburn was impressed Simmons gave the soldiers so much recognition.
"I've never had something like that happen when he told everybody to stand up and clap for the guys in the back of the room in uniform. It was unreal. My year has been made."
Milburn ended the session by asking for Simmons's autograph for his wife, to which Simmons, upon hearing her name, replied, "Oh yeah, I remember her."
In Alberta to marshal the Rexall Edmonton Indy, Gene Simmons took a moment after a press conference yesterday to send a message to Canadian soldiers.
"Hi guys, it's Gene Simmons.
"We know you're in Afghanistan, we know it's a tough one, I just want you to know from my heart we love you," Simmons said for the camera just before he had to stop and wipe his eyes.
It was the second time Simmons recognized the two soldiers filming for the military.
"I like the fact that there's a bit of civility when the Canadian flag goes up and your national anthem is sung, everybody quietens down a bit," said Simmons.
"You don't have to salute, no one's forcing you to do anything, but just for a few minutes you shut your mouth and give it the respect it demands.
"I think that's part of our lives that's been tossed aside. Culture has become cynical and we don't even respect what we should."
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"A few months ago I told you all about a session I did for a popular Russian artist, SAPGIR BAND. Well, they used footage of my session in the video for the song [see below], and here is it to enjoy. That old Les Paul from 'God Gave Rock N Roll To You II' and various other KISS songs is making the magic... my brother even played that LP on the Paul Stanley solo disc from 1978! Enjoy!"
Founded in 2005 by Dmitry Sapgir, SAPGIR BAND is a classic rock act which lists THE BEATLES, DEEP PURPLE, THE ROLLING STONES, URIAH HEEP and DIRE STRAITS as its influences.
Toronto has booked French director Mabrouk El Mechri's action comedy "JCVD," which features Van Damme playing himself in the midst of a post office heist.
Also receiving an international premiere in the festival section is Japanese director Toshio Lee's "Detroit Metal City," which features KISS frontman and reality TV star Gene Simmons as rock icon Jack Il Dark.
Tarantino, Jamie Lee Curtis, Dennis Hopper and Stacy Keach appear in the Mark Hartley documentary "Not Quite Hollywood," which recalls 1970s and '80s Australian exploitation films.
Other titles announced Wednesday include world premieres for J.T. Petty's "The Burrowers," "Deadgirl" by Marcel Sarmiento and Gadi Harel, and Spanish pic "Sexykiller" by Miguel Marti.
The second annual celebrity tournament, a fund-raiser for Pacific’s 20-sport athletics program, takes place July 27 and 28 at The Reserve in Aloha.
The tournament field also includes former “Monday Night Football” sideline reporter Lisa Guerrero, legendary NASCAR driver Geoff Bodine, singer/songwriter Ray Kennedy and Doc McGhee, the legendary manager of Bon Jovi and KISS. Rising country star Crystal Shawanda will be the featured artist for the tournament's Sunday concert.
Entry packages for the Pacific University Legends Golf Classic are filling fast. The tournament begins on Sunday, July 27, with a dinner, auction and concert featuring Thayer and other musicians in the tournament field. The golf takes place on Monday, July 28, on The Reserve’s two world-class courses with a shotgun start at 1:00 p.m. A clinic featuring PGA professionals and a putting contest will precede the tournament.
For more information on the Pacific University Legends Golf Classic or to reserve a playing spot in the tournament field, please visit the tournament web site at www.pacificlegendsgolf.com or call 503-352-2211.
1) WMMR - FM (Philly's #1 Rock Station) - Friday at 7:10 a.m.
2) WTFX - TV - Friday at 8:23 a.m.
3) WCAU - TV - Friday at 9 a.m.
As the money-loving, fire-breathing bassist for KISS, he was preoccupied with his ever-expanding music and media empire, including his reality TV show, Gene Simmons Family Jewels, and thousands of licensing deals for products such as a KISS credit card, KISS Canon camera and KISS coffeehouse.
Then, in 2005, Simmons was invited to an Indy race in Dallas-Fort Worth. He compares the experience to meeting his longtime love, Newfoundland native Shannon Tweed.
"It just hit me like a two-by-four on the back of the head," says the 58-year-old rocker and grand marshal of Saturday's Rexall Edmonton Indy.
"When I walked down the racetrack and saw the space-age technology and the astonishing pride and military precision of the teams and their drivers, I went, 'This is NUTS.' I've never seen anything like this in my life."
Simmons liked Indy so much, he decided to get involved.
The musician and his business partner, Rich Abramson, are now in charge of marketing Indy's races, including Saturday's inaugural event at City Centre Airport. As grand marshal, Simmons is responsible for waving the flag and uttering those famous words at the start of the race -- "Ladies and gentlemen, start your engines" -- and showing up at Capital Ex on Friday night. (Check around the ED Fest stage.)
"I'll make sure the people know and come to the event," says Simmons, who also wrote a theme song for the league, I Am Indy. "I'm the sugar-coating, babe."
Which means he doesn't want to talk about his recent venture, Ladies of the Night, a book about the history of prostitution.
"I shouldn't, because obviously everyone wants me to emphasize Indy, but if you go to GeneSimmons.com, you'll get a quick gander," he says.
Fair enough. So what does he think of the merger between the Indy and Champ car leagues?
"It's wonderful. They should never have split. It had to do with egos and politics, like anything. After the fact, you look back and say, 'Remind me what this was all about.' They should never have split. They're back together -- there are more cars, more drivers. It's the Olympics of speed, baby. The drivers are not only good-looking -- they could certainly be rock stars -- they're also literally Olympic-level athletes. Helio Castroneves literally won the Dancing (With the Stars) show on ABC. Athletes of the highest order."
Who's his favourite driver? Or can he reveal such information?
"You really shouldn't because every time you think it's Marco Andretti or Danica (Patrick) or Helio Castroneves or Tony Kanaan, it's the race itself that makes you root for somebody who's really pushing the limit. When you see someone going above and beyond, you just jump to your feet and go 'Wow.' It's the effort."
Has Simmons ever tried to drive an Indy car?
"I am physically too big, I'm proud to say. You have to be compact."
It's probably for the best. If you watch his reality show, Gene Simmons Family Jewels, you'll know he's a road hazard. He was once pulled over for erratic driving and his six-foot-seven son, Nick, 19, bested him at a driving-test challenge.
Mention his children -- Simmons and Tweed also have a 16-year-old daughter, Sophie -- and he is happy to veer off topic. Unlike rocker Ozzy Osbourne's dysfunctional offspring, Nick and Sophie are smart, sober and the real stars of Family Jewels. You'll never see them stumbling outside a club in L.A.
"If they ever did that, they knew they'd find themselves in a work camp in the middle of the desert. Oh yes," he says.
While he won't talk about his prostitution book, his entrepreneurial ego gets the best of him and he starts describing some of his other current ventures, including a 50-storey skyscraper in China and a new reality TV show, Jingles. (Contestants will try to write songs for TV commercials.)
In addition to his grand marshal duties at this week's Indy race, the KISS bassist and relentless entrepreneur will be speaking at a local business conference in Edmonton in September.
But the real news is that KISS is planning to rock Edmonton. They haven't been through these parts since July 20, 2000. (They're only doing four U.S. dates this year -- including one at the foot of Mt. Rushmore, on Aug. 4.)
Simmons has always had a soft spot for our city. Edmonton was the site of his first groupie conquest in 1974, according to his 2002 autobiography, KISS and Make-Up.
She was a girl with a green hair.
"I thanked her on my solo record," he says. "I never bothered to learn her name. It's idyllic and romantic in that way."
In a recent interview with ABC7.com's George Pennacchio, Paul Stanley stated about his art, "What I'm trying to do with my art is connect with people emotionally. I think one of the beauties of abstract art is probably that it appeals to you emotionally, rather than intellectually. I'd rather get a smile or somebody going, 'Whoa!' than somebody going, 'Hmmm.'"
"I love color and somebody was describing my work and said to me, 'You know, you're fearless with color,' and I said, 'What's there to be afraid of?' You know — it's color!"
"You don't need a degree to know what good art is. Good art is what you love. When you go into a restaurant, you don't have to have someone tell you what bad food is. When you spit it out, guess what? It's bad,"
Paul's original works start at about $14,000, but his giclee reproductions begin at about a thousand dollars.
And now friends and relatives of Robin Douglas Goodwin, who would have turned 47 in February, want to thank the tongue-wagging KISS frontman.
It all started last Nov. 3, when the body of an unknown man was discovered in a wooded area near Vegreville.
Eleven days later, RCMP released several photos in an attempt to identify the man.
The pictures showed a denim jacket with several badges - including several for KISS.
"Once I saw the jacket I knew that was my friend's jacket," said Ken Peterson, who grew up with Goodwin in rural Saskatchewan.
"There (are) not too many people who have that amount of badges all on one denim jacket."
Now with Simmons coming to Edmonton to marshall the Indy race this week, Goodwin's friends and family are hoping to meet up with the rock legend and thank him.
"In some ways it's to thank them and it's to let them know what happened to a big fan of theirs. We know he's a very busy man but maybe he'll show some concern," said Peterson.
Goodwin was last seen Sept. 22, 2006, just after his shift as a heavy-duty mechanic in Nisku. His remains would turn up 13 months later.
Family had spent that time combing newspapers and obituaries looking for any sign of Goodwin.
"We watched bodies and unidentified remains show up in Vancouver," said brother-in-law Garry Boe, who said it was difficult every time family and friends heard of unidentified bodies turning up and not knowing whether it was Goodwin.
When police released photos of the jacket last November, Boe happened to spot the picture in a newspaper at the same moment that his wife happened to be writing an e-mail to the Edmonton Police Service. She added in a line about the photo and that they were positive it was Goodwin's.
DNA tests on June 24 concluded that the remains indeed were Goodwin's.
RCMP are investigating Goodwin's death as suspicious but are not releasing a cause.
Goodwin was a huge KISS fan, said Peterson.
CBS has tapped Simmons to judge the reality show "Jingles," the latest TV series from Mark Burnett, the executive producer behind hits like "Survivor" and "The Apprentice," the network announced on Wednesday.
The show, slated to premiere later this year, will feature contestants writing and performing jingles for a variety of subjects, ranging from food products to sports teams. The winner takes home $100,000 and an advertising contract.
The show will be hosted by Kimberly Caldwell, a former contestant on the blockbuster Fox hit "American Idol," while advertising executives Linda Kaplan Thaler and Julie Roehm will join Simmons as judges.
"Jingles" is the latest move into reality television by Simmons, who helped form Kiss in the mid-1970s and became known for his wild makeup and wagging tongue. Simmons previously starred on A&E's "Family Jewels" and competed on a celebrity version of Donald Trump's "Apprentice" on NBC.
Simmons also has launched his own marketing company, using his name to promote energy drinks, books and clothing.
After all, one of the most visited art museums in the world is home to many famous works, like Leonardo Da Vinci's "Mona Lisa," something an artist like Stanley likely would appreciate seeing in person.
But Stanley isn't just another artist. He's probably better known for being able to rock and roll all night and party every day as the flamboyant frontman for the legendary rock band KISS.
And despite the fact that KISS completed its most successful tour of Europe ever in the band's long history - playing 29 concerts in seven weeks that concluded in late June - it's Stanley's artwork that takes center stage once he puts down his guitar.
Local KISS fans, as well as art aficionados, will get a chance to view some of that artwork when Stanley makes two special appearances at the Wentworth Gallery in King of Prussia Mall Friday, July 25, from 7 to 9 p.m. and Saturday, July 26, from 5 to 8 p.m.
"I look forward to painting," said Stanley in a telephone interview from Paris a few weeks before KISS wrapped up the European tour. "It's something that I take a certain amount of . . . oh, I don't know . . . there is a calming factor to know that at the end of this tour, I get to go into a room by myself and create from another part of my brain."
After reigning for more than 30 years as one of the most recognizable frontmen in the history of rock and roll, Stanley has embarked on a new career as a painter and has had some considerable initial success selling more than $2 million of his artwork in 2007. His King of Prussia appearance is part of an exhibition of his works touring the U.S. with the Wentworth Galleries.
"There are certainly going to be people who come (to the galleries) because of a connection that is first, and more primary for some, for what you're best known for. You're bound to have that," said Stanley. "I tend to say that my notoriety gets my foot in the door . . . but then you're free to slam the door on my foot.
"But at the end of the day, having spoken to enough of the galleries and their owners, there is a good amount of people initially who are drawn to the work without knowing who did it."
Stanley said that painting has been a road to self-discovery for him and that he initially didn't paint with the idea of showing his work to anybody.
"The first piece that I hung in my house I found very surprising that people were drawn to it," he said. "They would ask me who did and where it was from. But I hung it because I was very pleased with it and the bonus was that it was moving other people.
"When it became obvious that there was a demand for my work, I absolutely had to make sure that the business aspect was taken care of. But business is only necessitated by success. I don't do things initially for the business of it. The business is something that is both a necessary evil and a terrific reward."
His art at this point is very much unscripted, Stanley said. He doesn't do preliminary sketches nor does he sketch on the canvas. He prefers to work "in a stream of consciousness and that way, the piece is as revealing for me as it might be for someone else."
"For me, the beauty of abstract art is that it's really ultimately about what someone finds in it and that goes for me, too," he said. "I can certainly, when asked at a gallery, explain my reality of the piece, but I will then tell someone that ultimately what's more important is their reality of the piece."
This isn't the rocker's first venture outside the KISS perimeters. Stanley also has achieved success and rave reviews on the stage performing for six months in 1999 to standing-room-only crowds as The Phantom in the Toronto stage version of "Phantom of the Opera."
But now that KISS has successfully toured Europe, it's all about the painting.
"To do a gallery show and be surrounded by works that I created that have been met with such acceptance is very gratifying," said Stanley. "I'm blessed in that I have been able to take the intangible and make something tangible out of it, whether it's rock music or theater or fine arts."
He calls it a "road of discovery we all get to go on together."
"Painting is a very solitary and very intimate experience," he said. "Ultimately, it's shared, but the process isn't, so it's tremendously and deeply enjoyable because it's very profound for me.
"I've never done anything except to please myself, whether it's doing theater or doing KISS or doing painting at this point," said Stanley. "They are things I do very much for personal fulfillment and the icing on the cake is the accolades and pleasure that others get from it."
There also is a VIP reception with Stanley planned for Saturday, July 26, from 4 to 5 p.m. For details on that event, call 610-337-8988 or 1-800-732-6140.
For more information on Stanley or to view his artwork, go to www.paulstanley.com. For information on Wentworth Gallery, go to www.wentworthgallery.com.
We now know who will host and judge CBS' Mark Burnett-produced competition show "Jingles." What we don't know is when the show will air.
CBS made a pair of somewhat contradictory releases on Wednesday (July 16) afternoon.
On one hand, CBS announced that the original Sunday, July 27 premiere date for "Jingles" has been indefinitely delayed. In its place, the network plans to air rebroadcasts of "Flashpoint," a summer drama that had a solid premiere last week in a tough Friday slot.
That would normally look like bad news for "Jingles" -- the release says it "remains in production and will be rescheduled for broadcast at a later date" -- but CBS made sure to include positive information as well.
Kimberly Caldwell, a finalist on the second season of " American Idol" and a TV Guide presenter, will host the show, which asks contestants to write and perform jingles about a wide variety of products.
Amidst this sea of product placements, the next great jingle composer will be crowned by a judging panel led by rock legend and A&E reality buffoon Gene Simmons. In addition to his co-founding role in the KISS empire, Simmons has been central in branding his famous image, even launching the Simmons Abramson Marketing company.
Joining Simmons in presenting the $100,000 grand prize (and an advertising contract) are a pair of advertising legends, Linda Kaplan Thaler and Julie Roehm.
Kaplan Thaler's credits include the "I don't want to grow up, I'm Toys R Us kid" jingle and founding The Kaplan Thaler Group, the ad agency behind the Aflac Duck, among other campains.
A former senior vice president of marketing and communications for Wal-Mart, Roehm is the founder of the Backslash Meta, LLC agency.
KISS is currently on its 35th anniversary tour, which has seen the beloved band stop in Australia, Russia and all over Europe. But Stanley is taking some time off the road — sans Starchild makeup — to visit St. Louis and show off his paintings.
One might expect the art from a member of a band whose initials were thought to stand for “Knights in Satan’s Service” to be a bit on the twisted side. “Like human sacrifices or something? I never have gone on record or told anybody that my life was dark or heavy or ominous,” Stanley said.
Instead, when he visits West County Center’s Wentworth Art Gallery on Aug. 1 and 2, expect to see colorful, textured images of hearts, peace symbols and moons. It’s the softer side of Stanley.
The busy rocker with two successful careers in the arts took some time for a Q&A.
COREY STULCE: Do you remember what art classes were like when you were in school?
PAUL STANLEY: Funny enough, I probably hold one of the distinctions in that school of having failed art, but that says volumes about my problems with authority figures.
CS: Do you use any reference materials?
PS: None. I’m on a trip and I don’t know where I’m going — but I know when I’m there.
CS: Can you describe the environment in which you’re working?
PS: Clutter. Clutter and loud music.
CS: What kind of music?
PS: I pretty much wore out listening to every R&B tune of the last 40 or 50 years. I’m about to move on and try something else. I’ve gone through everything from the Chi-lites to James Brown to the Spinners to the Temps to Shep and the Limelights — all the way back.
CS: What inspires you most when you’re painting?
PS: Nothing. I don’t want to paint with my head; I want to paint with my heart and my instincts. I just go for it.
CS: How often are you surprised at what ends up on the canvas?
PS: Most of the time. It’s either very much a depiction of what’s going on in me in the moment or something that I’m pulling up from some other point. My track record in terms of my own approval is pretty good.
CS: Was it a process to get to the point where you knew a painting was done?
PS: Yeah, it’s very easy to pass the point. That’s part of the trick, knowing when you’re done. You can go past the point. I tend to look at something for a while and go back the next day, and often it’s better to leave well enough alone.
CS: How did the decision come about to go public with it?
PS: I just saw that the response was very positive. It was more a lark; it just evolved to that. I have to say I was kind of taken. Initially when the pieces were in a gallery, people would be drawn to them or want to know who did them without knowing they were mine. No doubt I’d be kidding myself if I didn’t say my success and who I am truly gets my foot in the door. But there’s no rule against slamming the door on my foot. I get an access that other people might not, but ultimately you stand or fall by what you’re doing. Nobody’s gonna buy my painting because they like my songs.
CS: It might get people in the door, but from there it’s on the quality.
PS: Sure. Sooner or later it really does come down to if someone is willing to part with money. That says everything. The amount of people who have been purchasing the art has been phenomenal, way beyond anything I thought. That’s tremendously validating; really gives me a great satisfaction.
CS: Do you get the looky-loos?
PS: Of course. That’s great. I don’t care why somebody comes to a gallery show. Many people have never been to a gallery or seen art because they’re intimidated. … I’m a big believer that everybody should have art and your likes and dislikes are every bit as valid. Particularly for you, they’re more valid than anybody else’s.
CS: What kind of art did you collect before you started painting?
PS: At one point, I was into a lot of art nouveau. I was collecting a lot of lamps and Tiffany things. Paintings, some of my few regrets are things that I let pass by, like a large Picasso I didn’t buy at one point. Or Andy Warhol offering to do my portrait and I said, “Some other time,” and there’s no more Andy Warhol. For the most part, my taste is pretty eclectic.
CS: How would you compare the powers that be in the art world to the music world?
PS: It’s much more of a direct connection to the people. You don’t need to go through some big corporate conglomerate to get your painting seen. You don’t have everybody having a title and putting in their two cents — not that I listen anyway. It’s much more direct. There’s me, the gallery and the person who collects. What’s great is there are quite a few collectors who really have no connection to KISS. They’re buying art.
For more information about Paul Stanley’s appearance, visit wentworthgallery.com or call (314) 821-8884.
When the play starts, 25 years has passed since the girls last met. Now time has taken its toll and Jessica — whose "first love" was one-time KISS guitarist Vinnie Vincent — is bitterly divorced from her rich ex-husband Per who left her for a younger woman.
Jessica devises a plan to steal her ex-husband's money and go to the USA to meet her teen love Vinnie Vincent.
"I'm gonna marry Vinnie Vincent," Jessica cries and stretches her arms towards the sky.
For more information on the play (in Swedish), visit the Norrländska Socialdemokraten web site.
Maybe Simmons just wants to rock and roll all night and race every day of this event. And he'll probably sign a few books while he's at it.
Henrietta Tiefenthaler, editor of Phoenix Books & Audio, confirmed on Friday that the rocker will indeed be in Edmonton in two weeks time. The actor/musician/author/tireless entrepreneur is going to tie in a book signing while he doubles as the grand marshal of the race.
The Rexall Edmonton Indy runs July 24-26.
Last July, motorspots legend Mario Andretti served as the grand poobah at the Champ Car event. This weekend, at the Firestone Indy 200 in Nashville, Predators goaltender Dan Ellis will fill the role. The netminder proclaimed he was jacked about the chance to not only hang out at the track, but that he'd have the chance to grab the mike and roar: "Drivers, start your engines" -- not unlike Simmons.
Back in 2006, Simmons and marketing partner Richard Abramson signed a deal to promote the Indy Racing League. Out of that deal came the circuit's signature song, I Am Indy, co-authored by Simmons and BAG.
Simmons was in New York on Friday to promote his latest publication, Ladies of the Night: A Historical and Personal Perspective on the Oldest Profession in the World.
"I don't bring guitars into my painting studio, and I don't bring paintbrushes on stage," he said in a recent phone interview. "You have to be able to close one door when you open another."
Obviously, the KISS frontman still rocks all night -- three and a half decades after his glam metal band formed. In fact, they've been tearing it up on the European leg of the KISS Alive/35 World Tour.
"(It's) the most successful tour ever. … Our fans now more than ever realize in a world of boring bands, there's only one KISS," said Stanley, who speaks softly, carefully considering his words.
"I've always fought to make sure that KISS was everything it can be and should be. The day it falls short of that or I fall short of that, I'll stay home," he said.
Not that he doesn't stay close to his California residence, where he lives with his second wife, Erin Sutton, whom he wed in 2005, and their son, who'll turn 2 this fall.
"We have no greater responsibility than to guide our children. That's why I'm home most of the time," he said. "My philosophy, particularly with my children, is they don't have a voice to vote. … If they did, their voice would be, 'Dad, stay home.' "
Still, Stanley doesn't plan to cease performing any time soon. His band's longevity in an often-fickle industry has been relatively easy, he said, because, "When we do go out, we commit ourselves to being everything that people expect.
"When you've been a band of this stature for over 35 years, you not only have to live up to the reality of what you did in the past but what people think you did in the past," he added, chuckling softly.
Now, the 56-year-old rocker is living a new reality as an artist who sold more than $2 million in artwork last year.
"What's fascinating … is that I'm developing in front of everybody. My success has come so quickly in that I'm evolving, in a manner of speaking, in the public eye," he said.
Stanley graduated from New York City High School of Music and Art as a teen. He began painting after going through a particularly rough divorce from his first wife, Pamela Bowen, with whom he has a 14-year-old son.
"I turned (to painting) as a means of self-expression," he said. "I think the idea that, as with music, it shows for me if you do something to please yourself, nine out of 10 times it'll please someone else."
Stanley's first painting was a self-portrait.
"I guess I was on the right path when people knew it was me," he said.
His work has evolved from "a kind of stream-of-consciousness using color and texture instead of words" to exploration with "limitless color. I never paint with an idea of knowing what to paint. I want it to, in a sense, come from almost purging. At this point, it's still very much coming from a kind of visceral, emotional place. … There's no rules as far as this is concerned."
Stanley's art retails for $1,500 to $50,000. It's available for purchase from Wentworth Gallery, a fine art chain that sells works from relative unknowns as well as renowned masters, such as Chagall, Dali and Picasso.
"This is a journey that I'm enjoying immensely. A lot of people who are getting a lot out of it -- the people at the galleries, the people who acquire the art -- have a very quick and deep connection to the pieces, which I think is great," he said.
But Stanley's art isn't just for aficionados. He's aiming for people who simply like what they see.
"I think the saddest situation is when people don't get to experience something because they've been told their opinions don't count because they're not educated. What possible validity is there in trying to appreciate food or art that someone else likes if you don't like it?"
Bandmate Gene Simmons liked what he saw in Stanley's rendition of the Statue of Liberty, a painting that now hangs in Simmons' home.
"A great icon. The Statue of Liberty -- not Gene, although he would beg to differ," Stanley said. "This truly is the land of opportunity, and I can attest to what's possible here."
"Let's call it what it is. The poetic phrase is 'the oldest profession in the world,'" he told Early Show co-anchor Harry Smith. "So it takes a historical point of view from the brothels of Rome to the geishas of Japan."
The book's lengthy title is "Ladies of the Night: A Historical and Personal Perspective on the Oldest Profession in the World," but Simmons said the "personal perspective" doesn't mean he's been a customer.
"My problem with that is they expect me to pay them. They're supposed to pay me," he said with usual bravado. "Not going to happen. Seriously, it's a book that I wanted the style to match the content. It's gold trimmed. It's a beautiful piece. Put it on your coffee table and let the guests in your house find the delicious subject by which to spend an evening talking about."
Simmons said that he's not attempting to romanticize prostitution, but instead wants to open up dialogue about the subject.
"This is something everybody knows exist. But in this puritanical culture, we have terrific family values and that's great," he said. "Other subject matters are swept under the rug."
He said that he wouldn't object to it being legalized because he feels government regulation could be beneficial.
"I'm not in an advocacy group," he said. "I would not object to it being legalized, because anything the government is not involved in - in terms of trade - is the wild west so you've got drugs, you've got criminals."
In addition to promoting his book, Simmons has been busy with music and television.
He and his Kiss bandmates kicked off their 35th Anniversary Tour in Australia in March.
"And they said it wouldn't last. I got your 'wouldn't last right here,'" Simmons quipped, Brooklyn style. "Melbourne, in front of 80,000 people. Whirlwind tour of Europe."
The band is on a break from the tour while Simmons films season 4 of his reality series "Gene Simmons Family Jewels." New episodes of season 3 are currently airing on A&E.
Today, though, having completed a successful tour, currently working on a new album and being feted by a new generation of guitar slingers, Frehley is getting some sweet vindication. The "Space Ace" talked to Spinner about the wild ways of his past, his own guitar heroes and a recently resurfaced memory of being a roadie for Jimi Hendrix.
Why are people still picking up on the music 30 years after you started?
I don't completely understand it, but I know in a lot of those guitar solos and other stuff I did I put my heart and soul into it. So maybe that somehow comes through the speakers.
How old were you when you started playing guitar?
I was 13, and actually my brother and sister both played folk guitar, they were, like, folkies back in the hippie days and they were doing Peter, Paul and Mary songs and folk songs, they both played the piano and I was going, "Get me out of here!" And a friend of mine bought, like, a $25 Japanese electric guitar with a little amp with, like, a six-inch speaker. And I had been fooling around with my brother's acoustic, but acoustic didn't really do it for me. When I plugged in this electric guitar, put the amp on 10 and then just hit a note, it was like love at first sight. I was hooked, and from age 13 on it's been a love affair with me and the electric guitar ever since.
Who were the guitarists that turned you on?
Keith Richards and the Stones were big. Then, of course, you get the whole English invasion with the Beatles and a little later on Jimi Hendrix, Eric Clapton, Cream, the Who, huge influence. I never considered Pete Townshend a brilliant lead guitarist per se, but when it comes to chords I learned how to play rhythm guitar from Townshend. I listened to his chord work because it's just brilliant.
What are some of your favorite guitar moments in your own work?
That solo in 'Strange Ways,' 'Fractured Mirror,' I was just listening to that the other day. We were trying to work it up for the show, we were gonna do that and 'Ozone,' but I think we're gonna hold off on that until the next tour cause I don't wanna do it unless it's perfect. I'm not that good at critiquing my own work, I'd rather let other people do it. What do you think?
One song I just fell in love with recently, even though it's not a guitar song, is 'Hard Luck Woman.'
That's a good song. 'Calling Dr. Love' is a good song. I'm trying to remember the guitar solo 'cause I just can't hear it in my head. 'God of Thunder' I did a really cool solo on that. Gene was good with me in the studio. He used to like give me ideas. He'd go, "Ace, do the dinosaur bend here and then do something fast and then do this melodic thing." He'd help pull them out of me, 'cause back in those days I wasn't always present, even though I was there [laughs].
Do you have any stories from when you weren't there and present?
I was lucky enough, I don't know if that is the right word, but I was lucky enough to get drunk with Alice [Cooper] before he got sober [laughs]. It was hysterical 'cause I got invited to this birthday party and Alice was sitting at this table. I was on one side of him and Paul Stanley was on the other side. Paul wasn't drinking at the time, and, of course, I was a complete drunk and so was Alice, so we got along famously, and Paul was completely on a different level than me and Alice. But I think Alice got sober real soon after that.
You got to interact with a lot of people like Alice. Were there any moments that stood out to you as a music fan?
It's funny, I recently recalled a memory where I actually roadied for Jimi Hendrix's last New York appearance when I was, like, 18 or 19 at the Randall's Island concert. I had forgotten about it for years and I'm trying to find footage from that concert because I was on the side of the stage in lemon yellow hot pants and a black T-shirt with a snakeskin scar on it and I had hair down to my waist [laughs]. I ended up sneaking backstage because I looked like a rock star. I'm walking backstage and I was observing, it was like a festival and I was watching the guys in the band coming in and out and in those days they didn't have laminates or anything so I was just looking at the way the rock stars walked in and out to watch the other groups. I just looked at the guy like I was somebody and he just assumed I was in some band. And then I'm backstage mingling, I'm hanging out with Steppenwolf, Jethro Tull, Grand Funk Railroad, and finally somebody said, "Who is that guy?" What band is he in?" Somebody came up to me and said, "Who are you?" I said, "I'm nobody [laughs]." In those days they were different. They said, "Well, can you do anything?" I said, "Yeah." He said, "Can you set up drums? Can you tune guitar?" I said, "Yeah, I can do anything." Next thing I know I'm setting up Mitch Mitchell's drums for Hendrix. It was so surreal.
There's the thing of being the music fan turned into the artist, but you never lose that fandom.
No, you never do. It's just that I know how much I enjoy my privacy, so I never like to impose on other stars. I never go after people cause I know how much I don't like to be bothered when I don't like to be bothered. And a lot of the guys, Hendrix is gone...I never bumped into Clapton, at least not that I remember. I never met Beck. It's just one of those things where our paths never crossed.
Who the producer on the record you're working on now?
Me. It's a good cross-section of Ace Frehley heavy rock. It's more like the first CD I did with 'New York Groove' than maybe some of the more recent albums I put out 'cause I'm singing lead on all the songs and I wrote all the songs. So it's more of an Ace record.
How excited are you to have this record coming out and be on tour?
It's really an exciting time for me because for so many years people I worked with in the past maybe kind of bad-mouthed me and said I was screwed up on drugs and alcohol and couldn't function or this, that and the other thing; I was undependable. And that's just not the case today. So it's a good feeling to be able to come out and take care of business on the road and be clean and sober, show up on time and do interviews and have a great time, which kind of dispels all the negativity that's been laid down before me.
Do you feel vindicated by the album and tour?
I hope so, I hope that happens because for a long time I was missing in action [laughs]. And it's just nice to be back, it's nice to be cognizant of what's going on around me and reclaim my rock 'n' roll throne.
It's interesting you put it that way because I was at the Dimebag Darrell tribute show at House of Blues in L.A. and you could see from the interaction with the younger guitarists the respect they have for you. Are there any guitarists you've gotten that response from or seen your influence in them?
Yeah, John 5 is a good friend of mine. Obviously, Dimebag Darrell was a good friend of mine. I spent a weekend with him and his girlfriend at his place in Atlanta a couple of years before that incident happened. I never really thought about how many people I influenced, but I know it's been a lot. I probably would've practiced more if I knew that today back then [laughs]. But other than that it's something I don't ponder; today I focus on the now and the future. Life's good. I'm just happy to be alive. A couple of times I almost checked out.
Do you talk to the guys in Kiss anymore?
Yeah, Gene called me in November of last year and invited me to do his television show. I was just too busy. I speak to Paul every so often, three or four times a year. And I spoke to Peter in October. So we all keep in touch.
But at this point is the solo stuff what you want to be doing?
I like doing my own stuff simply because I'm in control of my destiny for the most part. Whenever I work with Kiss, Paul and Gene, especially Gene, are such control freaks they push my buttons because they make these stupid decisions without checking with me and it always makes me crazy. They got all that crazy merchandising; next thing I know we're selling caskets.
What was the craziest thing you ever saw your face on?
I don't know -- toilet paper, maybe [laughs]. You're killing me.
Any last words?
I just want to thank all the fans who've supported me over the years. I got the best fans in the world, and you won't be disappointed with the new record, trust me. I need to be vindicated [laughs].
For additional hotel and ticket information, visit the Baltimore KISS Expo web site.
Before you go after him with a cartoon buzzsaw, you should know the man's not exaggerating. He's on fire—and not just because he's usually breathing it onstage. All at once, he's started the fourth season of A&E's hit reality show Gene Simmons Family Jewels; Kiss keeps selling out tours after what he calls "35 years of confounding the critics"; and now he's authored the must-grab book Ladies of the Night, "a personal and historical overview" of the fine art of whoring. Is he a client? "I never have delved, as they say," Simmons swore. But he's apparently researched the subject even more than Eliot Spitzer has. "It's often called the oldest profession in the world," Simmons related, "and it is. At the dawn of man, in what was then known as Eastern Europe in the middle of the Ice Age, one of the first Cro-Magnon females turned to her male counterpart in the cave and said something like, 'Ugh. Why don't you get your hairy ass out there and bring me delicious mastodon meat, and I'll trade you some of mine for some of yours?' "
An exact quote, I'm sure. "The 15-year-old pimply-faced boy next-door," he went on, "wants the sunshine-faced girl next-door, and he'll pay. He always paid and he always will pay. It's not prostitutes as such, but let's be honest—if you take anybody out, you're paying for it. Whether you call it going to dinner or prostitution or even matrimony, you're paying. With marriage, there's traditionally been payment on the way in—a dowry—and on the way out—alimony!" No wonder we gays are fighting for the right to marry: It'll legitimize our whoring!
Anyway, Simmons interviewed tons of 'hos for the book and told me: "They said, 'I love my family and kids, and I'm well-educated. But since I enjoy sex, I thought: Why shouldn't I get paid for it?' And it's on their terms. They decide who they're having sex with and how much they'll charge." And whether to do a skanky music video when their politico client is caught by the big guys.
Can a self-empowering dame make it with Simmons (who's long been married to onetime Miss November, Shannon Tweed) or does he treat them like caca doody? "Any girl can go to the media," he argued, "but you've never heard anything like that." But didn't some of his famous '70s conquests claim he was, uh, arrogant? "Everybody says I'm arrogant."
01. Deuce
02. Detroit Rock City
03. I Was Made For Lovin' You
04. Love Gun
05. Rock 'n Roll All Nite
06. I Love It Loud
07. Black Diamond
08. Lick It Up
09. Christine Sixteen
10. Do You Love Me
11. Heaven's On Fire
12. Calling Dr. Love
13. Shout It Out Loud
14. Forever
15. Hotter Than Hell
"Kiss Best - Kissology" is scheduled for a release in Japan on August 27, 2008 via DefSTAR Records, a subsidiary of Sony Music Japan. The limited-edition version of the CD — which will feature the re-recorded versions of the band's classics completed with the group's current lineup (including guitarist Tommy Thayer and drummer Eric Singer) — will also contain a bonus DVD featuring footage of KISS' April 2, 1977 concert at Budokan (taken from "Kissology Vol. 1") plus a bonus sticker. The DVDs are region-2 encoded (Japan, Europe, and Middle East), and carry no subtitles.
To pre-order this collection, visit CDJapan.co.jp.
"Hard & Heavy" will be promoted on television with a half-hour program hosted by Bret Michaels, lead singer for iconic hard rock band POISON and star of VH1's "Rock of Love" hit reality show. The collection also includes an exclusive DVD of Michaels performing acoustic versions of two of POISON's biggest hits plus two of Bret Michaels' original songs.
"Hard & Heavy" features a virtual "who’s who" of hard rock artists:
BAD COMPANY
PAT BENATAR
BLUE ÖYSTER CULT
BOSTON
CHEAP TRICK
CINDERELLA
ALICE COOPER
DAMN YANKEES
DEEP PURPLE
EUROPE
EXTREME
FOREIGNER
SAMMY HAGAR
HEART
HONEYMOON SUITE
BILLY IDOL
KISS
LOVERBOY
MEAT LOAF
MEGADETH
NELSON
NIGHT RANGER
POISON
JUDAS PRIEST
QUIET RIOT
RUSH
STYX
SKID ROW
.38 SPECIAL
GEORGE THOROGOOD
TWISTED SISTER
WHITESNAKE
…and many more.
The collection features 152 hard-rocking hits on nine CDs plus a 2-CD set of power ballads by artists including POISON, WHITESNAKE, CHEAP TRICK, HEART, KISS, WARRANT, KANSAS, SCORPIONS, ALICE COOPER and many more. Fans who buy the CD collection online or via telephone will receive two bonus DVDs: "Hard & Heavy: Confidential" an exclusive four-song acoustic performance by Bret Michaels and "History of Rock 'n Roll", three hours of performance clips and interviews with classic rock legends. Plus, the collection comes in a special metal collector's box, a mini "heavy metal road case" that captures the feel and power of the music.
Michaels recorded four songs on acoustic guitar especially for the "Hard and Heavy: Confidential" DVD, "Every Rose Has Its Thorn", "Something To Believe In", "Driven" and "All I Ever Needed". The DVD is exclusively available as part of the collection.
Michaels joined forces with Time Life to create an essential look at the hard-rocking hits of the '70s and '80s including many high-profile and must-have artists and songs that rarely appear in multi-artist collections. Filmed in the warehouse district of downtown Los Angeles with two hot rockin' co-hosts, the program features over 80 performance clips of music and artists from the '70s and '80s. Michaels talks about how this music affected him growing up, introduces some of his favorite songs and artists, and even talks about writing the classic rock ballad, "Every Rose Has Its Thorn".
"This is the music that I love, live and breathe every day," says Michaels, "'Hard & Heavy' is, hands down, the hardest-rockin' collection I've ever heard. Time Life has put together something that I've always dreamed of. Killer guitar riffs, emotional power ballads and high octane metal."
Time Life's executive producers, Vinny Vero and Mitch Peyser, the creative forces behind the collection, set out to license pivotal hard rock songs to create a complete collection. Said Vero, "Bret wanted to make sure what we were saying in the show was something he felt and believed. He was very involved in the scripting of the show and wanted to feel good about what he was saying." "It's definitely the hardest-rockin' collection we've ever created," said Peyser.
The 30-minute presentation will begin airing nationwide the first week of July.
"Hard & Heavy" is available online
Simmons will celebrate the release of "Ladies of the Night" with a July 8 appearance at Borders Books (1360 Westwood Blvd.) in Westwood, California beginning at 7:00 p.m.
Guitarist/keyboardist Paul LaPlaca (ZANDELLE, Z02, CHRIS CAFFERY) has been tapped to contribute a dark interpretation of the foreboding KISS track "Unholy". Chris Caffery (SAVATAGE, TRANS-SIBERIAN ORCHESTRA) will perform the guitar solo, with drums provided by Dennis Leeflang (SUN CAGED, EPICA, BUMBLEFOOT). Penned by Vinnie Vincent and Gene Simmons, the song is one of three Vincent co-writes to appear on KISS' "Revenge" album from 1992, nearly a decade after his departure from the band. Also confirmed for the tribute is a new recording of the VINNIE VINCENT INVASION anthem "Boyz Are Gonna Rock" by Mike Weeks, guitarist on the most recent solo album by original INVASION vocalist Robert Fleischman. Joining Weeks on the track are former NITRO bassist T.J. Racer and drummer Andre LaBelle, who appeared alongside Fleischman on the unreleased third Vinnie Vincent album "Guitars from Hell".
Rockstar (Nickelback)
Kryptonite (3 Doors Down)
Rock and Roll All Night (KISS)
Behind Blue Eyes (Limp Bizkit)
Photograph (Nickelback)
With or Without You (U2)
Here Without You (3 Doors Down)
Beautiful Day (U2)
Livin' on a Prayer (Bon Jovi)
Mr. Jones (Counting Crows)
Let Me Go (3 Doors Down)
Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For (U2)
Blurry (Puddle of Mudd)
Bawitdaba (Kid Rock)
If Everyone Cared (Nickelback)
Savin Me (Nickelback)
Yellow (Coldplay)
Livin on the Edge (Aerosmith)
Alive (POD)
Sunday Bloody Sunday (U2)
"We stopped at the Spangdahlem Air Base today on our way to the Luxembourg show to sign autographs and show our support for the men and women there. We landed at the base in our jet and then went onto the show."
Just a few minutes later, KOL received this great letter from Master Sergeant Jamie Cabral.
Hello KISS ARMY!
YES, KISS was here signing autographs at Spangdahlem Air Base Germany at the Brickhouse. There was a good turn out and they had to cut the line off so the group could start getting ready to depart. The four of them were on the stage in front of their posters and big TV’s were on either side of the stage playing their videos. Awesome, would have loved to have them hang around longer but they had to be on the jet by 1645. It was time to head to Luxembourg for their show tonight. I watched their jet taxi to the end of the runway and then set up for departure. It then rolled down the runway at 1700 as the National Anthem played across the base. A fitting departure. I followed the jet as long as I could until it disappeared into the clouds. I really wanted to get my 1979 Ticket Stub autographed, that would have been way too cool but I had to report to work this afternoon, maybe next time.
Thanks guys for showing up it meant a lot to all of us!
Master Sergeant Jamie Cabral
23 FS, F-16 Crew Chief Section Chief
Spangdahlem Air Base Germany
Frehley turned up to play lead guitar on Kiss' "Black Diamond," which was mostly sung by drummer Matt Cameron, with guitarist Mike McCready, an admitted Frehley obsessive, handling the first verse.
As he'd done the night before, Ramone thundered through his former band's "I Believe in Miracles" with Pearl Jam. Frontman Eddie Vedder also saluted his guitar tech, Ricky Ramone, who had long worked for the late Johnny Ramone before joining Pearl Jam.
Frehley and Ramone weren't the only guests during the show. A local vocal trio, secured after a couple of phone calls from Pearl Jam personnel, was enlisted to sing on "All Night," "Who You Are" and "W.M.A.," all of which were either new to Pearl Jam's live set on this short tour or had been absent from the rotation for a decade or more.
During the MSG run, the crowd often reached deafening volume, taking over for Vedder on tracks like "Better Man," "Present Tense" and "Release," which opened last night's show.
The sets went heavy on material from the band's first three albums, with hits like "Alive," "Even Flow," "Daughter," "Corduroy" and "Elderly Woman Behind the Counter in a Small Town" balanced by deep cuts such as "Leash," "Rats," "Whipping" and "Garden."
A healthy celebrity quotient was also on hand during the run, including the Olsen Twins, Coldplay frontman Chris Martin and Tim Robbins and Susan Sarandon.
Pearl Jam proceeds to Hartford, Conn., on Friday and will play a private show back in New York next Tuesday to benefit the Robin Hood Foundation.
Oh, and the fans, too.
"The record industry is dead. It's six feet underground and unfortunately the fans have done this. They've decided to download and file share," said Simmons, according to an AOL Australia report.
"There is no record industry around so we're going to wait until everybody settles down and becomes civilised. As soon as the record industry pops its head up we'll record new material."
Are you happy now, ungrateful fans of music?
Anyway, the death of the music industry has at least gotta be good for the Kiss Kasket, the $4,700 coffin the band used to sell on its website. It could be used as a beer cooler until the lucky fan died and was placed inside. (Remember to remove the brewskis first!)
See, Kiss would never do anything to harm the music industry.
(Note: That is, unless you count the band's execrable 1978 TV movie Kiss Meets the Phantom of the Park, in which case they obviously would.)
But at 58, the Israeli-born Kiss frontman (who spent his early childhood in Haifa as Chaim Witz, the son of a Holocaust-surviving Hungarian mother) becomes as shy as a blushing schoolgirl when the subject is his money.
“I’m not here to dispel anybody’s rumors either up or down about assets I have. Those are sort of private issues,” Simmons demurred in an exclusive interview with Portfolio.com over the phone from Bilbao, Spain, where Kiss was in the midst of an eight-month world tour.
SIMMONS SAYS
On Downloads:
"You're making a living off your music, why would you give it away for free?"
On Touring:
"If you're Kiss, you can take out 75 percent of gross."
On Prostitution:
"They should be paying me."
On Carbon Emissions:
"You're better off getting rid of cows."
Luckily, he had plenty to say about his philosophy of business, life, politics, and art.
Lloyd Grove: How are you?
Gene Simmons: I’m deliriously happy.
L.G.: Excellent. So let's get started. You've been pretty vocal about internet downloading of music, and you've had some critical remarks to make.
G.S.: That's like saying, "You're pretty vocal about a nuclear holocaust."
L.G.: [Laughs] But, Gene, it's happening, there's nothing we can do about it—
G.S.: Oh, you can't? No, you're wrong.
L.G.: Tell me why you're not like some horse-and-buggy guy complaining about the automobile?
G.S.: Oh, no, no, no, I think it's very clearly a matter of worldwide theft. And that what's needed—consortium is not just a big word like gymnasium. [It would include] rights holders, writers, publishers, record companies, or at least the entities that now hold the assets of those companies, which have since gone belly-up and have enormous debts—my sense is a trillion dollars of lost income. Hundreds of thousands of people thrown out of work by music fans who decided, one way or the other, by hook or by crook, to stop paying for content. There's no difference between that and movies or anything else that you own. So you're Norma Kamali and you design an outfit, and your name is your brand and your ownership—and your name is your signature. Nobody else should be free to sign your name and your signature to a check and cash it, not without your permission, and certainly not without you getting paid. What's missing is repercussions for bad behavior. Jail time, taking peoples' homes, cars. I mean legitimate hardcore penalties for theft.
L.G.: Well, if you have millions upon millions of people around the world doing this, particularly—
G.S.: That means that there are possibly trillions of dollars which can be collected.
L.G.: Sure, but what is the enforcement mechanism? Who has the resources to go chase down teenagers in their houses and haul them out in handcuffs?
G.S.: In order to fight a big army, you need a big army. So that means all the writers and the publishers and the people on one side who have been stolen from need to get together and go after the people who have stolen from them. But that also involves carriers—YouTube, everywhere else where content is put out that doesn't pay for it—and it doesn't just involve individuals. They get the stuff delivered through entities that are making a good living. It's a parasitic life form. But by the way, I'm not so much complaining as an individual, because I'm rich and famous—I'm filthy rich-and that's good.
L.G.: Sure.
G.S.: And that's what America is all about-to aspire, to work and then get paid for your work and blah blah blah.
L.G.: Let's agree that artists certainly deserve the fruits of their labors.
G.S.: Let's.
L.G.: And the ancillary people, the producers, technicians, etcetera. But are you suggesting that you put together some private sort of civil-litigation force, or what?
G.S.: Oh, in all areas. I think you tug on the shirtsleeves of the legal system and, at the same time, start class-action suits.
L.G.: I see. So a Team America: World Police for the music and record business.
G.S: Well, there is one for drugs—there didn't used to be.
L.G.: How successful has the one for drugs been, Gene?
G.S.: That question sounds like you're giving up—which is to say, it hasn't been very successful. But what's the alternative? Nothing?
L.G.: Well, the alternative, I suppose, which has been put forward by groups such as Radiohead, is to try and figure out a new business model. [Last year the British rock band released its seventh album, In Rainbows, on the internet, telling downloading fans to pay what they wished.]
G.S.: That's a fallacy. That was a one-time event for them. They're not going to go back to that model because you can't make a living. If you're nobody, you don't have any sort of downside—"Yeah, take my music for free." But if you're somebody, which is to say you're making a living off your music, why would you give it away for free? I mean there's got to be a demarcation between what charity is and a capitalist venture.
L.G.: This is the problem, of course, that's faced by many businesses that have been affected by the internet. I come from the newspaper business, and newspapers are on an inevitable downslide in circulation and advertising because their content is available for free online.
G.S.: I think you're missing my point. Whether newspapers and paper goods become a thing of the past or not, underlying rights is what needs to be protected. If you create something, and you own it, the question is, should other people be able to have access, make copies, and bypass you and not pay you? That's really the issue. It's a legal, moral, and ethical question. I mean, the farmer goes into the henhouse and complains that there are no chickens and no eggs left. Well, moron, you let the foxes in whenever they want, so what do you expect? Of course there aren't any. So this doesn't affect me. Kiss is on a world tour, our 35th anniversary, we're selling out stadiums, and we're about to play to 50,000 people in Bilbao, Spain.
L.G.: Is that where you are now?
G.S.: Yeah, literally.
L.G.: I looked at the pictures on your website. Awesome. Those crowds are amazing.
G.S. And we're thrilled and blessed and all that stuff. But how sad that there's not going to be another Beatles or Kiss or U2 or whoever. There's not going to be a new band like that, because there isn't going to be an infrastructure to support it. And so the next generation is happening right now. There are some really good bands out there that are never going to see the light of day. You always hurt the one you love. Well, the people who love the music the most are the ones that are killing it. Again, I'm not complaining for me. I get paid every time I get up on stage—and [from] 3,000 licensed goods, everything from Kiss condoms to Kiss caskets.
L.G.: Right, it's easier to sort of supervise and enforce your licensed products than it is your music. But can you make sure that your music is protected as well?
G.S.: Well, we simply don't put out new music. We put out DVDs, our Kissology DVD trilogy, volume 1, volume 2, volume 3, is approaching 20 times platinum, 20 times—that's from the R.I.A.A. [Recording Industry Association of America]—each disc! [Street noise] The music you hear in the background is people marching through the streets. I'm out on the terrace.
L.G.: I hope it's not a revolution or a coup!
G.S.: Well, it's happened before in Spain, it's pretty volatile here. So again, this doesn't affect us, but the new bands, forget it. It's a crime. And the reason the film industry began to battle piracy is they saw the death of the record industry. They actually arrest people. They actually see people with video cameras filming the movie, and they arrest them in the movie theaters, and they take them to court.
L.G.: Of course, we could talk about this endlessly. Obviously there are certain countries like China that don't respect even rudimentary copyright laws.
G.S.: So far. But they're coming around, because of capitalism and trade and sanctions and blah blah blah, they're coming around. Because China is going to see that as soon as it enters the underlying rights world, which is to say, the next Chinese person who creates the next Pokémon, Chinese version, is going to want to reap the rewards. So if you're a Chinese filmmaker, or songwriter—you know, right now, China doesn't have any pop culture that anybody gives a shit about. I can't name you a Chinese comedian, or actors or superheroes or anything. But when that first Chinese superhero or cartoon or song or painting becomes a worldwide phenomenon, you bet your ass, they're going to be more vocal about it than Western culture, and they're going to want to get paid. Same thing with India. I can't name you an Indian comic book, cartoon character, comedian, actor, and don't really care.
L.G.: Well, Bollywood, of course.
G.S.: Means nothing outside of India. And over there they collect 50 cents or whatever per ticket. Once they see billions of people willing to go to their movies, what do you think they're going to do? How about if there's an Indian rock band who all of a sudden starts making records that everybody wants to buy? Stranger things have happened. There have been German bands that have sold platinum. So that first Indian band, do you think they're going to let the rest of us have it for free?
L.G.: So we should be propping up the popular culture of India and China and sort of accelerating this process?
G.S.: We should be doing nothing. Capitalism is a wonderful, self-generating sort of entity. Let the cards fall where they may.
L.G.: I just wanted to ask you—you're in the middle of this humongous world tour which you started in March and you're going to the end of August—what's that been like, traversing the globe on this very demanding tour?
G.S.: It's not demanding at all. Anybody who complains just wants sympathy. It's the life of Reilly. You live on Mount Olympus. I don't even have to wipe my ass if I don't want to. People carry your luggage, you travel on your private jet—there's nothing to complain about. And the big guys don't. You never hear Mick Jagger open his mouth. Bono will say nothing. It's lonely at the top? No, it's not. You can have as much flesh as you can digest. It's not lonely—we get paid very well, hideously well—everybody wants to be us, and we have access to any girls we want.
L.G.: How old are you, Gene? 58, 59?
G.S.: Yeah. By the way, only white people talk like that. You never hear a black person say to B.B. King, "Aren't you 80? Isn't it time to stop?" White people are fucked!
L.G.: So you think I'm white, do you?
G.S: Well, the biggest stars in the world are over 60-McCartney and the Stones, those are the bands you want to go see. There isn't a 20-year-old band that can sell out a stadium.
L.G: Now are you really partaking of the full-dress rock star's life at age 58 or 59? Or are you just telling me you're doing that for marketing purposes, since you're a genius marketer?
G.S.: Nobody's a genius. We're all trying to figure out how to make the next buck. Think what you will. I mean, when you lead your life, you live your life. And whether somebody thinks it's a good story or not, who cares? You ask me a question and I answer it, and then you make of it what you will.
L.G.: So tell me a little bit about what you've learned about business. You sort of learned the hard way, did you not?
G.S.: Business has never been easy, and the delusion that musicians and writers and artists and people like that, who aspire to this thing called show, actually never really paid much attention. In the spirit of full disclosure before the fact, and truth in advertising, it is actually called the music business and show business. It's not called music or show—it really isn't. And it isn't called film, it's called the film business. You know? And art, it really is the art business. They call it the art "world," they don't want to use the word business, and words like inspiration and all that stuff is nonsense. The classic musicians and artists of the past, during the Renaissance period, these were commercial artists. These were commercial writers. Chamber music was based on the premise that the lord of the manor walked up to the guy, and said, "I want a three-minute piano concerto, put it in my chamber, there's going to be just a few guests and royalty"—that's why it's called chamber music, by the way. And that's why Mozart sometimes had three-minute piano concertos. You know why? Because that's what he was paid to do. [What] they were all paid for, and that includes the Sistine Chapel. The pope shows up and says, "I don't like that." They're commercial artists.
L.G.: Absolutely, I take your point. But what I wanted to get from you was, in the early part of your career up until perhaps the '90s, you were in a situation where the series of people who were managing Kiss and managing your business affairs and investing your money were doing a wretched job. Was there a point back in the '90s when perhaps you had only $6 million in assets or something like that, and you learned a lot about business the hard way? I wonder if you could talk a little bit about that.
G.S.: Well, sure. But it's fair to say that whatever numbers people think are the real numbers aren't anywhere near that—but I'm not here to dispel anybody's rumors either up or down about assets I have. Those are sort of private issues. I'm responding to the $6 million thing, which is a very funny number. That's okay. My mother eats more for lunch than that amount of money. But the point is that I will always be at the top of my list in terms of priorities. People who work for you, and with you, don't always have you at the top of their lists. Now, if and when they do, and if they have the goods to deliver, then it works. And, like any job, you have to understand that everybody—managers, agents, everybody else—works for you, not the other way around. And if at any point, they don't do what you think they should be doing—you fire them. Nothing personal. It's not called "friends," it's called business. And so people have been let go a number of times, and will continue to be, I'm sure, in the future.
L.G.: Right, but did you have a wake-up call at some point and say "Look, I, Gene Simmons, have got to get my arms around all this and control it myself and not leave it to people who don't have my best interest at heart"? Was there a point when you realized that?
G.S.: That's a really good point, and it's a good caution for anybody about anything. The more you know about the structure, the infrastructure of the process, the dynamics, who's in it, why, the agendas, and so on, the more you'll be able to make cognitive and astute decisions about your life. And every decision you make either increases your assets or decreases them-whether or not you're in mutual funds or whether or not you'd go down a dark alley or go down a well-lit alley. All those decisions have repercussions up or down. You're right. The more you know, the more astute your decisions might be.
L.G.: I was just wondering if there was a certain time when you said "Aha! I have to do this!"
G.S.: Well, it's a learning curve. In real life, nothing happens like switching on a light bulb. Those are sort of poetic notions. In the real business world and the real world—politics, religion, and so on—it's a learning curve. You learn a little bit and you learn some more, learn some more, and you've got to keep in the race. And once you stop, technology and the business model overtakes you and leaves you behind. So I used to be a sixth-grade teacher, and I used to teach kids math and English and literature. It was in Spanish Harlem. I think it was P.S. 75. The year was 1972, I think. So I used to teach math to kids—and my daughter, Sophie, comes up to me and shows me math problems, and, I have to tell you, I don't have a clue what she's talking about.
L.G.: Same here.
G.S.: Yeah. And what that means is, we didn't pay attention to the evolution of mathematics, so it bypassed us. And it's no different in math, it's no different in business, it's no different in anything. You know, if you blinked and you opened your eyes all of the sudden, the world became a digital and virtual world. I mean, it happened right away.
L.G: Talking about learning curves, when you see that the people who are most successful in the financial world, the heads of huge investment banks like Bear Stearns and Merrill Lynch, when you see that they've managed to lose tens and tens of billions of dollars, what do you make of that?
G.S.: Arrogance. Arrogance. Warren Buffett doesn't lose. And that's not because he's Buffett, but because he has a philosophy. He's very conservative. And when you get full of yourself, arrogance kicks in. It's like Tyson, when he was hungry and lean and mean, nobody could stop him. And then he decided to get into the ring in Japan and not train because he thought, "Hey, I'm Mike Tyson." So he got knocked out. It's arrogance.
L.G.: By the way, do you have investments with Berkshire Hathaway?
G.S.: Perhaps.
L.G.: I'm not asking you numbers, Gene. I just wonder if you think it's a good operation, and whether you've put your money there.
G.S.: Well, it's difficult to be quoted. I watch financial guys all the time, especially on the Fox entity, because it just becomes so spirited, and debate goes back and forth. And I also watch CNBC and CNN. I like everybody's point of view, and I've been on those broadcasting entities. I want to make the point about the financial geniuses of the stock market, the ones who have been successful, and there was a study on this. Over the course of the year, they picked 10 places to stick money in and they kept moving it around. And a monkey was given a dart and kept throwing 10 darts at a dartboard, and the monkey beat the best guys in the business. In the short term, that's possible. In the long term, the conservative point of view is what wins.
L.G.: Between a monkey and Warren Buffet, you'd pick Warren Buffet?
G.S.: I would, because, over the long haul, he's been successful. I think his average is 20 percent or more per year through the years. And if you take a look at what he invests in, it's biotech and communications and medicine and so on. It's AT&T, and every once in a while he'll go Disney. But it's not going to be a startup operation, it's going to be an entity that's been around a long time with a lot of assets. So this guy is a good guy to look at. So why does he do over 20 percent average per year, and the street does about half that? You know, people get greedy, arrogance kicks in. "I'm the genius." You get your face on the cover of BusinessWeek, and then it becomes about the celebrity. People start asking you questions, the way you're asking me, "So what do I do with my money?" And you become full of yourself, and then you think your opinion is the only thing that matters. It's not. I'm very conservative. If I have the cash to buy it, I'll buy it. Perhaps not all for cash, but you have to take a look at the downside. If the ship sinks, do you have another boat so you can move on? You can't just get on and go, "Hey, it's not going to sink." Well, maybe it will.
L.G.: Are you and your business partner, Richard Abramson (who together own a branding and marketing company, Simmons Abramson Marketing), still advising ITU Ventures, this venture capital firm in Century City?
G.S.: We talk. We talk the way we talk here, and the talking is what makes people make decisions. You're the President of the United States, you want to go to war, you don't want to go to war, you sit down, and you talk. You talk with people who have their snoots to the ground. In general, it's pop culture, but everything costs money. Venture capital is a good word for life. Because everything costs money. We think there are different rooms in this building—pop culture is over here, and oil is over there, and communications and biotech are over there—but it's really all the same. Everything costs money, and everything needs people to give you money for either that service or for the product. You have to figure out how to get your stuff into their hands and get their money into your hands, and therein lies the big hurdle. How do you do that for the least amount of money, for the most amount of money, and how do I get them to understand they can't live life without my stuff? And I use that word in a Marshall McLuhan-esque sense. My stuff is important and they need it, and I have to convince them they need it, so part of that is branding and marketing and positioning and advertising. Or, if you can bypass that, then your business model works better, because it doesn't cost as much to get your message out there. Viral is best, because it's the most seductive. That's what we sort of do.
I can't tell you why I know the things that I know, but I'm also clear I know what I don't know. And if you're clear about the issues you don't know, then you're getting a pretty good read. So it doesn't matter whether you're a venture capitalist or whether or not you're in pop culture. Because, as you know, we're the branding marketing company of the IndyCar Series, and that includes the Indy 500. I'm the one that came up with "I am Indy"—and the song. But in order to position a message, you have to understand something about what the thing is and where it wants to go. Those are sort of vague language notions, but I know what they mean. And that doesn't mean I know squat about how an Indy car works. I can't tell you a gear from a schmeckle—I have no clue. And it's completely unnecessary, actually, in the world that we live in. That's why you hire engineers. You have to keep your eye on the big picture, otherwise you'll never get there. And so I understand certain things based on a little bit of this, a little bit of that. It's sort of like [Sony chief executive] Howard Stringer. If you sit down and talk with Howard, he'll tell you, "Look, I'm not trained. I don't know a lot about business and stuff like that, but I have a point of view."
L.G.: Now he tells us!
G.S.: Oh, no, he was always very clear, and you want to get a guy like that who isn't concerned with the minutiae. You know, the captain of the ship is not going to be able to fix the ship's engine if it breaks, and can't tell you how it works, but he knows where he's going.
L.G.: Let me ask you about your whole Kiss operation and the licensing. You have 1,000 products that are licensed, as you say, everything from condoms to caskets. Are you licensing new products all the time?
G.S.: All the time. And it's 3,000 products!
L.G.: So not only are you now up to 4,500 sexual encounters-
G.S.: That number is not true.
L.G.: What is the correct number, Gene?
G.S.: 4,800.
L.G.: Do you, like, mark these down? How do you keep track of all that?
G.S.: Well, you have to take photos.
L.G.: [Laughs] So you're licensing new products every day. Was there any point at which you had given over the rights to your music and you had to get it back?
G.S.: Some of the publishing was sold off, because there was a big piece of cash in front of us, and we wanted to use the cash to work on something. But it came back—it all comes back.
L.G.: How hard was that to get it back? What was that process like?
G.S.: Money. If you have money, things are easy. Everybody talks about publishing as being the cash cow. The truth is, if you're lucky and blessed and at the right place at the right time, a lot of variables, live performances are it. It just is.
L.G.: And you control the iconic Kiss costuming and makeup?
G.S.: Right, all of it. It's privately held, there's no debt, never has been. We don't borrow money, and when we go out and do tours, you'll get your live fees, the millions that comes from that every time you get up. But you can also-I mean, as an example—if you are doing $4 per head at a live event on T-shirts, let's say for argument's sake, 50,000 people. And out of those 50,000 people, you average $4 per head per live, they buy a T-shirt. But not everyone has a T-shirt, so it kind of averages out to $4 a pop. That's the gross. We get $4 per head, so that's two hundred grand. But we just played Paris yesterday, day before, and it was $23 a head. As you can see, that's just for T-shirts. They have hall fees and something like 20 to 25 percent hall fees, sort of paying quote "rent" to the entity—and there are price of goods fees. But we make a living.
L.G.: How does that break down? What percentage of the take goes to expenses and hall fees and other things?
G.S.: It's as different as the people who work in it. Even with hall fees, you can negotiate them. As an example, if you're a live entity and you control the concert hall, you're going to be harder on bands that come in and only play once. But if you're the Stones or Kiss or U2, you're going to want to be nice to them, because they can play anywhere and fill up anywhere. So the hall wants the business, because they don't just make money off the band—renting the facility and getting their licensing and merchandising. They make money off of parking and popcorn and peanuts and whatever else they're selling there. And that's where the real money is for the hall.
L.G.: The band doesn't get a piece of those concessions?
G.S.: Popcorn and soda? No. You don't want to get involved in food and beverage, because one person chokes on a popcorn, and you get sued. No, no, no food and beverage for us.
L.G.: Can you give me a ballpark? I'm just curious, I just know nothing about this business that you've been in for four decades—how does it shake out?
G.S.: If you're Kiss, you can take out 75 percent of gross.
L.G.: Wow. How many people do you think in this latest tour...?
G.S.: I think you're mixing different business models. One is licensing, merchandising. The other one is actually putting on a show.
L.G: Okay, were you talking about the licensing business?
G.S.: Yes.
L.G.: Okay, 75 for that. What about the show itself?
G.S.: Well, it costs us around 300 grand a week to pay for expenses. And, again, if a band goes out there with 10, 15 trucks, it's going to cost them that much. Or you can fly everything. As soon as you put everything on jets, it goes 5 to 10 times as much. You keep on the ground and keep the distances between the cities to 500 miles or so, then you do well. But do an average of four to five shows a week, often five, and we can take out as much as a million or more a show.
L.G.: And how large is your road crew? How many people?
G.S.: Well, it's covered in the 300. In the smaller arenas—say 15,000 to 20,000—we can have a crew of about 30. But as you get up to the stadiums, you have to have mercenaries come in. We don't pay for people manning the porta-potties. But you're going to want to have extra sound, extra lights, so you staff up to maybe 50. Now, again, the sad part of all this, in the music world, is that they took their eye off the ball, or someone opened Pandora's box and they can't figure out how to put it back in. It's over, and there's going to have to be a new business model for new bands. McCartney's always going to do well. He'll be able to play any stadium and play Beatles songs, and I'll pay to go see it. And the Stones. But the next Kiss? Is not going to have a chance.
L.G.: Right, right. Tell me, the A&E show, which is quite charming—
G.S.: Gene Simmons Family Jewels. We start shooting the fourth season in July or August.
L.G.: Now do you own the show?
G.S.: Um, I own most of the show—there are partners. It's seen around the world. I don't know, 60 to 70 countries, something like that. I have the German version, and I can speak German well enough, but the voices they used! [Speaks German] I was telling you the other languages that I speak, but the—
L.G.: Hebrew, German, English, what was the fourth?
G.S.: Very little Hungarian. Sorry, no, full Hungarian—very little Japanese. Hungarian curses are the funniest docile-sounding exclamations. You want to hear some? You know, in English, we say holy shit, what the fuck. Ready for Hungarian? [Curses in Hungarian] That's when you slam your thumb with a hammer or something. Here's the direct translation—"Oh, that's Christ's horse!" [Another Hungarian curse] "That's the pain of the dog!" But you can say you're beautiful in any language—you have to learn that first.
L.G.: Absolutely. So, Family Jewels—let me ask—
G.S.: Gene Simmons Family Jewels.
L.G.: Yeah, yeah, I got it. Can you tell me what kind of revenues you're throwing off annually from your company? I'm not asking profits, just sheer cash flow.
G.S.: Well, it's millions and millions, but I don't want to talk about that because A&E is my partner. We also have a cartoon show on Nickelodeon called My Dad the Rock Star, a comic-book company called Simmons Comics—it's all there on GeneSimmons.com
L.G.: I'm just asking, just all together, if you added it all up, how much cash flow is the Gene Simmons, Kiss business, with the music and the licensing and the ancillary shows—how big a business is that? That's what I'm just trying to get—the order of magnitude.
G.S.: I make a living.
L.G: [Laughs] So, you don't want to tell our readers-
G.S.: No, every day I wake up and new opportunities come up and there's just not enough time—the lecture circuit speaking-engagement thing is all over me—I've done a few.
L.G.: As kind of a business guru?
G.S.: Well, I'm not fond of the business gurus, I'm fond of think tanks. I'm fond of talking and listening. I'm not fond of speeches, because the guy is only going to hear his own voice talking. Business and religion and politics and pop culture are a moving target, and because it's a moving target, the only way you're going to learn is you have to engage people in conversation. If it's stationary, then you can talk all you want, because the rules don't change. But people change, tastes change, and just everything changes, so you have to engage people in conversation, and sometimes it'll take an illiterate to walk up to you and say, "How do you know that?" And that's a good question. Even though he's unqualified to ask anything, he's never done anything, what comes out of his mouth may be actually pretty profound.
L.G.: I want to help you plug your book that's coming out, Ladies of The Night, which is about the oldest business in the world. It seems to be just your sort of appreciation of prostitution, right?
G.S.: Well, it's really not. I neither condemn it nor condone it, you know what I mean? It simply is. I have a fascination with it, and you can take a few different points of view about it. One, that it's despicable and so on and you can take a puritanical point of view.
L.G: Not yours, I would think.
G.S.: Or you could take the point of view that it's women empowering themselves.
L.G.: That would be your point of view?
G.S.: It is. And that what goes on behind closed doors between consenting adults is nobody's fucking business is my point of view, and that what everybody else has to say about it is besides the point.
L.G.: Let me ask you, have you been a satisfied customer?
G.S.: Actually I haven't, but that's only because I'm against the business model. I think they should be paying me. Here's how I position it, and I hope you're recording this. This is a pearl of wisdom. Page one, at the dawn of existence, four million years ago, that first human female grunted to a male counterpart, "I'll stay in this nice warm cave, you go out and risk your hairy behind to bring back that delicious mastodon meat. I'll trade you some of mine for yours." After that momentous event, nothing would ever be the same. Before language, before culture, before currency, before even religious questions, before anything. The very first time that male either didn't kill, hunt, or in essence use his physical powers to overcome something, and not share it with somebody, was sex.
L.G.: So this is the spark that ignited the economic engine?
G.S.: All of it, that's precisely the point. Sex ignited, well, obviously the biological imperative, the urge to merge, but also, sex is the very first spark that ignited civilization, civility, nonviolent sort of social harmony. It is sex itself, or from the female, that created the social structure. Otherwise, every guy would be trying to kill every other guy. So there's less food and so on, and you don't want to share it with anybody in the pecking order. Testosterone would rule. It is sex itself that was the spark that ignited all of it.
L.G.: Let me end with this: Obviously we're in the middle of a very heated presidential campaign. Who do you think would be better for the economy, Obama or McCain?
G.S.: Well, I'm neither a Democrat nor a Republican—I mean, both are full of hot air. On the far right, you've got wacky religious anarchists, and then on the far left you've got communists and socialists, and so neither works very well, which is why sometimes Democrats and sometimes Republicans get voted into public office. People tend to vote for ideals more than political parties, and I think that's healthy. I am a social liberal in terms of female rights. I think anybody who wants to get married should be allowed the hell that that brings—so married gay men, good luck, why the hell would you want to get married in the first place? Good luck. You want some of that torture? Go for it. I think the gay community is looking for something else—some kind of validation, and I'm all for it by the way, but marriage is hardly the place. I'd want to just get paid just as much. The hell with anything else, just give me the money. But fiscally, I'm very conservative. I'm against charity—I'm totally for jobs. I can always give you money, but you'll go through it, then you're done. I'd rather give you education and skills so you can go and make your own money. So I'm against welfare. I'm for giving people jobs so they can make their own money so they don't have to say thank you to anybody, including me. When you give charity—it's often awkward to people. But, of course, I'm like you, I want the world to stop living in hunger and blah blah blah. I don't want socialism, I think the idea of a universal health care, and you have a right to be taken care of-actually, you don't. And I don't think it's government's responsibility to pay for your medical bills. That's why businesses are moving offshore, because as an employer, if I hire you, it's not just that I have to pay rent, insurance, the price of goods, your salaries, deal with the unions when they go on strike and torture me. But I also have to make sure that if you're pregnant, you have maternity leave, and pay you for it, and if you have a broken tooth, I have to make sure that's taken care of, and when you retire, I've got to worry that you're paying your taxes and stuff like that. So no wonder it's difficult to make money in this country. By the way, the employer is the last one that gets paid. First one is the person who works for you, then you've got to buy the price of goods, you've got to pay rent, and if there's a profit left, the owner of the company gets paid. And I'm for making it easier. I'm pro-Corporate America. I think that corporations are what makes America possible. I like Wal-Mart.
L.G.: Do you like Exxon Mobil having record profits on rising oil prices?
G.S.: I do. You want to know why?
L.G.: Yes.
G.S.: I would encourage the American oil companies to make as much money as possible so that we put the money in our oil companies instead of the Middle East.
L.G.: Are you for offshore drilling and A.N.W.R. drilling?
G.S.: You know, the druthers. Of course, there are environmental issues, but neither you nor I are qualified to say what's environmentally sound. For all the global-warming issues everybody talks about, we'd be better off killing cows because the methane released from cow farts literally is causing the biggest hole in the ozone.
L.G.: Really? Are those more damaging to the ozone than your G5 or whatever it is you're getting around in?
G.S.: Yeah, yeah, that's a popcorn fart.
L.G.: Can I just say for the record that my carbon footprint is one zillionth of yours, and I feel like a better citizen for it?
G.S.: Probably, but it's not the carbon emissions that's the problem, it's methane. They're telling you the wrong things. That doesn't mean that we shouldn't limit the emissions and the garbage we dump from stuff like that, but it's political. I think you should be able to enjoy the fruits of your labor, but you're better off getting rid of cows, which is not going to happen, because the emissions of the methane causes holes in the ozone which increases the ultraviolet rays, etcetera. But that's a tough one for people to swallow, although it's absolutely true, and you're welcome to do the research.
L.G.: Asking about McCain and Obama . I know you've been kind of a hawk on Iraq, I don't know where you're on it now.
G.S.: I'm a hawk. It's very funny how people use those terms. I think...
L.G.: It's a branding-marketing term.
G.S.: No it's not, I think it's a political positioning for people who don't agree. And the people who want peace more than you or I are the soldiers in the front line... I want the opinions of the people who actually risk their lives voluntarily. I want to know what they think, not what somebody who's having a margarita in the afternoon is thinking.
L.G.: Fair enough. But between Obama and McCain—
G.S.: I'm about to answer. Socially, perhaps environmentally, I like Obama. In terms of foreign policy, I prefer McCain. In terms of the economy, I believe Obama is going to have a damaging effect on our economy.
L.G.: So are you undecided at this point?
G.S.: I think most people are. That's why it's fifty-fifty. That's why even Hillary supporters are thinking of voting for McCain. But that's good. I think this is a terrific time for politics. My gut tells me that Obama's got history on his side, sort of like the black John F. Kennedy, the underdog, and Kennedy was the first Catholic to be president. We're not voting for issues, we're voting for personality. People know nothing about politics or positioning, they vote based on sound bites. Because nobody reads, nobody digests. And once a president is in office—I mean, for eight years, nobody knew the name of the Vice President of the United States. They just don't because they're busy trying to work and survive and have families and stuff like that. Do I think Al Qaeda cares if it's Obama or McCain? Actually, they do. Muslim extremists don't number in the hundreds of thousands, they number in the millions. That's worldwide. I believe we're fools and delusional, and [we] think here's a fantasy, we pack up, go home, and everything is fine. Nobody's going to try to figure out how to get a dirty bomb, strap it on their chest, and walk down your street to take out your city.
L.G.: So it's a scary world.
G.S.: Yeah, and then your choices are what are you going to do about it? Come home, watch TV? Or are you going to go out there, whether everyone agrees with you or not. Remember, America created the League of Nations—tried to get countries to talk-but it failed miserably—two World Wars followed. America tried again with the United Nations-it continues to fail daily at a miserable rate, while Muslims were being killed by Serbs in Bosnia-Herzegovina, the U.N. did shit. Nothing. It took American planes to go over and drop a few bombs for everybody to come to their senses. The just horrific events that are going on across the African continent, including Mugabe and Sudan and just everywhere, Darfur. What do you think U.N. is doing about it? Nothing. Fucking pathetic. America is not the police of the world. Actually, it is. It actually is. If America ceased to exist, who would you count on? France?
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The details are as follows:
Friday, July 25, 2008: 7:00 – 9:00 p.m.
Saturday, July 26, 2008: 5:00 – 8:00 p.m.
Wentworth Gallery - The Court at King of Prussia
690 West Dekalb Pike
King of Prussia, PA
For details on the VIP Reception with Paul on Saturday, July 26 4-5 p.m. or to RSVP, call 610-337-8988 or 800-732-6140.
No, not the latest Madonna photoshoot. We're talking rock gods Kiss, who've strapped on their stackheels to return to Europe for the first time in almost 10 years.
Having given up all pretence of ever retiring, the New York quartet are celebrating 35 years of crazy, crazy nights by recreating their Seventies Alive show, right down to the original costumes. Heck, when you're hauling a rig that big around the world, you gotta do your bit for recycling.
Okay, there may be a couple of new faces in the band this time, but who cares when there's plenty of greasepaint to keep the illusion going?
Besides, Kiss has always been about Paul Stanley and Gene Simmons, and on a warm night in Paris the main men were back in all their be-wigged splendour.
Stanley, demonstrating exactly why he needed his hip replacing recently, spent the entire two hours wiggling his backside like somebody had slipped itching powder in his strides.
Simmons stalked around in thigh-high monster boots, breathing fire, spitting blood like a man who's overdone the flossing and, of course, unfurling That Tongue at every lady in range.
All their trademark over-the-top trimmings were here - levitating drumkits, exploding guitars and more fireworks than the Rooney wedding.
But pyro alone doesn't make a 35-year career, and while the explosions created plenty of smoke, the real fire came from the music. From the opening wallop of Deuce to the ribcage-rattling Parasite, the band were as tight as Stanley's kecks. And when the band launched into I Was Made For Lovin You, the entire arena partied like it was 1979.
So, do I still wanna rock 'n' roll all nite and party every day? You better believe it.
Kiss release the KISSology DVD boxset throughout Europe at the end of the summer.
First, there was the dubious distinction between "hard rock" and "heavy metal," then, of course, "punk" vs. "metal," then we had "crossover" bands who polluted the waters still. Now, with grindcore, screamo and other sub-varieties that make you wonder where are the "Log Cabin Metallists," it's to the point where you could argue that Cher and Ween should qualify somehow.
Well, I didn't have quite as cynical a take. But I did notice that I was favoring the old vs. the new. Maybe because everything is fresher the first time around. And while every single bio I receive on a new metal band tells me how UNLIKE ALL THE OTHER BANDS this one is, somehow, it isn't true. I'm not accusing anyone of lying, I just think that most bands and their supporters have what could be called "Parental Vision." That's where the only person who really believes you're beautiful is your mom or dad. These people want to believe their band doesn't sound like all the others and to highly trained ears--senior metallists, that is--the distinctions are obvious and concrete. To normal folks who are just looking to turn the radio up when they hear something they like, well, let's just say it's become pretty obvious why most metal has become part of a hardcore subgenre and not the mainstream phenomenon it once was.
Now for 25 performing outfits who have made Heavy Metal what it is.
25) Meshuggah: Swedish metal bands prefer to make things difficult for themselves. First off, they're in Sweden, not exactly a prime lift-off point for World Domination, unless you're IKEA. Top that with the fact that these guys refuse to play in standard time signatures, standard key signatures or do anything that could be considered standard. They sometimes don't even make the standard "evil" faces. They try. But it always looks like they're about to laugh. The music really is like shoving your head into an industrial fan. Impressive.
24) Mercyful Fate: A Danish metal band fronted by a guy in slightly wrong Gene Simmons make-up, a screech that sends chills up your spine and a goofy fun-lovin' name like King Diamond. Yet, for all that, the guitar playing, the relentless rhythms and the obsession with Satanic gobblygook make them sureshots in my book. Slightly more entertaining than Venom, who were number 26 and therefore left off this list.
23) Alice In Chains: Some people might choose Soundgarden and I might too, on a different day. But Alice In Chains were heavier and weirder, bluesier and more decadent. They pre-dated grunge and uncomfortably jammed themselves onto the Seattle tugboat as it sailed into the Pearl Jam nation. To anyone who says "Hey, they're not metal," I remind you that heavy metal began with a very strong blues influence and Alice In Chains were far bluesier than many bands who have since come to define metal.
22) Uriah Heep: The roots of Spinal Tap? Albums such as Very ‘Eavy...Very ‘umble, Look at Yourself, The Magician's Birthday and High And Mighty sure seem to have conceptually influenced a strain of "mock metal," yet Uriah Heep with the amazing singing of David Byron, one of the originators of the heavy metal vibrato-laden moan, and the brooding organ of Ken Hensley jammed together as many styles as they could sneak past customs. Sometimes it was peanut butter and jelly, sometimes Rum & Coke and sometimes bananas and bar-b-que sauce. At least they tried.
21) Pantera: Phil Anselmo is one scary dude. And I wouldn't want to meet any of these guys in a dark alley. But on a stage, gainfully employed, Pantera were in their element. While their hard and heavy ways made them heroes to their devoted following, one misguided member of that devoted following took things to the point of indescribable horror when he shot and killed guitarist "Dimebag" Darrell (among others) while Darrell was playing in his post-Pantera group Damageplan. Being in a band has its job hazards; this should NOT be one of them.
20) Thin Lizzy: You'll see that I'm partial to bands who can write songs. Play as many notes as you like. Scream your lungs out. Tell me the world isn't fair. Hail Satan, if you must. Tell me more about how you're going to "rock me." Or tell me all about the people in a faraway galaxy who will one day communicate through the electric guitar. But I'll still take someone who can write: "Jailbreak," "Cold Sweat," "Whiskey In The Jar" and "The Boys Are Back In Town."
19) Kyuss: Who to blame for Stoner Rock? Why not these California desert dudes? These days people know about Queens of the Stone Age, who excel at shifting their line-up on a monthly basis, but once upon a time in the early 90s, Josh Homme and his then buddies stayed together on a fairly consistent basis (well, bass players come and go... and the drummer got switched up in the end, but for these guys that is consistency) and cranked out albums and looked to be going somewhere. Then, of course, before they could really be considered successful, they broke up. Which is what stoners do.
18) Guns N' Roses: With sides of punk and glam, Guns N' Roses coasted into the heavy metal mainstream with catchy tunes and a harder edge than their nerf-metal counterparts. There seem to be two kinds of heavy metal groups: ones that can't stay together and ones that never quit. Funny how everyone but Axl seems to be able to play nice with each other. They say money changes everything, but apparently not everything.
17) Kiss: They may never get the respect they crave. But they've got the sales they always wanted. If any band can be said to be a retail industry, it's Kiss. While so many bemoan the fate of the music business since music is so often distributed free these days, Kiss were already making merchandise a key monetary hub in their organization while others were busy building up their reputations with critics. Now grab your Kiss lunchbox and set it down on your Ace Frehley dinette set with those Peter Criss utensils to nicely cut up that Gene Simmons Bologna and Paul Stanley Liverwurst. I don't even own this paragraph. Gene Simmons does.
16) Dio: Ronnie James Dio is what we call a lifer. A Heavy Metal Zelig, always somewhere in the mix, whether it's with Ritchie Blackmore's Rainbow, Black Sabbath, Elf or his own self-titled Dio. One of the originators of that vibrato-heavy metallic moan, Dio not only qualifies for a lifetime achievement award for his contributions to furthering the cause of Metal throughout the world but for Medicare in this country. And they credit him with that funny hand gesture!
15) Robin Trower: Ah, who? You know the guy from Procol Harum? Ok, that doesn't help. Well, ask a heavy metal guitarist sometime who's among their favorite players and nearly every time you'll hear people bring up the name Robin Trower, whose solo albums from the early ‘70s are pretty damn staggering in their sludgy-blues heaviness. This is back when the music didn't mind bringing you down. Which just goes to show what a good Quaalude can do. Start with Bridge Of Sighs.
14) Rush: Rush took a severe beating at the hands of critics for being a tad humorless about their high concepts. But they never whimpered and headed home. Nope. They had too many kids waiting for them in the stadiums who liked their high seriousness and looked forward to living in a future they would never actually live to see. 2112 is still a long ways away...They did it with guitars and they did it with synthesizers and they did it with a drummer who owned way too many drums. But to be fair, he uses all those drums. They're not just for show, like with some people.
13) Spinal Tap: Everyone says they weren't real. Yet I will put them on every Heavy Metal list possible, since their material--you know, the songs--are every bit as good as the "real" thing. And even if they never really did record an album called Intravenus DeMilo, they should've. And if the budget had been there, they just might've. And who's to say Shark Sandwich isn't just the victim of a clever two word put-down review? Maybe someone should go back and re-evaluate this band's imaginary oeuvre.
12) Deep Purple: While Sabbath and Zeppelin have gone on to be immortalized, Deep Purple have fallen dangerously behind. Ritchie Blackmore deserves better than to be lumped in with the "Where Were They Then?" pile. "Smoke On The Water" may be obvious, but "Space Truckin'" and the rest of Machine Head should be textbook cases for all aspiring young hard rockers. And they were purple when only hippies were ruining the color and not dinosaurs and Prince.
11) Slayer: Slayer redefined "heavy" back in the 1980s by speeding things up to the point of hardcore punk but with intricate riffs and shout-outs to Satan that made them obvious followers of the Metal church. With such a volatile sound and temperament, who would've thought they'd still be hanging together this many years later?
10) Iron Maiden: Just caught a live concert of theirs from 1985 on--where else?--a sports network. Great, since the music networks can't be bothered. And boy did these guys look kind of funny with all that billowing smoke and weird prancing around--and those spandex tights. In some respects, almost as good as Spinal Tap, and in some ways better since they were serious. "Rime Of The Ancient Mariner" is ponderous, but the hoof-beating gallop of "The Trooper" and just about anything from The Number Of The Beast makes up for their inherent corniness.
9) Motorhead: By never swerving from their ideals, Motorhead managed to win the hearts and souls of metal loyalists everywhere while simultaneously gathering punks and critics (same thing?) for their cause. Playing louder than others proved to be a key strategic move. Writing "Ace Of Spades" proved to be the other.
8) Aerosmith: There are those who will swear they aren't heavy metal. Yeah, I know. They were once considered a Rolling Stones ripoff because Steven Tyler had big lips like Jagger and Joe Perry was the sullen shadow playing the role of Keith Richards. But this bluesy, R&B-based hard rock band wrote stuff like "Toys In The Attic," "Back In The Saddle" and "Draw The Line" before crashing, burning and reforming in the ‘80s to further a more commercialized rock sound that sure sounded like a lot of heavy metal at the time.
7) Judas Priest: Their songs were always pretty catchy for a metal band, but I always preferred singer Rob Halford's between song banter. Very brief and always spoken in the same punctuated strain that he uses for the climax of their best tunes. In other words, he never lets up the intensity or drops the mask. He is the dominator on that stage and with two guys--K.K. Downing and Glenn Tipton--on guitars who virtually defined the overused trope "twin-guitar attack"--how much more definitive do you need?
6) Metallica: Whether their new album this Fall brings them back up a few pegs remains to be seen, but before they started a virtual war with their fans over $$ (weird, coming from a band who'd already raked in more than most bands would see in a lifetime) and put out St. Anger, the album that made people think that maybe Load was worse than they originally rationalized, Metallica were once the lords of a new generation. Master Of Puppets remains one of the sacred treaties and the self-titled Black Album is that one metal album that non-metal people own and pull out to prove they "like" heavy metal.
5) Jimi Hendrix Experience: Hendrix was far more than some heavy metal guitarist. Putting his music in any box is useless because it always sneaks out. But from the opening notes of "Purple Haze," it's obvious that Jimi was interested in being louder than the other boys. While it's an obvious shame that he didn't live through the ensuing decades, it's a blessing that he came of age at a time when musicians relied on band chemistry and not Pro-Tools to make their magic. Because as good as Hendrix was, he also knew how to pick the right supporting cast.
4) Van Halen: Some metallists say these guys aren't metal because they like girls and to party and they cover the Kinks, Roy Orbison and Motown. But have you heard Eddie's tone? He re-taught the guitar for an entire decade and while they lose points for employing Sammy Hagar (whose band Montrose, you'll note, is absent from this list), they did once bring us that ultimate, premium, all natural ham of hams, the great David Lee Roth.
3) AC/DC: Chords on top of chords, hooks on top of hooks and two singers--Bon Scott and Brian Johnson--who combined for a serious number of knockout punches. AC/DC knew how to flirt with radio without losing the crunch. And how Angus manages to bang his head and hop around the stage to this day remains one of metal's unsolved mysteries.
2) Led Zeppelin: Zep never stayed in one place too long and while Jimmy Page had an arsenal of riffs for aspiring young guitarists to emulate, the band coasted off into acoustic Hobbit tributes and art-rock when they got bored. But their complete demolition of the blues was damn impressive, whether it was Bonzo's beating the drums into submission or Bob Plant screeching for another inch of his love.
1) Black Sabbath: The lords of darkness who were always trying to find the sunshine but couldn't find the energy to lift the blinds. By keeping it simple and focusing on the most elemental elements, Black Sabbath mastered the art of the powerchord and the downward spiral. Killing themselves to live, never saying die and fighting the war pigs! What a legacy!
Maul Stanley: Even though you officially joined KISS during the "Animalize" tour, you did in fact play some guitar on the album itself. Were you brought in before or after Mark St. John and at the time did you know you were being considered for the band?
Bruce Kulick: No, Mark had already been announced as the guitar player for "Animalize" when I was brought in. I know that he was having some health problems, plus I think Paul didn't like some of the stuff he was playing on one song, maybe a song and a half. That's when they asked me to come in and help out. As everyone knows, Mark then became ill so they asked me to fill in for him on tour. Along the way, they started to think that maybe I was the right man for the job and that's how my time in KISS got its start!
Maul Stanley: Was it weird being on tour with KISS, knowing that the man you replaced was hanging around backstage?
Bruce Kulick: Well, I tried to handle it in a very positive way. Mark was always cool with me and I was always cool with him. I didn't want to make it a competition and I didn't want it to seem like I was his adversary. We actually used to jam backstage. After touring Europe for six weeks in the fall, KISS had returned to tour the U.S. We started in Pennsylvania and I think Mark was on the road with us for about three weeks. He learned the show by watching it every night. When they finally tested him out onstage a couple of times, that's when they realized that it probably wasn't going to work out with him. In the end, I simply had the home court advantage because I'd already been out touring with the band. So at the end of 1984, Gene and Paul asked me to officially join KISS.
Maul Stanley: When was the last time you saw Mark St. John before his untimely demise last year?
Bruce Kulick: It was probably when we did a KISS expo together a few years back. We had a good time hanging out but he seemed a little unsure of himself that day. Somebody would ask him a question and he wouldn't know the answer, so I'd have to answer it for him. It was truly sad to lose him last year and even though Mark wasn't destined to remain in KISS, he left his mark on the band by playing on a great record.
Maul Stanley: What is the status of your long-delayed autobiography "Honorary Discharge"? You've been promising that for about 10 years now. Is it really not finished yet or are you just waiting for Axl Rose to release "Chinese Democracy"?
Bruce Kulick: That would make sense! When Axl finally puts out that record, I'll have no choice but to finish my book! In truth, the book already has about 24 chapters written. However, it's been at least six years since I actually worked on it, mostly because the music itself always takes priority for me. Even though I think I have a fabulous story to tell, somewhere along the way I seemed to lose my passion for writing it all down. Having said that, I know that at some point the time will be right to at last finish it up.
As for the other stuff I have going on, I'm still performing in GRAND FUNK RAILROAD, who will be playing in Atlantic City at The Hilton this summer. I'm also producing some exciting new artists, all of whom can be found on my MySpace page. And of course, I'm also still working on my newest solo album "BK3". In general, I'm still doing everything I love to do, playing guitar and creating music.
Maul Stanley: Will Eraldo Carugati be painting the cover of your new solo album?
Bruce Kulick: I don't think so! Actually, I don't know what I want to do with that yet. Even though a few friends and fans have shown me some designs, I probably won't know what I want until I get closer to releasing the album.
Maul Stanley: Gene Simmons has always maintained that he has never once been drunk or high. If that is true, how did he ever agree to let you sing a lead vocal on "Carnival of Souls"?
Bruce Kulick: Well, I didn't really drug him... although it did take a fair amount of prodding! I think by then, Gene and Paul already knew that the reunion would be happening so they just kind of threw me a bone!
For whatever reason, I just never wanted to let go of that song, "I Walk Alone". First I sang on the demo, so we'd have a point of reference. We tried the song a couple of different ways and even worked on a version with Bob Ezrin. It was nuts! Our producer on "Carnival of Souls" was Toby Wright, who had previously worked with KORN and ALICE IN CHAINS. He was actually the one who thought it would be cool if I sang the song. Even though it might not sound like a typical KISS track, he liked it when everyone in KISS would sing a song on the records. So Toby was the one who really pushed for me to record the vocals. And believe me, I was petrified! Obviously, I've learned to sing a lot better since then but thankfully my voice seemed to work for the track.
I do love that song, by the way. The lyrics are actually very appropriate. Since the reunion happened shortly thereafter, I truly did walk alone! So I suppose it all made sense in the grand scheme of things.
Maul Stanley: Since it was Eric Singer who suggested in 1995 that Peter Criss sit in and jam with the band during the official Kiss Konvention tour, it safe to assume that you blame Eric for getting you both fired from KISS?
Bruce Kulick: Well, I know that Eric's suggestion was innocent enough. If it hadn't been him, it would have been somebody else. In fact, it was MTV who really pushed for the reunion to happen. At the time, they were still on top of the world and exposure on the network still meant a lot.
The official Kiss Konventions were a very unique thing. Imagine going to a KISS expo and having the real KISS there, answering questions and playing live and the whole 9 yards. I don't know if you saw the one at Roseland in New York City, but it was absolutely incredible. It didn't even matter that tickets were $100 each, which at the time seemed exorbitant! The Kiss Konventions were something special and Gene and Paul really wanted MTV to cover them. We had been getting such a great response to performing acoustically that they wanted to do an episode of "Unplugged". MTV liked the idea, but they also wanted to do it as a reunion. So even though you could say it was Eric's fault that things happened the way they did, it was really more of a business decision on the part of the band.
Maul Stanley: How long after the taping of "Kiss: Unplugged" before you realized you should start looking for a job?
Bruce Kulick: Well, at the time we were still moving forward with "Carnival of Souls", so technically that version of the band was still in existence. It wasn't until Eric and I had our meeting with Gene and Paul months later that we were made aware of their reunion plans. They paid us for a year so there really wasn't as much pressure as you'd think. Honestly, I never thought I'd be in KISS for 12 months, let alone 12 years. I knew it wouldn't last forever and I'd always kind of assumed they'd put the makeup back on at some point. In the end, they still took care of Eric and me, so for that I feel very fortunate and grateful. Personally, I was very proud of "Kiss: Unplugged" so at least I went out on a high note!
Though Vinnie Vincent himself has not released any new material in over a decade, "Kiss My Ankh" will pay tribute to the undeniable musical legacy of the former KISS guitarist. Vinnie's compositions are widely regarded as a highlight of the KISS catalog and remain a staple of the live KISS set list. Included on the tribute will be selections from the three KISS albums to which Vinnie contributed, as well as the two albums he released with the VINNIE VINCENT INVASION. Additional artists and track listings will be announced as they are confirmed.
"Kiss My Ankh: A Tribute To Vinnie Vincent" is scheduled for a summer 2008 release.
The second annual Myrtle Beach KISS & Rock Festival will be held at the Myrtle Beach Convention Center, located just blocks away from the ocean at 2101 N Oak St. Myrtle Beach, SC 29577.
This year's event will be held in "Hall A" and is scheduled to run from 11:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m.
Multiple dealer tables will feature KISS collectibles (past and present) as well as rock and roll memorabilia spanning the genre. The editors of "Sweet Pain" (featuring KISS-inspired body art) will also be on hand screening submissions for their new book.
If you have KISS-inspired body art, you're encouraged to visit the publisher's booth and have your tattoo(s) photographed.
For more information, click here.
The Palms Casino Resort is pleased to announce legendary rock band KISS will bring their Alive/35 Tour to Las Vegas for one night only at The Pearl Concert Theater on Friday, August 29, 2008 at 8:00 p.m.
KISS is currently celebrating 35 years of rock ‘n roll domination on their record breaking European tour where shows in Helsinki, Finland and Oslo, Norway sold-out less than one hour after tickets went on-sale and fans in Stockholm, Sweden bought all 32,000 tickets in just 20 minutes. KISS have added only a few US summer tour dates, including their stop at The Pearl.
KISS invented stadium rock in the ‘70s with their sci-fi Kabuki costumes and make-up, explosive theatrics and, of course, their trademark platform boots. In their extensive world tours, they’ve attracted the most rabid fans: The KISS Army. Now celebrating thirty-five years of rockin’ the globe, KISS founders Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley, along with longtime band members guitarist Tommy Thayer and drummer Eric Singer will bring to Las Vegas the time honored KISS spectacular that has made their performances legendary.
Along with the screaming guitars, lights and pyrotechnics that have made KISS “The Greatest Rock ‘n Roll Show On Earth,” the band brings their vast repertoire of classic music. Having sold 85 million records worldwide, KISS have become the soundtrack for a generation. In honor of their 35th anniversary, the band plans to play their Kiss Alive album in its entirety as well as a few surprises and rarely played live KISS classics.
Tickets for KISS are $103.00 and $303.00, plus any additional service fees and go on-sale Saturday, June 21, 2008 at noon. Please visit any Ticketmaster location, call 702-474-4000 or visit www.ticketmaster.com to purchase tickets. The Pearl Box Office is open from noon – 7 p.m. daily. Doors will open at 7:00 p.m. and show time is 8:00 p.m. The Pearl is home to Miller Lite Live, presented by Cricket Wireless; for more information on upcoming concerts, please call 702-942-6888.
Both appearances are open to the public and free of charge
Friday - July 25, 2008 - -7-9 PM
Saturday - July 26, 2008 -- 5-8 PM
Wentworth Gallery - The Court at King of Prussia
690 West Dekalb Pike - King of Prussia, PA
For details on the VIP Reception with Paul on Saturday - July 26, 2008 4-5 PM or to RSVP call - 610-337-8988 or 800-732-6140
Kiss concluded the first night (June 13) of the 2008 Download Festival with an eye-popping stage show.
With pyrotechnics, fireworks and Paul Stanley leaving the stage via a zip wire mid-song the finale of the band's set proved phenomenal.
Taking to the stage at 8.45pm (BST), the group appeared from behind a black and silver Kiss banner while a voice announced over the speakers: “Alright Download you want the best, you got the best, the hottest band in the world Kiss.”
Lowered down on platforms to stage level and surrounded by pyrotechnics the four-piece dressed in full costume and make-up launched into the opening track 'Deuce'.
Before launching into ’Strutter’, Paul Stanley told the audience: “Man it seems like tradition every ten years we come to Donnington. We couldn’t have made it this far without you – we salute you Kiss army!”
Playing their classic ’Alive’ album in its entirety, with synchronised dancing, fireworks and frontman Gene Simmons sticking out his tongue in signature style, the band did not disappoint their faithful.
In the early part of the show, they elongated ’She’ with a bluesy solo which saw Tommy Thayer playing his guitar held over his head.
Thayer did not stop there though, and leaving his guitar to feeback in front of an amp while a roadie handed him another one to continue the song.
That guitar's neck then proceeded to let off fireworks before the rest of the band returned to the stage.
Throughout the set the Paul Stanley kept asking the crowd to scream louder and participate.
At one point he said: “I want you to help us, I want you to sing with us.”
When the crowd were not loud enough for Stanley, he goaded them by saying: “We played in Stockholm to half as many people and they were twice as loud!” The crowd then responded with an even louder cheer.
The band then continued with the set which saw Gene Simmons stalking the stage.
Then, during ’Cold Gin’, Paul Stanley teased the crowd again by playing the opening riff of Led Zeppelin’s ’Stairway To Heaven’.
While the crowd squealed in delight while Stanley joked: “Nah. Not tonight…but it’d be great if 50,000 people could sing with us.”
After a few more songs and plenty more pyrotechnics and synchronised dancing, Stanley said: “Things change all over the years, politicians come, politicians go…but no matter how many things are going bad take a little time to rock n roll and have a party.”
The band then launched into ’Rock N Roll All Night’.
Which saw Stanley swirling his guitar round pretending to hit the stage to the sound of fireworks.
He finally relented and on the third firework smashed his guitar much to the crowd’s joy.
The showmanship didn’t end there though.
For the band’s encore, which saw Simmons return to the stage with a bass guitar in the shape of an axe and for one track get lifted up to the stage’s roof by strings while swilling fake blood in his mouth, Stanley travelled through the crowd on a zip wire.
Before launching into the mass of bodies Stanley declared: “I wouldn’t mind coming out all the way to see you.”
He then asked the crowd to chant his name before launching off the main stage down a zip wire all the way to a mini stage in the centre of the crowd to perform ’Love Gun’.
Shaking his hips and holding his guitar over his head Stanley was clearly enjoying himself.
After returning to the stage the foursome, surrounded by more exploding fireworks and pyrotechnics, the band concluded with Detroit Rock City’ before bowing and leaving the stage.
After the band had exited TV screens on either side of stage said: “Kiss thanks you.”
Although the band did not play their iconic hit ’God Gave Rock N Roll To You’ it was blasted over the speakers as roadies cleared up the stage.
Kiss played:
'Deuce'
'Strutter'
'Got To Choose'
'Hotter Than Hell'
'Firehouse'
'Nothing To Loose'
'C’Mon And Love Me'
'Parasite'
'She'
'Watchin' You'
'Rock Bottom'
'100,000 years'
'Cold Gin'
'Let Me Go Rock N Roll'
'Black Diamond'
'Rock N Roll All Nite'
'Shout IT OUT Loud'
'Lick It Up'
'I Love It Loud'
'I Was Made For Loving You'
'Love Gun'
'Detroit Rock City'
Asked how it feels to be playing Donington again after 10 years, KISS guitarist/vocalist Paul Stanley replied, "You know, it's actually like a tradition. This is our third time playing Donington, and no matter what you call it, no matter who takes it over and what they name it, the one thing that remains constant is KISS. So we're back. We're celebrating 35 years. We'll be playing most of 'Kiss Alive!' and a whole lot of other stuff. Trends come, fashion comes, all this stuff happens — we don't go away. We're like the virus that… We're like herpes, I guess. Once we got you, we're staying with you."
On the topic of whether KISS plans to ever record new material, bassist/vocalist Gene Simmons stated, "This is something that's been asked everywhere we go. In all seriousness, it's unfortunate, the record industry is dead, it's six feet underground, and unfortunately, the fans have done this — they've decided to download and file-share, there's no record industry around, and we're gonna wait until everybody settles down and becomes civilized and as soon as the record industry pops its head, we'll record new material." Stanley added, "The truth is we have no plans to record. The reason we don't record is because any classic band that hits the road, the last thing you really wanna hear is their new songs. Everybody says, 'Go out and do a new album,' but if you put on a live DVD of any classic band, turn off the sound and I'll tell you when they're playing a new song — it's when everybody sits down. So everybody says, 'Go do a new album,' but who goes to see the STONES to hear a new song? Who goes to see MCCARTNEY, THE WHO; who goes to see any of the classic bands to hear new songs? If you're playing a new song, that means you can't play a classic song. So, really, what's the point?"
Asked if there is any truth to reports that there is going to a TV show to find new members of KISS, Stanley replied, "That kind of got blown a bit out of proportion. There is a always a chance… Because we're KISS, we define ourselves by all the rules we bring — we're not like other bands. Is there a chance of doing a 'KISS II,' so speak? Sure. But it's not gonna take the place of KISS if we were to do it. We're in the midst of our most successful, biggest tour of Europe ever — this is the most successful tour we've ever done, bar any of the past 35 years. So we have no plans to stop. What we do outside of being a touring band, it's up for grabs. We don't live within the boundaries of other bands. They wish they could be KISS; we don't wish we could be them."
The trio, who are due to appear ahead of their metal heavyweights on the Main Stage this afternoon (June 13), said they don't feel "intimidated" by their peers.
"We're not intimidated at all," said guitarist Phil Campbell. "We're gonna do our best and have a great time. It'll be a lot of fun.
"If it was just a KISS and tour they could have called it 'Kiss My Ass'. No seriously though there's something for everyone at this festival, it's a lot of fun. There are so many bands playing and it's early summer."
The metal veterans also revealed that there will be no new material, and the band will stick to a greatest hits set.
Read more at NME.com.
"Gene Simmons Roast" was taped on November 27, 2007 at the Key Club on Sunset Blvd. in Hollywood, California. The event — which is said to be a benefit for "wounded warriors" — was hosted by comedian Jeffrey Ross and featured "roasts" by the following celebrities and comedians:
Brian Poshen, Carrot Top, Dave Navarro, Craig Gass, Danny Bonaduce, Eddie Griffin, Fred Armisen, Jim Norton, John Heffron, Lisa Lampanelli, Ralphie May, Shannon Tweed, Steve-O
Each "roast" focuses on a particular celebrity as its target. A panel is selected from the celebrity's peers and current, popular comedians to comically point out the foibles of the personal and professional lives of the celebrity in question.
Ross stated before the event: "I'm roasting my childhood hero... Growing up, Gene was my favorite member of my favorite band. But that doesn't mean I'm not gonna take him down hard."
Commented Simmons: "This is real stuff. I had no clue what was going on, who was going to be there, or what they were going to say. Very little of it was edited out (except that stuff A&E just couldn't put on the air). Some of it was very raunchy, and you may get to see that stuff on the web."
"Join us for our world-record attempt for the 'most people made up as KISS' — taking place at Download on Friday! Only you can help make it happen...
"We have joined forces with FACE, the official body of face-painters who are providing at least of 20 professional face-painters in order to achieve our goal! We hope to be able to set a record for over 400 faces painted within three hours.
"Face painting by our accredited painters is FREE; please don't do your own make-up. Remember — in order to break the record, we can only accept faces painted by FACE members. Expert facepaint-makers Mehron are very kindly sponsoring the attempt by providing all the necessary paint...
"The attempt will take place on Friday 13 June with face-painting starting at 13:00 and finishing at 16:00. The face painters stations will be based in and on the edge of 'Kidney Wood' which is the kidney-shaped green area close to the day ticket entrance in the Main Arena.
"The stations will be split into four sections concentrating on each of the faces — The Demon, Star Child, The Cat and The Spaceman.
"Once you've had your face painted, you'll given details of where to congregate to be part of our mass KISS award-winning photograph!"
Both KISS and original KISS guitarist Ace Frehley are scheduled to perform at this year's Download festival, among many other acts.
For more information, visit www.downloadfestival.co.uk.
The KISS frontman sees himself as a "Good Samaritan" because he boosts his female fans' confidence by showering them with attention.
He said: "Think of me as a goodwill ambassador. The poor girls spend hours putting on their make-up and their perfume.
"How rude would it be if that got ignored? Otherwise, they'll feel their self-esteem lower. You don't want that happening. I'm a Good Samaritan. It's my good-natured side."
The singer - famed for his outrageous costumes and make-up - also said he is willing to stay in character when he is in the bedroom.
When asked if he keeps his costume on in private, he teased: "It depends what the ladies like."
KISS are set to play at the Download festival in Derby, North England, this month.
Gene claims people are more likely to want sex at outdoor events - and advises fans to stay away from drugs.
He added to NME magazine: "The chances are pretty good that the male of the species will have an urge to merge.
"Don't get high. Save the money. You get high, there's nothing you're going to say that's going to be witty and charming. And your schnackle might not work. Trust me."
Concert Live are now creating Limited Edition Live CDs of the following dates:
O2 Arena, Prague 06.06.08
SAP Arena, Mannheim 10.06.08
Arena Oberhausen, Oberhausen 11.06.08
Rock And Roll all day and all night with 18 hours or KISS music on Thursday June 5th!
Rare tracks, live recordings, interviews and so much more!
To listen live - visit www.wbwc.com .
During a familiar rant by Simmons about how KISS could go on forever, Roy Hilmar Svendsen of Norway's NRK asked jokingly if the band would consider looking for replacements for Simmons and Stanley in a TV show, similar to programs like "Rock Star" and "American Idol".
"The answer is yes. The deal has just been signed," Simmons replied. "It's coming soon."
In a separate interview, Stanley was apparently not very happy to hear about his bandmate's statement regarding KISS' future.
"There is no signed deal," Stanley said. "Again, when we are both aked the same question sometimes, you get different answers," Stanley added, "What will happen, we'll see as we go along. But is something going to happen next week? Is something signed? No. But am I opposed to the idea of going out and trying to find new KISS members through the television? Of course not."
In the one-and-a-half-minute clip, which is part of a one-hour-long KISS special which will air on NRK in September, McGhee can be seen stating, "I believe that KISS can go on forever. I believe that there is a way — and we are talking to people and we're pretty close to getting it done — about finding the four new members of KISS."
According to NRK, Stanley said that the members of VELVET REVOLVER were planning a similar stunt to find the replacement for lead singer Scott Weiland, who was fired at the end of the band's European tour earlier this year. However, in the end the band decided not to do it, according to Stanley, because of VELVET REVOLVER guitarist Slash's wish to remain "cool" and credible to his fans.
"I don't have to be that cool," Stanley reportedly told NRK with a smile.
In a recent interview with Rockpages.gr, KISS drummer Eric Singer confirmed that KISS had re-recorded some of the band's eariest hits. He stated, "You know that many bands re-record songs so as to have the control over the copyrights. For example, if someone asks for a KISS tune, the band doesn't have to get into a bureaucracy with the record label. It is very convenient."
‘Hot off the press - new show added to the Ltd Edition KISS Alive 2008 tour CD series'
Due to phenomenal demand, a new recording has been added to the exclusive KISS ALIVE 35 tour CD series.
The legendary KISS are taking Europe by storm – KISS fans everywhere are rocking to the classic tunes pumping out and Concert Live want to make the most of this 35 year celebratory tour!
This is why we’ve announced a new recording in the series - ‘KISS Live at Valhall Arena, Oslo’.
The Oslo recording took place over the weekend, 31.05.08, with the remaining CDs available to order NOW!! Make sure you get your hands on this recording as they are all selling out fast!!
You want the best? We’re recording the best…Don’t miss out!!!
Stanley, who is in the middle of Kiss's 35th anniversary world tour, is setting aside time for private meetings with anyone who buys one of his acrylic paintings or prints, priced from $1,500 to more than $50,000.
The crowd is a motley crew: a pudgy guy with a Red Sox cap and buzz cut, a blonde who could pass for an aging groupie, an art collector with a turtleneck. The brightly lit gallery is located next to a Sephora skincare shop, which is fitting for the primped and groomed singer known for his black-and-white "Starchild" makeup.
"Does he look good? How's his hair? Oh, god, there he is!" says Lisa Fiorino, a mother of two from Randolph, as she catches a glimpse of the 56-year-old Stanley, who is decked out in a dark vest with red pinstripes, skinny jeans, black boots, and his trademark jet-black mane.
Fiorino wears a guitar-pick necklace, uses a "Calling Dr. Love" cellphone ringtone, and has a tattoo of Stanley's face on her upper back. She's hoping the singer will mingle after he meets the paying customers, who are accorded VIP status with free wine and photo ops. A Kiss soundtrack plays overhead.
"I'm a little flustered and need some wine," Jennifer Jack says after meeting Stanley, who signed her silver Kiss purse. She and her husband, George, who bought 1978's "Double Platinum" when he was 8 years old, purchased a print of Stanley's "Mona Lisa," a riff on da Vinci's famous painting, for their Concord, N.H., home.
Stanley draws closer when George Jack tells him his paintings are reminiscent of LeRoy Neiman, the 80-year-old American artist who got his start as a contributor to Playboy magazine.
"I keep finding that all these people connect with me, not just through music but through art," Stanley says.
The youngest patron is 18-month-old Zakk Robinson, who was named after Ozzy Osbourne guitarist Zakk Wylde, according to his father, Michael Robinson of Wrentham. The baby wears a T-shirt featuring the cover of 1976's "Rock and Roll Over" album. On the shirt, made specially for Kiss Army offspring, the title has been altered to "Rock Me and Roll Over."
Robinson, who bought a print of Stanley's tortured, hollow-eyed "Scream," wrote on the entertainment website collider.com: "Next to my wedding day and the birth of my son," Kiss's 1996 reunion tour featuring the original members was a "monumental time in my life."
Stanley, a father of two, pays special attention to the VIPs' kids, giving them high-fives, making googly eyes, and signing miniature electric guitars. He still speaks with a thick New York accent.
"Paul Stanley's a regular guy," said VIP Dean Demagistris of Bedford, N.H. "I like his music, but I didn't think his art would be this good."
Demagistris, who keeps a room filled with rock merchandise, said he's seen Kiss perform 45 times. He paid about $4,000 for two prints, including the abstract "Purple Haze," a tribute to guitarist Jimi Hendrix.
For Stanley, the tour of the Wentworth Gallery chain marks his most recent reincarnation. A graduate of the New York City High School of Music and Art, the setting of television show "Fame," the singer last stepped outside rock music when he starred in a stage production of "Phantom of the Opera" almost a decade ago.
"Art, theater, music - there is no difference," Stanley says. "No one should tell anyone else what's good and what isn't."
After the last of the VIPs head home, Stanley appears from behind a roped-off area to address the non-buyers who are finally given entry to the gallery.
"I want to apologize for not being able to speak to everyone," he says in a raised voice. "I know everyone would want to shake my hand, have me sign something, tell me a story, but there just isn't enough time."
Fiorino, standing in the front row after waiting outside the gallery for two hours, turns around to reveal the Starchild tattoo. Others hold up memorabilia to sign. Stanley throws up his hands.
Just then, the singer notices a boy in a wheelchair off to the side and heads over for a snapshot, breaking his own policy. When he's finished, Stanley smiles and tells the fans, "OK now, don't go out and get a wheelchair and try to come back here."
ing a familiar rant by Simmons about how KISS could go on forever, Svendsen asked jokingly if the band would consider looking for replacements for Simmons and Stanley in a TV show, similar to programs like "Rock Star" and "American Idol".
"We have already signed the contract, and it is going to go through in a couple of months," Simmons reportedly replied.
Really?
"Yes, of course!" he confirmed.
In a separate interview, KISS co-founder Paul Stanley was reportedly not very happy to hear about his bandmate's statement regarding KISS' future.
"These things are typical," Stanley said. "Gene says something as if it was a fact, but there is no signed deal. The future has many possibilities. Will it happen next week? No! Am I opposed to the idea? Of course not."
According to NRK, Stanley said that the members of VELVET REVOLVER were planning a similar stunt to find the replacement for lead singer Scott Weiland, who was fired at the end of the band's European tour earlier this year. However, in the end the band decided not to do it, according to Stanley, because of VELVET REVOLVER guitarist Slash's wish to remain "cool" and credible to his fans.
"I don't have to be that cool," Stanley told NRK with a smile.
Regarding Steve's cover of "A Million To One", which will receive its official release on the upcoming tribute album "Kiss My Ankh: A Tribute To Vinnie Vincent", Brown said, "It's just an amazing concept and that's why I signed on to the project. I mean, who would think to do a Vinnie Vincent tribute album? I just thought that was so funny! But Vinnie was a great guitar player and a great songwriter."
"You can laugh all you want about the fact that there's a Vinnie Vincent tribute album," offered Trunk, "but he was a huge part of the reason why KISS had a career in the '80s. He wrote 'Lick It Up' and all that great stuff. No matter what state the band is in now, Vinnie was a huge contributor to their success."
Trunk further added, "You've got to hear Steve's version of 'A Million To One' because he did such a great job on it. He covered one of my favorite songs from a non-original KISS lineup and he did such a different, cool version of it that I was just blown away. I only play one ballad per show, so I'm going to play it tonight." Ed later ended the program by selecting the song for his closing ballad.
Steve's interpretation of "A Million To One" is an elaborate acoustic rendition of the song, putting a fresh new spin on the 25-year-old classic.
A 30-second sample of the song is available at the SplitScreen Entertainment web site.
ve Brown currently fronts the modern rock act STEREO FALLOUT and is expected to reunite with his TRIXTER bandmates for select live dates in 2008, including the massive Rocklahoma festival in July.
Though Vinnie Vincent himself has not released any new material in over a decade, "Kiss My Ankh" will pay tribute to the undeniable musical legacy of the former KISS guitarist.
nie's compositions are widely regarded as a highlight of the KISS catalog and remain a staple of the live KISS setlist.
luded on the tribute will be selections from the three KISS albums to which Vinnie contributed, as well as the two albums he released with the VINNIE VINCENT INVASION. Additional artists and track listings will be announced as they are confirmed.
"Kiss My Ankh: A Tribute To Vinnie Vincent" is scheduled for a summer 2008 release.
Best known for their outrageous live performances, wild costumes and theatrical stage antics, KISS has also produced a long list of hits over a career spanning more than 30 years. Their 1975 release Alive! turned the band into super-stars with the world-wide hit, "Rock and Roll All Nite."
Date: Saturday, August 30th, 2008
Venue: Harveys Outdoor Arena
Online Reservations: Tickets on-sale Friday, June 13 at 10 a.m. (PDT)
Tickets go on-sale Friday, June 13, 2008 beginning at 10 a.m. PDT, only through Ticketmaster outlets, www.ticketmaster.com or www.apeconcerts.com.
Williams - who sang, "Every morning when I wake up, I look like Kiss, but without the make-up" in his 1999 hit Strong - joins a long list of artists who have mentioned the face-painting rockers in their lyrics, including Lenny Kravitz, Weezer, Jimmy Buffet and Kid Rock.
And singer/guitarist Stanley insists he was impressed with the British pop star's name-drop, despite Williams' fear the metal rockers would hate the lyric.
He says, "I liked it. When I ran into him in Los Angeles, I think he thought I was gonna deck (punch) him. But I liked it.
"But, as big as Robbie Williams is, he's not in one of our songs."
Rice was in the Swedish capital Thursday for an international conference on Iraq. Kiss had a sold-out concert to play Friday.
"I was thrilled," Rice said of her late-night encounter with Kiss frontman Gene Simmons and bandmates Paul Stanley, Eric Singer and Tommy Thayer in the executive lounge of the Sheraton Hotel where they signed autographs and handed out backstage passes and T-shirts to her staff.
"It was really fun to meet Kiss and Gene Simmons," she told reporters, noting that they seemed well-informed about current events. The band had asked if she could stop by after she finished dinner with the Swedish foreign minister and Rice readily agreed, she said.
Rice, a classically trained pianist, said she has eclectic musical tastes ranging from Beethoven to Bruce Springsteen.
Hard rockers such as Kiss are included in the mix, and Rice said her favorite Kiss tune is "Rock and Roll All Nite."
But, Rice conceded, she has never seen the band in concert.
"I was thrilled," a beaming US secretary of state told reporters Friday after meeting lead singer Gene Simmons and his three band members at the waterfront Sheraton Hotel in the Swedish capital on Thursday night.
"For someone who likes the whole range of music, it was really fun to meet KISS and Gene Simmons," Rice said on the plane taking her from a conference on Iraq in Stockholm to talks with Iceland's leaders in Reykjavik.
The gathering was held in an executive lounge at the hotel after the band, which is on a European concert tour, contacted the US delegation who were in Stockholm for the Iraq Compact Review Conference, US officials said.
Her aides showed reporters digital photographs of Rice smiling and chatting to the long-haired band members who were dressed casually rather than in their flamboyant stage costumes of black leather and painted faces.
They wore slacks, open-necked shirts and jackets. Rice, who had just returned from a dinner with Swedish Foreign Minister Carl Bildt, appeared in her usual business attire.
Simmons and the other band members -- Paul Stanley, Eric Singer and Tommy Thayer -- autographed for her a glossy concert photograph of them on stage and gave band T-shirts to Rice's aides.
Rice said she had never seen KISS perform but she had been to four rock concerts in her life.
The first was when she was 10 years old and she saw Paul Revere and The Raiders in her native Alabama and the second was when she was 16 years old and went on her first date with an Air Force cadet to see Smokey Robinson.
She later saw Earth Wind and Fire and U2 in concert.
Get ready to rock and roll all night Lake Tahoe, KISS is coming to the South Shore.
John Koster, regional president of Harrah's Northern Nevada operations, made the announcement at the Lake Tahoe Visitors Authority Board of Directors meeting today.
Koster said with the line-up this year, it definitely could be the best year for the Harveys Outdoor Concert Series.
KISS will be playing August 30 in the Harvey’s Outdoor Arena.
A rock star begins his second act.
Picking up a paintbrush wasn’t unprecedented for Paul Stanley. Throughout his career with the rock band KISS, applying face paint was a precursor to an over-the-top performance. But eight years ago, a painful divorce let him to extend his reach. Stanley had kept a sketchbook for years, and a friend who saw his drawings urged him to try his hand at painting as a form of catharsis.
Stanley bought canvases “without a clue of what to do” and began painting. The only ground rules he set for himself were that he “wasn’t going to get bogged down with trying to depict things too realistically at the expense of emotion or immediacy.”
Los Angeles resident Stanley, who describes his early works as a “stream of consciousness using color and texture instead of words,” says an unsigned painting he created and hung in his house repeatedly resonated with visitors. “People would ask me who did it and where it was from,” he says. Their interest was enough to convince him that his paintings might have a broader purpose beyond private catharsis. He was quickly proved right.
Stanley began showing his work in galleries and, contrary to what you might imagine, it wasn’t just the KISS Army snapping up his paintings. Four portraits of the band Stanley created as a tip of the hat to fans have been some of his least popular works. “There are definitely collectors who will never go to a KISS concert,” Stanley says.
His work is rich with bright explosions of color and texture, often touching on themes such as fears. Sometimes he prepares the canvas by texturing it with modeling paste, then layering acrylics of different viscosities over top, using his fingers, brushes, home painting tools or anything else that can apply paint to it. “Someone said I was fearless with color,” Stanley says. “I said, ‘What is there to fear’”
Art allows him to explore, he says. With music, “there are certain restrictions-it’s the nature of the beast-whereas in painting the limit is the edge of the canvas. Whatever goes on within it is up to you. There are no rules.”
The soft-spoken artist insists that, despite his growing commercial success (sales totaled $2 million last year); he is still painting for himself. ‘My art isn’t the only work in progress; I’m changing and developing in front of everyone,” Stanley says. “My growth is happening as my success is blossoming. I’m never scared; it’s only exciting. I always define myself by the challenges I take on and how I rise and fall with them.”
Tommy: Going back to Black and Blue in the 80's, for people that don't know, we moved to Los Angeles in early 1983 from Portland, where we started out. Quiet Riot and Motley Crue were starting to do well and we just knew that, since we were writing our own stuff, that LA would be the best place for us to be. Within 6 months, we had a record deal; John Kalodner signed us at Geffen Records and envisioned us as being the American Def Leppard. We put out 4 records for Geffen through the 80's up to 1990 and did moderately well but we never really broke, for whatever reason.
Jeff: And somewhere along the line, you crossed paths with Gene.
Tommy: Exactly. In 1985 we did part of the Asylum tour with KISS, a dream come true at that point as we were always huge KISS fans when we were kids.
Jeff: Who wasn't, back then, right?
Tommy: Ya. I became more associated with Gene to begin with because, after that tour, we asked him to produce our third album “Nasty, Nasty”, which he agreed to do. We kind of developed a relationship and I just got to know him more and more through that and then he did our fourth album, called ”In Heat”. By that time he was asking me if I wanted to write some songs with him for KISS and we wrote a couple of songs that ended up on “Hot in the Shade”.
Jeff: So the writing relationship came before you were asked to be involved in the business end of KISS?
Tommy: Absolutely. First, it was Gene working with Black and Blue and then it was writing with Gene for what ended up being KISS songs. At the same time, they were working on, developing songs for their next album and Gene would have me come in to help out. Then I was playing guitar in the studio with him on all of his demos; he liked the way I played guitar. It just kind of evolved from there and pretty soon, by the early 90's, when Black and Blue ran its course, Paul and Gene asked me to come and work for them part-time. I needed a job and thought “Wow, working for the band KISS?! That's not even a job!!”
Jeff: It is pretty amazing for me to talk to someone who was in the rare group of 80's “metal” musicians who made it out alive, stayed in the music business and was able to transition from the demise of Black and Blue, to being a Kiss co-writer, then to becoming an important part of KISS' business operations for so long and then to, incredibly, being the lead guitarist in KISS.
Tommy: On the one hand I was just in the right place at the right time, but on the other hand, just to give myself a little bit of credit, I'm a very hard-working guy and have a good concept of what people want when they hire someone. I think in anything that you do, and in me getting involved with the guys in Kiss, if people know you will always be on time, be reliable and work hard, then they will give you the respect back. Then they will respect your opinion, and in my case, Paul and Gene both knew that I was knowledgeable about the rock and roll world and had those qualities. But at the same time you're humble and you're not getting too cocky about things. I'm a pretty low-key guy so I usually say less than more in certain situations. They just kind of started to like my vibe and what I did for them and how I did it. So, anyway, Paul (Stanley) called and said they were going to be doing this book called “KISStory”, a coffee-table book and that they were going to put it together and publish it themselves. They had these archives of tons of old photos from the beginning of their career and Paul wanted me to go through them and pick out the best photos to use for the book. From there, it just evolved from part-time work, doing this and that, then evolved to doing whatever needed to be done. By 1995, the KISS Convention idea was new and they hired me to be the key guy, spearheading and literally running the organization; putting together the KISS Museum and even booking hotels. Almost like a tour/road manager. I do have a good business background and my Dad has been a very successful business man for a long time so I am kind of from that environment. This was actually where I was headed in the early to mid 90's; getting involved mostly in the business side of music, producing and management. That's where I was going. I'd even cut my hair short.
Jeff: 1996
Tommy: Ace and Peter, the make-up and the reunion tour comes together. I helped put the reunion tour together and made sure that Ace and Peter were ready to go, musically. I'm sure you've heard the stories that I was asked to come in and work with those guys to make sure they got the original parts down.
Jeff: That, in itself is pretty amazing “job”! So when Ace left, for whatever reason, you were the natural selection to take step in and take over…
Tommy: Yes, but way back in the late 90's, I was doing video editing, putting together and producing and directing KISS DVD's. I did a lot of “ghost” guitar playing on the Psycho Circus album; I did some rehearsing with the band and even sound checking sometimes when Ace wouldn't show up. I was definitely the natural replacement.
Jeff: Did you have to give up a lot of your former KISS-business duties when you became the lead guitarist in 2003 or did you just add that to your extensive list of daily jobs!?
Tommy: I do very little business-related things or KISS now. It is a lot of work and a change of pace but I was busy then and busy now. A different schedule and also a different list of things to do; and some of them you don't want your guitar player doing anyway.
Jeff: Then at this point of the interview, I gather that your advice to serious guitar players who have good songs and are serious about being in a professional band, might be on the business side, rather than the playing side?
Tommy: For sure. Pay attention to the business side. Always work hard. Don't wait around for things to come to you. You need to go out and grasp them yourself and be pro-active. My Dad always said “Just make sure people like you”.
Jeff: Guitar practicing. How often do you pick up a guitar and when you are not on KISS time?
Tommy: To be honest with you, I don't sit around and play as much as I used to in the old days. That said, I feel like I play guitar better now than I ever have, I really believe that. I think it just comes from years of experience and confidence.
Jeff: So you mainly start playing or practicing to get ready for rehearsals, before a tour, in order to get your finger, hand and arm muscle strength back in action?
Tommy: Yes. When we tour, we rehearse for a week or two as a band but I start a week or so before that I like to listen to and play the songs we will do in the set, just to get into the groove a bit. To get loose and also to build the calluses back up so that you don't get out on tour and have painful blisters on your fingers! It's all prep (preparation to get ready). I'll literally put on the KISS live albums and play along.
Jeff: I find that most touring guitarists will tell you that they like to practice guitar standing up. I know that I can play guitar much better when sitting.
Tommy: You know that it's a little more challenging if you've got your guitar slung down below your belt, a la Jimmy Page, than sitting down or with the guitar up around your chest. It's just different and, either way, you've got to get used to it again.
Jeff: On a typical show day, do you play guitar in the daytime? Any jams with any of the band members? Practicing before the show?
Tommy: I like to warm up a little bit backstage before the show, just to get loose. I don't believe in playing 3 hours the day of the show. I think the band actually plays better if you have a day in between shows. If you cram too much rehearsal, too close to shows, I don't think that's as effective either.
Jeff: Time to recharge and refresh.
Tommy: Exactly.
Jeff: What about your nerves before the show.
Tommy: I think that being confident prevents you from being nervous. Anticipation and excitement are how I feel but not nervous as in any worrying. Confidence is important in whatever you do and that comes from years of practicing, knowing that you are good at what you do and working hard; that is what gives you confidence.
Jeff: And having the best crew and gear behind you every night…
Tommy: Yes, also knowing that the whole support thing is happening. Having a great guitar tech means your guitar and sound are going to be sweet, as soon as you play it.
Jeff: Your touring role in KISS obviously demands that you play and be the Ace character, as best you can. In your mind, what aspects of your playing, performance or sound does Tommy Thayer bring to the KISS show? Or are you only striving to be the Ace character as perfectly as you can and that is your only goal? You obviously nail (play perfectly) Ace's solos and do them very consistently each night.
Tommy: We (KISS) talked about this too, that the whole idea for me isn't to just go up and try to mimic Ace completely; that would come across as being real tribute looking. It's a fine line between being faithful to what Ace has done with is playing and looks, and then injecting some Tommy Thayer into it. I don't go out trying to play and sound like Ace. The reason I sound like Ace is because I grew up learning how to play like one of my favorite guitar players since I was 14 years old. So when I play a KISS song, with my style, the way I play, it really sounds a lot like KISS! It just comes out that way because of the influence he and KISS had on my playing. I think that what I bring to the table in the KISS show is a more consistent and solid style of guitar playing. I am not trying to take anything at all away from Ace; Ace is the reason that I am in this band and here at all. To me, Ace was really in his prime back in the 70's and I think that I bring a new version of what he was doing back then, but in a more solid way. Consistent, ballsy and tight is the best way to describe my contribution to the music and show; night after night.
Jeff: You jammed a lot with Ace back in the mid-90's. Did you notice any similarities in your picking style or how you held a pick compared to how Ace?
Tommy: I didn't copy his. In fact, my style of picking is nothing at all like Ace's. My right hand style is holding the pick with my thumb and my middle finger. Way back, I noticed that Eddie Van Halen held his pick the same way but that's not why. I hold a pencil the same way; it is just a natural thing for me.
Jeff: What song contains your favorite KISS guitar solo?
Tommy: 100,000 Years.
Jeff: Why?
Tommy: Classic Ace Frehley licks. I was really more a fan, particularly of the first 3 albums because I think that that was when Ace really shined. People think I'm crazy for saying this but my favorite KISS recordings were all the records up until “Rock N Roll Over” but I think it is just because I am biased. I grew up, I was a teenager in that magical era so that is why it is my favorite Kiss. I'm sure that, if I was born a bit later, I would have been more into the later KISS records; you know what I mean?
Jeff: Same here. Love Gun, Hotter than Hell and Kiss Alive 2 were my favorites however I really did like pieces of all KISS records. So how many guitars do you take on tour with you?
Tommy: Usually about 4 Les Paul's but I have 5 now because I am going to be doing some cool effects for the Europe tour; I can't tell you specifically what effects but it will be great! The shows we did in Australia and New Zealand, I played one guitar for almost the entire set. It was setup so well that it does not even budge out of tune; it is just perfect. It's one of my Sunburst's, #2, I think. Your readers can visit my site (tommythayer.com) to check out my guitars.
Jeff: Do you have any special guitars at home that you will not take on the road?
Tommy: Yes. I have a couple of Les Paul's at home. One has a wine-red finish and it's an old Les Paul Deluxe from 73 or 74 but it was routed out to a Standard. I bought it in the height of the Gibson/Charvel craze around 1987. I bought it at a used guitar shop in Hollywood for $325.00 !!! It's been broken but it has a great neck. I use it for rehearsals and recording; not the prettiest guitar but I love it.
Jeff: Did you fall in love with the Les Paul when the KISS connection happened or?
Tommy: Always Les Paul's for me, ever since I started playing guitar!
Jeff: Strings?
Tommy: Ernie Ball only.
Jeff: Picks?
Tommy: D'Addario picks. Mediums. Custom logos and things on the picks but standard picks.
Jeff: Pickups?
Tommy: Gibson pickups. 498 bridge and forgot the neck one. I think it is listed on my web site.
Jeff: Cables?
Tommy: Technology-wise, I am more of a low-tech guy. I have a great tech that worries about cable-types and things like that; In fact, I don't even know what cables or even wireless unit I use, although I should!
Jeff: So you are more of a plug-into-the-amp-and-just-play type of player?
Tommy: That's it. “Keep it simple, stupid” is my thing. What KISS stands for!
Jeff: I call that the “Angus Young” philosophy! Do you have channel switching on your amps? A clean and dirty setting?
Tommy: A good analogy! I go to a clean setting on one song and there is a little picking arpeggio part in the middle of “God Gave Rock N Roll To You” but for the most part, I just use the one channel.
Jeff: Is there any compression or gating on the dirty channel?
Tommy: No. Nothing at all. No effects either. Gates will mess with your sound when you turn your guitar down and it starts messing with your natural, low-level picking sustain. Again, simplicity is my rule. Most of the rigs I've heard ending up sounding processed and phony. There are a few exceptions but generally they sound like bad Rockman's. I was watching a band a few years ago and the guitarist, who is a well-known and good player, had the full-on Bradshaw, mega-processed rig with all the stuff but it didn't sound big and ballsy. Then they announced a guest was coming onstage for the encore. It was Slash. He's got his Les Paul on and the roadie rolls out this a 100 watt Marshall half-stack rental and Slash plugs in and KILLED the other guitar player's sound! And the other guitar player had this $50,000 rig! It was not just because it was Slash; obviously it is in the fingers, too… but it was the simplicity of it all: A half-stack with a Les Paul and a great player. Nothing beats that.
Jeff: A lot of guitar players have signature series amplifiers. You have a “Tommy Thayer Signature Series” amplifier coming out now; however one of the things that really impressed me about it had nothing to do with the amp itself. You are donating 100% of the royalties from the amp to the Children's Hospital Of Los Angeles.
Tommy: Thanks. It's a charity that I have been involved with for some time, here in town. Helping children and especially sick children is a huge and important thing to me and I just wanted to make these donations to them. It's really important to me in life to be successful but that is also measured by helping other people that need help and I am into that in many different levels.
Jeff: That is unique and commendable. Tell us how the amp deal came about.
Tommy: A friend of mine turned me on to the Hughes and Kettner stuff about a year ago. I saw that Alex Lifeson (Rush) and Davey Johnstone (Elton John) used them; a couple of my favorite all-time guitar players. I figured something was going on here if these guys were using them so I tried a few of the amps. They sounded like a really good Marshall that was modded a bit; not like overdriven but more of a warmer- overall tone. H and K then sent me some amps to use with KISS, I loved them and pretty soon they asked me about doing a signature amp. Hughes and Kettner usually have 3 or channels in their amps but a Duotone for me was just fine. It sounds great. Looks cool and it's great to have my own amp.
Jeff: And even better is what you are doing with the money from them. So this will be the first European tour for Kiss since 1999, Psycho Circus? It looks like you are doing 8 shows, so far, for the great German rock n' roll fans; they will surely appreciate that!
Tommy: Looking forward to it definitely; it's been a long time!
Jeff: I will be at one of the German shows wearing my Love Gun shirt with pride! Tommy, on behalf of the readers, myself and all at Guitar magazine, thanks very much for your time and a very interesting interview! Have a great European Tour!
Tommy: Thanks, Jeff! See you soon!
Jeff: Your touring role in KISS obviously demands that you play and be the Ace [Frehley] character, as best you can. In your mind, what aspects of your playing, performance or sound does Tommy Thayer bring to the KISS show? Or are you only striving to be the Ace character as perfectly as you can and that is your only goal? You obviously nail (play perfectly) Ace's solos and do them very consistently each night.
Tommy: We (KISS) talked about this too, that the whole idea for me isn't to just go up and try to mimic Ace completely; that would come across as being real tribute looking. It's a fine line between being faithful to what Ace has done with is playing and looks, and then injecting some Tommy Thayer into it. I don't go out trying to play and sound like Ace. The reason I sound like Ace is because I grew up learning how to play like one of my favorite guitar players since I was 14 years old. So when I play a KISS song, with my style, the way I play, it really sounds a lot like KISS! It just comes out that way because of the influence he and KISS had on my playing. I think that what I bring to the table in the KISS show is a more consistent and solid style of guitar playing. I am not trying to take anything at all away from Ace; Ace is the reason that I am in this band and here at all. To me, Ace was really in his prime back in the '70s and I think that I bring a new version of what he was doing back then, but in a more solid way. Consistent, ballsy and tight is the best way to describe my contribution to the music and show; night after night.
Check out a photo from the signing session at this location.
Some know Simmons best in full costume and makeup as the front man for the rock band KISS. While you might see him as the Gene Simmons found on television’s “Family Jewels” reality series and recently in Donald Trump’s boardroom on “The Apprentice,” there’s more to him than meets the eye. Here are some reflections and sales lessons I took away that day:
Connect: Simmons made it a point early in his presentation to emphasize the value of making a connection person to person. Forming a V with his index and middle finger, he drew an imaginary line between two pairs of eyes, his and the other person’s, to illustrate the connection. He said without such a connection, we often miss a great opportunity to open a dialogue and involve the other person.
In sales, we connect by the same means, a one-on-one bridge. Those who rely too heavily or often on tools such as e-mail and telephone are settling for low-impact, easy-to-dodge efforts to reach people. Why do so many people use e-mail? They see it as no-cost advertising and promotion. In business, we most often get what we pay for. Use the highest-impact form of contact we have, the face-to-face meeting.
Simplify: Simmons stressed how making things simple for others to understand and follow is key to their willingness and ability to buy. Connecting with an audience member, he learned that he was speaking with a former member of the U.S. Navy’s Special Forces known as SEALs. This person wanted to use the SEAL label as part of a product name. Simmons encouraged him to look at how he could simplify for clarity as well as to prevent any confusion, since someone might think the name refers to a cold-water carnivore.
We simplify in sales by making it easy for prospective buyers to understand not only what we’re offering but also the key benefit that provides the reason for purchase in the first place. Unless and until we ask great sales questions, we’re shooting in the dark.
Learn: Simmons related the story of his childhood discovery of the public library, a place where anyone who entered had free access to boundless volumes of information. The son of a Jewish mother who found her way out of Hungary and the concentration camps, Simmons was in training to become a rabbi before he latched onto the idea of becoming a rock star, artist and entertainer.
In sales, we can learn through any number of channels, including listening to our prospects, our customers and our suppliers. To the degree that we are open to new information or reinforcement of existing longtime principles, we put ourselves in a position to win. Look at how much of your time and revenue or income you invest in increasing your learning.
Consider investing 10% or more of your top-line sales or commission figure into yourself and your lifelong education.
Work: Simmons noted that KISS, the rock band now in its 36th year, is truly a rock brand with more than 3,000 different products, services and companies associated with the brand. Both NASCAR and the Indy racing circuit have KISS-branded vehicles, there’s a chain of coffee shops bearing the brand name (the first shop opened in Myrtle Beach), and there’s more on the way. This aging group of rockers now does over a billion dollars in revenue annually, thanks mostly to the drive of Simmons, who still gets up and goes to work each day. He creates, promotes, sells and touts the value of partnering with KISS. His work clearly appears to be paying huge dividends.
In sales, we work when we show up day after day and contact those whom we believe will benefit from the products and services we provide. Unfortunately, many sales professionals do relatively little work where it counts the most. Where exactly does it count? When we put ourselves in as many situations as possible where we get to ask prospects to compare their pain with our value equation and, if nothing else, simply try our solution.
The greatest mentors I’ve had throughout my life and career simply keep offering their solutions and wisdom regardless of their accomplishments, amassed wealth or age. Our lesson here is to continue to get up, show up and work up to the targets we’ve set. If such exemplars can do it long after they need the additional income, we can certainly do the same.
In the second installment of this series, we’ll continue looking at the lessons picked up from this part-time rocker and full-time salesman.
Says Ace: "As you know, we've been experimenting, as have other performers, with the idea of meeting and greeting my fans at the end of a concert.
"A few days ago [on May 22], we had such a meet-and-greet at my show in Nashville. While it was a good event, upon reflection, I have ideas which would make such meetings spectacular. I want this to be an incredible experience for my fans.
"Until I have time to perfect these meet-and-greets, I have decided not to have any on this European tour.
"I hope to have this in place by my next European tour. In the meantime, I hope to see all of you at my scheduled tour dates, which remain unchanged."
For a list of upcoming Ace Frehley shows, click here.
"A few weeks ago John Corabi (MÖTLEY CRÜE, RATT, UNION, THE SCREAM) and I were off to Mexico City for a big event that was a large music expo, with vendors and sponsors and artists from around the world all getting together to share everything we all love about music. It was called Expo Rock and, although some of the bands were very varied, John and I represented for sure the rock side of the event... although we were asked to perform with our acoustic guitars!
"The band John and I formed 10 years ago called UNION never played in Mexico, although the KISS and MÖTLEY fans are quite familiar with our careers and, of course, we have had a few very successful concerts with our friend Eric Singer, the current KISS drummer. As the ERIC SINGER PROJECT (ESP), we have been in Mexico twice in three years, and the fans loved those performances. Last time we were there was in December of 2007, so many of those who attended the Expo Rock got a chance to meet John and I at the special meet-and-greets organized at the event. We had two days to play and sign things for the fans, and the reaction we received made us feel very welcome. Mexico has some amazing fans and we loved taking photos and signing for them.
"On the Saturday Expo, we performed on the main stage. We prepared a 40-minute set that included UNION tunes, some BEATLES songs, and two new John Corabi originals that he has been recording. We also played 'Against The Grain', the acoustic song from my CD 'Transformer', live for the first time ever!
"It was great performing with him again acoustically, as we used to do promotional performances quite often in the UNION days on just our acoustic guitars.
"Second day of the event, the meet-and-greet once again was huge. We were asked to play our set this time on the smaller second stage, which actually was much more appropriate dynamically. Problem was, and it was a BIG problem, the band on the main stage about a half a football field away was so loud I couldn't even tune my guitar! So we went off the stage and waited for the band playing on the main stage to quiet down."
Read the entire message at this location.
Check out photos from the concert at Darkside.
Fan-filmed video footage of the "Parasite" performance can be viewed here.
KISS' setlist was as follows:
01. Deuce
02. Strutter
03. Got To Choose
04. Hotter Than Hell
05. Firehouse
06. Nothin' To Lose
07. C'mon & Love Me
08. Parasite
09. She + Tommy Thayer solo
10. Watchin' You
11. Rock Bottom
12. 100.000 Years + Eric Singer solo
13. Cold Gin
14. Let Me Go, Rock & Roll
15. Black Diamond
16. Rock and Roll All Nite
Encore:
17. Shout It Out Loud
18. Lick It Up / Won't Get Fooled Again
19. Gene solo + I Love It Loud
20. I Was Made For Lovin' You
21. Love Gun
22. Detroit Rock City
Commented Simmons in a posting on his web site, "Here [Photo#1, Photo#2] are a couple of shots from the forthcoming Leslie Greif/Adam Reed produced 'Battleground Earth', which pits rappers against rockers (!!!) in a 'green' challenge. You'll see what I mean when on August 3rd, when the show debuts on [Discovery Networks' eco-centric] Planet Green. Our 'Gene Simmons Family Jewels' [Gene's reality TV show] crew finished filming a Whistler, Canada extreme snowboard-themed episode — and the next day I found myself on the first flight to San Francisco where (in the middle of the night) Luda and Tommy and the 'Battleground Earth' crew were filming in a 'greeng graveyard — no headstones...in fact, if you didn't know it was a cemetery, you'd think you were in a forest setting."
In "Battleground Earth", viewers witness Tommy Lee and Chris "Ludacris" Bridges pushed to the limit as they attempt to keep their high-wattage acts on an eco-friendly course. Enlisting the help of their posses, celebrity guests, and anyone else willing to lend a hand, Ludacris and Tommy Lee dive right into the "Battleground Earth" competition with unexpected and sometimes hilarious results.
In the "Fast Fuel" episode Ludacris and Tommy Lee's bio-diesel tour buses are running on empty in the middle of the Texas Panhandle. They must roll into a fast food restaurant and look for fast food grease to turn into eco- friendly fuel. Throughout the tour they battle to get the word out about the state of the environment. This rap 'n' roll battle culminates in a green carpet benefit concert at Los Angeles' legendary Greek Theater. The concert featuring Luda, Tommy Lee and many of their famous musician friends will support the renewal of Griffith Park, which was devastated by recent wildfires.
"Battleground Earth" is a primetime series produced for Planet Green by the Greif Company. Leslie Greif and Adam Reed are the executive producers for Greif, Steve Jones is co-executive producer and Jonathan McHugh is supervising producer. Howard Lee is vice president of production and executive producer for Planet Green and Lisa Caruso is executive producer.
Four separate covers have been produced exclusively for the U.S. market. Readers can take their pick from individual cover photos of Gene Simmons, Paul Stanley, Tommy Thayer or Eric Singer!
Eric Singer
Gene Simmons
Paul Stanley
Tommy Thayer
In the rest of the world, Classic Rock's cover features all the members of KISS in a group shot.
To buy alternative KISS covers, go to www.myfavouritemagazines.com and search for Classic Rock.
KISS live performances are renowned across the globe so it’s with great pleasure and excitement that we're announcing the KISS Alive 35 limited edition series of live CDs.
With 10 dates being recorded throughout their European tour this is sure to be an exhilarating few weeks with many a memorable performance captured forever.
With hits such as ‘I Was Made For Lovin' You', ‘Detroit Rock City’ and ‘Rock & Roll All Nite’ echoing above the streets of Europe you will know that KISS are in town so be sure to get your live tour CD to relive the KISS experience over and over again!
This series is strictly limited edition so be sure to bag yours before they go! Don't miss out! The following dates are being recorded so even if you haven't managed to bag a ticket be sure not to miss out on these truly collectable CDs:
27/05/2008 Hartwall Arena, Finland
30/05/2008 Stockholm Stadium, Sweden
01/06/2008 Koengen, Norway
04/06/2008 Color Line Arena, Germany
09/06/2008 Velodrom, Germany
13/06/2008 Download Festival, UK
15/06/2008 Arrow Rock Festival, Netherlands
17/06/2008 Bercy, France
24/06/2008 Datch Forum, Italy
28/06/2008 Graspop Metal Meeting, Belgium
CLICK HERE to order any of the following KISS LIVE CDS.
In-store info:
Helsinki, Finland
May 28th Wednesday
Dlx Deluxe Music
12:00 noon to 1:30 pm
Stockholm, Sweden
May 29th Thursday
4 Sound
5:00 pm to 6:30 pm
WORLDWIDE SOLD-OUT 35TH ANNIVERSARY TOUR TO HEADLINE STURGIS ROCK’N THE RALLY LINEUP AT 68th ANNUAL STURGIS BIKE WEEK!
In what is destined to become “the night that rocked Sturgis,” legendary superstars KISS will perform at Glencoe Nation’s Rock’n the Rally on August 4th. Recognized as one of the biggest and best bike rallies in the world, Sturgis Bike Week celebrates its 68th year this August 4-10, 2008. With capacity of 110,000, Glencoe Amphitheater is the largest outdoor music venue in the nation.
Currently in the midst of a sold-out European arena and stadium tour, KISS will make a stateside detour to thrill Sturgis with the one-of-a-kind stage show for which they’re known. Along with the screaming guitars, lights and pyrotechnics that have made KISS “The Greatest Rock n Roll Show On Earth,” the band will play songs from their vast repertoire of classic hits. Having sold 85 million records worldwide, KISS has become the soundtrack of a generation. In honor of their 35th anniversary, the band plans to play their KISS ALIVE album in its entirety as well as a few surprises and rarely played live KISS classic gems.
Tickets to Kiss’ performance on Aug. 4 in Sturgis, S.D. will be available June 1, 2008 at www.startickets.com or 1-800-345-9213. Glencoe camping information and additional line up announcements may be found at Rock’n the Rally’s website: www.rockntherally.com.
Steve Brown currently fronts the modern rock act STEREO FALLOUT and is expected to reunite with his TRIXTER bandmates for select live dates in 2008, including the massive Rocklahoma festival in July.
Though Vinnie Vincent himself has not released any new material in over a decade, "Kiss My Ankh" will pay tribute to the undeniable musical legacy of the former KISS guitarist. Vinnie's compositions are widely regarded as a highlight of the KISS catalog and remain a staple of the live KISS setlist. Included on the tribute will be selections from the three KISS albums to which Vinnie contributed, as well as the two albums he released with the VINNIE VINCENT INVASION. Additional artists and track listings will be announced as they are confirmed.
"Kiss My Ankh: A Tribute To Vinnie Vincent" is scheduled for a summer 2008 release.
The man claims 4,800 sexual encounters. Not to be picky but, if so, where'd he find time left to make a list? Anyway, with his legendary insight and whatever other bodily parts assisted in the research, he gives us his thinking on Doing It. He rocks from the first cavewoman to bad girls of the Bible, brothels of Europe, geishas of Japan, courtesans of the Victorian Era, two-buck streetwalkers of Eighth Avenue, saloon ladies of the Wild West, slick chicks of Vegas to today's modern madams and high-end (and high-front) call girls.
Page One: "At the dawn of existence 4 million years ago, that first human female grunted to her male counterpart: 'I'll stay in this nice warm cave. You go out and risk your hairy behind to bring back that delicious Mastodon meat. And I'll trade some of mine for yours.' After that momentous event, nothing would ever be the same."
We read the Sung Dynasty (years 960-1279) triggered the phrase "red-light district" because red lights outside places identified them. We read prostitution was a business for lawmakers plus lawbreakers because Pope Clement II (year 1046) ruled anyone engaged in it must leave half their property to the Church. And Chapter 18 is Gene's interview with three current Ladies of the Evening - who'll also do it daytime - in Hollywood.
This Simmons Books job, written with Julie McCarron, has lush velvety binding, is out July 8 and will be laid down - pardon the expression - along with a contest. Log onto genesimmons.com and, 200 words or less, say why the world's oldest profession is good or bad . . . and why. You can win anything from an actual personal greeting from Gene to - if you manage to get a naked photo delivered - maybe an actual personal phone call.
Both appearances are open to the public and free of charge
Friday - July 25, 2008 - -7-9 PM
Saturday - July 26, 2008 -- 5-8 PM
Wentworth Gallery - The Court at King of Prussia
690 West Dekalb Pike - King of Prussia, PA
For details on the VIP Reception with Paul on Saturday - July 26, 2008 4-5 PM or to RSVP call - 610-337-8988 or 800-732-6140
X.S. Labor Day Weekend Grand Finale - Sunday, August 31st...Outdoors, Under the Stars... "Takin' it to the Streets" Motorcycle Road Rally and Poker Run around Clear Lake, followed by a full concert by the legendary KISS! Fireworks after the Show!
Tickets on sale to the General Public Sunday, May 25th at 9am. KISS ARMY members will have access to an exclusive ticket presale this Wednesday on KISSONLINE (details Tuesday).
Call 800-660-LAKE direct to Konocti Harbor for Tickets & Room Reservations or get tickets at any tickets.com locations, or on line at www.tickets.com.
Konocti Harbor Resort and Spa
8727 Soda Bay Road
Kelseyville, California 95451
For more information on the Resort, visit their website at www.konoctiharbor.com.
The results of the poll — published in the new issue of Roadie Crew (#112) — are as follows:
01. Jimi Hendrix
02. Eddie Van Halen
03. Yngwie J. Malmsteen
04. Randy Rhoads
05. Ritchie Blackmore
06. Jimmy Page
07. Tony Iommi
08. Steve Vai
09. Jeff Beck
10. Michael Schenker
11. David Gilmour
12. Dimebag Darrell
13. Allan Holdsworth
14. Uli Jon Roth
15. Angus Young
16. James Hetfield
17. Brian May
18. Marty Friedman
19. Joe Satriani
20. Jason Becker
21. Gary Moore
22. Paul Gilbert
23. Eric Clapton
24. Al Di Meola
25. Zakk Wylde
26. John McLaughlin
27. John Petrucci
28. Adrian Smith
29. Steve Morse
30. Stevie Ray Vaughan
31. Slash
32. Kirk Hammett
33. Robert Fripp
34. Alex Lifeson
35. Chuck Schuldiner
36. Ace Frehley
37. George Lynch
38. Dave Murray
39. Glenn Tipton
40. Neal Schon
41. Eric Johnson
42. Trey Azagthoth
43. K.K. Downing
44. Andy LaRocque
45. Malcolm Young
46. Django Reinhardt
47. Jeff Loomis
48. Steve Lukather
49. John Sykes
50. Denis "Piggy" D'Amour
The US rock band came for their first ever gig in Bulgaria and filled the hearts of their fans with joy. The concert was announced at 7pm, but KISS waited until the sun set down to step on the scene.
“You wanted the best, you got the best. The hottest band in the world. KISS!” the loud-speakers blared and the show began. As promised, the fireworks were exceptionally beautiful, and loud, of course.
“Bulgaria, beautiful women, loud guys,” were one of the first words of lead singer Paul Stanley on stage.
Amid flames, smoke and lights, KISS performed some of their greatest hits from the past 30 years, including Rock’n’Roll All Night and I Was Made For Lovin’ You, while the excited public was jumping, applauding, singing and yelling back.
Each of the four musicians made a solo performance, which raised the temperature on the stadium. Tommy Thayer even triggered fireworks form the neck of his guitar.
When Stanley brought out a Bulgarian flag and kissed it, the audience erupted in applauses. “You are amazing, Sofia,” Stanley shouted to the audience. “We want to take you with us!”
Please note that KISS has **NOT** yet officially confirmed its participation in this event.
For the complete schedule, go to www.sturgis.com.
According to Novinite.com, the concert stage was 18 meters wide and 11 meters deep. The technical equipment for the show weighed 20 tons and arrived in Bulgaria on 15 trucks.
The four KISS members requested maximum lighting in their dressing room due to the specific make-up they are famous for and wore at tonight's concert.
The musicians' menu while in Bulgaria consisted of meat and vegetarian dishes. The four KISS members prefer chicken and lamb meat as well as different vegetable soups. They have insisted that their dinner is served in china plates and with silverware.
KISS' setlist for the Sofia concert (May 16, 2008):
01. Deuce
02. Strutter
03. Got to Choose
04. Hotter Than Hell
05. Nothin' to Lose
06. C'mon and Love Me
07. Parasite
08. She
09. 100,000 Years
10. Cold Gin
11. Let Me Go, Rock'n'Roll
12. Black Diamond
13. Rock and Roll All Nite
Encore:
14. Shout It Out Loud
15. Lick It Up
16. I Love It Loud
17. I Was Made for Lovin' You
18. Love Gun
19. Detroit Rock City
After joining KISS in the mid-1970s at its lead guitarist, with the "Spaceman" makeup and silver sprayed hair, Frehley designed the group's logo.
"There was a point in my life when I wanted to become a graphic artist," he said last month in a phone chat from Westchester County, N.Y. "But the music kind of took over."
Frehley will play tonight at House of Blues in North Myrtle Beach.
He said he's shooting for 12 tracks on his next album, his first in 18 years, with a release in early summer. Studio work has spanned more than 6 months, and some of the songs go back 12 years.
Speaking about his avocation, Frehley said, "I always knew I was a good artist. I just finished up designs for a biker shirt for the next tour. I just love playing with art. I've been working on Photoshop forever."
He explained how graphic arts lets him channel creativity he might not have found through his fingers and frets.
"What art does for me," Frehley said, "is it gives me another avenue to express myself. One thing about music, especially live, is it's spontaneous. It's like in the moment."
Art, though, offers him variations.
"You can work on a piece of art for a week," Frehley said, "and wake up the next day and look at it differently, and change it. So, it's mostly an ongoing process.
"With live music, it's so right then and there, and it's over in a couple of hours, so then it's waiting for the next show."
Filming a Dunkin' Donuts ad last year in his KISS warpaint brought back memories of playing with bassist/singer Gene Simmons, rhythm guitarist/singer Paul Stanley and drummer Peter Criss.
Frehley spoke of the order and simplicity on the set for the one day it took, hitting makeup in the morning, shooting after lunch and finishing by 6 p.m.
"Considering the stuff I've done," he said, referring to feature films, "it was a piece of cake."
Especially since leaving KISS in 1980, Frehley has enjoyed hearing from other musicians who say they picked up a guitar because of him.
"It's really flattering," the 57-year-old said.
Frehley said the oddest event happened around a Rapid City, S.D., concert. He had gone to visit Mount Rushmore and the Crazy Horse Memorial, and at the Indian Museum of North America, ran into a fellow native New Yorker.
"I don't think I've met anybody who was born at Lebanon Hospital," he said, laughing about this happenstance.
Frehley called his visit last year to the Kiss Coffeehouse at Broadway at the Beach fun, especially when he saw the turnout of fans to see him perform.
"I'm really looking forward to coming back, especially for bike week," he said. "I have a lot of friends who ride. If I wasn't playing, I might have even gone to biker week, just to get away from the studio and see everybody."
Rocklahoma will be held July 9-13, 2008 at the Catch The Fever Festival Grounds, four miles north of Pryor, Oklahoma. TRIUMPH and EXTREME are among the bands reuniting with all or most of their original lineups for this year's festival, which will also feature sets from NIGHT RANGER, CINDERELLA, Bret Michaels, TESLA, ARMORED SAINT, L.A. GUNS and many more. More than 85 bands in all will perform on three giant stages throughout the four days with several more big names to be added in the coming weeks.
KISS "ALIVE 35" TOUR
Since there's no new album to promote, could you tell a little about the theme for this new KISS ALIVE 35 tour?
Well, I mean, obviously "Kiss Alive 35" is the 35th anniversary of the band and that's really all it is, you know. We're not at a point where every time we go on tour we need an album. Especially since it's really kind of a croc of shit, the idea that when you get down to it people talk about wanting a new album, but at the end of the day they don't really wanna hear a new album. Nobody does, nobody wants to hear The [Rolling] Stones' new album, nobody wants to hear [The] Who's new album. You don't go to a concert to hear new music, you want the band to go and do it, but then you don't wanna listen to it. I understand it, but why go in the studio and do an album when understandably people wanna hear the classics; those are the songs that mean something because they are connected to a time in somebody's life. A new song is fresh but it has no connection, so you listen to it five times and then you say "That's really nice, now play 'Love Gun'."!
So this tour is basically a celebration of your 35 year career?
Yes, plus when we're in Europe, we'll be doing all of "Kiss Alive". So, you know, here we do it a little different because Australia we have a different kind of relationship with, we try to include a broader spectrum of music.
Like you mentioned, you've decided to perform the "Alive" album in its entirety in Europe. How come, since you're not even wearing the ‘Alive’ costumes on this tour but the ones from the "Destroyer" era?
Well because we're not recreating the past, we're celebrating it. It's not about putting on the "Kiss Alive" show, it's not about dressing, it's not about making a statement by recreating that moment, the costumes or what we wanted to wear because we've worn the other, you know. And we don't wanna come up with new costumes. Again, new costumes are almost like a new album. Somebody maybe saying "When are you gonna have new costumes?", but if we showed up in new costumes they'd say "Why aren't you dressed like Kiss?” So at some point we have to do what we think makes the most sense.
Besides the ALIVE album, what other songs can the European fans expect to hear on this upcoming tour?
Oh, you know, really, we'll play all of KISS ALIVE, but then we'll play the classic songs from different periods of the band too. Rather than just give you a list, it's pretty much what people have come to expect, which is always a double-edged sword because someone else is going to say "You're playing the same songs.” Right, because most of the people wanna hear those songs, so the handful of people who get tired of it should probably stay home.
EUROPEAN KISS MANIA
In Australia you usually play some special songs like "Shandi" that were hits over here. In Europe and in the in Nordic countries especially, your biggest albums were probably the ones from the '80s, starting from "Lick it Up" to "Crazy Nights". Taking this into account, perhaps you could play stuff like "Heaven's on Fire" over there, for example?
Good, yeah, absolutely. Good to know.
The upcoming shows sold out almost instantly all over Europe. What was your reaction to the fastness of the ticket sales?
Yeah, it's actually the biggest tour we've done of Europe, bigger than the reunion tour. So, it shows again that people love Kiss; it's that simple, you know. People love what we do and what we represent and again it's always interesting when someone says "Oh, it's not all the original members.", but it's Kiss. And I think anybody's kidding themselves if they think that we should stop because it's not the original members or that we should take into account anything other than the fact that we're Kiss first and foremost. Every time we hit that stage, we live up to everything we've done. I know, I was there.
Are you aware that a new "Kiss story" record was set? First Sweden set a new record, but then a few days later the show in Finland became the fastest selling KISS show ever!
Yes, yeah, Helsinki. You know, it's an honor, it means a lot to me to do something like that and it means that we have to give back as much as we can and we will.
There's practically a whole new generation of Kiss fans, kids under the age of ten even. Have you noticed this phenomenon in your live audiences?
Yeah and it's great. I believe that what we do is timeless and ageless, you know, it's doesn't have a particular time, it's forever.
There are some interesting destinations that you'll be playing at on this tour too, like Russia and Serbia. How does it feel to play in places that you've never been to before?
Very exciting, you know. To be doing this as long as we have and then find something that's new, is as much fun as doing what's familiar. It's great to go back to places we know and know what to expect, and it's also great going to some place where we haven't been.
s' last European tour was for the PSYCHO CIRCUS album, back in 1999. Since the demand, judging by the success of this current tour, has certainly been there, why has it then taken this long for Kiss to return to Europe?
h, we've just been busy. And, you know, I like to spend a lot of time home, I have family. I also wanted to go out and do my [solo thing], I also wanted to do "Phantom of the Opera". There are always many things to be done and only so many hours in the day and at some point, you know, my kids want me home. That's a good reason to be home, I wanna be with them.
er the European leg of the tour, will it get extended to include the USA, Japan or some other areas as well?
on't really know yet. My art has been doing phenomenally well and I have shows booked, gallery shows for that and there's also talk of doing "Phantom of the Opera" again, so there's a lot of things pulling in different directions. And I don't ever wanna do something that I'm not sure I wanna do, you know, so just have to make sure.
more question about the new tour, word has it Eric McKenna is working on new guitars for you?
c's always working on something, he's got this great company "Boogey Street" and they do different kinds of variations of some of my guitars. They're also gonna do, you know, he's working on an acoustic version and some other things. Eric's a good guy.
Do you already know if you're going to use any of those new models on the European tour?
Probably not, I've gone back to some of my older Washburn’s, which we'll re-release again, because they're just great guitars.
UPCOMING RELEASES
Can the fans expect a release, DVD perhaps, from this "Alive 35" tour?
Good question. No plans right now, we're certainly not doing anything in Australia, but Europe is the perfect place to do something.
How about the KISSOLOGY DVDs, were you surprised how well those have done?
I think my biggest surprise is that KISSOLOGY III is the biggest and I thought that KISSOLOGY I would be the biggest because KISSOLOGY one is the beginning. And if you believed the loudest voices, the loudest opinions, you would think that the majority of people wanted the earliest stuff. But as it turns out, the biggest seller by far is KISSOLOGY III, so once again the people who speak the loudest are not necessarily the majority.
You must feel vindicated seeing how well that era is appreciated now, although it may not have quite seemed that way at the time?
ll it's just funny how you have some people who want Kiss to be their private band and to be exactly what they believe Kiss should be. Most of those people are in the minority. You know, fifty, sixty thousand people in Melbourne came to see Kiss, the shows in Helsinki sold out because they're there to see Kiss. The unhappy few will remain few.
you still have more unreleased vintage footage stored away for further releases?
h, we're planning more KISSOLOGIES. You know, KISSOLOGY IV is in... we can see that KISSOLOGY IV is coming very soon.
l it continue from where the third part left off or will it focus on something else?
know, we're not sure yet because we've taken this quite far, but there's so much in there. We have loads of footage.
you have any professionally filmed material from the 1983-1985 years?
Yes, we have, we do have great material from there too.
That material would be great to see someday, there aren't really even any decent quality bootlegs around from that era.
Yeah, we know.
RUMOUR CONTROL
There's a rumor going about presently that you've recently re-recorded some of the old Kiss stuff, is there any truth to that?
Well, it's a good rumor.
That's it?
Yeah. If we did re-record it, it would sound amazing. You know, it would sound as good as it sounded, only more sonically powerful. But IF we did re-record it, they would sound identical, only more fidelity.
But you haven't?<>Like I said, if we did...
After the press conference in Melbourne, what has been on many people's mind is how you said Kiss could carry on without you if necessary. Would you care to elaborate on that statement?
I think Kiss is much more than a band, I think that we define ourselves by the rules we break and I would be flattered if I am right and someone can take my place. Again, someone else's idea of what Kiss is, it doesn't necessarily speak for the majority. So somebody says "Oh, it has to be the four originals." and now they go "Oh, it's gotta be Gene and Paul.", I don't necessarily agree. And it would be, as far as I believe, a tribute to everything that Kiss stands for if the band continues without me. It doesn't mean I won't be there, it doesn't mean I won't control things but I believe what Kiss stands for, the idea of giving a great show and doing your best and entertaining, it goes far beyond the individuals in the band.
In the past you’ve stated that once you’re no longer able to give a hundred percent you will retire from the stage. Do you still feel that way?
I don't know how to put it. I can always give a 100%, is a 100% the same as it once was? Of course not, but as long as I feel good about what I'm doing I can continue. So it's a hard question to answer, you know, but the day will come when that question will get answered.
RELATIONSHIPS
There's always speculation among the fans about how the band members are getting along with each other. How would you describe your relationship with Gene Simmons after all these years?
Probably better than for a long, long time because we just give each other a lot of space. You know, 35 years, actually [for Gene and me] it's longer than that, it's 38 or 39 years. You know, we were different when we started, we're even more different now, so we have to give each other enough space to be who we want to be, you know, and not be in the others way. But when it comes to Kiss, we're very focused and that's all we can expect, we get along fine. You don't have to live with your brother, you love your family, you love your brother, but you don't want to spend all your time with them.
How about the other current band members, Tommy Thayer and Eric Singer? They both seem to be cool and easy going guys to work with. It must be less hassle working with them than perhaps some past members of the band?
Oh yeah. It has to be fun and for me, if it stops being fun and I want to continue then someone else has to leave, you know. That's what was wrong with the "Farewell" tour. The "Farewell" tour turned out for me to be about not wanting to end Kiss, but to end playing with a couple of the guys, you know. So, it took me a while to realize that I didn't want to say goodbye to Kiss, I wanted to say goodbye to some of the members. For better or worse, it just wasn't working, it wasn't happy. I didn't think that everybody was thankful for what they had. It stopped being fun because people stopped realizing how lucky they were. I have to say that every day I'm thankful for everything that happened with Kiss. I'm blessed and I work real hard to maintain that. And when people take it for granted or don't respect it, then it's not fun.
Are you any longer in any kind of contact with Ace Frehley and Peter Criss?
Ace I spoke to, but not very recently. I think he's, you know, feeling very good about playing clubs and that's good for him. It's just great that he's making sobriety a priority for him. Whatever else he thinks, I could care less, you know. I'm happy that he's alive, I'm happy that he's healthy, the rest is not important.
At your recent shows Tommy Thayer's has been singing now Ace's signature song, "Shock Me". How do you feel about some people's negative reactions to that?
Who cares! I mean, honestly, it's insane to think that we wouldn't play a Kiss song. From what I hear Ace is playing Kiss songs too. He's doing "Love Gun" and “I Want You” and it's fine, I have no problem with that. Again, fifty thousand people were happy to hear "Shock Me" again, you know, five people hated that, but you can't please everyone.
SOLO CAREER
You put out LIVE TO WIN in 2006 and it was your first solo release in seventeen years. Looking back, how would you now reflect on the whole process; making the album, doing a solo tour and the feedback you got from the fans, etc.?
Well, I did LIVE TO WIN with the specific idea of not making a one man Kiss album or a sound alike to the first solo album, both of those would be very easy. If I want to do a Kiss album by myself, I can do it. I've done things like that before, you know. So, I wanted to push myself in a different direction. Some people understood it, some people didn't, but going out and playing was amazing. You know, playing live is always the greatest and that band was insanely good.
On your solo tour you played shows in the USA and Australia. Since there’s a kind of "Kissteria" going on in Europe right now, is there a chance of seeing Paul Stanley solo tour over there someday?
I wanted to [tour Europe], but again there just wasn't time. I really, really wanted to and the guys, they never wanted to stop. They still wanna continue and I would love to, it's just a matter of finding time.
Is there a chance you might put out more solo records in the future?
You know, sure there's a chance, I just don't know when. If I did another one, it wouldn't sound like the last one. It would probably sound much more guitar driven. You know, after I finished the solo tour I was ready to go back in and do another album, there just wasn't any time. But what I would wanna do, if I did another one, would be making it much more guitar driven. But I had a great time doing the album and I had an amazing time doing the shows.
Incidentally, I met legendary drummer Carmine Appice on last summer and when I asked about his role on your 1978 solo album but he couldn't recall which songs he played on that record… Can you shed some light on this matter?
He played on [Take Me Away] "Together as One", that's all he played on.
In the late '80s you recorded an album's worth of material that never got released. Was it originally supposed to be another Paul Stanley solo album?
No, there was no solo album. I read that, you know. If everything I read was true, I'd be either in a lot of trouble or a lucky guy. There was no solo album. I started doing some writing with the idea of writing for other people and much more for some pop people. It was never going to be my album. I actually did those songs with the idea that these are completely uncharacteristic for me, you know, I mean I never wrote those with any sense of indentifying with them.
That material is quite pop and keyboard oriented, some tracks like "Timetraveller" for example...
Yeah, you know, it was very pop, very melodic and I would never be comfortable doing those songs. "Timetraveller" was one song there, there was also a song called "Two Hearts Collide” and… there was a bunch of them. They were just good songs, it was almost like an exercise to write with the idea that I'm not writing for me.
We seem to be running out of time, with so much left to discuss, but still I must ask what's the status of the LIVE TO DREAM DVD?
I think it's out in June, or July, and it will be released by Universal.
It's going to be a worldwide release then?
Yeah, definitely.
Thanks. We'll be seeing you again soon, in Finland (among other places).
Good, absolutely.
KISS put on a marvelous show and rocked from beginning to end. And the crowd … well they were already excited on the square in front of the arena when the gates weren't even open yet. They yelled and chanted KISS songs all the time creating a beautiful atmosphere. Inside the arena, right before the show, the crowd started a ‘wave’ like they were at a football game and during the show at some points the crowd was even louder than the band, standing, clapping and cheering the entire concert. You could tell from their faces KISS themselves loved the sight of it too.
The stagefloor was the floor which is normally being used for opera performances. This gave the band the opportunity to use the sides of the stage too, which they did very often. At one point Paul Stanley even sat down on the ancient stands of stone, right in front of the audience there. Due to this stagefloor they couldn't use the elevators they normally use at the end of Rock And Roll All Nite. And there were some more difficulties which kept them from putting on an entire show with all the effects they normally use. Word got out the trucks with the stage attributes were being held at the border thus arriving at around 2 o’ clock. This may have been the cause of them just walking to the stage instead of coming up from the ceiling on a lightning rig. Also the center stage was missing so Paul didn't fly during Love Gun. But this didn't seem to bother the crowd at all. And it shouldn't. This performance was memorable in many ways!
Click here to see more beautiful shots of KISS in Verona.
KISS chose an unusual setting for its Italian concert, picking the Arena of Verona, a historical building dating back to 30 AD (more than 2,000 years ago!). Arena of Verona usually plays host to classical and lyrical concerts, but on Tuesday it was rocked by 4,000 fans in full makeup.
Photos of the arena (and of the show) can be seen on Musica Metal. More pictures are available at DelRock.it.
"Seeing the band in this open-air venue was an incredible experience," reads a posting on the site. "And if the setting wasn't enough, the audience in Verona was easily one of the best ever at a KISS concert.
"From the opening of 'Deuce' through the end of 'Detroit Rock City', the audience stood singing and cheering through the entire show. The crowd was so loud at times, that Paul [Stanley, guitar/vocals]acknowledge them several times with an 'I love it.'
This was truly an electrifying KISS show!
Other notes about the Verona Show:
* Though you couldn't tell from his energetic performance, Paul was suffering from a bad case of bronchitis.
* Eric performed an extended drum solo during '100,000 Years'.
* Entire audience hummed 'Detroit Rock City' guitar solo!
* KISS was presented with a beautiful award celebrating the band's worldwide album sales!"
Check out pictures at this location.
IMPRESS YOUR FRIENDS WHEN THEY HEAR YOUR VOICEMAIL!
WINNERS TO BE ANNOUNCED ON THE DAY THAT “LADIES OF THE NIGHT” HITS STORES—JULY 8th, 2008!
Answer the following and enter the Gene Simmons “Ladies of the Night” Essay Contest now!
LADIES OF THE NIGHT—the Oldest Profession in the World: Good or bad? Tell us. And, tell us why in 200 words or less.
Then, on July 8th 2008, pick up your own copy of LADIES OF THE NIGHT and find out what GENE SIMMONS has to say about the world’s oldest profession.
Details: Enter to win a personalized voice mail greeting from Gene Simmons and a ton of Gene Simmons swag. In 200 words or less, tell us why Ladies of the Night are good or bad and why. Contest to run from May 6th through June 8th, 2008
First Place:
- A personalized digital voicemail recording from Gene Simmons
- An autographed copy of Gene Simmons new book, "Ladies of the Night"
- An autographed copy of "A&E's Gene Simmons' Family Jewels: The Best of Season 1 & 2"
- A month’s supply of Frank’s Energy Drink
- Loads of Gene Simmons swag
Second and Third Place:
- An autographed copy of Ladies of the Night
- A basket of Gene Simmons swag
How to Enter. No online purchase necessary to enter the Contest, where you can win the prizes outlined above. To enter, send your story together with your first and last name and email address to: phoenix.books@phoenixnm.com. Contest begins May 6, 2008. All on-line entrants must provide a valid e-mail address. First and last name of all on-line entrants establishes the identity of the entrant and ultimately, who the winner is. Any intent by the entrant to misrepresent themselves through the use of aliases and e-mail addresses will be disqualified. Limit one entry per household and/or unique e-mail address. If multiple entries are received from any person or e-mail address, all such subsequent entries will be disqualified. Entries may also be made by mail on a handwritten letter or postcard. Mail-in entries MUST specify the contest being entered and contain all information as requested on the on-line entry form (including e-mail address, if available). Mail entries to PHOENIX BOOKS, INC., 9465 Wilshire Boulevard, Suite 840, Los Angeles, CA 90212. No copies, facsimiles or mechanical reproductions will be accepted. By participating, all entrants agree to abide by these Official Rules.
Eligibility. The Contest is open to legal residents of the U.S. You must be 18 years of age or older to enter. This Contest is void wherever prohibited by federal, state, provincial, municipal or local law. Employees and immediate families or household members of Phoenix Books, Inc. or Gene Simmons (hereinafter collectively called “Sponsors”) and their respective parent companies, affiliates and subsidiaries, are ineligible to participate in this Contest.
Prize Deadlines. All on-line entries for the Grand Prize drawing must be received by 11:59 p.m. (PDT) on June 8, 2008. All mail-in entries must be postmarked by 11:59 p.m. on June 8, 2008. All entries, on-line or mail-in, must be received by June 11, 2008.
Famous national and international personalities from sports, music and entertainment have been immortalized or will immortalize themselves with their hand or footprint in concrete and then find their place in the MOWOS in the Olympic Park.
A precondition for being immortalized in the Walk of Stars is that the personalities have been successful in the Olympic stadium, hall, swimming centre or ice sports centre or have done something special for the Olympic Park.
Your book makes the argument that prostitution gives women access to power that they would otherwise not have. Have you always felt that way?
Surprise! I actually respect women. I've always had that point of view. I look on the issue as one of self-empowerment for women. Women should be the sole judges of how they want to lead their lives. And let's be frank—many ladies have made more money in their line of work than they would have sitting in front of a computer.
How long have you been interested in the subject of prostitution throughout history?
I've always been fascinated by the “forbidden fruit” of America's Puritan culture. The book is meant to be humorous, historical, and to give people an understanding that the exchange of money for sexual relations has been around forever. I actually have no agenda other than engaging people in a conversation about the question: “What does anybody else have to say about consenting adults behind closed doors?” I argue that people should stay out of other people's bedrooms.
What was one of your favorite historical periods to write about?
The Renaissance in Europe, when courtesans enjoyed more power than housewives. These ladies were not common prostitutes. They were part of the culture and the fashion of the times, like Madame de Pompadour, Louis XV's mistress. The wives of the men of the period? They were invisible. They meant nothing.
Your co-writer, Julie McCarron, also worked with you on Shannon Tweed's Kiss and Tell. What does she bring to your work?
Julie was amazing at finding the visual material I wanted, but she also wouldn't let a single piece of information get by that wasn't completely researched. And she's terrific at rewriting. She made sure that I separated my viewpoint from historical facts.
Tell us about your publishing endeavor, Simmons Books.
So far, Simmons Books has mostly been related to me and my interests. But Ladies of the Night is primarily a beautiful and classy art book, and I would like to do others like the big, expensive books Taschen Books has done. The advantage I have of being Gene Simmons and having my name on the imprint is that I get to talk to guys like you. Because if the only thing I ever accomplished was being proofreader at Publishers Weekly and Library Journal—which I did a million years ago—people would say, “So what?” It gives me access, but you have to have the goods, because, let's face it, a lot of people just aren't reading anymore unless a book is featured on Oprah's show.
SET LIST:
Deuce
Strutter
Got To Choose
Hotter Than Hell
Firehouse
Nothin' To Lose (Eric lead vocals)
C'Mon And Love Me
Parasite
She (Tommy Guitar Solo)
Watchin' You
Rock Bottom
100,000 Years (Eric Drum Solo)
Cold Gin
Let Me Go Rock 'N' Roll
Black Diamond (Eric lead vocals)
Rock And Roll All Nite
Encore:
Shout It Out Loud
Lick It Up
I Love It Loud (Gene split blood and flew to rafters)
I Was Made For Lovin' You
Love Gun (Paul flew to back of arena)
Detroit Rock City
According to Wikipedia, "Never Gonna Give You Up" is a dance-pop song originally performed by Rick Astley. It was released as a single from Astley's multi-million selling debut album "Whenever You Need Somebody", which was written and produced by Stock Aitken Waterman. The song was a worldwide number one hit, initially in the singer's native United Kingdom in 1987, where it stayed at number one for five weeks and was the best selling single that year.
The guitarist quit the group in 1983 - citing artistic differences for the split. He rejoined Kiss in 1996 for their reunion tour, but gave up his place again in 2001 to concentrate on his solo career.
And Frehley admits that although the rockers are about to embark on a forthcoming world tour later this year, he is not tempted to join them on the road.
He says, "I don't see it happening. I never say never, but I just turned 57. I don't see myself getting up onstage with tights on and putting on the makeup and jumping around like, you know, a kid again. Because I don't physically think I can do it.
"On the last reunion tour, I saw a couple of videos. I think we looked a little tired, you know? I think it's maybe better to put that segment of Kiss to sleep."
Check out the special on 90.2 Aristera sta FM OR www.902.gr tonight at 22:00 (GMT+2).
The group's setlist was as follows:
01. Deuce
02. Strutter
03. Got To Choose
04. Hotter Than Hell
05. Firehouse
06. Nothin' To Lose
07. C'mon & Love Me
08. Parasite
09. She + Tommy Thayer solo
10. Watchin' You
11. Rock Bottom
12. 100.000 Years + Eric Singer solo
13. Cold Gin
14. Let Me Go, Rock & Roll
15. Black Diamond
16. Rock and Roll All Nite
-------------------
17. Shout It Out Loud
18. Lick It Up / Won't Get Fooled Again
19. Gene solo + I Love It Loud
20. I Was Made For Lovin' You
21. Love Gun
22. Detroit Rock City
KISS' next performance will take place Sunday (May 11) at Olympiahalle in München, Germany.
You've traded the superstar lifestyle of LA's Viper Room for the Diaper Room. What are some of your day-to-day duties?
At 6 A.M. I was up with Colin. I changed, dressed and fed him, then we played together and watched Baby Einstein DVD's. Mornings are my favorite time of day. And as soon as we're off the phone, I'll pick Evan up from school.
Sounds like you're and involved dad.
You have to be hands on. But I'm fortunate: When I'm not on tour I'm here seven days a week, 24 hours a day. I probably take on more of the load than most fathers. And, of course, my wife, Erin, is amazing. She's always there for the kids, making them feel special.
What are your house rules?
Bedtime is an important routine. We try to get Evan to sleep by 9 P.M. Having respect for everyone else in the house is also key, as is maintaining good grades in school.
Do you and Erin help Evan with his homework?
He's an excellent student - especially in science - but we do our part. I quiz him for tests; Erin is the whiz when it comes to math.
Which rule is Evan most likely to break?
He always wants to stay up past his bedtime. If I told him he could stay up until midnight for a special occasion, he'd try for 12:30.
What's the hardest question you've had to answer as a parent?
When Evan was very young he said to me, "Dad, if God is inside everyone, why are there bad people?"
And how did you respond?
I told him, "Because some people don't listen to what he's saying." But I admit it took me a little while to come up with that.
You're a painter as well as a musician. Do you see a lot of creativity in your sons?
Oh, yeah. I finger paint with Colin, and Evan is a phenomenal guitarist - he can outplay me! But he is very much his own person, and I am grateful for that. My wish for him and Colin is that they'll make their own tracks in life without walking in my shadow.
What's your idea of a perfect day with your family?
It doesn't take much to make us happy - going to the mall, playing instruments at Guitar Center, sitting down to dinner together, giving Colin a bath - it's all great. I also like to spend time alone with Erin to recap the day and revel in how lucky we are to have this family.
Most teens think parents are embarrassing. What have you done to mortify Evan? It's a little different when you're a rock star. You're pretty cool no matter how you slice it.
Watch the seven-minute chat here: www.youtube.com/watch?v=9Pz8lR6t9NE
So, let's get the obligatory KISS reunion question out of the way up front.
"Uh, I don't see it happening,” the guitar hero said last week from a tour stop in Cincinnati. "I never say never, but I just turned 57. I don't see myself getting up onstage with tights on and putting on the makeup and jumpin' around like, you know, a kid again. Because I don't physically think I can do it.”
The last time Frehley re-teamed with all three of his original comic-book-character cohorts (Gene Simmons, Paul Stanley, Peter Criss) was for the KISS Farewell Tour in 2000, one of the largest concert draws of that year. But old tensions within the band caused drummer Criss to take his leave in early 2001, and caused Frehley to walk out a year later, that time for good.
"On the last reunion tour, I saw a couple of videos,” Frehley said. "I think we looked a little tired, you know? I think it's maybe better to put that segment of KISS to sleep.”
So, while Simmons and Stanley are soldiering on for the diehard KISS Army (with a couple of guys wearing Criss and Frehley's old makeup designs, much to the dismay of many fans), the Ace is concentrating on rekindling his career, preparing to release his first solo album in nearly 20 years this summer as he takes his "Rocket Ride” tour to cities across the U.S., Canada and Europe.
Frehley lands at the Diamond Ballroom on Saturday night. Then he'll circle back to the Sooner State in July for the massive Rocklahoma festival near Pryor.
"The first show I did in over five years was last year, Halloween, New York City,” Frehley said, his raspy voice still heavy with Bronx accent. "Played the Hard Rock Cafe. And I had so much fun doin' that, I booked four more shows on the East Coast at the end of December and then, you know, we put together this real tour.”
Frehley had already begun work on a new studio album with bassist Anthony Esposito in spring 2007, his first since 1989's "Trouble Walkin'.” He's hard put to explain his long silence, except to say, "Every time I was ready to do it, something came up.”
Not that he's been completely idle. Recognized as a talented graphic artist and creator of the famed KISS logo, he recently designed the official T-shirts for the annual Myrtle Beach Bike Week, has worked in computer animation and is contemplating the creation of an animated feature and a musical score to go with it. Frehley has also appeared in a national ad for Dunkin' Donuts, and he played his cards right on VH1's "Rock and Roll Celebrity Poker Tournament.”
"I'm a good poker player,” he said. "I never played Texas Hold 'em before. It's OK. I mean, I'm not crazy about it. I'd rather play seven-card stud. Or just, you know, five-card draw. I don't think it takes as much skill to play Texas Hold 'em as it does seven-card stud, because there's more variables.
Frehley managed to knock four players out of the tourney before he got knocked out, and he says that was only because the officials moved him to a different position at the table.
"You're never supposed to change your seat when you're playin' poker,” he advised. "It's bad luck. It really threw off my equilibrium, man. I just said, I can't do this, you know? I just made a crazy bet, and I lost.”
Now, he's betting that the batch of songs on the as-yet-untitled new album will rake in some winnings.
"There's some current songs, some songs I wrote this past year, some songs I wrote as far back as 10, 12 years ago,” Frehley said. "It's great because I had a lot of different material to choose from. Probably had 20 songs. So I'm gonna pick the best dozen.”
But don't expect to hear the new material in the live show.
"No, no, no, no, not with YouTube, you know? Every time I do a show, it winds up on YouTube. Since this album has been such a long-awaited record, I didn't wanna give it away.”
Frehley said he has plenty of material to choose from in his past catalog, including the songs he penned for KISS and all the material from his four solo albums. "It's hard to figure out what songs not to play, almost,” he said.
Meanwhile, he says he no longer harbors any hard feelings toward Simmons or Stanley, despite some harsh words exchanged in the past. He still speaks on the telephone to all three on occasion, and he wishes every one of them well.
"(KISS) was a big part of my life and, uh, most of the times were good so, you know. I'm just kind of ‘that was then and this is now,' you know? ... The most important thing is, if you're just happy with what you're doin' with your life, that can make things so much better. I'm havin' more fun than I've had in years. I'm doin' it my way.”
That laugh, though, is one of the reasons Ace Frehley always was the coolest member of KISS. The band's original guitarist never seemed to take the band as seriously as his pompous, mouthy bandmates. Of course, Frehley was often too wasted to take much of anything seriously during KISS' heyday.
Clean and sober for 19 months now, Frehley quit KISS once again in 2001 after a five-year "reunion/farewell" outing and said he's having a new kind of fun on his first solo tour in 13 years. He's also releasing a solo album later this year.
These ventures follow recent TV appearances on VH1's "Rock Honors" and "Rock and Roll Celebrity Poker Tournament" as well as -- most surprising/charming of all -- a fireworks-filled Dunkin' Donuts ad directed by "Scrubs" star Zach Braff.
Although he's clearly not making KISS-sized money as a solo artist, Frehley believes he's getting the last laugh over his former bandmates.
Q. It's been well over a decade since you did a solo tour. How are things different now?
A. For me, things are definitely better because I'm clean and sober now. That puts a different twist on everything. It's great to wake up without a hangover and not remembering what you did the night before.
Q. Was it harder to stay sober when you toured with KISS?
A. Not really. If I was having a good time and everybody was doing the right thing, I might've stayed. It just turned into the same nonsense that led to me leaving in'82. It all started happening again.
Q. How do you feel about them touring with (former roadie) Tommy Thayer in your place, with the same makeup?
A. I really don't think about it (laughs), or I'd rather not think about it. I have no control over that. The fans don't seem too happy, though. What KISS is doing right now reminds me of like what some great fighters have done in the past when they come out of retirement . . . It's getting embarrassing.
Q. Every Kiss fan knows your 1978 solo album was the best of the four members'. Did you have something to prove then, and do you have anything similar to prove now?
A. I always felt like I had something to prove when I was a member of KISS because we were all so competitive. Those four solo albums speak for themselves.
Q. Your recent Dunkin' Donuts commercial reinforced how you don't take yourself too seriously, or at least your KISS persona. Was that the point?
A. I've never taken anything I've done too seriously, and when people take it too seriously I just tell them to calm down. Like the Stones said, it's only rock'n' roll.
Like I said earlier, I got involved with rock'n' roll because it's fun. It's not really work to me. When I'm having fun, at the end of the day I say, "Wow, I'm having a great time. I can't believe I'm getting paid to do this." That's the way it should be.
“I’ve been clean and sober for 19 months now,” Frehley said. “It’s nice to wake up in the morning and remember what you did last night.”
Recent photos from Frehly’s new tour shows the guitarist trimmed down with a goatee, longer straight hair and black shades. Wielding his signature Starburst Les Paul, Frehley’s appearance is a far cry from the makeup days or the “unmasked” years of the late ’80s and ’90s. Known for his issues with substance abuse, Frehley sports a new band and a new outlook on performing live.
“I’ve been pretty much on a health kick since I’ve been sober,” Frehley said. “And with all that nonsense out of your system, you think clearer and you make more intelligent decisions about everything, about what you put in your body and your career. Same thing happens when you are abusing stuff, but it just happens in reverse.”
Frehley’s career keeps him busier than ever. Currently on tour with no end in sight, fans have continued to embrace the former KISS guitarist and his music, and seem excited to learn that he will release another solo album, something Freyley hasn’t done in more than 20 years. With the advent of YouTube, fans can see the guitarist and his band on their current tour, something Ace seems to embrace, with only a little reservation concerning his new material.
“I would imagine the YouTube clips have only helped my career because some people who would have normally not been able to see me, can,” Frehley said. “I can’t complain about it but I know some people do.”
Frehley then notes that such exposure does have its downside.
“To be honest with you, if it wasn’t for YouTube, I probably would be playing a couple of the new tunes live,” Frehley said. “But I don’t want to give any of the new stuff away to the mass media. It’s been so long since I came out with a new record, I want this one to be special.”
When not touring, Ace hangs out with his wife and works from his home studio. And if you’re wondering if there will be a Ace Frehley reality show like the one of his former frontman, don’t hold your breath. He’s been approached several times but has turned down offers for a side career on the small screen.
“I think [Gene Simmon’s] show is funny as shit,” Frehley said. “But I gotta keep my private life private. Gene’s a ham, he loves the press, so reality shows are perfect for him. But when I am at home, I feel like part of your life has to be private.”
His current Rocket Ride World Tour has Ace and company playing in America and Europe with a followup tour in the works after release of his album. But for this rock ‘n’ roll icon, keeping busy is a benefit to clean and healthy living.
“It actually feels better now than it has for a long time,” he said. “I have my band and my music and I’m in control of my own destiny. I got the greatest fans in the world and I consider it a privilege to play no matter if it’s an arena or a small club. I have just as much fun either way.”
Ace Frehley plays the Whiskey Roadhouse (at Horseshoe Casino) Friday, May 9. The 8 p.m. show costs $29. Matt’s Rocket Collection opens. Visit whiskeyroadhouse.com.
Even at home, the KISS frontman rocks a P.A. system. "Honey," Paul Stanley says into an intercom, his voice echoing from speakers throughout his Spanish mansion.
"We're going out to the studio."
Stanley's attractive wife of two and a half years appears and agrees to keep an eye out for the tardy photographer. He gives her a goodbye peck and then, as he leads the way to his painting studio, he says to me out of the corner of his mouth, "Not a model. Not an actress. An attorney."
Stanley and his wife welcomed their first child together 19 months ago, and since then, this rocker's mansion has become part Romper Room. We walk by an avalanche of toys in the center of the room, and there are certainly enough child-proof gates around the home to make the U.S.-Mexico border toddler-safe.
Off stage, Paul Stanley is not a guy you would peg as someone who wants to rock and roll all night and party every day. He's reflective, thoughtful and knowledgeable about art. He looks me in the eye as often as he looks off into the distance while choosing his words, and he is capable of relating his life lessons, such as the importance of being true to oneself.
Following the beat of his own drummer paid off for Stanley. In fact, it paid for this sprawling residence in Beverly Hills. But something other than music will likely pay for the 2,000-square-foot addition he has in the works: visual art.
Last year, he sold about $2 million in paintings — artwork he never expected the public to see. Until 2001, "Star Child’s" painting was limited to applying his signature makeup before every KISS show. But when Stanley divorced his now ex-wife in 2001, he needed a creative outlet. "I spent a lot of time kicking, screaming and banging my head against the wall, and a friend of mine said, 'You should paint.'"
He bought acrylic paint and canvasses, but he didn't know what to do, so he says he just dove in. "I found myself painting without any preconceived idea of what I would paint. It was really just about trying to paint emotion, as opposed to trying to depict reality. Every time I paint, it's like going on a trip without a map. I don't have a clue where I'm going, and when I get there, I know that's where I should be."
The early paintings had plenty of large circles. Stanley felt they were "a source of energy," because they were a continuum with no beginning or end. With one exception: his very first. That circle is incomplete. But don't try too hard to figure out what he's trying to say with such symbolism — the truth is he ran out of paint and decided to let fate leave its mark.
The canvas with the incomplete circle now hangs in his cavernous living room, where, on this warm April day, Stanley sits in leather pants, legs crossed, his long-sleeve, collared shirt unbuttoned just north of his navel. As he gesticulates, the large silver bracelet on his right wrist jangles.
"[The painting is] still unsigned. I didn't sign it because I was so self-conscious that if I signed it, people would judge it because it was mine," he explains. "To this day, the edition is sold out. As a point, and as something for me to remember, I don't sign it, because that's where it all started, with someone who was not so sure."
McGhee purchased the 8,000-square-foot building at 21 Music Square West from music publisher B. Tom Collins, who bought the building for $250,000 in 1995, according to city records.
Music Row is an area just to the southwest of Downtown Nashville, Tennessee that is home to hundreds of businesses related to the country music, gospel music, and contemporary Christian music industries.
Watch the video at this location.
He returned for a reunion tour in 1996 and continued until 2002.
These days, though, the New York-born singer-guitarist, 57, cites his 19-month stretch of sobriety as his crowning achievement.
"Doing this sober, I remember what I did the night before," said Frehley, whose well-publicized drug and alcohol problems spurred his original split from Kiss.
"It makes things a little easier."
Frehley, at work on his first solo album since 1989, will head to the Newport Music Hall on Saturday to perform with a new band.
The group, he said, won't play anything from the upcoming album -- "I want it to be a surprise when it comes out" -- but it will serve a "good cross section of Kiss songs and my solo stuff."
Frehley offered other observations while taking a recent break from his home studio in Westchester, N.Y.
Q: Although you won't play new songs on your latest tour, how would you describe the sound and vibe of the new disc?
A: I'm trying to recapture analog sound and get away from the digital stuff. I'm getting back to basics -- kind of like the stuff I did on my first solo album with Kiss (Ace Frehley in 1978).
Most people cite that first album as my best album, so I've been trying to revisit that and pick up where it left off.
Q: When did you last hear that album?
A: I very rarely listen to my records, but I've been listening to it in bits and pieces in my car. It's hard, because of my schedule, to listen to any record from beginning to end. I think a lot of people have that problem today; the kids are downloading everything.
Q: So many people picked up a Gibson Les Paul because they saw you with one. Why did you always gravitate to that guitar?
A: If you talk to musicians, most of them will agree it's kind of a no-brainer.
If you play hard rock, you pick up a Les Paul and you plug it into a Marshall amp, and you really don't have to do much more.
Q: When you designed the Kiss logo, did it just come to you one day or did it evolve?
A: I think I was playing around with it one afternoon and came up with it. . . . I was on some Web site the other day, and they were talking about the top 10 logos of rock 'n' roll, and it was, like, the Stones, I forget what the second one was -- and Kiss was third.
It's crazy when you think about it.
Q: What about your makeup?
A: I was always fascinated with the science-fiction stuff -- that whole scene -- and I just started playing around with it. It's bizarre. It just happened.
When I write a song sometimes, it's like I'm not writing it. It's like somebody's beaming the information to my head; as fast I can write the lyrics, it's coming out of me. . . . The makeup was that kind of the same thing. It's almost like somebody up there sent it to me.
Q: Why did Kiss inspire so many people to start bands?
A: Why were we so successful? I don't know. I just accept it.
Q: When you see your face tattooed on an arm, does your jaw drop?
A: I'm just flattered someone would go that far, and I just try to take the time to autograph something or talk to them a little when I have the time.
Q: When will you rejoin Kiss?
A: I don't see that happening. I think we had a great run, and the reunion was a great tour.
I mean, I just don't see myself running around onstage in makeup these days. In my spare time, I have fun riding around on my Harley.
Going back to that whole scene -- it was fun while it lasted, but no thanks.
Photos as well as the 60-minute podcast can be downloaded at this location. iTunes users can also subscribe to "Talking Metal" for free at this location.
"Good To Be Bad" was released through SPV/Steamhammer in Germany on April 18, the rest of Europe on April 21 and it came out in North America on April 22. In addition to the regular jewel-case version, a limited-edition two-disc set contains an extra CD in a cardboard sleeve, as well as a poster, photocard and sticker.
That laugh, though, is one of the reasons Ace Frehley always was the coolest member of Kiss. The band's original guitarist never seemed to take the band as seriously as his pompous, mouthy bandmates. Of course, Frehley was often too wasted to take much of anything seriously during Kiss' heyday, but as he said in a phone interview last week, "For me, rock 'n' roll should always be fun."
Clean and sober for 19 months now, Frehley quit Kiss once again in 2001 after a five-year "reunion/farewell" outing and said he's having a new kind of fun on his first solo tour in 13 years, which brings him to First Avenue on Thursday. He's also releasing a solo album later this year.
These ventures follow recent TV appearances on VH1's "Rock Honors" and "Rock and Roll Celebrity Poker Tournament" as well as -- most surprising/charming of all -- a fireworks-filled Dunkin' Donuts ad directed by "Scrubs" star Zach Braff.
Although he's clearly not making Kiss-sized money as a solo artist, Frehley believes he's getting the last laugh over his former bandmates.
Q Do you think it's a fair tradeoff doing a solo tour? That is, you don't have to put the makeup on, but you also don't get to play as big a venue.
A I don't even think about the makeup. I took the makeup off in 2001, and I really don't plan to put it back on. As far as the smaller audiences, usually the smaller places have better acoustics and you're closer to the people, more intimate. A lot of times that can be a lot more fun. I'm used to playing arenas with a pit and security guards between the band and fans; there's always that distance. The places I play now, people can touch me. As long as they don't get too intimate, you know? [Laughs/cackles.]
Q It's been well over a decade since you did a solo tour. How are things different now?
A For me, things are definitely better because I'm clean and sober now. That puts a different twist on everything. It's great to wake up without a hangover and not remembering what you did the night before. Life just seems to be getting better all the time.
Q Was it harder to stay sober when you toured with Kiss?
A Not really. If I was having a good time and everybody was doing the right thing, I might've stayed. It just turned into the same nonsense that led to me leaving in '82. It all started happening again. For me, rock 'n' roll should always be fun. That's the reason I got into the business. When it's not fun anymore, it's time to move on.
I just had to leave because it wasn't fun anymore and I wanted to move on with my solo career, which I left on the back burner when I rejoined the group in '96. It was time. It was billed as the farewell tour, and then the reunion tour. They're still doing shows in Europe now. That wasn't the whole concept of the way it was presented to me when I jumped on board again.
Q How do you feel about them touring with [former roadie] Tommy Thayer in your place, with the same makeup?
A I really don't think about it [laughs], or I'd rather not think about it. I have no control over that. The fans don't seem too happy, though. What Kiss is doing right now reminds me of like what some great fighters have done in the past when they come out of retirement, when they should have just rolled up the towel. That's the way it seems to me now. It's getting embarrassing.
Q What can we expect to hear on your new album?
A There are some good heavy rockers, some instrumentals, some midtempo stuff. It's the classic Ace Frehley sound and writing. I think everybody is going to ultimately be pleasantly surprised. I can't believe it's been like 15 years since I put out a studio album. Where the hell did time go [laughs]?
Q Every Kiss fan knows your 1978 solo album was the best of the four members'. Did you have something to prove then, and do you have anything similar to prove now?
A I always felt like I had something to prove when I was a member of Kiss because we were all so competitive. Those four solo albums speak for themselves.
I don't think I have anything to prove now, because I'm some kind of legend, I guess. All I need to do now is kind of reinforce that. Positive reinforcement, you know [laughs]? I think my new CD is going to do that.
Q Your most genius song in my mind, and many fans' minds, is "Rocket Ride," with rock's best sexual innuendos outside of AC/DC. What do you remember about recording it?
A I wrote that with our tour manager, Sean Delaney, who passed away a few years ago. We were all whacked out of our minds when we were doing that [laughs]. I actually had a recording setup in my attic at the time, and it was hot as hell, the air-conditioning wasn't working. It was just an entirely crazy recording session. Things aren't crazy like that anymore these days, fortunately.
Q Your recent Dunkin' Donuts commercial reinforced how you don't take yourself too seriously, or at least your Kiss persona. Was that the point?
A I've never taken anything I've done too seriously, and when people take it too seriously I just tell them to calm down. Like the Stones said, it's only rock 'n' roll. This isn't, you know, the Spanish Inquisition [laughs]. That's another thing about Kiss. Sometimes those guys take the whole [expletive] deal too [expletive] seriously.
Like I said earlier, I got involved with rock 'n' roll because it's fun. It's not really work to me. When I'm having fun, at the end of the day I say, "Wow, I'm having a great time. I can't believe I'm getting paid to do this." That's the way it should be. When you're on tour you should be having a great time. That's what it's all about. For some reason with Kiss, it stopped being that.
This time was different. The morning after the show, there was no hangover, no fawning KISS fans partying with him until the dawn's early light, no deleterious carryover from the night before.
"After I woke up the next day, I went to see Mt. Rushmore," he says in advance of his show Sunday at Mr. Small's Theatre in Millvale. "I played that area before and never went to see it, and it just blew me away.
"I'm enjoying that element of my life. I didn't do a lot of sightseeing when I was touring before, and it's great."
Frehley himself is in good shape. He is sober, active and recording a new album he hopes to release in the summer -- although, he admits with a laugh, it probably won't be out until December.
But it is his legacy as the lead guitarist in KISS that still overshadows everything he does, that still brings out soldiers young and old from the KISS Army, when he performs live shows.
When told that many guitarists point to him as an influence, Frehley quickly cracks, "If I knew in my 20s that so many people would emulate what I do, I would have practiced a little bit more.
"But that's something I try not to think about too much. I try to stay in the now and think about the future rather than think about the past and what went down. Somebody just asked me in an interview, 'What do you think about when you hear KISS?' ... I had some great times with KISS. I had a lot of fun. But that was then, this is now. I don't see myself going back. I have fond memories of the band, but I'm looking forward to doing my stuff."
That includes the current tour and the new album, which has everything from heavy rockers to slower instrumentals. Frehley is especially keen on "Genghis Khan," a song he says is in the same style as Led Zeppelin's "Kashmir." Another tune, "A Little Below the Angels," is a mid-tempo song with "a nice hook to it, something you could hear on the radio," he says.
All Frehley needs to do is let the album go.
"My biggest problem is that I'm never happy with what I do," he says. "It's always a trade-off. There's no such thing as perfection, but the closer to perfection, the better it is. Sometimes I'm so close to stuff, I've got to get away from it for a while. Being on the road was good because it put my head in a different place. When I came back, I threw some of the tracks on and they sounded good to me, but I know I can do a little better. That's where I am now."
Until the album comes out -- whether that's the end of May, the end of June or the end of the year -- Frehley plans to continue touring. He's dipping into the KISS catalog during live shows with "Deuce," "Parasite" and a medley that includes "Torpedo Girl" and "Five Card Stud," along with a few tracks from the forthcoming release.
And he is especially pleased that, at 57, he's playing better than he has in years.
"I just keep moving forward, trying to do the right thing," Frehley says. "Getting sober really helped a lot. I just put one foot in front of the other and keep moving forward. It seems to be working."
Then again, were you to choose any other member of KISS at the same time and tell him that "Space Ace" would even be alive in 30 years, the skepticism would have been just as strong. Yet, here we are nearly midway through 2008, and Frehley has survived it all -- alcoholism, sports car disasters and Dunkin' Donuts commercials. A rock soldier, indeed.
Ace Frehley plays The National on Friday. Doors open at 8 p.m. Tickets are $20 in advance, $22.50 the day of the show.
It’s true that KISS has already been around for 35 years already, but this is the first opportunity for Bulgarian fans to see them live. The masks are back on for the band’s ALIVE 35 Tour, which passes through 17 countries, some of the biggest music festivals and… Sofia.
Unlike other great bands, which came along over the past several years and have obviously capitulated to the merciless passage of time, KISS have no intention of ever disappointing their fans. If you imagined that their concert will be just a little bit of fuss in a calm May evening, you're mistaken! KISS plan anything but a calm gig. How do we know? Well, the simple fact that they arrive with tons of equipment speaks for itself. The main stage will be 18m wide, but two additional wings will extend it to nearly 25m. The lighting equipment alone weighs 12 tons and the show includes unique pyrotechnics. The sound will be provided by six-ton-heavy equipment.
KISS promises something unprecedented for their Sofia show. Hence, part of the ground of the stadium will be detached and the band required 400kg of dry ice for the concert.
KISS must know what they're doing. If they were not what they are, they wouldn't have sold more than 80 million records and wouldn't have had numerous platinum status albums. Fact is, KISS is one of the most influential rock’n’roll bands in the history of music.
The tickets are still available via eventim.bg and their ticket desks across the country. Prices are 50 and 60 leva. At the website of the band kissontour.com real fans can buy special pass packages including meeting the band, assisting at the sound-check before the concert or both. The requirement is that they already have a ticket for the concert.
However, it’s not only devoted KISS fans that will enjoy the Sofia show. The music dilettanti, such as myself, will be surprised to find out how many of the songs they hum under the shower or sing along to on the radio are actually Kiss hits. Still not convinced? Just look for Crazy, Crazy Nights, I Was Made for Lovin’ You, Forever or the cover of God Gave Rock’n’Roll to You in the internet. Oh, yes! It’s KISS who perform them.
If you've ever wondered why these men wear so much make-up, let’s shed some light on this mystery. When the band was founded the original line-up of Peter Criss, Ace Frehley, Paul Stanley and Gene Simmons adopted their make-up and costumes from the personae of comic book-style characters. They represent The Demon (Simmons), Starchild (Stanley), Space Ace (Frehley), and The Catman (Criss). The Demon make-up reflected Gene's cynicism and dark elements. As Stanley was considered a hopeless romantic, he became the “Starchild”. The Space Ace was a reflection of Frehley’s desire to go for a ride in a space ship. The Catman make-up hinted that Criss had nine lives due to his rough childhood in Brooklyn. As Criss and Frehley are no longer part of the band, current members Tommy Thayer and Eric Singer became, respectively, the Spaceman and Cat.
The show starts at 7pm, don’t miss it!
Both appearances are open to the public and free of charge
Friday - July 25, 2008 - -7-9 PM
Saturday - July 26, 2008 -- 5-8 PM
Wentworth Gallery - The Court at King of Prussia
690 West Dekalb Pike - King of Prussia, PA
For details on the VIP Reception with Paul on Saturday - July 26, 2008 4-5 PM or to RSVP call - 610-337-8988 or 800-732-6140
CINDER ROAD's debut album, "Superhuman", was released in 2007 via EMI. The CD was produced by Marti Frederiksen (AEROSMITH, DEF LEPPARD, OZZY OSBOURNE) and is described as "a mix of high-octane rockers and heartfelt ballads" that, according to vocalist/guitarist Mike Ruocco, "create an experience running the gamut of emotions." The 11 tracks on "Superhuman" are definitely staggering in their passionate range. Ruocco maintains a simple philosophy when it comes to music. "Each song is an extension of my emotions," he says. "They’re like my children."
For more information on CINDER ROAD, go to this location.
Check out a promotional video for the program in which Gene explains the relationship between his sunglasses and his sexuality at this location.
What's now considered a cult classic, the high-rating effort was troubled by a poor script, sub-par acting from the band and even gaffes like the clear appearance of Ace Frehley's black stunt double in one scene. In other words, this dreck is ripe for the simian handy work of Magic Smoking Monkey Theater.
The offshoot of St. Louis Shakespeare chooses one film or TV train wreck or cult favorite per year to perform live on stage with a low budget and lots of nudges and winks to the audience.
"It's like a rejected Scooby-Doo script," director Donna Northcott said of "Phantom of the Park." "At the end you half-expect to hear, ‘And I would have gotten away with it, too, if it wasn't for you pesky KISS members.'"
The movie aired 30 years ago on NBC, which was clearly trying to capitalize on the mega-success of KISS in the late '70s. While Gene Simmons' acting chops may have improved after stints on reality TV shows like "The Apprentice," it's clear that KISS as a whole was much stronger on the concert stage than in front of the camera.
"It's one of those that you watch with the remote control in hand to keep pausing and say, ‘What the hell did they just do?'" Northcott said.
In the movie, a diabolical amusement park inventor, Abner Devereaux, decides to create human clone robots in an act of revenge, including fake KISS members. The KISS boys, of course, have super powers to match their on-stage personas.
"Demon" Simmons, played here by Wood River's Chris "Mr." Jones, breathes fire and is a tough guy; "Space Ace" Frehley (Collin Preciado) can teleport and shoot lasers from his hands; Peter Criss, the "Catman," (Ben Ritchie) can leap like a feline and "Starchild" Paul Stanley (Jim Ousley), besides sporting intoxicating chest chair, can shoot a mind-controlling eye beam.
Is it any surprise this was produced by Hanna-Barbara?
This being a fast and furious Monkey show - past efforts include "Plan 9 from Outer Space," "The Love Boat" and "Speed Racer" - a major hurdle was the make up involved. Northcott said the four guys playing KISS are doing their own, and as of Wednesday had improved on their initial application time of 45 minutes.
"All the actors who play band members are members of the KISS Army, so they know how to apply the correct make up," she said.
Alas, the songs will not be performed live, but ala Memorex.
"We can't hope to do justice to the original band members," Northcott said. Songs from "Phantom" include hits like "Rock and Roll All Night" and Criss' heartfelt tribute to his then-wife, "Beth."
Northcott said costume designer Lisa Beke had part of her work cut out for her, too. "We always have a lot of '60s and '70s items in our wardrobe warehouse ....... but it's harder to find unitards and stockings in male sizes at second hand stores."
A challenge of re-creating some of these "classic" films of the past is the fact that most of the interesting roles go to men - except for something like "Valley of the Dolls," Northcott said.
Drag casting could have been possible, since the singer for the all-little person KISS tribute band, Mini KISS, is a woman.
"We didn't want it to be about drag; Gene performs in drag essentially anyway and that would have been one too many levels of complexity," Northcott added.
As of this writing, the Monkeys had two more days to work out the kinks in the show, and Northcott said some special effects were in the works. She's particularly pleased with the scenes at KISS' groovy pad.
And it wouldn't be a Monkey show without a tease for the future. A live "commercial" for the infamous "Star Wars Holiday Special" will also be part of the performance.
Northcott said that show is on the short list for future Monkey treatment, and it does contain some juicier roles for women, like Carrie Fisher, Harvey Korman in drag and Bea Arthur - with the latter potentially being available to a female or male actor.
"KISS Meets the Phantom of the Park" will be performed at 8 and 10:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday, and May 2 and 3 at the Regional Arts Commission, 6128 Delmar, University City, Mo. Tickets are $15 and available through Metrotix at metrotix.com or by calling (800) 293-5949. Visit stlshakespeare.org/MONKEY/ for more information.
Paul will appear on the Fox 25 Morning News (Boston) "live" in-studio on Friday at 7:45 EST.
The rock star and his entourage of models rolled up to six different 7-Elevens for a meet-and-greet with fans.
"This is actually a better product, everybody talks about energy drinks but usually they're just cough medicine," said Simmons. "This is something that’s actually pasteurized. It's Austrian and there are different flavors."
Fans lined up to greet Simmons on the 7-Eleven on College Avenue and tasted the new beverage. Many brought KISS T-shirts and guitars to have autographed.
Read more at NBCSandiego.com.
The supermodel will appear in the second season finale of ABC's "Ugly Betty," according to actress Becki Newton.
"She's going to be in our last episode, which is exciting," Newton told The Associated Press at the launch party for the new Sunglass Hut store design. "I've personally requested that I don't stand next to her because Amanda would not like to be seen with such a tall, pretty person."
Newtown, who stars as sassy receptionist Amanda Sommers on "Ugly Betty," isn't sure what character Campbell will play or if she'll actually have scenes with the 37-year-old supermodel, who was arrested earlier this month on suspicion of assaulting an officer after police were called to a disturbance at Heathrow Airport in London.
Campbell was originally announced as a guest star last year but didn't appear in the first season or the beginning of the second season, which was cut short because of the writers' strike. Other "Ugly Betty" guest stars have included Victoria Beckham and Gene Simmons, who played himself and was revealed to be Amanda's father. Newton said Simmons will reprise his role in an upcoming episode.
ABC had previously announced the series will return for a third season.
"You can't get anywhere until you're ready to find it," he says on the phone, explaining how he took up painting several years ago during a difficult divorce. "I did it purely as a cathartic release, and I did it from the get-go with the ground rules that I was going to concentrate more on trying to depict emotions than trying to depict any image of reality."
The only Kiss content is four portraits of the band's members in costume. "A tip-of-the-hat to the fans," Stanley calls it, but one that's so out of place precisely because of how abstract the other works are. "I have to tell, you it's pretty gratifying to know that they're the least popular pieces in the gallery," he says. "People aren't buying Kiss, they're buying art."
That art ranges from serene to immediate, while touching on themes Kiss never would. You wouldn't know Stanley spends some nights in 9-inch heels, cranking out the riff to "Deuce." It's important to him that his art—both its content and its success—not be seen as some by-product of Kiss. "At the end of the day, if you know you're buying pieces of art because I sing 'Love Gun,' you're probably better off spending the money elsewhere."
But, if it exists, the link to Kiss may not be causal. The paintings, some of which seem to reflect influences like Rothko and Miró, inspire a range of emotional responses, and Stanley sees legitimacy in nearly every reaction. It's a creative open-mindedness that perhaps developed alongside his relationship to Kiss' fans. "I'm sometimes stunned by what some people read into some of my music, but that doesn't negate the truth in what they're saying," he says. "In the same way as with a piece of art or anything else that's subjective, it's ultimately more important what you get out of it than what I set out to do."
While it's strange to hear Paul Stanley talk about the affirmation of "real" art collectors, especially since Kiss made a career out of being reviled by critics and worshipped by fans, they're not the only ones he cares about. "If my appearance brings in people who have never been into a gallery, I've done a double service," he says. "I think that many people don't get a chance to experience or enjoy any of the arts, because the critic's job, unfortunately, seems to be to intimidate a potential viewer by telling them that their opinion isn't valid unless it's educated. That really sells a lot of people short." And, it might be that kind of classic rock populism that finally gives him away.
Q: What led you to try your hand at painting?
A: Well, as a teen I attended the High School of Art and Music in New York but I wasn’t painting at that time. About eight years ago, I was going through a hard divorce, and a friend suggested I paint as a type of therapy. I really connected with my emotions and wanted to keep doing it.
Q: How would you describe your artistic style?
A: It’s very personal, stream-of-consciousness, fly by the seat of my pants stuff. I compare it to going on a trip without a map. I like abstract art because it appeals to people on an emotional rather than analytical level.
Q: Are there more KISS tours or a new album on the horizon?
A: We just did some massive shows in Australia and New Zealand, and in three weeks we’re heading to Europe. So, KISS is alive and ready to blind you, deafen you and pummel you into submission (laughs). A new album? We’re asked about it, but we know fans don’t really want new material. I could write the next “Let It Be” and people would say, “That’s great. Play ‘Love Gun.’” And we’re happy to do that.
Q: Why hasn’t KISS been elected to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame?
A: Because the people who own it are part of what I call the “East Coast Music Mafia,” and their opinions don’t really reflect rock fans’ in general. Unfortunately, it’s a sham with a very official-sounding name.
Q: Anything you’re looking forward to doing while you’re in Boston?
A: My sister lived in the North End for a time, and you can bet I’ll be heading there for some real Italian soul food.
The DVD single includes some of the more humorous and heartfelt episodes including: “Happily Unmarried”, “Nest Generation Rock Star”, “The Demon Lives”, “Driving Me Crazy”, “A Bun in the Oven”, “Nice Day for a Facelift”, “Face Off”, “Master Gene Theater” and the bonus episode “Under the Knife.”
GENE SIMMONS FAMILY JEWELS: THE BEST OF SEASONS 1 & 2 is available in retail store now.
According to a press release, "the material [on KKB's '1974'] was the work of an unnamed band that Bruce was a member of, along with Mike Katz (bass) and Guy Bois (drums), and is in a 'CREAM-meets-YES' style."
KKB's "1974" track listing:
01. I'll Never Take You Back
02. My Baby
03. You've Got A Hold On Me
04. Tryin' To Find A Way
05. Someday
06. You Won't Be There
07. To Be Free
08. You Won't Be There (alternate jam take)
Check out audio samples at this location.
A month before roughly two dozen inmates at Theo Lacy Jail viciously killed John Chamberlain in an attack that would earn national headlines and lead to a major scandal that continues to unfold, an inmate named Mark Leslie Norton told deputies he feared for his life. He asked to be moved from one part of the jail to another.
Although deputies may not have recognized him, Norton is better known to most of the world by his stage name, Mark St. John; he had briefly been a guitarist for the world-famous rock band Kiss in the mid-’80s until a nasty bout of arthritis forced him into early retirement.
Norton, according to published reports, grew up in Garden Grove and had been living with his parents there while earning a modest income giving guitar lessons. He was booked into Theo Lacy on Sept. 14, 2006 to serve a two-week sentence after pleading guilty to possession of drug paraphernalia, resisting arrest and attempted destruction of evidence. For a week, Norton stayed in D Barracks, a medium-security dormitory for nonviolent offenders. But on Sept. 21, according to Norton’s inmate file, which the Weekly recently obtained from the sheriff’s department, he told deputies he wanted to be moved somewhere else because he “stole crackers out of another inmate’s property box” and was “in fear for his safety.”
Deputies moved Norton to F-West Barracks, another medium-security dormitory, where he remained for three days, until being released from jail on Sept. 24. From the file, it appears the transfer worked. There is nothing to suggest Norton was attacked or ever requested medical treatment. But one key witness insists that Norton did, in fact, get his ass kicked.
Jared Petrovich, a former shot-caller at the jail and one of nine inmates charged with murdering Chamberlain (see “‘I Lit the Fire,’” April 3), told the Weekly he personally helped to arrange for Norton to be assaulted and that Deputy Kevin Taylor, the same guard Petrovich alleges authorized the attack against Chamberlain, approved the beating. In a recent interview with the Weekly, the onetime shot-caller for the “Woods” (the white inmates at Theo Lacy) stated that Taylor knew in advance that numerous inmates, including Norton, would be beaten up and not only did nothing to stop the assaults, but also gave sack lunches to him and other inmates in return for carrying them out.
“We went up to Kevin Taylor and said, ‘We’re going to beat this guy [Norton] up,’” Petrovich recalls. “[Taylor] said okay and gave us sack lunches, two each for the four us,” referring to himself, another Woods shot-caller and pair of Latino inmates who needed to be advised of an upcoming beating so they didn’t “trip out.”
According to Petrovich, Norton was being punished for stealing property from another inmate in a different part of the jail. “He got caught stealing something,” he says. “I guess he did that somewhere else in the jail, but we found out about it somehow. . . . The Kiss guy got beat up pretty bad.”
Petrovich says he was included in the meeting because the other shot-caller was scheduled to leave F-West in a few weeks and had chosen him as his replacement. Although Petrovich claims Norton was severely beaten, he says he didn’t personally witness the attack.
Sheriff’s officials have refused to make Taylor, who is currently on paid leave, available for an interview. On Oct. 5, 2006, he allegedly watched Cops on television and used his cell phone to send 22 text messages while dozens of inmates just yards away fatally beat Chamberlain, a Mission Viejo software engineer awaiting trial for possession of child pornography (see “Blind Spot,” March 29, 2007). Following the murder, Taylor refused to speak to sheriff’s homicide investigators and, later, declined to be interviewed by district-attorney investigators or testify before the Orange County grand jury. But two of his partners did talk, and what they say suggests that Petrovich’s claims about Taylor, as outlandish as they sound, are plausible.
Both Special Services Officer Philip Le and Deputy Jason Chapluk testified that Taylor routinely used shot-callers such as Petrovich to enforce jail rules and punish inmates who broke them and that he frequently rewarded the shot-caller with special privileges such as extra time in the day room, new uniforms, or—you guessed it—sack lunches.
Le estimated that Taylor would meet with shot-callers up to 10 times per day and that some of those meetings were to ask the shot-caller to ensure that inmates who had been punished didn’t request medical treatment at the jail. The conversation, Le testified, would go like this: “Hey, this guy is messing up, so get him in line; [tell him], ‘You are not hurt. . . . You are fine.’” If the inmate continued to complain, Le told the grand jury, Taylor knew the result would be another violent attack. “Something is done discreetly in certain areas [of the barracks],” he explained. “The inmates know there are certain areas or blind spots, and they do it there.”
A former Theo Lacy inmate who claims he was a Woods “torpedo,” or enforcer, says he personally beat up, or “taxed,” numerous inmates while incarcerated at the jail. (The Weekly confirmed that the inmate, who asked not to be identified, was in Theo Lacy several months before Chamberlain’s murder—and before Norton’s brief stint in the jail.) “It was my job to go to the blind spot and wait while another Wood got the person who was going to be taxed,” he says. “You put the person getting taxed against the wall, ask them if they are ready, and then go to town for 15 seconds on their body. . . . It never gets brutal; there might be some bruises left after, but never any blood.”
Mark Leslie Norton, unfortunately, is unable to talk about his time in Theo Lacy. As any true Kiss fan already knows, Norton died last year. According to the Orange County Coroner, the cause of death was a brain hemorrhage bought on by an accidental overdose of methamphetamines on April 5, 2007. The Weekly’s attempts to reach Norton’s family for comment were unsuccessful.
"First and foremost, Ace would like to thank all of his fans for their support on his most recent tour. Throughout the course of this Rocket Ride, people have requested ways they could meet Ace. We may have found a way of satisfying that craving, and will be trying it out in Nashville on May 22. If all goes well, we will continue this throughout the rest of the tour. Stay tuned."
The festival billing is shaping up as follows:
Friday, June 13:
KISS
JUDAS PRIEST
MOTÖRHEAD
DISTURBED
KID ROCK
SEETHER
SIMPLE PLAN
RISE AGAINST
ACE FREHLEY
FIGHTSTAR
JOB FOR A COWBOY
THE DILLINGER ESCAPE PLAN
Saturday, June 14:
THE OFFSPRING
INCUBUS
BULLET FOR MY VALENTINE
BIFFY CLYRO
ALTER BRIDGE
MADINA LAKE
36 CRAZYFISTS
HIM
ASH
PENDULUM
THE SUBWAYS
Sunday, June 15:
LOSTPROPHETS
JIMMY EAT WORLD
COHEED AND CAMBRIA
IN FLAMES
WITHIN TEMPTATION
APOCALYPTICA
BLACK STONE CHERRY
CAVALERA CONSPIRACY
CHILDREN OF BODOM
ELLIOT MINOR
JONATHAN DAVIS
AIRBOURNE
Tickets for Download are on sale now, priced at: a full weekend ticket £130, standard camping £20, camper van £40, family zone camping £20, lockers £11, parking £10 in advance or £15 on the day.
"I just came back from Kansas City for the first-ever KISS Expo in that city. The fans were excited to share their love of KISS, and I have to admit it was a great day for me as well. I announced my forthcoming CD release, 'KKB 1974', and wanted to debut some tracks from this music from my past for the crowd but the CD player was not hooked up to the PA system properly.... file that under 'WTF?!'
"Anyway, fans can now see all the CD artwork and hear some samples here on my website! I think you all will all be surprised and excited to hear the music I was playing and creating when I was only 19 years old, and to read about the band, how the recording came about, and how I rediscovered it after so many years.
"'KKB 1974' will be for sale at the big NY Expo on May 3rd, and after that I will be taking orders on my website so be sure to stay tuned!
"Of course the Kansas City Expo had me doing a Q&A with the crowd and some great questions were asked — Why am I on the 'Creatures Of The Night' CD cover? — and I was signing and taking pix through most of the day. I really enjoyed the excitement from the crowd and reminded them of an upcoming show with GRAND FUNK in Kansas on June 7th. Quite a few people there actually attended some of the GFR shows in the past and I was pleased to hear that!
"At the end of the Expo, I jammed with the tribute band DRESSED TO KILL. They did a good job entertaining the crowd and they finished the set with me sitting in on 'Lick It Up' and 'Rock and Roll All Nite'. It was a great way to end the evening and I would like to say thanks everyone who worked hard to make the first Kansas City Expo a success, especially all the fans! KISS fans are the best!"
Check out photos at this location.
Gene Simmons, the co-founder and lead vocalist of the Kiss rock band, revealed on his website that he shot a cameo for Toshio Li's live-action film adaptation of Kiminori Wakasugi's Detroit Metal City manga. According to the website's April 10 entry, Simmons played the "Demon God of Rock and Roll." Not coincidentally, his real-life onstage persona is nicknamed "The Demon." His band's signature white-and-black face corpse paint and "Detroit Rock City" song inspired the look and name of the fictional Detroit Metal City band in Wakasugi's rock parody manga.
Simmons flew to Japan the morning after his band's March 22 show in New Zealand for his shoot. The film will open in Japan in August, and a camera crew for the Gene Simmons Family Jewels reality television series shot behind-the-scenes footage that will air in the future. In the movie, Ken'ichi Matsuyama (Death Note, NANA, Sexy Voice and Robo) stars as Soichi, a struggling pop singer who finally becomes a hit when he reluctantly leads a metal rock band under the stage name "Johannes Krauser II."
The KISS Fan Carnival will feature special Guest Bob Kulick, Jason Henderson (writer for Gene Simmons' House of Horrors), KISS Tribute Band DESTROYER and a screening of ATTACK OF THE PHANTOMS.
Bob will do a Q&A and sign autographs throughout the day. Expect a blistering 2 hour set from the hottest KISS tribute band in the Texas area - DESTROYER!
KISSOnline will be in selling official KISS merchandise!
For tickets and more info CLICK HERE.
Vinnie's compositions are widely regarded as a highlight of the KISS catalog and remain a staple of the live KISS setlist. Included on the tribute will be selections from the three KISS albums to which Vinnie contributed, as well as the two albums he released with the VINNIE VINCENT INVASION. Participating artists and track listings will be announced as they are confirmed.
"Kiss My Ankh: A Tribute To Vinnie Vincent" is scheduled for a summer 2008 release.
Further details can be found at the SplitScreen Entertainment web site.
Rockpages.gr: Will you change the set-list for the upcoming tour in Europe?
Eric Singer: I am not sure, yet… but I think that we will do a special set-list for the European audiences, so as to express our gratitude for making this tour so succesful. You will like it… wait and see.
Rockpages.gr: I was talking with Paul [Stanley] a few days ago and he told me that he didn't expect the success of the European tour, at least at such extent. Did you see it coming?
Eric Singer: Well, I have to say that I agree with Paul 100%. Nobody expected that this tour would be bigger than the Reunion tour and especially for Paul and Gene [Simmons] was a big surprise but also a big satisfaction. Tickets are selling out fast everywhere… that's great!
Rockpages.gr: That means that there will come a time when KISS will be a band without any of the original members in the line-up. At least, Paul has said so….but do you think that this is possible?
Eric Singer: Let me tell you this: Never say never with KISS! I won't rule anything out.
Rockpages.gr: Do you see yourself in a few years in KISS and at the same time being the oldest of the line-up?
Eric Singer: I would like that…why not? But, despite what Paul says about KISS carrying on without him, the truth is that I haven't seen anyone that could replace Paul! I have seen many tribute bands and the problem was always the fact that nobody, and I mean nobody, could immitate Paul's voice or moves. There's only one Paul Stanley!
Rockpages.gr: I agree! Tell me something…you were there without make-up and now you are playing with the famous cat make-up. Do you see any differences in the band from all the years that have passed by?
Eric Singer: Well, I think that the band, now, knows exactly what it wants regarding the live shows and its career in general. In the early '90s we were thinking about things like which direction we should follow, what kind of an album we will release, the stage show etc. Now we offer exactly what the people want: A KISS show with full make-up, fireworks, explosions, platform boots and all the other stage acts that will entertain each and everyone! Each KISS fan has grown up in a different phase of KISS career… "Asylum", "Revenge", the 70s records etc. We try to please as many as we can…after all everybody loves the make-up show!
Rockpages.gr: Is there any truth to the rumor that KISS entered the studio recently to re-record some classic songs from the back catalogue?
Eric Singer: Where did you hear that?
Rockpages.gr: I have my sources…well, is it valid information?
Eric Singer: I will tell you, but tell me first who told you?
Rockpages.gr: Jimmy Haslip…he saw you in the studio a while ago and he was quite certain that Paul had told him that KISS re-recorded old tracks…
Eric Singer: OK! Yes, that's true! You know that many bands re-record songs so as to have the control over the copyrights. For example, if someone asks for a KISS tune, the band doesn'' have to get into a bureaucracy with the record label. It is very convenient…
Rockpages.gr: Tommy Thayer sang "Shock Me", causing some turmoil amongst the KISS Army. Would you sing "Beth" if Paul and Gene asked you to?
Eric Singer: Yeah, although I don't really think that Gene would ask me (to do) such thing as he doesn't like ballads at all. But, I wouldn't have any problem. It's not a sign of disrespect…I know that almost everybody has linked this song to Peter Criss. But at the same time, it is a good song and by singing it I only show respect to KISS and Peter.
Read the entire interview at Rockpages.gr.
"We regret that due to security concerns relayed by U.S. government intelligence and the unwillingness of our tour insurance policy to cover our concert, we have been left with no choice but to cancel our show in Belgrade. Because of our excitement at returning to play for our many Serbian fans, we all share in the same disappointment and it is our hope to return soon."
Stanley will exhibit his artwork at the McLean Wentworth Gallery from 12:00 p.m. to 3:00 p.m. EST on October 11, 2008.
Paul is currently working on new pieces to add to his exhibit as well as for future purchases. He will even be painting on guitars to describe the emotions that his songs evoke.
Interested parties will have until October 10, 2008 to make their decision on the specific artwork they wish to acquire. Upon arrival, guests will receive a very special welcome gift. There will be a photographer there to capture all the special moments of the evening and there will be a few surprises as well. Six (6) RSVPs have already been made.
For more details, and to secure your reservation, contact Anne Dorman, Tysons Gallery Director, at 703-883-0111.
His setlist was as follows:
01. Rip It Out
02. Hard Times
03. Parasite
04. Snowblind / I Want You
05. Rock Soldiers
06. Breakout
07. Into The Void
08. Strangeways
09. [Medley] Torpedo Girl / Speedin' Back To My Baby / Five Card Stud / Trouble Walkin' / Stranger in a Strange Land
10. New York Groove
11. 2,000 Man
12. Shock Me
13. Rocket Ride
14. Deuce
15. Lover Her All I Can
16. Love Gun
17. Cold Gin
Fan-filmed video footage of the London concert can be viewed here: 1, 2
Stanley, who returns to Wentworth Gallery in SouthPark mall Friday and Saturday from 6 to 9 p.m., knows this. Although it might irk Kiss fans, he's there to spend time with art buyers (not fans), but hopes his appearances expose new people to fine art.
"It's a great opportunity for me to meet with people who are acquiring the pieces," he said during a recent phone interview. "Also, maybe it's an incentive for people who have never been in a gallery to come. Because of the size of the crowd I can't spend a lot of time with people unless they're acquiring art, but I often will come out and ask how many people have never been in a gallery before. There are quite a few who haven't.
"Unfortunately (some) people are intimidated by going to a gallery or musical or theater because they think that they're supposed to be educated before they can have an opinion. That's nonsense. Your opinion is valid because it's yours. You'd don't need a degree to know whether you like it or not," adds Stanley, who grew up in Manhattan going to museums and operas with his parents. "To me, the arts are like food. The more you get, the more well-balanced your diet is."
The TPB, which includes six stories that were originally run as individual comics issues, is written by Sean Taylor, who also authored Fishnet Angel, and is illustrated by artists Flavio Hoffe and Esteve Polls (who also illustrated a tale in the debut Simmons Comics Group release, Gene Simmons House of Horrors). Adding to the package is a new introduction from Gene Simmons; a photo collage from a Dominatrix party featuring Gene and some real-life dominatrices; an art gallery with all of the original cover art; and an outro and new Dominatrix prose story by Taylor.
Dominatrix is the story of Dominique Stern. After a client loses his composure during an intense session and blurts out top-secret information, Dominique finds herself a reluctant superhero who must save herself, her friends, the jerk who got her into the mess, and quite possibly her country.
"'Dominatrix' came to me in a flash," says Simmons. "Comic books and pop culture in general have always toyed around with the leather/rubber-bound heroine. It's sexy and kick-ass. [But] they always skirted the sexuality issue. I decided to meet it head-on, so to speak."
Simmons based the character on a semi-real dominatrix he knows socially. "After talking with her about the lifestyle," he says, "[I] combined it with clandestine Manchurian Candidate and Nick Fury's Hydra stuff [a super-spy from Marvel Comics], oh, yes, and pills. Special pills."
To complete the spicy story and package, the comic TPB is graced with a sexy, painted cover by CVO creator Alex Garner.
The Gene Simmons Dominatrix TPB will be in stores April 19, 2008; call 1-888-comic-book (1-888-266-4226) to find a store near you.
"Interestingly, the galleries will tell you there are people who come in and are drawn to certain pieces without ever even knowing it's me; that's secondary," Stanley says from his California home. "I will also say in the same breath that no doubt my success and my fame gets my foot in the door. But you can still slam the door on my foot. Nobody's going to spend a good sum of money on art because they like it when I sing 'Rock And Roll All Night.' If they do, then they'd be better spending their money elsewhere."
Stanley, who attended the prestigious Manhattan School for Music and Art, was always focused on music. He says he is one of the few to fail art at the school and didn't even pick up a paint brush until 2000. While going through a divorce, a friend of his suggested that he paint to release emotion. "I went to an art supply store and bought canvases and paints and palate knives and brushes and all kinds of things that I was clueless to use and went home and started painting," he says. "What never crossed my mind was to show any of my work. It was a very solitary and very intimate experience. It was really about trying to purge emotions."
The first piece he painted wasn't signed because he didn't want anyone to know he painted it. However, when positive reactions flowed in, the idea of showing his work grew. He notes that one of the most interesting aspects of his artwork is that portraits he did of the members of KISS have been the least popular.
His artwork, using acrylic paints, is often comprised of bright colors. The average original is roughly 4 feet by 5 feet, but prints are often smaller. "I believe art is for everybody, whether you're in a trailer or a villa," he says. "Somebody said I was fearless of color. What's there to fear? I've never been bitten by blue, or attacked by red."
"There's one piece that I have called 'Scream,' which was not done at a very pleasant time in my life," Stanley says. "It was kind of tough for me to look at, at that point. I love the painting more today because it's kind of a snapshot of where I was once and how far I've come."
Stanley, 56, is now remarried and pauses during the interview when his youngest child comes running into the room. He's not the flamboyant front man that you see on stage. He's calm with his answers — a man content with his life or perhaps just resting his vocals.
KISS is still touring, after all. They recently wrapped up a tour of Australia and are preparing to hit Europe. An American tour is not something that's been ruled out.
"The band has never been better," Stanley says of the current lineup with Gene Simmons, Tommy Thayer and Eric Singer. "The fact is, we did do a farewell tour and by the end of the tour I realized that the only thing I wanted to say farewell to was a couple of members and the band should continue. The only ones who question that are the ones who don't want us to continue, and they're so insignificant in numbers that they do not even warrant an answer. This will continue beyond my tenure in the band."
As for a balance between the music and art, Stanley feels it's easy. "Music and songwriting has much more structure to it," he says. "The only boundary in painting is the edge of the canvas. I made sure that once I started painting that I was going to work without any rules or limitations."
Paul Stanley will be at the Wentworth Gallery at SouthPark Mall on April 11 and 12 from 6 to 9 p.m.
Initially run as a three-issue quarterly, the series has been critically acclaimed by fans and reviewers alike, both for the quality of the stories and the art. The TPB includes the original intros and outros written by the book's host, Gene Simmons, as well as a new collection introduction from Simmons. In addition, Nick Simmons--Gene's son, budding co-star on Gene Simmons Family Jewels, the top-rated A&E reality show, and the creator of the upcoming Platinum Studios comic Skullduggery--has three short prose stories included in the TPB. Top that off with 15 different and terrifying stories by some of the hottest new talent in comics today with a cover by Matt Busch, and you've got all the makings of a deliciously scary treat.
"I had always loved the Twilight Zone. I never missed an episode," says Gene. "I read Amazing Stories and Analog. In short, I loved the anthology horror/sci-fi canvas and wanted to re-introduce the format into comic books. [Gene Simmons House of Horrors] is a chance to showcase the best in professional talent, and to introduce new talent, as well. Each story will be written and drawn independently, with wraparound commentaries by myself. The fact that I'm powerful and attractive will only add to the stunning effect of the stories."
Stories are written by a range of authors, including Chris Ryall (Zombies Vs. Robots); Tom Waltz (Children of the Grave); Dwight MacPherson (Dead Men Tell No Tales); Sean Taylor (Fishnet Angel); Nick Simmons; and two talented progeny, the daughter of comic writer Alan Moore's (Watchmen and V for Vendetta), Leah Moore, and her husband John Reppion (Raise the Dead). Artists include Andy Kuhn (Fire-Breather), Jeff Zornow (American Werewolf), Steph Stamb (Angel: Masks), Matt Busch (Star Wars), Esteve Polls (Dominatrix), Grant Bond (Revere), Jon Alderink (City of Fire), and others.
The Gene Simmons House Of Horrors TPB will be in stores April 9, 2008; call 1-888-comic-book (1-888-266-4226) to find a store near you.
For the original comic book, blood from each KISS bandmember was drawn by a registered nurse, witnessed by a notary public, and poured into the vats of red ink used for printing the comic at Marvel's Borden Ink plant in Depew, New York.
The eco-friendly package is 100% recyclable and biodegradable. It also includes a blow in card containing seeds for planting and allows you to get three free MP3 downloads from a selection of 30 titles.
In other news, MK Magazine has posted photos of Ace's April 1 concert at the House of Blues in Chicago, Illinois. Check them out at this location.
The track listing for the collection is as follows:
Disc 1:
01. Strutter
02. Deuce
03. Hotter Than Hell
04. C'mon and Love Me
05. Rock and Roll All Nite
06. Detroit Rock City
07. Beth
08. Hard Luck Woman
09. Calling Dr. Love
10. Love Gun
11. Christeen Sixteen
12. I Was Made For Lovin' You
Disc 2:
01. Creatures of the Night
02. I Love It Loud
03. Lick It Up
04. All Hell's Breakin' Loose
05. Heaven's On Fire
06. Thrills In the Night
07. Tears Are Falling
08. Uh! All Night
09. Crazy Crazy Nights
10. Reason To Live
11. Hide Your Heart
12. Forever
Disc 3:
01. God Gave Rock 'N' Roll To You
02. Unholy
03. Domino
04. Hate
05. Childhood's End
06. I Will Be There
07. Comin' Home
08. Got To Choose
09. Psycho Circus
10. Into the Void
11. I Pledge Allegiance To the State of Rock and Roll
12. Nothing Can Keep Me From You
No further details are currently available.
Poland's Metal Mind Productions will re-release BLACK 'N BLUE's album "Rarities", on May 5 in Europe. The limited-edition digipack title (limited to 2,000 copies) will be made available on golden disc, digitally remastered using 24-bit technology.
According to a press release, "Rarities" is "a peep inside the closed doors of the group's history, revealing a unique collection of rare and previously unreleased songs. 'Rarities' remains a true treasure chest for all of BLACK 'N BLUE's fans, with a portion of melodic pop-rock enough to satisfy even the most demanding enthusiasts of the genre. This album will get you on a night train straight to the '80s — so fasten up and enjoy the ride!"
Though many Kiss fans consider the cartoonish, theatrical shocks of the band’s early career to be the pinnacle of the rock experience, others idolize Frehley as an old school guitar hero with rare command of a snarling Gibson Les Paul. The lack of starry-eyed makeup and silver moon boots either onstage or off demonstrated that this show was for the latter batch. These diehards cheered both hard-rocking Kiss chestnuts like “Deuce” and solo tracks like the jagged “Snow Blind,” as Frehley uncorked solos full of melodic bite.
Working toward a second year of sobriety and surrounded by a band of young firebrands, Frehley at age 56 appeared fitter both physically and musically than when this reviewer last saw him (in full costume) during a 1998 reunion show supporting Kiss’ “Psycho Circus” album. Frehley’s stage banter exuded humor and ease, and his reinvigorated playing during crowd pleasers like “Love Gun” and the Rolling Stones’ “2000 Man” brimmed with personality and confidence.
“Parasite” from 1974’s “Hotter Than Hell” album allowed Frehley to salute two of his principal influences, echoing both The Who’s guttural “Boris the Spider” and Led Zeppelin’s pummeling “Immigrant Song.” During the song, even the band's roadie could be seen banging his head behind the towering wall of speaker cabinets.
Although Frehley’s makeup kit was left behind, he did feature his trademarked trick guitars twice. The attempted showmanship backfired after charging through “Shock Me,” however, when Frehley’s smoking guitar failed to ignite. Frehley laughed it off as an April Fool’s joke on himself, but promised to make up for it with something special. The band then played “Fractured Mirror,” a rarely performed instrumental piece.
The only time Frehley’s band itself didn’t spark was unfortunately during his biggest solo hit. “New York Groove” faltered as the group struggled to lock into the song’s “Hand Jive” rhythm and Frehley’s strobe-light guitar experienced tuning problems. Frehley regained momentum by coaxing the crowd with a Chicago-centric version of the song’s chorus. By the time the band ripped through the saucy “Rocket Ride,” the room was back in their pockets.
At the time, the New York City music scene only boasted a few places to play original music, including Max’s Kansas City, the Mercer Arts Center and a club located outside of the city in Queens called Coventry. It was at this local hole in the wall that KISS performed its first show on Jan. 30, 1973.
Throughout the year, the band would return to Coventry and also ply its heavy-metal wares at other local dives including The Daisy in Amityville, Long Island, and shows at The Hotel Diplomat and a loft party on Bleecker Street. 2008 marks the 35th anniversary of KISS’s first show ever at Coventry in Queens. In celebration of that KISS-toric event, we spoke to KISS and members of the band’s inner circle, who shared their reminiscences of those pivotal performances and pre-fame days.
In the beginning, Coventry was ground zero for New York City’s glitter-rock scene, as everyone from The New York Dolls to The Ramones to Jayne County played there. KISS wasn’t the main draw at first, but it didn’t take long for the band to build a following.
PAUL SUB (Owner, Coventry): Coventry opened in the early ’70s. It was located on Queens Boulevard and 47th Street in Queens. The club was originally called Popcorn Pub, and I later renamed it Coventry after a town in England.
PAUL STANLEY: When we played Coventry, it was called Popcorn, and they were trying to change their image. It was a perfect relationship in that we brought in a certain New York credibility to the club, so other bands started coming across the water and playing there too.
PAUL SUB (Owner, Coventry): It was a big club, around 5,000 square feet, and it held around 700 people. Everyone from KISS, The New York Dolls, The Ramones, Blondie, Sam & Dave, The Dictators and Elephant’s Memory played there. I’d put on 10 acts a week, both local and national. The only act we turned down, because we didn’t want to spend $300, was Aerosmith (laughs). The New York Dolls were really the ones that kept Coventry going. They played once a month, and whenever they played, 700 people would show up. They had the main following of all the bands who played there. The Dolls really helped pay my rent (laughs). All the other groups who played there, from KISS to The Ramones, didn’t really bring in that many people.
GENE SIMMONS: Coventry was located in Queens, New York, in a downtrodden industrial area. Two stories above the building we played was a subway, so when we played, the trains would be going by, and it was loud. It was owned by the boys (imitates tough guy accent) “Who kind of talked like this.’” We played a Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday and were paid 30 dollars.
PAUL STANLEY: First time we played there, it was virtually empty.
PETER CRISS: Nobody was there (laughs). It was a nightmare. We killed ourselves for six people.
LYDIA CRISS (Peter’s then-wife): I remember it was a really cold winter night. The only people who showed up at that first Coventry show were me, Jan Walsh, who was Gene’s girlfriend at the time, and her friend, plus the road crew — Eddie Solan; Joey Criscuola, Peter’s brother; and Bobby McAdams — and the people who worked at the club.
BOBBY MCADAMS (KISS roadie): It was really empty. But, they took it in stride. They knew things would turn around. They weren’t gonna give up.
Most bands have to showcase for years before they get noticed. These guys got noticed right away. They were very lucky in that sense.
PETER CRISS: Even though hardly anyone was there at our first gig, when we eventually played there enough times, I remember pulling up one night in the car with the boys and there was a line down the block. We went, “Holy shit! Wow, this is cool!” We had to go through the crowd, and they were all patting us on the back, and we made it to the basement and we said, “F**k!” It was cool.
EDDIE SOLAN (roadie and soundman): We had a small crew, just me, Joey Criscuola, Peter’s brother, and Bobby McAdams. But, everybody helped. Paul used to drive a bread truck with all the band’s gear. It was filled to the ceiling with equipment (laughs).
KEITH WEST (The Brats): When KISS came together, it was a small glitter scene in New York City with about 10 bands that were popular — The Dolls, The Brats, Eric Emerson & The Magic Tramps, Teenage Lust, Harlots of 42nd Street, Ruby & The Rednecks, The Planets, Luger and Street Punk. Every band in the glitter-rock scene in New York City had their own gimmick. KISS wore the kabuki makeup, Jayne County was the transsexual, The Dolls had this gender-bending look, and The Brats were into bands like The Faces. Everybody was into the glam/glitter/pop stuff like Sweet, David Bowie, T-Rex, Mott The Hoople and The Raspberries. But, it was Bowie who led that scene for all of us.
MARK POLOTT (frequent Coventry attendee and member of local bands, Murder Inc. and The Brats): KISS separated themselves from other bands. They had a certain charisma. In a lot of ways they weren’t part of the scene; they were their own entity, and they cultivated this mysterious vibe. So many guys I knew in bands were from Queens. You had Paul Stanley and Gene Simmons from KISS. You had The Ramones, Johnny Thunders from The Dolls, Ricky Byrd from Joan Jett & The Blackhearts, Wayne County, The Miami’s, The Brats, Murder Inc., Rags and Street Punk.
GENE SIMMONS: I was always the asshole who decided to pick up the phone and bother people and get us to where we wanted to go. On my way into work in the city I used to pass by this club in Queens. I called the club, got the manager on the phone and started selling, which is what I’ve always done my entire life. I said to him, “We’ve got a band called Wicked Lester, and I’m really excited about it. You should book us, because we’re terrific.” So he agreed to put us on for three nights during the middle of the week when nobody went there. We had yet to name ourselves KISS. That first night we changed the name of the band from Wicked Lester to KISS.
JIMI LALUMIA (Writer, Words & Music/Rock): Coventry was a real nexus for rock and roll ’cause there were no strings attached. Max’s Kansas City had strings attached, because it was associated with the Warhol crowd and the glitter/glam rock scene that was happening with the Dolls and Wayne County. The Mercer Arts Center in downtown Manhattan was also not considered rock and roll; it was considered an art center, which made itself available to rock and roll after all else had failed. Coventry was viewed as a real nuts-and-bolts, rock-and-roll joint. It felt like a real rock-and-roll room. It was a perfect venue for KISS to get their act together because it was very rock and roll.
Early attempts at using makeup were rudimentary at best. But, KISS’ electrifyng stage show was coming together, and it all began that first night at Coventry.
GENE SIMMONS: That night at Coventry, I wore a sailor suit for the first show. It was a holdover from Wicked Lester’s audition for the head of Metromedia Records. I put on whiteface, put my hair up, kind of had that bat-like thing, but no black lipstick. I had the design. Paul put on rouge, and that was it. Ace had his little design but no whiteface. And Peter had only rouge on his cheeks and red lipstick. By our second appearance at Coventry, we had a primitive version of the KISS makeup on and had a real sense of who we were gonna be.
PAUL STANLEY: We wore makeup then, but it was not as sophisticated as it is now. The rest of the band pretty much looked the same, but I didn’t. I just wore eye makeup and rouge. It was the same idea but different makeup.
PAUL STANLEY: Our outfits were predominately black. I was wearing real high heels, skin-tight Lurex pants, black knee socks and a black T-shirt that said “KISS.” The costume cost about $45 for the shoes, $3 for the T-shirt and about $5 worth of Lurex. I made the pants myself, because I couldn’t afford to buy them. Instead, I went out and bought the material, and then, my father said, “Well, nice try, but I’ll buy you the pants… I admire you for wanting to make the pants, but you can’t; you’ve never done it before.” I said, “Oh yeah?” So, I took my best pair of jeans apart, cut the Lurex like the jeans, asked my mother to show me how the sewing machine worked and made myself a pair of pants.
GENE SIMMONS: We must have looked like dinosaurs. By 1973, everybody had stopped wearing high heels. We had these 6-inch boots with studs on them. It looked like an S&M thing, and if you didn’t know what the studs were, they were the strangest things you ever saw. They looked like they weighed a ton. But, the show itself was straight ahead — real raw, real short, real good rock ’n’ roll.
PAUL SUB: Nobody knew KISS at the time; they didn’t have a following.
LYDIA CRISS: Even though there wasn’t anybody there, they weren’t discouraged. They were just happy to play. They played their hearts out like it was the Garden. The band made $30 that night, but all the money went to the road crew.
JOEY CRISCUOLA (Peter Criss’ brother and early KISS roadie): After the first show, word spread about this wild act, and the few more times they played Coventry they’d built a following and began to pack the place.
GENE SIMMONS: We refused to play Top 40. We had brass balls. We said, “We’re not gonna do “Hang On Sloopy” or “Midnight Hour.” We’re gonna go on and do our own tunes. We were taking a really big risk doing that. We did two sets at Coventry for that first show, all originals. We still had the same musical bullets we use today — “She,” “Watchin’ You,” “Deuce,” “Strutter” and “Black Diamond."
The set list for the first show
Set one:
Deuce
Watchin’ You
Love Her All I Can
She
Simple Type (Wicked Lester song)
Keep Me Waiting (Wicked Lester song)
Life In The Woods
Baby, Let Me Go (renamed Let Me Go, Rock & Roll)
Firehouse
Black Diamond
Set two:
Deuce
Love Her All I Can
She
Life In The Woods
Simple Type (Wicked Lester song)
Keep Me Waiting (Wicked Lester song)
Baby, Let Me Go (later renamed Let Me Go, Rock & Roll)
Watchin’ You
(Set list info courtesy of “KISS Alive Forever: The Complete Touring History”)
GENE SIMMONS: Our show had no talking, just bang-bang-bang, song-song-song and off the stage. We didn’t have any real effects at the time.
EDDIE SOLAN: For “Firehouse,” we had this idea to use these red revolving beacon lights. They had a magnetic base so a fireman or cop could just reach out and put it on the roof of his car and plug it into the cigarette lighter. I was working for an electronics company back then, and we sold those kind of lights. I made up a box out of a car battery charger to turn on the red lights. We had three of them on top of the amps. We used to use it at the end of “Firehouse” and at the end of the show, too. That whole thing stuck with them for a long time. Even when they were on the road playing big places, they always had the revolving red lights.
LEW LINET (First KISS manager): After the show, even though only a few people showed up, the band were in high spirits. They were very young and naïve, and they were on the road to success. They had a gig, they were very impressed with themselves and happy with what they were doing. They didn’t second guess themselves or question their journey; they did what they loved to do. They didn’t understand how difficult it would be to achieve success. They didn’t know how high the mountain was to climb. When we’re very young, we’re not frightened of working toward success, because we don’t know that it’s difficult. It’s the same syndrome as children picking up a second language. They don’t know that picking up a second language is hard. They just do it. So, in many ways, KISS were babies in rock and roll, bright-eyed and bushy-tailed and ready to take on the world.
STAN MIESES (Writer, New York Daily News): Back in 1973, I was 20 years old. I was a copy boy at the Daily News. Hanging around, I impressed a couple of the editors with my enthusiasm for rock and roll. I’d gotten a couple of assignments to review rock shows. Then this guy Paul (Sub) wrote me from Queens — he must have seen my byline.
He said, “You’re The Daily News. You guys should really cover clubs in Queens.” So, I went out to this guy’s club, The Coventry, sat down, and this group named KISS came on. I looked at them and thought this was like comic book or kabuki, something I’d never seen. They looked great. Musically, it sounded like cement mixing. It was not my style of music — my style leaned more to The Velvet Underground — but I thought their stage show was very impressive. The club was half full but they were enthusiastic. The substance of my review, which ran in The Daily News, was how they looked. I described the band in detail and not so much the sound. They had clearly defined characters, and that’s something I hadn’t seen since The Beatles. Each member of the band was individualized. The makeup made all four guys distinct. The behavior onstage was also very distinct. I thought these guys had a shot at making it, because, at the very least, the next day people would say, “You should see what I saw!”
Signed to Neil Bogart’s fledgling new label, Casablanca Records, in the fall of 1973, before embarking on their first national tour, KISS returned one last time to play two final shows at Coventry on Dec. 21 and 22. The Dec. 22 show was captured on video and is included in “KISSology III: Volume Three 1992-2000.”
BILL AUCOIN (KISS manager 1973-1982): I met with KISS, and they came across as guys that really wanted to make it. I told the group I’d get them a record contract and to give me 30 days to do it. Kenny Kerner and Richie Wise heard the tape and told Neil, “Come on Neil, sign them.”
PAUL STANLEY: When we signed with Casablanca, it felt really good and new. There was the feeling back then that they needed us because KISS was Casablanca. I think a lot of creativity comes from when you want something very badly or when it’s new and there’s a certain amount of excitement. Neil (Bogart) wanted his record company to be great, and he needed to devote everything to whomever he signed to the label. That fit in with all of our plans.
PAUL STANLEY: Things happened quickly after we got signed. It was virtually overnight that were in the studio recording our first album. At the time we did the shows at Coventry in December of ’73 we were getting all new equipment. We knew that we were on the verge of the next step of this world domination that was to come.
GENE SIMMONS: When we played there in December of ’73, there may have been 80 to 100 people. But, there was a special excitement within the band, because we had just signed to Casablanca Records, which was going to be a brand-new label. We were the first artists on the label. For all we knew, we were about to become big stars. In the beginning, you dream big.
BILL AUCOIN (KISS manager 1973-1982): After the Fillmore East closed, no one was using that venue. So, we hired that venue to rehearse the KISS show on a bigger stage. They weren’t used to playing on a big stage; they were used to small clubs. So, after the band recorded the first album, we wanted to play in front of a live audience. We knew we were coming up to their first big live show on New Year’s Eve. That was the reason for playing Coventry in December of ’73.
MARK POLOTT: KISS played two sets a night, and their sets were really strong, especially “Deuce,” “Strutter,” “Firehouse” and “Black Diamond.”
GENE SIMMONS: That would be the last time we’d play a New York club. We had full outfits; we had the candelabra.
MARK POLOTT: At the end of the set, they would have these red emergency lights spinning around on their amplifiers. The theatrics were beginning. KISS were very impressive.
In that era, most of the bands’ material was a little shaky; it was glitter/punk, and these guys were a hard rock band. They were much more polished, and they could play. They weren’t the greatest musicians, but they really played strong. They really had something.
You could tell everything was very thought out and calculated, but in a good way. These guys were smart. They weren’t drugged out. You had to respect them; they knew exactly what they were doing every step of the way. They had stage moves, and they had choreography in certain parts of their songs. You didn’t see that with other local bands. Visually and sonically, they were exciting. Maybe you saw it on TV with Paul Revere and The Raiders years before, but not then.
RICK RIVETS (The Brats): Me and the drummer from The Brats, Sparky Donovan, knew KISS were gonna make it and make it big. They reminded me of a futuristic Beatles. You had four guys who could sing; they all had the same look with the black leather and studs, although they each had their own individual characteristics.
PAUL STANLEY: Coventry was a study in contrasts. The first time we played there, there was nobody there. The last time we played there, you could barely get in the door. It was very cool. It was the first place we played when we got a record deal.
LYDIA CRISS: The all-girl band Isis opened for KISS that night. The Dolls were in the audience. It was a wild show. It was all starting to happen for them, and you could sense the momentum building. Spirits were high.
JOE VALENTINE (Rags): We played on the same bill with KISS at Coventry in December ’73. I didn’t quite understand the correlation between kabuki makeup and rock and roll, but hey, rock and roll has strange bedfellows. But, their music was so good. To be honest, I thought they didn’t even need the makeup. I said to myself, “These guys are gonna be big!” The Dolls were struggling at the time; their asexual look was a tough sell to middle America. KISS were the next New York band in line poised to conquer the world.
KISS Manager Bill Aucoin captures the band at Coventry on video.
GENE SIMMONS: Bill Aucoin had a primitive version of a video camera set up in our rehearsal hall that Sean Delaney arranged.
PAUL STANLEY: We rehearsed down there, and we set up a video camera just so we could see how we moved, and check ourselves out.
BILL AUCOIN (KISS manager, 1973-1982): We filmed it in a little basement that we rented off Canal Street that had roaches the size of cats.
PETER CRISS: That impressed me about Bill Aucoin. Here we are in 1973 in a basement with video cameras on us. He had four videos running on us all of the time getting our moves together, getting our choreography together. After we were done, we’d watch ourselves to see how stupid or how cool we look. Whatever’s cool, keep; whatever’s stupid, lose.
PETER “MOOSE” ORECKINTO (KISS roadie & special effects): Sean (Delaney) gave KISS the personalities that he wanted to see. I can still picture him standing in front of them down in the loft, and he’s got that Charlie Manson look in his eye, that intense f**kin’ look, and he’s going, “Gene, you’re the monster; you’ve gotta act this way!” He solidified their stage personas and wanted them to come across larger than life.
GENE SIMMONS: We actually started filming ourselves so we would learn by watching ourselves. You can’t be in two places at once, of course, but if you can watch what you’re doing, you can hone what you do a little bit easier.
PETER “MOOSE” ORECKINTO: Their manager, Bill Aucoin, was a TV producer who had done the show “Flipside.” He brought in the video equipment that we were using down in the loft.
BILL AUCOIN (KISS manager 1973-1982): I shot the footage that night at Coventry on a half-inch Sony reel-to-reel recorder with a Sony black-and-white video camera. We shot the footage not to preserve a show per se, but more to see if they did anything wrong that we could fix before their big show on New Year’s Eve at the Academy Of Music.
Unfortunately, that same reel of video tape held some wonderful moments in their rehearsals in this dungeon down in the Bowery, but I taped over it when I shot their Coventry show. I always knew I had the footage, and a few years back, I finally had it transferred. I came out to L.A. and showed Gene and Paul the Coventry footage, and they were both quite amazed. I don’t think they remembered they were as good as they were.
Gene said, “Gee, we really were together then.” At that point, they’d rehearsed so much they were really tight. They were thinking of themselves as not being that tight and focused, but the truth of the matter is yes, they were. Watching the video you can sense what I believed from the first moment that I worked with them: KISS were really on a mission. They were driven to make this happen, and a lot of artists aren’t. They expect it to happen, or they dream about the money. But, they don’t necessarily have the drive, but KISS had it. At that time, they were very excited. They had their album coming out. They were doing their first tour. This was a dream for any artist, and you can see it excitement in their performance at Coventry.
GENE SIMMONS: In “KISSology III,” what people are seeing is early videotape of our show at Coventry, December of 1973.The band is pretty well rehearsed, pretty tight and the sound quality is pretty damn good. I always knew the footage existed and went after Bill, and it took me years to convince him to let us put it out. I negotiated the deal with Bill, and eventually, we came to an agreement. He was very kind about it. The fans deserve to see this. I hadn’t seen the tape for over 30 years.
PAUL STANLEY: Seeing the footage of us at Coventry only reaffirmed for me how great this band was just in terms of the commitment we had to what we did, and the sheer balls to be who we were at that time. The footage is great. The songs are great. It was a thrill to see the footage.
You’re seeing a band on the verge of exploding into a world force. And again, it only pointed out to me what I always believed, which was that you could either go with us or we’d roll right over you, but you couldn’t stay in the way. The band live, even in such a raw state as is in that Coventry footage, it’s undeniable the sheer power and force that we were putting out. And the commitment we had to what we were doing.
Commitment is a word that always comes out in terms of referring to KISS. Everything we do and everything we’ve always done has been done with 100 percent commitment. There we are basically with no frills in terms of what people would consider a stage show today.
GENE SIMMONS: The most impressive thing about it was you saw a band. Peter and Ace, especially, were really into it. They were clear-headed, really committed, and their playing was really solid. Both Ace and Peter played in tune and had great live energy. They rocked. Back then, we were a real band. You could see that everybody felt proud of being onstage together. It really was a four-wheel-drive vehicle in the early days.
What was most impressive to me was how tight it was. I thought because the band was playing in a club right before we went off on tour we would be loose. Actually, it wasn’t loose at all; it was pretty tight. Onstage, it was a real band. Offstage, it was a dysfunctional family. Ace and Peter had their own demons that continue to this day, unfortunately. When you watch the video of us at Coventry, you can see Peter is playing his heart out.
Even early on, KISS seemed destined for superstardom, as its brand of performance art and rock captured the imaginations of those around the band. And Coventry served as the launching pad.
EDDIE SOLAN: From the first time they played Coventry to the last time they played there, you could sense a big difference in their performance. KISS constantly took a step forward. Every show they did was a constant build. They had a vision. Every step they would take was a step forward. That made them a little more serious than the other local New York bands. Nobody doubted that they’d make it eventually.
JOEY CRISCUOLA (Peter Criss’ brother and early KISS roadie): KISS had a real ballsy attitude. Even back in their club days they had a sense they were something special. Gene always had that ego, and so did Paul, Ace and my brother. They always felt they were stars, whether they played for one person or 20,000.
PAUL STANLEY: Coventry was important for us, because it was so difficult for a band like us to get any gigs because we didn’t play Top 40, and we weren’t part of the Mercer Arts crowd, which was the crowd that took in the New York Dolls and some of the Andy Warhol, Max’s Kansas City bands. So, we needed a place that could be ours, and Coventry was a place in Queens that was just on the other side of the East River. It gave people in New York access to come see us, and it also set us a little apart from the New York glitter bands. Coventry was a place where we really cut our teeth, and it was the first place we ever played.
GENE SIMMONS: For us, playing at the Coventry was magic. Coventry defined who and what we are. We felt like we belonged together and believed it was us against the world.
Frehley, who recorded the album at his home studio in Westchester, N.Y., is now on a North American concert tour, stopping tonight in Chicago. He says he’ll release the record first through his official Web site, which is currently being revamped, and perhaps also via iTunes.
‘‘Basically, I’m trying to get back into the mindset I was in when I did my first solo record [1978’s ‘Ace Frehley’],’’ Frehley says. ‘‘That record seemed to have all the elements everybody liked — a real cool instrumental, a hit single, some real heavy rockers, a nice variety of different genres of music.’’
Among his favorite new tracks are ‘‘A Little Below the Angels,’’ hard rocking ‘‘Pain in the Neck’’ and an instrumental called ‘‘Fractured Quantum,’’ which is a follow-up to his previous instrumentals ‘‘Fractured Mirror’’ and ‘‘Fractured Too.’’ Another favorite is ‘‘groove song’’ titled ‘‘Genghis Khan,’’ which he likens in tone to Led Zeppelin’s ‘‘Kashmir.’’
Don’t expect to hear any of the new songs at his concerts, however.
‘‘Every show’s on YouTube, every song,’’ explains Frehley, who used 12-step programs and a personal physician and therapist care to clean up after he left Kiss for a second time in 2002. ‘‘I don’t want to play any of the new songs ’cause I don’t want to give away anything. I want that magic and mystique of hearing something for the first time when you’re supposed to, so I don’t think I’m going to play any of [the new songs] until the CD’s released.’’
Instead Frehley will play a set filled with Kiss favorites he wrote, plus material from his previous solo releases. He admits some ambivalence about doing ‘‘Cold Gin,’’ ‘‘’cause I don’t drink anymore and I don’t promote it. But it’s such a kick-ass song ... I think that me talking about the fact I’m clean and sober and I’m not a party animal anymore is plenty. I can still get away with playing it.’’
As I enter Paul Stanley's palatial estate, he opens tiny gates from room to room that were installed that very morning to keep his 17-month-old son Collin from getting into undue trouble. As we journey through the house and out to his guest house / art studio in the backyard, the walls are noticeably void of any KISS memorabilia. Paul smiles, "I know what I've done; I don't need a wall of gold records to remind me." And this seems true. Paul has settled into a very tranquil and happy existence with his wife and new son. But it would seem that painting has also brought Paul peace of mind of late. "Anytime you find a means of expression it's going to make you more aware of who you are and put you more at peace, it's kind of like releasing the pressure on a water pipe."
As Paul shows off several easels of paintings in progress, he offers up a part of his ritual. "I come in here and crank up some music and make a mess. Most of the time I listen to the soul station on XM. I can sing those songs backwards and forwards: Delfonics, Joe Tex, Al Green…The Four Tops."
It is here that Paul begins his tale of brush strokes and madness conquered. "It wasn't until about eight years ago that I really started painting. I was going through a divorce and anybody who's ever been through a bad break up knows you need some sort of outlet besides hitting your head against the wall and screaming. A friend of mine said I should paint, so I went out and bought some canvases and paints. I was clueless as to what I was going to do, I was just kind of shell-shocked and I went on this exploration. But I do what I do by instinct. It makes it that much more exciting. It's like getting in a car and hitting the road without a map. There's no sketches beforehand and there's no sketches under the paint. It's just me going for it. Same thing with music. I'll start blindly writing a song, not knowing what I'm writing and whatever words come out kinda dictate, then it becomes kinda fill in the blanks. Someone might argue with me, but in art there's no boundaries; music is great but it has rules and laws you have to follow. In painting, the boundary is the edge of the canvas. So I just started painting, and I put a piece up in the house, which was Green Planet, which is still unsigned. When I put it up, I was afraid that if people saw my signature, they wouldn't take it seriously. So, to this day, it's not signed. But people used to come over and ask me who did it, who was the artist and where they could get something like that. I started seeing how many people were connecting with what I was doing and it was nice to know that other people liked it, but that was a bonus. I'm not interested in pleasing other people unless I'm pleasing myself. That's a bad place to come from, when you're trying to second guess what other people are going to like. I'd rather please myself and if nobody else likes it, then I've won anyway. So I kept doing it for myself, but ultimately I did a show in New Jersey and went on to do 14 shows last year and the success has been pretty staggering. People seem to want to take this art home."
I ask Paul if he was afraid of art critics out to slaughter a rock god. Paul nods and laughs, motioning to his large estate. "This is the house that bad reviews built. I don't live or die by critics. If you get critical acclaim, that's great, but ultimately what you want is popular acclaim, the masses speak loudly. One person can stand up and tell you what you should like and why you should like it, but it must be very disheartening to him because it's irrelevant. All that matters is what people like. If the two coincide, that's great. More people should go to galleries and art museums but they feel that their opinion is invalid because they've been told that. Your opinion's valid because it's your opinion, if you like something, you don't need to explain to anybody why you like it."
I wonder if Paul feels like his success has had anything to do with his stature as a rock legend. "Sure, my career and my success get my foot in the door, but you can slam the door real hard on my foot if you want to. Ultimately what I'm doing has to stand on its own. Do KISS fans come? Yeah. Some of them have never been in an art gallery. But there's also a large number of collectors and people who come that'll never be at a KISS concert. But the two shall meet, and it's great. But I don't think that anybody is going to buy a painting for a sizable amount of money because they like listening to 'Love Gun.' If they do, they'd probably be better off spending the money on something else. I did a set of four portraits of the guys in KISS as a kind of a tip of a hat to the fans and I thought 'Everybody's going to love these.' But they're not very popular, and that's actually made me really happy. You know, people aren't buying KISS faces on canvas, they're buying something they connect with."
And if you're hungering to obtain a piece of Paul's art for your very own, prints will soon be available online. "It's great because a lot of people can't afford an original. But you're not getting some cheap-ass paper print, it's actually a print that's been embellished with physical brush strokes, so when somebody buys a print, they're getting something that's on par with the original, which is great."
Soon, tentatively in the fall, Paul will be showcasing his paintings at an L.A. art gallery. Will he be there for the opening? "Absolutely, I think that whenever possible, you want to meet the artist. I think it's important, if possible, to kind of understand what the artist's reality is of a piece. However, ultimately, you've got to find your own meaning in it. But to have that one on one time I think is optimal. I didn't become famous to cut myself off from the people that made me famous, I like people."
The full interview (plus another one Barton conducted with KISS rhythm guitarist/vocalist Paul Stanley) will be published in a future issue of Classic Rock magazine.
An excerpt from the chat follows:
Geoff Barton: While you were in Australia Sharon Osbourne made some disparaging comments about you. [Sharon called Simmons "a silly man in a silly wig."] Would you care to comment?
Gene Simmons: "Oh, she's terrific. Sharon is terrific. Any mother who — whether it's imagined or not — believes that her family is being assailed by outsiders would do the same.
"No, she's great. I've known Sharon and Ozzy for 30 or more years, and some of it… well, you know Sharon. Some of it is bluster. Because it makes great copy.
"Ozzy was touring at the same time as KISS. He was playing the Rod Laver Arena in Melbourne, and the night before or the night after we played outdoors at the Formula One car-racing grand prix.
"I was quite cool with what Sharon said. I mean, part of it was that there was so much media attention for KISS… I honestly didn't know Ozzy was in town. Until Sharon delivered that soundbite, that is. That was the first I knew about it. 'He's a twat, he wears women's clothing,' whatever it was she said.
"That's cool. It's edgy. I love that."
Listen to the interview in two parts at this location.
1. Osteria Mozza Melrose
"On Fridays we love dinner at Osteria Mozza, Mario Batali's place. The food is spectacular without being pretentious. They have a pasta orecchiette with sausage that just baffles me, it's so good."
2. Pinkberry Melrose
"We'd probably stop by Pinkberry. I'd get a medium original flavor with mango and blueberries. After that, we'd just go home. I'm at the point now where I've given up the Viper Room for the diaper room."
3. Temescal Canyon Pacific Palisades
"First thing Saturday morning, I'd go out for a hike up in the canyons, anywhere to get my heart going. Then I'd come back and get together with my trainer J.J. in my home gym. He's a triathlete; I'm a try-athlete."
4. International House of Pancakes Westchester
"After the workout, I'd go right to IHOP for breakfast. You can find all kinds of reinventions of the breakfast wheel, but for my money there's no better pancakes, bacon and scrambled eggs."
5. Paradise Cove Beach Cafe Malibu
"After that, we'd go climb on the rocks at Paradise Cove and see what kind of life is lurking around in the shallows."
6. Track 16 Gallery Santa Monica
"Or maybe we'll walk around the art galleries at Bergamot Station in Santa Monica. I look at the other paintings and either get inspired or humbled."
7. Hotel Bel-Air Restaurant Bel-Air
"On Sunday morning, I'd go to the Hotel Bel-Air and have brunch outside. Maybe have an omelet with goat cheese and some chicken sausage."
8. Guitar Center Hollywood
"Then I'd take my older son Evan to Guitar Center, where he'd get a chance to play and we'd check out the latest equipment. They're very friendly there; when I was growing up, music stores didn't let you play the instruments unless you showed them money."
9. Village Pizzeria Larchmont
"Then we'd head to Village Pizzeria in Larchmont. Great pizza, and as a former cabdriver from New York, I can tell you it's the real deal. I like plain cheese, but sometimes I'll get it with anchovies and meatballs."
10. Borders Century City
"After that we'll stop by Borders. I love picking up a book and diving into it that night. "
Solway College pupil Samantha, who paid half of a $250 ticket to see two back-to-back Rock2Wgtn shows in the capital headlined by schmock horror legends Kiss, Alice Cooper and Ozzy Osbourne, had been wandering Manners Mall with her face painted in Kiss black and white, killing time with a friend before the first performance.
She had travelled to Wellington with a group of five ardent rock fans, including her mother Jackie, and stumbled across a pizza-eating contest while the band Kiss relaxed on a nearby bar balcony overseeing the event.
Samantha was plucked from the crowd, who were baying for Simmons to descend among them, and was told, "Gene is already here", before she was seated at the contest table.
A man who told her he was the band manager said Simmons was going to contest the event with an offer of an extra song that night if he was beaten. He also told her to hug him when he arrived. And that's when it happened.
"It was awesome. Gene kissed me. He grabbed my head in his hands and kissed me. He was gentle but it was still a massive surprise.
"Next thing I know there are a million people taking pictures of me and TV crews asking my name. I phoned Mum and told her what happened but she didn't believe me until we got to the concert and people started taking more pictures of me," she said.
"One Goth girl with a mohawk and shaved head even ran up and gave me a hug because she said she wanted to hug the person Gene kissed. And, no, he didn't use his tongue . everybody was asking that."
Samantha is proud to have camera phone pictures of the tender moment and a video of the blood-spitting rocker vomiting the pizza that had been moments before stuffed into his mouth. "He told me he'd just eaten and wasn't hungry. Neither was I. He didn't really say much. It was kinda awkward. But I was kinda blank once I realised who I was sitting next to . and when he kissed me &"
Samantha said she is yet to gauge school feeling on the impulsive pash, and will find out from today.
"It was something I didn't arrange and couldn't stop from happening . even if I wanted."
"I'm 19 and I've probably been a fan for about 18 years now," he said.
Mr Hutchins, of Tawa, arrived at the airport early on Friday afternoon - only to be told the rockers were not due till later that night. Undeterred, he came back in the evening and finally met his idols at 11.30pm.
"It was pretty cool. They all walked out together and signed a few autographs."
All four current members of the band - including stalwarts Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley - signed his own prized "axe".
The gig that followed on Saturday night at the Rock2Wgtn metal festival was amazing, he said. "It was the first time I've seen them ... It's very original. There's not much else like it around. Not a lot of bands can do what they do."
Headlining the show, KISS, featuring Gene Simmons (bass, vocals) and Paul Stanley (rhythm guitar, vocals) and a better guitarist and drummer wearing the spaceman and cat-man makeup, replacing original members Ace Frehley and Peter Criss.
The KISS stage shows were legendary in the 1970s - and the band, now celebrating 35 years, played a set that had faithful members of "the KISS army" chanting along, arms in the air. Shots of fire and a flashing neon logo in the background all made for a great show.
Family Circle (July Issue): Paul was interviewed and will be featured in the July Issue of Family Circle Magazine. Family Circle has a readership of nearly 4 million.
Ace Frehley cites a familiar list of guitarists as his influences — Pete Townshend, Jimi Hendrix, Jimmy Page, Eric Clapton, Jeff Beck and Keith Richards.
In turn, the former Kiss guitarist has inspired a new generation of players — Pearl Jam, the Foo Fighters, Lenny Kravitz and Pantera among them.
But Frehley downplays the notion that he has become an elder statesman of rock.
“It’s really flattering. I probably would have practiced a little more if I knew I was influencing a generation of guitar players,” he said.
With a persistent buzz around his current tour and a new album set for a May release, it seems that Frehley’s influence is waxing once again.
“I’ve tried to get into the mindset of where I was with the first solo album, which had ‘New York Groove,’” he said.
That song, a fan favorite, was the only hit from the solo albums each member of Kiss released in 1978.
“I’m trying to incorporate the elements of that album into this new one,” he said.
The still-untitled new album will be his first new solo music since 1990’s “Trouble Walkin’.”
Inactivity is not to blame for the lag time between new albums. Frehley embarked on a solo career after leaving Kiss in 1982. After four well-received solo albums, he rejoined Kiss in 1996 for a reunion tour, which became the highest-grossing tour of the year. He left the band again in 2002. Being back on the road for six years postponed his solo career.
“I was on tour with Kiss for a while. I was ready to go into the studio before the reunion tour,” he said. “It took me a while to recover from that.”
Since 2002, Frehley has taken his talents in different creative directions, but he never gets far from the iconic Spaceman persona he made famous with Kiss. In fact, he donned the Kiss makeup again for a Dunkin’ Donuts commercial in 2007.
And Kiss music is a notable part of the current tour.
“I’m doing ‘Cold Gin,’ ‘Rocket Ride,’ ‘Love Gun,’ ‘Strange Ways,’ ‘Deuce.’ I’m doing a good cross-section of early stuff, through the years to my early stuff also,” he said.
Despite some turbulent times, he looks back on his tenure with Kiss and recognizes its unique place in rock history.
“The old days were great,” he said, noting that he is still in touch with and on good terms with his former bandmates. “It was a roller coaster ride. By the early ’80s, I started getting tired of the whole thing.”
One element of the Kiss legacy can be frustrating, though. The makeup, costumes and theatricality of the band’s concerts often overshadowed the music.
“We were a very visual band, and sometimes the music almost got lost in the show. I remember reading reviews on the road. A lot of times, they talked about the show more than the music,” Frehley said.
And even though he still uses some of the same pyrotechnics and smoking-guitar effects that he did with Kiss, the music is the main priority.
“I’m a musician first and a performer second. The first and foremost thing for me right now is the music,” he said. “I’m just focused with my new band on this tour and the CD.” As the tour makes its way through Rapid City and beyond to festivals in Europe this summer, Frehley is optimistic about the immediate future and some changes in lifestyle.
“Everything is just falling into place,” he said. “I’m feeling good — clean and sober. I’m healthy. I can remember what I did the next day.”
He said an interviewer recently commented that he must have played everywhere in the world by now.
“I said, ‘Yeah, but I don’t remember a lot of those places.’”
The Spaceman’s inspirations
Ace Frehley’s musical aspirations began after the budding graphic artist saw The Who’s first New York appearance for a “Murray the K” show at the RKO 58th Street Theater. Seeing Led Zeppelin’s first New York appearance at the Fillmore East also proved to be a milestone of his teenage years. But his initial live introduction to The Who still burned in his memory. Knocked out by the band’s power and theatricality and dazzled by Pete Townshend’s showmanship, Frehley knew his future was in rock music.
“I always knew music was the way for me to go,” he said.
The last member to join Kiss, Frehley assumed the Kabuki visage of the Spaceman. An accomplished artist, he also designed the famous Kiss logo, one of the most recognizable in all of music.
Armed with his Cherry sunburst Les Paul, Frehley’s incendiary fretboard theatrics with Kiss became legendary. Frehley’s Kiss compositions — “Cold Gin”, “Shock Me,” “Rocket Ride” and “Parasite” — are routinely cited by fans and critics as among the band’s best.
Since embarking on a solo career in the mid-’80s, Frehley released a string of well-received albums.
If you go
Who: Ace Frehley in concert, with opening act The Trews
Where: Rushmore Plaza Civic Center theater
When: 8 p.m. Saturday, March 29
Tickets: $25.50 to $35.50 at the civic center box office, 1-800-GOTMINE and www.gotmine.com.
KISS' setlist was as follows:
01. Deuce
02. Shout It Out Loud
03. Lick It Up
04. I Love It Loud
05. Firehouse
06. Calling Dr. Love
07. Shock Me
08. Let Me Go, Rock 'N' Roll
09. 100,000 Years
10. God Of Thunder
11. Black Diamond
12. Love Gun
13. Detroit Rock City
14. Shandi
15. I Was Made For Lovin' You
16. Rock And Roll All Nite
Tickets for KISS' show at Arena Riga, go on sale March 31.
Gene Simmons from rock band KISS thought he would have a crack at being the world's fastest pizza eater.
The rock icon may have a legendary mouth but he was not able to set any pizza eating records today.
KISS are in Wellington for a two day rock festival that also features Ozzy Osbourne and Alice Cooper.
Diddling the dates to make a tour an "anniversary tour" is one ingenious way to keep a career going - especially one that involves a band doing the stuff they do every time, only bigger, brighter and louder - but you can't argue with the spectacle of a KISS show.
There are fireballs, fireworks and fire-breathing; wires to make everything fly, including the bassist Gene Simmons and his preposterous tongue; and enough blinding lights to power John Butler's next couple of carbon-neutral tours.
The band, of course, are a spectacle in themselves with their black-and-silver outfits and make-up. Singer-guitarist Paul Stanley is the most comfortable when it comes to gyrating and shimmying around in ludicrous platform boots.
Between attempts to engage the crowd with a bad Australian accent and boo-inducing claims about the great audiences in Melbourne and Brisbane, Stanley even operatically bellows some tunes. Deliberately or not, the songs, as the acronym has it, Keep It Simple (and) Stupid with big, dumb, anthemic choruses, ear-bleeding riffs and racing, pulsating rhythms.
And, um, it's all pretty good fun. I'm not sure whether anyone needs to see it ever again but I'm not going to complain. Especially when KISS have probably got another historic anniversary coming up next year.
But even Singo sent the US rocker "death threats" when he heard his daughter Sally was planning to spend the day getting music tips from the old rockers.
The young singer and the old-enough-to-know-better Simmons filmed an episode of his reality TV series, Family Jewels at Icebergs yesterday - which surely proved a bizarre sideshow for diners at the popular Bondi nosh spot.
Singleton is looking the part of a "dirty pop" rocker, swapping her natural blonde locks for goth black. And dad - a gentleman who prefers blondes - is not happy.
"He's been trying to get me to colour it back. But it's not as bad as his reaction to the nose ring I got the other day. Wait till he sees the tattoo," the 23-year-old joked.
Platinum Studios and the KISS comics group are now offering issues 1 though 5 of the KISS4K comics, and the KISSmas special, for FREE at WOWIO.com.
CLICK HERE to get your free KISS4K comics.
To celebrate the WOWIO release of KISS4K, the Platinum Studios store is having an amazing autographed comic and memorabilia sale. For a limited time, the Platinum Studios store will offer all autographed Destroyer edition books at 40% off their original price. These Destroyer Edition books are signed by Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley and are Guinness World Record Certified as the largest comic book ever published, measuring a monstrous 2 ½ feet high by 1 ½ feet wide. This special sale includes all the Destroyer limited edition cover variants, all very rare and of VERY limited quantity.
Saving the BEST for the truly hard core KISS fan, Platinum Studios is offering the biggest deal of all. The “Make Ready” box set which includes Issue #1 of the KISS Comics Group release KISS 4K Legends Never Die! The pages are unfolded, boxed, and supplied untrimmed, exactly as they would be before it is saddle stapled for production. Each page is a piece of artwork in itself and suitable for framing. A very limited printing of 50 sets this is a true collector’s item. The “Make Ready” set also includes all 4 covers of the KISS4K Destroyer Edition and each is signed by Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley! Originally priced at $1,000 this set has been brought down to the unbelievable price of $300!
This sale is for a limited time and Platinum Studios has very limited quantities so hurry to get your piece of KISS and comic book history.
CLICK HERE for more details.
A sea of fans stared at the stage waiting for the slightest hint of KISS arriving before them. Many of them, especially the young, had faces made up in black and white KISS masks as fans have done for decades. Up the front of the crowd, a child no older than five rested on his father’s shoulders, his baby face masked in Gene Simmons paint.
KISS took the stage to a crack of fireworks, a phenomenal light array, and a hundred pillars of burning flame shooting out of seemingly-never-ending fire holes. The screams were high and deafening. “Awesome,” is the only word to describe the initial impression. There was much more of this to come!
The audience leapt off their feet in all the seated rows and screamed wildly. (Except in the small section on the edge that I was seated in, assumedly full of other media or industry people who somehow sat and seemed to be more focused on their mobile phones. These dullards, however, were still surrounded by screaming rockers).
KISS belted into Shout It Out Loud and perfectly synchronised flames shot from cannons with every beat. You could feel the heat of the flames along with the perfect sound of the wailing guitar screech. Gene Simmons thrust his tongue out with glee, stomping the stage with 12 inch heels carved into the shape of a dragon’s mouth. The band were as energetic as teenagers and showed no signs of their age at all, busting into Firehouse as sirens wailed and red lights span around the stage. Love Gun was greeted by cannons firing. The difficult high vocals for an old throat were still matched by Paul Stanley with minimal reliance on the vocal-FX so commonly used by aging bands.
In this sea of light, sound, steam and fire, waves of ecstasy cut through as Tommy Thayer (replacing Ace Frehly as the Spaceman) wailed his Gibson strings in the most sweet, resonant and downright impressive guitar solos ever to sweep the halls of the BEC. The guitar sound was perfect and the solos were masterpieces that impressed with every lick. Solos are often impressive but very rarely heavenly and these, scattered through the show, proved that KISS were more than simply excellent showmen but also inspiring musicians.
Black Diamond, Detroit Rock City, I Was Made For Loving You – KISS have a powerful back catalogue. The stage was massive and every song had its own show and own theatrical magic – from Gene Simmons flying on a wire (which for a moment malfunctioned, much to his distress!), to enormous dry ice spills, tons of confetti shot into the air, sparkling fireworks and guns shooting streams of sparks. The show had thirty-five years of dramatic creativity packed into an ultra-expensive stage extravaganza. This was even trumped once and for all during I Wanna Rock And Roll All Night. The drum kit became a giant space-ship and literally blasted into the air above the stage in a great burst of steam from eighteen jets beneath it, while Tommy Thayer and Gene Simmons were also projected into the air by springs.
Having been blown away by a show far greater than could be possibly expected, I can safely say that any rock show that is not a KISS show can only be a cheaper imitation.
Former KISS guitarist Bruce Kulick is the special guest at the event. Bruce will take part in a question-and-answer session and be available for photos and autographs throughout the day. KISS tribute band DRESSED TO KILL will perform wearing "Alive!"-era costumes. KISS merchandise and collectibles will be on sale throughout the day. There will be giveaways and contests too. Children 12 and under get in free.
For more information and tickets, click here.
The power of KISS and makeup could see Wellington overrun by glam rock lookalikes.
The first night of the Rock2Wellington heavy metal concert on Saturday is headlined by 1970s United States glam rockers KISS, known as much for their painted faces as for their music.
On the support card is another make-up junkie, mascara-loving Alice Cooper.
Wellington mobile make-up artist Megan Kemplay couldn't afford a concert ticket, so she will be raising cash to buy one by painting the faces of old rockers on their way to Westpac Stadium.
Lip gloss, face paint, hair lacquer and black nail polish will all be in use at her temporary studio outside Hotel Waterloo's Stadium Bar from noon on Saturday.
She thinks the painted face of Kiss bassist Gene Simmons, famed for his long tongue and radio-friendly riffs, will be the most requested among the thousands of metalheads expected in the city.
The running-mascara look of Alice Cooper would be a cinch, the qualified hair and makeup artist said. She is charging $10 for the 20-minute makeup jobs.
Hughes & Kettner has collaborated closely with Tommy Thayer (guitarist with the rock giants KISS), to bring out a signature version of its classic tube amp the DuoTone Head.
The release of the Tommy Thayer Signature Edition DuoTone coincides with the launch of the highly anticipated KISS Alive 35 world tour that kicks off in Melbourne, Australia on March 16th, and extends to sold-out concerts in Europe and the UK throughout May and June this year.
This signature version - the "Tommy Thayer Signature Edition DuoTone" - replaces the current amp and includes very specifically a customized illuminated front plate bearing both Tommy's signature and also his own mask emblem.
Also included with the amp is a certificate of authenticity personally signed and numbered by Tommy, and a Tommy Thayer Signature Duotone poster.
In addition, the amp covering is a very special Hughes & Kettner "signature edition tolex" giving it a very unique look, and with an optional 412 cabinet to match!
Last but not least, the amp is set up and biased exactly how Tommy likes it – and you will never find out what that is until you play one! Needless to say, the gut-wrenching tone you would expect is all there, and much, much more!
There is one more thing.
Tommy has very kindly decided to donate all his royalties earned from sales of the amp to The Childrens Hospital Los Angeles. This is a wonderful gesture from Tommy, which we are very proud and happy to carry out on his behalf.
(Children's Hospital Los Angeles was founded in 1901 and has been treating the most seriously ill and injured children in the Greater Los Angeles area for more than a century. It is acknowledged throughout the United States and around the world for its leadership in pediatric and adolescent health care).
The Tommy Thayer Signature Edition Duotone is launched on the Hughes & Kettner booth in Halle 4.2 during the Frankfurt Messe, and will then be available from selected stores around the world from May 2008 onwards.
For further details of this and all our products, please visit our booth during the Frankfurt Messe, or go on line to www.hughes-and-kettner.com for further information.
Jeff Hayzlett, chief business development officer for the Rochester area’s largest manufacturer, laid out some of Kodak’s changing marketing emphasis and message as he spoke today at a meeting of the American Marketing Association’s Rochester chapter.
“We’re going to make some fundamental changes in the way we go to market and the way we advance and promote our brand,” Hayzlett said.
For example, Kodak decided to drop its century-old Olympics sponsorship after this year in favor of sponsoring a NASCAR race car and the PGA Tour.
“All our marketing activities should activate customers, not build brand, not build buzz,” Hayzlett said. “We’re going out where our customers are.”
Kodak products were the centerpiece of a Jan. 17 episode of NBC’s The Celebrity Apprentice, and sales doubled the following week, Hayzlett said. He declined to say what getting Kodak involved in the show cost, but said that typically such product placement can run anywhere from $500,000 to $2.5 million.
Hayzlett said Kodak would be back on the show for the March 27 season finale, with he and Simmons facing off over Kodak rejecting the marketing campaign the Kiss bassist had created on the January episode.
His appearance will be open to the public and free of charge.
Paul Stanley’s Wentworth Gallery Appearances:
Friday - April 11, 2008 - 6-9 PM
Saturday – April 12, 2008 6-9 PM
Wentworth Gallery
South Park Mall
4400 Sharon Road
Charlotte, NC
VIP Reception – 5 -6 PM - Please call for details
RSVP: 704-365-2733 or 800-732-6140
TV Guide: Twenty-five years. What's the secret?
Shannon Tweed: It's about being strong enough to have your own life. That doesn't mean be a nasty bitch who's loud or bossy; it just means be strong in your own sense of self. You can still be strong and be feminine.
TV Guide: Some people believe your relationship with Gene is an open one....
Tweed: "Open" has never been a word I've described my relationship as. And he has never described our relationship as "open," nor has it ever been "open." He does not have sex with anyone else while we are together. It's a sore spot for me that people think that. Anything that you've ever seen... happened before 1983.
TV Guide: What one thing about Gene would surprise us the most?
Tweed: How soft he is. He's very sweet, and kind of stupid. [Laughs] He can't make a sandwich — but he can make a lot of money.
TV Guide: Would you ever consider posing for Playboy again?
Tweed: If I had a good enough body, I'd do it tomorrow. [Stuff] falls down, though. And you have to go pick it up. [Laughs]
TV Guide: How do you think Playmates today compare to the past?
Tweed: There seems to be a style of girl that is sort of fashionable. I think the style is about to change. It's been so fake-looking for a long time that I think we're due for a revolution of some kind. Maybe some more natural-looking breasts and some natural hair color. [Laughs]
Jason Dussault states, "Following up on our success in Vancouver, Los Angeles, and New York, I am very pleased to be at an exclusive and premier retail location in Toronto like TNT, which carries only fashion forward brands."
The Alive 35 World Tour is the band's second Down Under tour since the boys' so-called Farewell Tour hit Queensland seven years ago but you can't keep a good shock-rock band down.
And while the trademark fire-breathing, smoking guitars and pyrotechnics have stayed the same, after 3½ decades only two of the founding members remain: Paul Stanley and Gene Simmons.
Last night Kiss played a wide cross-section of their back catalogue dating back as far as Deuce, Come On And Love Me, and Firehouse – complete with Gene Simmons's fire breathing.
All eyes were on lead guitarist Tommy Thayer who had Ace Frehley's considerable space boots to fill and he proved equal to the task, belting out Frehley's signature tune Shock Me, complete with guitar solo.
Starry-eyed front-man Stanley played the Brisbane crowd off against their southern cousins declaring Brisbane the rock'n'roll capital of Australia.
About 50,000 people saw the rockers' first outdoor show in Melbourne since playing Waverley Park in 1980.
Many race-goers missed Lewis Hamilton's win to get the best seats for the concert, which started at 7pm.
Local singer Vanessa Amorosi warmed up the crowd.
Kiss frontman Paul Stanley said the band chose Melbourne to kick off their 35th anniversary tour because the city had greeted the band with "open arms and open legs".
After a quiet performance on Channel 9's Footy Show, the volume was well and truly turned up at Albert Park.
The show hasn't changed much since 1980 - a few new members and extra kilos but the same feel-good hit-fest.
While the schtick remains the same, there's a legion of new young fans who've never seen Gene Simmons spitting blood for God of Thunder or Stanley flying across the adoring crowd for Love Gun.
Total fire bans don't apply to rock bands, with an arsenal of pyrotechnics adding to the spectacle.
Stanley threw in an acoustic version of Australian-only hit Shandi before a finale that included rock anthem I Was Made for Loving You.
Anyone with a race ticket could watch the concert, but blow-ins paid $200 for a front-section seat.
Watch video footage of KISS guitarist Tommy Thayer singing Shock Me for the first time ever at the Melbourne concert: www.youtube.com
Frehley helped start one of the most influential rock bands of the ‘70s in Kiss and played with the group until 1983, when he departed to work on a solo career, only to return in the late ‘90s.
Today, the recently sober Frehley is benefiting from a rejuvenation of creativity, touring the U.S. and Canada and finishing up work on his first solo record in nearly 20 years. The guitarist took the time to speak with TCS Thursday, March 13, 2008 while en route to a gig in Calgary.
Hey, Patrick, Ace Frehley callin.
What’s going on Ace?
What’s up?
How’s life treating you?
Never better (laughs).
So you’re traveling to Calgary today?
Yeah.
I’ve been to Calgary many, many times and I absolutely love it there. I’m a little further south in Montana.
Right.
Let’s talk about that for a second. What do you think about when you look at upcoming tour dates and you see Montana on there?
I think it’s cool. I like going to places that I don’t go that often ‘cause I always get a different perspective. Usually the audiences are great because they don’t get as many shows as some of the major markets get.
Definitely. Do you have any experiences playing gigs to Montana crowds?
None whatsoever (laughs).
Have you even been here recreationally?
I know I haven’t been there recreationally but I’m sure I’ve been there performing.
The place you’re gonna play is great. It’s called the Wilma and is this ancient opera house. Very cozy. Very cool place to see a show. I imagine it’s cool to play there. Plus it’ll be St. Patrick’s Day, man. St. Patrick’s Day show in Missoula.
Oh, that should be hot.
Tell me, so far, how the road’s treating you and how you’re getting along with this group of dudes you have on tour with you right now.
The band’s great. The audiences have been great. The promoters have been great. It’s a whole different ball game doing it clean and sober. I take care of business today and it’s a lot of fun remembering what you did the night before (laughs).
I bet. Tell me a little about where you got this current lineup as far as your band mates.
The bass player, Anthony Esposito, I hooked up with about a year and a half ago through a mutual friend, ‘cause I was looking for sober musicians. We started working on solo material and me and Anton Fig got together in my studio and did some pre-production and we started tracking last year for the new record and the new record’s just about finished. Got some finishing touches and then gotta mix it. Shootin’ for a late May release.
So you’ve got it tracked and you’re waiting to mix it, do you have a nearby studio?
I have my own studio.
How killer is that to have one at your fingertips whenever you get the urge to record something?
It’s great having your own studio. It’s not the first studio I’ve owned. I’m currently fine-tuning the studio. It’s a work in progress. I was the architect. Basically I bought some property with like three houses on it and one of them I renovated into a studio. It’s got 4,000 square feet.
That’s huge.
Yeah. Originally I had a room downstairs with a brick floor and a fireplace, with an 18-foot ceiling that I was using as a recreation, hang out room and I realized that if I put drums down there we’d probably get a huge drum sound and we did that last November and we tracked several new songs in that room now. It’s got a great drum sound. That’s now the drum room instead of the upstairs studio.
As an artist, how exciting is it to think about getting back into that process of making an album? Including everything from, obviously you’ve already written the music, but also coming up with artwork, and having another chapter of your career come out on a CD.
It’s crazy. I’m really getting off on it. This is such a long-awaited CD and I wanna make sure that it’s just right. I think everybody’s gonna like it. It’s got all the elements, or a lot of the elements that my first CD had, ‘New York Groove.’ Most people cite that as being a favorite Ace Frehley record, so I’m trying to get into that mindset.
You were talking about being sober. Is there more of a reward for you from the perspective of writing music and putting together an album that you haven’t had in a long time?
You know, for years I always thought I needed substances to be creative and lo and behold, I realized last year that I actually function a lot better without all that stuff (laughs). It took me 40 years to figure it out, but better late than never right?
Right. When you sit down to write music and you go into your studio to track it, it must be such a release for you, such a welcoming feeling. Describe the transition you go through mentally when you really head into that creative process of writing and recording music.
I mean, I write songs in the weirdest places. Sometimes I write ‘em laying in bed. Sometimes I write ‘em riding my motorcycle. I’ll come up with melodies in my head and lyrics. I don’t have a set formula for writing songs. Some people do. Sometimes I come up with the melody first or a lyric, sometimes I come up with a guitar riff and I add melody and lyrics to it. There’s no set way for me to write a song. Once I get the process going and once I get into the studio, I kind of have tunnel vision because I’m easily distracted. I have to just turn off the phones and lock the door (laughs).
Is there a particular feeling that you get when you think of a killer riff? Like you said, when you’re riding your motorcycle or wherever, and you know it’s gonna end up on a song. Do you get goosebumps or get a certain feeling?
Goosebumps are in order (laughs). It’s cool. It’s the process of doing it that’s special. Once it’s completed, you’re ready. You wanna move on. You’ve taken it as far as you can take it. Although I’m really looking forward to performing several of the new songs off the CD live. Once we get it out.
You’re gonna wait until it’s released to bust those out?
I have to. With YouTube and everything. The Internet and everything. I do a show and it’s on YouTube the next day.
Phone cuts out. Ace calls back.
Yeah, I’m on a cell phone. It just died.
So, you were saying you do a show and it’s on YouTube the next day.
Yeah. Right now, on the Internet I have about 1,400 videos. So, an interviewer told me the other day (laughs).
Someone did their research.
Yeah.
I’ve noticed that you don’t have the online presence that many musicians have gone towards these days in terms of MySpace or the big flashy web site. It’s not like you’re gonna find Ace chatting with ‘friends’ on MySpace any time soon. What do you think of this technology and its ability to put you closer to fans and why do you choose not to participate in it and be out there as much as the next guy?
I like my privacy, number one and number two, I am going to be erecting a web site soon. I’m a stickler for graphics ‘cause I’m a graphics designer plus the web sites, I’m not very impressed with the graphics. I’ve been trying to come up with graphics for home page and all that stuff. I’m doing so many things at once. Designing t-shirts for the tour, trying to come up with CD cover art. Hopefully we can have this web site erected in the next two or three weeks.
Musicians all have a different perspective of the crowd and reasons for climbing up on that stage and performing, what feelings do you have when you’re up there ripping a solo and you look out at all the faces and is it different then it was when you were younger?
It’s different then when I was younger and it’s because I have a huge fan base now and when I was younger I didn’t have that. It’s almost like somebody said to me ‘ah, you’re becoming one of the elder statesman of rock and roll,’ and I don’t know how to take that (laughs). It’s almost like I can go up there and do no wrong as long as I’m playing my ass off. It’s kind of nice. I feel really comfortable onstage and I’m always having a good time. I feel like I’m alive when I’m onstage, you know. It’s a special place. I don’t know why I waited so long to hit the road. It’s been over five years.
But, you’re making up for lost time now, right? You’re out there driving through Canada in the winter.
Yeah, we just finished 16 shows and in another few days we’ll hit the half time of the tour.
A lot lately has been made of the constantly changing recording industry and it’s never been more public than now. It seems to be all over the place with downloading and the Internet. How do you see the changes from the perspective of someone who’s been involved in it for the better part of four decades?
I guess it’s a good change. Music is a lot more accessible now with the Internet. I guess the downside is all the illegal downloading. We may be missing out on revenue but it’s a lot easier to access an artists music with the help of the Internet. It’s kind of a double-edged sword. With the advent of YouTube, you automatically get built-in, free publicity because every show I’m performing there’s kids with camera phones, recording songs in the set and downloading it to YouTube. I think it’s probably good. You’ve gotta make the adjustments.
Obviously more bands can get their names out there. You don’t even have to be able to play. You can essentially fart in a microphone, record it, build a Myspace page and say you’re a band. So you can get your name out there. Do you think it’s more difficult these days for a band to break through and become a mega-band like Kiss then it was back in the day?
Probably. Probably because there’s just so many bands. When we were out touring, there wasn’t as many bands as there are today. It seems like everybody’s in a band. It’s really just the law of averages. Supply and demand. There’s very few groups today that have ever attained the success that Kiss had or has. We were just really lucky. We were in the right place at the right time and the gimmick caught on. We did tour extensively for several years (laughs). We played everywhere, more than once (laughs). There was a lot of blood, sweat and tears that paid off. I get the feeling today that some of the newer groups maybe don’t wanna put as much work into it. They want it almost handed to ‘em. More so than back in the ‘70s when you knew you needed to go out and hit the pavement.
It’s the old instant gratification.
Yeah.
Some bands wanna record an album in their basement, put it out and make millions.
I’m sure it’s happened (laughs).
I do have the one obligatory Kiss question. I know you get plenty of these. I was just reading today where Paul stated that he believes there’ll come a time when the band will continue without him and without all of the original band members. What do you think about if you hear the idea that there’ll be a day when Kiss will be playing and the four original guys won’t even be involved in it?
(long pause) I think it’s kind of shitty, you know. Kiss was the four of us. I think he’s just trying to make light. The fact that it’s only half of the original members now and the other two guys are just dressed up like me and Peter, I think that’s how he’s trying to rationalize what he’s doing today. Saying maybe there maybe won’t be any original members anymore, well, you know, that wouldn’t be Kiss either, you know. It’d be somebody dressed up with the makeup that we all designed back in the ‘70s and it’s all different people. I don’t understand that train of thought. I don’t know where he’s coming from on that. Kiss was Paul, Gene, Peter and Ace. That was Kiss. If they wanna call it Kiss, makeup somebody else wearing the same makeup, I designed that Spaceman cat, I wrote all those guitar solos, they’re dear to my heart and now you’ve got somebody else wearing the makeup I designed and playing my guitar solos and trying to come off like me. I think it’s bullshit (laughs).
I agree, man. I kind of chuckle to think there could be a day where that would happen. It’d be like the Beatles going out on tour with no original members left.
It’s a fuckin’ bullshit concept. If there’s four other guys dressed up in the makeup and none of the original members, it’s a fuckin’ Kiss cover band. Let’s just fuckin’ call a spade a spade. It’s not Kiss (laughs).
This last one might be tricky ‘cause you’ve no doubt played with everyone. If you could set up your ultimate fantasy show and share the stage with any bands past or present, which ones would you choose?
I don’t know. Jimi Hendrix, Led Zeppelin and maybe the Who.
I’ll tell you and this will come as no surprise, I’ve interviewed damn near 300 people and asked them all the same question and a ton have responded with Kiss.
Wow.
They’ll specify certain eras, but people throw Kiss out there a lot.
Cool.
Ace, I appreciate the conversation and I know Montana’s looking forward to hosting you.
Thanks, Patrick. It was great talking to you. You have a great day.
You too, man. Take care.
Bye.
He has also been something of an enigma. Since leaving the band in the early 80s, and following an aborted solo career that saw the release of three semi-successful records, Ace dropped out of the public eye until resurfacing again in 1995/1996 to team up with Gene Simmons, Paul Stanley and Peter Criss for the KISS reunion tour, which netted a whopping $43.6 million. A new album, Psycho Circus, and tour followed. At the conclusion of the KISS Farewell Tour, Ace left the band for the final time in 2002. KISS has continued touring with Tommy Thayer in Ace’s spot, even wearing the distinctive Space Man makeup and costume, much to the chagrin of many diehard fans.
A fan favorite, the buzz over “What is Ace going to do next?” must have reached Frehley’s ears at his lair in New York, particularly in the wake of the wildly successful KISSOLOGY DVD series released over the past year by KISS. This series reveals vintage live and interview footage of Ace, and the band, never before seen. As fans have clamored for more from the original Space Man, he has responded with news that a new album of original material is set for a spring ’08 release, and he has launched his first international solo tour since 1995 with a brand new band.
Ace checks in now via telephone from a hotel in Canada. . . .
So Ace, how’s the tour going so far?
Oh, it’s going great, we kicked it off in Baltimore on . . . what was it, February 28th, I think (laughs). Yeah. And the shows have been getting hotter and hotter as we go, you know, ‘cause it’s a new band and we’re still feeling each other out.
How long have you been playing with these guys?
This is maybe . . . uh . . . today is maybe like my 12th show, or something like that.
Oh wow. So why now, Ace? After all these years, why the big tour, what’s got the fire going now that maybe wasn’t there, you know, five years ago?
Uh . . . [pause, laugh] . . . I didn’t have my health for one thing. I mean, you know, this tour’s long overdue.
Oh, absolutely.
I mean, originally I hoped to have the record done for this tour, but, you know, I still need a little work on that; we’re shooting for a May release for the CD. But I really don’t need a record to tour. I’ve been in the marketplace for such a long time and I have so many songs I’ve written over the years, releasing the record shouldn’t be a prerequisite. The tour’s just so long overdue, so, you know, I’m really just having a great time and looking forward to getting back in the studio in April and finishing up the record for May.
Now are you recording that in the studio you built or are you recording that somewhere else?
I’ve been tracking it at my studio, in New York.
Ah, cool. Are you doing any of the new stuff on tour as part of this set?
I’d love to do it, you know, but we do that and it ends up on YouTube or something the next day or two.
Yeah, man, that’s true, and that’s one of the questions I wanted to ask you. Things are so different now, even from just back as far as the Frehley’s Comet days; I mean, what’s the biggest difference you see now versus when you were coming up through the ranks?
Well, the audiences are the same. You know, it’s just the business has changed in how people get music, you know?
Right.
A lot of people get music from the internet now, and a lot of people don’t even buy CDs anymore. So, that’s really the only difference, and of course YouTube and news and stuff.
What about you, are you a guy who still likes to record to tape or have you gone digital in your studio?
Ah, I’ve done both. I like tape.
Yeah? What do you think of the whole vinyl resurgence that seems to be going on? You know, a lot of people are buying vinyl again and a lot of records are coming out on vinyl, I think that’s kinda cool.
Well vinyl has a distinct sound. I’m probably gonna do a, you know, mix this next record to vinyl.
Oh, that’d be awesome.
Yeah, maybe do a picture disc or something.
Ah, yeah, that’s old school!
Yeah.
What about, for example, the Led Zeppelin thing. They just got together again for that show, and they talked about those guys doing a tour; in fact I just read yesterday that Plant turned it down and they were looking to get paid something like $200 million each to do that tour, and he said no. And like The Who, the band that I know got you wanting to play rock n’ roll, and KISS takes flak – I don’t want to talk about KISS a whole lot – but they take flak for continuing on with guys in your spot and on Peter’s drum throne; how do you feel about these bands, whether it’s KISS or Zeppelin or The Who or whomever, kind of keeping on keeping on minus guys who were a critical part of what made them in the first place?
Uh . . . [long pause] . . . I don’t know, I’d love to see a Zeppelin tour. I mean Jimmy was a big influence on me. And, you know, so was The Who.
Sure.
KISS is a different ballgame, you know?
Yeah, Zeppelin isn’t putting anyone in a John Bonham mask to go sit on the drums.
Yeah . . . I don’t know exactly what they’re doing, but it is what it is. . . .
Talking about guys like Jimmy Page, or Clapton, I mean, these are guys that all you have to say is “Page”, or “Clapton”, and people know what you’re talking about, or “Jimi” for Hendrix; these are guys that have influenced millions of players, and influenced thousands of records that people love, and I think when you say “Ace” people think of Ace Frehley . . . I mean, how does that feel? Do you ever sit and think, “Holy shit, I’m one of those guys?”
Ah, I don’t think about all that stuff. You know, people come up to me about how many people I’ve influenced and . . . I don’t think about that kinda stuff. I’m always kinda moving forward, I live in the now, I don’t live in the past, or the future – I live in the now.
Uh huh.
Every day is special, you know, that’s why they call it “the present.” [insert maniacal, patented Ace Frehley laugh]
Who do you see nowadays carrying the torch that you guys established back in the day as far as just a good high octane, let’s-go-out-and-have-fun-for-two-hours rock band, or do you even listen to anybody these days?
I haven’t really been checking out what’s on the scene, I’ve been so focused on trying to recapture the old vibe I had with the very first solo record I did, you know, the one with “New York Groove” on it.
Sure.
Most people always say that’s their favorite Ace Frehley record so I’ve been trying to get back into that mindset, you know, for this CD.
Well I’ve been a fan forever, you were the guy that made me get into music in the first place. The first album I ever bought was Love Gun, and the first favorite song was “Shock Me,” so I’m trying not to come off as a fanboy here, but I like all the stuff you did; you could put a set list together just of Frehley’s Comet stuff and I’d be fired up to see that show. Are you sharing vocals like you did on those other records or is it going to be all Ace?
Oh it’s all me.
That’s cool. You know there’s a rumor I’ve read that back in the day when you’d record your vocals the only way you could do it is if you laid flat on your back, is that true?
It’s true, I did that for “Shock Me.”
For “Shock Me”? That’s the only one, huh?
Yeah, yeah. I was trying to . . . you know, I didn’t think I had a great voice. I still don’t [laughs].
You wrote – there’re a lot of songs from those early records that you wrote that the other guys sang. How much input did you have on the songs the other guys were writing?
Oh, well, you know, I wrote the solos. I’d . . . you know, I’d give input on a few tracks here and there, but I really don’t remember too much about a lot of all that stuff. [laughs]
Sure. Are you a democratic guy in the studio? When your band comes in and records, do you take input or do you just lay it down and tell them how it’s gonna be?
I like input. Two heads are better than one and four heads are better than two.
That’s right.
I don’t believe in being like a dictator. You can always learn something from anybody, even the assistant engineer. I listen to everybody’s input, and I ask ‘em for it. I know sometimes my judgment isn’t always the best way to go.
But the buck stops with you, right? You’re the final decision maker.
Oh yeah.
Somebody has to be in every band, don’t they?
Well, it’s a necessary evil, if you want to call it that. [laughs]
What do you think of all these, like, American Idol and shows like that where they trot these people out to make big stars out of them, and when you think of some of the greatest musical artists we’ve had wouldn’t even make it out of the first round. I mean, do you ever watch any of that stuff?
Not really! [laughs]
How do you think you would fare on American Idol?
I don’t know! [laughing]. You know I don’t live in hypothetical situations, I live in the now.
Well yeah, and I don’t watch that stuff either, but when I think of the people I love the most I know that the way things are now they wouldn’t even make it out of the first round.
Well yeah, when it comes to rock n’ roll you gotta think of a lot of different things than just talent. Besides vocal talent . . . you know, attitude has a lot to do with it, and the way you come across visually. In a rock n’ roll band, you know, I would always take – if I had to choose between two front men you know I’d always go with the one that’s more dynamic and active and had personality, you know, even if his voice maybe isn’t as great as somebody else’s who doesn’t have those attributes. You need the whole package, you know?
Absolutely. You have a minute to talk about your art a little bit?
My who?
Your art? Are you still doing art?
Oh yeah. In fact I’m working on something, I’m designing a t-shirt right now on my laptop.
Oh yeah? You a Mac or a PC guy?
What do you think?
Mac.
Yeah. I’m working on Photoshop right now. I got version 1.0. [laughs]
Never bothered to upgrade and learn all the other stuff, eh?
Yeah, I work in it and I use 3D programs too and eventually I want to put together a DVD of an animation I came up with, you know, and scored.
See, that’s what’s frustrating to me, man, is I wanna see that stuff and you don’t have a website or anything to see what you’re working on. Is that gonna change?
Yeah. The website should be up hopefully in another three or four weeks. Just been like interviewing people to make it happen.
That’s cool, I’m looking forward to that. Now how do you feel about the fact that you designed one of the most recognizable logos ever? I mean, the KISS logo is right up there with the lips thing for the Rolling Stones. Where does that stack up with some of the musical stuff that you’re known for? You’ve got to be pretty proud of that.
Yeah, but like I said, I don’t think about, you know, accolades. Like someone said to me, would you love to be in the rock . . . the rock hall of fame . . . where was I, like in Cleveland or something –
Yeah, that’s where the rock hall of fame is.
Yeah, I mean it’d be nice, but it’s not something I think about or lose sleep over. The awards and the accolades and the praise and stuff is nice, but it’s not something that keeps me going. What keeps me going is performing and the smiles on people’s faces, and, you know, that’s my direction these days.
So what type of animations are you working on, are these like little movies or what?
I’m working with, like, spacescapes . . . and, just cool stuff like that, you know? I’m playing around with different elements . . . I kinda gotta put it on the backburner because a lot of times I get carried away with my graphics and forget to finish up my music.
So you were doing a lot of that over the years that you weren’t doing music, right?
Yeah. I’ll probably be doing an art exhibition next year. It’s like, now that I’m back and I’m healthy and clean and sober, it’s like everything is blowing up at once and I have to prioritize. All that stuff will still come to task.
And what about the health stuff – was that primarily a sobriety issue, or were you having other health problems we have to worry about coming up here?
Yeah, I’m alright – my liver’s okay. It’s my brain that’s broken! [laughs] My mind is broken. [laughs]
Well a lot of these guys that come back and do a tour or whatever talk about how they went to India and got a guru or something, or got into yoga and now they’re a yoga master or something and that changed their life . . . there’s no yoga or anything on your resume now is there?
No, there’s no yoga. It’s just more . . . more spiritual, and trying to get in touch with your higher power, and you know, it’s really about doing the right thing, getting rid of the bondage of self. ‘Cuz it isn’t always about you, sometimes it’s about other people and other things, you know?
Yeah.
Yeah, it’s like, I’m able to be a dad today, you know, and be there for my daughter.
How old is your daughter now?
27.
What does she do, is she a musician or artist at all?
Yeah, she is. We were actually working on a song together a couple weeks ago. You know she’s been toying with different things, career-wise, and of course she can’t make up her mind [chuckles].
Well, I’m forty, I still can’t make up my frickin’ mind.
Yeah, she was doing modeling for a while, then she was thinking about going into the medical field, and maybe thinking about going into publicity, you know – I just have to support her in whatever she does and try and point her in the right direction.
Does she ever get hassled because she’s Ace Frehley’s daughter, or is she able to fly under the radar?
All the time, yeah, all the time. She’s gotta be aware that some people may have ulterior motives, when they, you know. . . .
Yeah. Now you guys were able to pull of the whole mystique thing with the makeup that could never happen nowadays; I mean everyone’s got a camera up everyone’s ass.
Yeah, we were able to – I mean that whole time was a special time. You know it’s kinda . . . it’s over now! [laughs]
Yeah, but it happened. I’m all for living in the present, but you guys did something that affected a lot of people in a real positive way, and I think regardless of what bad things happened and whatever personally maybe you’ve had to work through, I mean, nothing can take that away from you guys, that’s quite a legacy – I hope you feel pride about that?
Yeah, I mean, most of my memories of KISS, you know, are fond. But that was then, this is now, and, you know, today I don’t really see myself putting on tights and running around in makeup and space boots. I was starting to feel that towards the end of that last tour that I did, I just felt that it was maybe better off put aside, and left to the legacy that it should be.
Are you glad you did that reunion tour?
I’m glad I did it, I’m also glad I left! [laughs]
I saw the reunion tour at the Tacoma Dome in Tacoma, WA. You guys set the roof on fire.
What happened?
Right after the – right before the first encore after the last song the pyro started a little fire up in the rigging. They had to send a roadie up to put it out.
Yeah, I remember that.
Yeah, that was the Tacoma Dome.
Yeah, that’s crazy stuff. I’m still doing the smoking guitar and the light guitar; I can’t shoot any rockets off in most of these places, but maybe next tour.
Are you looking forward to playing Missoula, MT?
Oh yeah. You know some places sometimes that aren’t as mainstream as others, sometimes are the best audiences, you know?
I’ve heard that from a lot of guys. We’re just a little hungrier here because we don’t have somebody coming through town every week.
Exactly. Yeah, I’m looking forward to it, I look forward to it every night. Like tonight I’m in Quebec City in Quebec, you know and –
Is it cold?
Is it cold, yeah it’s cold!
You’re freezing your ass off up there, aren’t you?
Well, I’m in a nice cozy hotel room [laughs] just chillin’. Makin’ phone calls and playin’ with my laptop, life’s good today.
Yeah, it sounds like it. Well, Ace, I’m not going to take any more of your time, I sure appreciate you calling. I’m really looking forward to the show and looking forward to the record, and we’ll see you in Missoula.
Yeah, Chris, it was great talking to you and I’ll see you at the show in Missoula. Take care.
Expect a “really in your face” brand of rock, said Mark Dinerstein, the Missoula representative for promoter Knitting Factory Entertainment. Dinerstein said he expects the three-hour performance to be like a classic 1970s heavy metal rock show.
Although Frehley is in the process of creating a yet-unnamed new album, at the show he will be sticking mostly to old Kiss classics and songs from his solo career.
“Frehley just felt the itch to get back out on the road,” Dinerstein said. “I guess he missed touring.”
Although Frehley hasn’t released a new album since the late 1990s, The Trews will be promoting their new album No Time for Later. Concertgoers should expect to hear mostly new songs from them at the show.
Tickets are $31 in advance and $34 day-of-show, available at Rockin’ Rudy’s, Ear Candy or at http://www.ticketweb.com. The show starts at 8 p.m. at the Wilma Theatre, doors open at 7 p.m.
Frehley helped start one of the most influential rock bands of the '70s in Kiss and played with the group until 1983, when he departed to work on a solo career, only to return in the late '90s.
Today, the recently sober Frehley is benefiting from a rejuvenation of creativity, touring the U.S. and Canada and finishing up work on his first solo record in nearly 20 years.
"The new record's just about finished," Frehley said in an interview with the Tribune en route to Calgary for a show. "Shootin' for a late May release. I'm really getting off on it. This is such a long-awaited CD and I wanna make sure that it's just right. I think everybody's gonna like it.
"It's got all the elements, or a lot of the elements that my first CD had, 'New York Groove.' Most people cite that as being a favorite Ace Frehley record, so I'm trying to get into that mindset," he added.
For Frehley, song ideas aren't harvested consciously and sometimes come at the most inopportune times.
"I write songs in the weirdest places," said the guitarist who influenced such notables as Slash and Pearl Jam's Mike McCready. "Sometimes I write 'em laying in bed. Sometimes I write 'em riding my motorcycle. I'll come up with melodies in my head and lyrics. I don't have a set formula for writing songs. Some people do."
When the creative juices begin flowing, Frehley opts to shut himself off from the rest of the world and get down to business.
"There's no set way for me to write a song," Frehley explained. "Once I get the process going and once I get into the studio, I kind of have tunnel vision because I'm easily distracted. I just have to turn off the phone and lock the doors," he added with a laugh.
Frehley recently purchased property and began turning a 4,000-square-foot house into the studio where he's been recording the new tunes.
"It's great having your own studio," he said. "It's a work in progress. I was the architect. Basically, I bought some property with like three houses on it and one of them I renovated into a studio."
For his latest record, Frehley enlisted the help of bassist Anthony Esposito and "Late Show with David Letterman" drummer Anton Fig, a longtime friend of Frehley's who was a part of Frehley's '80s solo group Frehley's Comet.
"I hooked up with (Esposito) about a year and a half ago through a mutual friend 'cause we were looking for sober musicians," Frehley said of his new bandmates. "Me and Anton Fig got together in my studio and did some pre-production and we started tracking last year for the new record. The band's great."
Being sober has been an eye-opening experience for Frehley, who's finishing up production on the new record and touring North America.
"It's a whole different ball game doing it clean and sober," he said. "I take care of business today and it's a lot of fun remembering what you did the night before. For years, I always thought I needed substances to be creative and lo and behold, I realized last year that I actually function a lot better without all that stuff. It took me 40 years to figure it out, but better late than never, right?"
The current lineup of Kiss is now rolling through Australia sans original drummer Peter Criss and Frehley, and the guitarist who wrote many of the band's most recognizable riffs questions the band's decision to continue with only half of its original members.
"Kiss was Paul, Gene, Peter and Ace," said Frehley, known for the silver stars that adorned his eyes onstage. "That was Kiss. I designed that 'Spaceman' cat, I wrote all those guitar solos, they're dear to my heart and now you've got somebody else wearing the makeup I designed and playing my guitar solos and trying to come off like me?"
Frehley has been replaced by guitarist Tommy Thayer, who wears the same makeup Frehley designed, and drummer Eric Singer has replaced Criss in Kiss.
Scheduled to perform with his solo band at a St. Patrick's Day show this Monday evening in Missoula, Frehley looks forward to standing onstage in places not generally entertained by someone of Frehley's reputation.
"I think it's cool," the guitarist said of performing in smaller cities like Missoula. "I like going to places that I don't go that often 'cause I always get a different perspective. Usually the audiences are great because they don't get as many shows as some of the major markets get."
Following the break up of Black And Blue, Tommy did alot of session work and formed the very punk influenced band Shake The Faith. There album America the Violent, is highly recommended by us here at Behind The Amps. It was around this time, that Tommy began working for the Kiss Company in various capacities, and in 2002 he was asked to fill the role of The Spaceman with the group.
Besides his roll in Kiss, Tommy is highly involved with various charities and helping in the education of the youth in his native Oregan.
So on the eve of Kiss' visit to Australia, we bring you our quick chat with Kiss lead guitarists Tommy Thayer.
BEHIND THE AMPS: Could you please tell us about the new Hughes & Kettner amps that will be using on this tour. How did this association come to be, and what specs are your new amps?
TOMMY THAYER: I am happy to announce that Hughes & Kettner is producing the new “Tommy Thayer Signature Edition DuoTone amplifier.” It is customized version of the HK classic amp, the DuoTone. It has an amazing tone; rich, ballsy, but very classic sound. All of my royalties for this amp are going directly to a charity I’m closely associated with, “The Childrens Hospital Los Angeles.”
BEHIND THE AMPS: You have played Les Paul’s throughout your career, and I noticed you used a silver finished Les Paul on the last tour, do you have any new guitars you will be debuting on the Alive/35 tour, and are these guitars modified (different pickups etc) or are they kept stock?
TOMMY THAYER: I will have several new guitars on this tour, I’m working on those right now. I won’t be straying far off the mark with pick-ups etc. though, because what I’ve used in recent years has worked well for me.
BEHIND THE AMPS: The Alive /35 tour is currently hitting Australia and Europe only, is there any other markets the band plans to hit during this tour, is the band rehearsing any rare songs for this tour?
TOMMY THAYER: We’re already rehearsing many KISS gems. The set is going to kick your ass.
BEHIND THE AMPS: A hypothetical question Tommy. Assemble a 4 piece band from your heros growing up, and a 4 piece band from current players today, who would your choices be and why?
TOMMY THAYER: How about Paul McCartney, Jimmy Page and John Bonham. As far as today, I’m not sure.
BEHIND THE AMPS: The new photo’s on the net show the band have gone back to the Destroyer Style costumes, will there be a new stage to go along with it, if so could you give us a little info on it?
TOMMY THAYER: Under our direction, the KISS production team is working on it now. We will always tour with a stage that’s fit for the bombast and enormity of the classic KISS show.
BEHIND THE AMPS: It has been rumoured that Kiss are filming the Australian shows for a special project, is this regarding new volumes of the hugely successful Kissology series or is it for a new project?
TOMMY THAYER: Every show is filmed, we been doing that for the last 10 to 15 years. And there will be crews following us throughout the entire tour catching what happens offstage and behind the scenes.
BEHIND THE AMPS: Thanks so much for your time tommy, any final words for your fans?
TOMMY THAYER: Back at you! Thank you to all KISS fans worldwide. You are an incredible, unique breed of rock & roll animals!
Behind The Amps would like to extend our gratitude to Tommy for sparing some time in his extremely hectic schedule. We urge all fans of music to catch kiss on the Alive/35 tour click the image below to get tour dates. And you can visit Tommys web site here and you can get all of your Kiss news at Kissonline.Com
You can get more information about the Expo Rock Show at this location.
Former KISS guitarist Frehley -- newly sober, following decades of drug addiction -- turned in a blistering show at the Garrick Centre on Wednesday, proving that pancake makeup and platform boots aren't prerequisites for rockin' & rollin' all night.
Frehley, who'll release his first new solo record in almost 20 years this spring, has been keeping a far lower profile of late than his ex-bandmate Gene Simmons, who's managed to render himself something of a walking punchline, thanks to all those embarrassing reality TV appearances (not to mention that unfortunate leaked sex tape).
But sobriety clearly becomes Ace, as he was in fine form Wednesday night, delivering a nearly two-hour set that sounded every bit as vital as it must have back in his heyday.
Looking none the worse for wear in a black leather jacket and shades, Frehley got the show started with the rocker Rip It Out, from the self-titled solo joint he cut under the KISS umbrella in '78.
That album is the one Frehley feels his fans respond to most, so it wasn't surprising that he also found room for Snowblind and New York Groove in his set list.
Also not a surprise? That Frehley waited a mere two minutes before banging out his first solo, funnelling that trademark fretwork of his through a literal wall of amplifiers.
On Hard Times, Frehley and his bandmates (among them former Lynch Mob bassist Anthony Esposito) indulged in some nice sleaze-rock harmonies, and on Parasite, they churned out a few feedback-heavy power riffs.
Frehley paused to make mention of our warm weather before blasting out the menacing intro to Snowblind (the refrain of which sounds eerily like a semi-truck whizzing by you on a highway) and dedicated Breakout to departed KISS-mate Eric Carr, who died in '91.
He also made reference to his own personal demons after wrapping up Into the Void, noting, "Sometimes there's a darkness all around us -- but somehow we get out of that dark place, no matter where it is."
Other highlights of the show included the fists-in-the-air anthem Rock Soldiers, a medley that incorporated elements of Torpedo Girl, Speedin' Back to My Baby, and Trouble Walkin', and encore versions of Deuce and Cold Gin.
But the apex had to be the climactic guitar solo that found Frehley flailing away on the frets for upwards of five minutes, eventually working himself into such a state that plumes of FX smoke came shooting out of his axe.
As gimmicks go, it's an oldie but a goodie. Just like ol' Space Ace himself.
"There's all this incredible horsepower, incredible noise and speed -- and then there'll also be the car race,'' Paul Stanley says.
"We will bring loudness to a new level. You're going to shiver and quiver in all the places that count. This is bigger than ever.''
"Don't listen to your girlfriends,'' Gene Simmons adds. "Size does matter.''
The band launch their Kiss Alive 35 world tour in Melbourne, celebrating the band's formation in 1973. The setlist borrows heavily from their classic 1975 album Alive!
"We have no intentions of stopping,'' Stanley says. "We gave up doing this for money a long time ago. We do it because we love it. But we still like being paid for it.''
"Rock and roll's in a pathetic state,'' Simmons rants. "The reason we're on stage is because we're goddamn bored and sick and tired of bands getting up on stage and not giving you value for buck. A warning for all low-flying planes -- Kiss are here.''
The band are filming the Australian tour for an hour-long TV special called Kissteria, and the crew for Gene Simmons' Family Jewels are also in town.
"When we played Kiss Symphony in Melbourne (in 2003) we didn't record the behind-the-scenes stuff,'' Simmons says.
"We're going to do it right this time.''
The new series of Family Jewels is being promoted in the US with the catchphrase "One man, 4800 women''.
"And some farm animals,'' Simmons clarifies.
Tickets for Kiss are available from Ticketek.
"I Was Made For Lovin' You"
"Shout It Out Loud"
Interview
Thirty-five years after their first performance, KISS are back in Australia to kick off another global tour with a concert at the Formula One Grand Prix in Melbourne.
And underneath the loud music, the big tongues and the make-up, are some astute business brains.
The US might be suffering an economic slump but KISS' lead vocalist and rhythm guitarist Paul Stanley still says he wants to rock 'n' roll all night.
"Good economy or no economy, we gave up doing this for money a long time ago," he said.
"We do it because we love it, but we still like being paid, so you can pay us."
KISS manager Doc McGhee says despite America's financial woes, the market for live entertainment is as strong as ever.
"I think the concert business is pretty much bullet-proof," he said.
"People, they're staying home, they're not travelling abroad because they don't have the money. If anything, it helps our economy. We're kind of recession-proof." Forbes magazine estimated that KISS earned $US48 million from its 1996 reunion tour and while those heady days are now gone, concerts are one part of the group's marketing machine.
Stanley says the KISS logo can now be found on clothes, toys, even condoms and a funeral casket.
"There's not many bands who could do something like that, so we just figured that between that and the condoms we could get you coming or going," he said.
The band has a huge range of merchandise.
"We sell about 2,700 products around the world, so we're the largest and biggest merchandising band of all times and have been for years," he said.
Despite that output, Mr McGhee wants to avoid saturating the market. Some argue an overabundance of products led to a drop in the group's popularity in the 1970s.
He says KISS's focus is now on the top end of the merchandise business.
"Our displays of dolls and things that we do are collectable, they're not on the same rack as Power Rangers. It's just keeping the quality there," he said.
And the deluge of products continues even though KISS's last recording of new songs came out 10 years ago.
KISS co-founder Gene Simmons is an unashamed capitalist, appearing on Donald Trump's Celebrity Apprentice and running a marketing business.
"Simmons Abrahams Marketing markets for the Indy car series, including the perennial and iconic Indy 500. This is our third year and it's coming to Australia," he said.
Although one suspects it will arrive without the face paint and platform boots.
"Gene's a prat," Sharon Osbourne said yesterday. "He's just a silly man in a silly wig. He's just a prat. What more is there to say about him? He's his own worst enemy by being in the public eye."
Sharon has publicly slated Simmons for copying her family's reality show, The Osbournes, with his own, Family Jewels.
The outspoken Sharon has joined Ozzy for his first Australian concert tour in 11 years. Their last visit was for the MTV Music Awards in Sydney in 2005.
"Australia has come on immensely," Ozzy said. "The world's getting smaller every day with technology. I got off the plane (in Melbourne) yesterday and within seconds I was on the phone to someone in LA. It's like Star Trek."
He released a new album last year, Black Rain, his first of original material since infamous reality TV hit The Osbournes.
Their children, Jack and Kelly, also flew into Melbourne yesterday for the tour and the Grand Prix.
Jack is producing a documentary on his father, and is filming in Australia. He also plans to study film-making.
"Jack wants to be behind the camera," Ozzy said. "He doesn't enjoy being in spotlight. Some people do, some people don't."
The family are used to Australians, with several ex-Melburnians on their staff, including Sharon's personal assistant, Silvana Arena, sister of singer Tina.
However, Sharon denied persistent rumours of a feud with Dannii Minogue, her fellow judge from British TV hit The X Factor.
Tickets are still available for Ozzy's concert at Rod Laver Arena tomorrow night.
Rock Gods KISS will make their only Australian television appearance tonight on the The Footy Show, performing two of their classic hits live in the studio.
The Footy Show airs tonight, Thursday, March 13 at 9.30pm (local time) on Channel Nine.
The pouty-lipped, make-up clad Starchild confesses his touring days with Kiss may soon be numbered.
"I really, firmly believe there will come a time when the band will continue without me," Stanley says. Shock. And yes, horror.
While this might have some fans shedding silvery-red tears over their vinyl editions of Kiss's iconic Dynasty album, Stanley insists that his departure would not necessarily spell the end for the band. He believes he is entirely replaceable.
"Some people can't imagine it without me, but I'm here to tell you, I can. There is somebody out there with the same amount of passion and the same amount of drive," he says. "Which is not to say I wouldn't want to have creative control."
Certainly, Kiss has changed its line-up over the years. Original members Peter Criss and Ace Frehley have been replaced, variously, by Eric Carr, Vinnie Vincent, Mark St. John and Bruce Kulick.
Currently, the band consists of Stanley, Gene Simmons, Tommy Thayer and Eric Singer.
But Stanley and Simmons, who formed the band in 1973, in New York, have always been the constants. Admittedly, Stanley's health has deteriorated over the years. He has had hip surgery and prior to a show in July last year was hospitalised with a rapid heartbeat. It was the first time Kiss had ever performed as a three-piece.
In Stanley's eyes, at least, Kiss is bigger than any one member of the band. Bigger than just a band, Kiss is a philosophy.
"I think Kiss is more about a point of view, about a respect for fans and about a loyalty and a direction much more than it is the people in the band," he explains.
"We don't follow the same rules as other bands. I can't live within the boundaries people set for me. I believe Kiss is founded on something so solid that it will continue to live on, the way a football team continues.
"There have been great players, but there will always be other players."
But for the moment, Stanley is staying put. This definitely isn't any sort of farewell tour, if such a thing really exists.
He is excited to be coming back to Australia only a year after he was here as part of a solo tour for his album, Live To Win.
"At this point in my life I wouldn't do anything that wouldn't excite me," he says.
Stanley first toured with the band here in 1980. And he has had a love affair with the country ever since, an affection extending to Kiss performing with the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra in Melbourne in 2004.
"There have always been amazing women and friendships and amazing food and some of the best wines in the world," he says.
"Over the years people's expectations have just got higher. So when I go out there I want to make sure we are every bit living up to the legend of Kiss.
"I think our fans understand how important it is for us to live up to what we have done in the past and making sure that nobody is disappointed. But they know we wouldn't be there unless we were going to deliver the goods."
The goods, in this case, happen to be a catalogue of hits including Rock And Roll All Nite, I Was Made For Loving You and Detroit Rock City, which have helped the band sell 90 million records worldwide.
There's no new stuff to speak of, apart from the Kissology DVD. But hey, as with most bands which trade heavily on nostalgia, who needs new material when you have the hits? Of course, the two calling the shots on stage are Stanley and Simmons. The pair have had their differences over the years and, at least from what is presented to the public, seem diametrically opposed personality types.
Stanley prefers the private life away from Kiss and has taken to painting.
Simmons has a burgeoning career outside the band as a reality TV star, having been the mentor on Rock School and the star of his own show, Family Jewels.
"I think we think of ourselves as brothers. Brothers means you can never get rid of each other, even when you want to," Stanley says. "We go about ourselves very differently. What we choose to put at the forefront or publicise is very different.
"Certainly, one of us spends quite a bit of time telling the world that he's the genius behind the band. This didn't happen because of a single person. It is the combustibility and the chemistry of people who don't necessarily view things from the same perspective which makes Kiss."
Stanley says the common ground is definitely the group itself.
"We tend to put our egos aside when it comes to making decisions for the band.".
Kiss perform at Acer Arena on March 20.
CLICK HERE to watch clips from KISS' Press conference.
The band, celebrating its 35th year, is playing after the F1 Grand Prix in Melbourne on Sunday night and is promising value for money.
"Good economy or no economy, we have no intentions of stopping," said frontman Paul Stanley.
"We gave up doing this for money a long time ago, we love it, but we still get paid."
Like the good businessman that he is, Kiss co-founding member Gene Simmons had a shot at the opposition while promising a full-on ear-blasting concert, none of this coming out and strumming a guitar and calling it a show.
"Rock and roll is in a pathetic state," he drawled.
"Bands think they can can get up on stage and strum their guitars and then download it - it's useless and pathetic.
"We're sick and tired of seeing bands getting up on stage and not giving value for your buck."
Stanley and Simmons, who were by guitarist Tommy Thayer and drummer Eric Singer, said they have been living out their dreams for the past 35 years.
"We not only want to live up to the legend (of Kiss) but we want to exceed it, and that's why we are here," Stanley said.
But does Kiss ever get worried that they will lose touch with their audience, with influences like rap and rave music at the forefront of the Y generation.
"Kiss music is universal, ageless - we always find a new audience," said Stanley.
"What we sing about is celebrating life, about enjoying yourself.
"We don't need to to look for an audience - the audience finds us."
Original members Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley are joined by guitarist Tommy Thayer and drummer Eric Singer for what will kick off their Kiss Alive 35 world tour.
Simmons was spotted at Brunetti's in Carlton with fans in between shooting a TV show yesterday afternoon.
The tour will celebrate the band's formation in 1973 and is their first Australian tour in four years.
The band has sold more than 90 million albums and is one of the most in-demand live acts in the world.
During their lay-off, Stanley has launched a solo career while Simmons started a reality show, Family Jewels, featuring his family.
The new series of the program, which airs on the Biography Channel in Australia, boasts the rocker has slept with 4800 women.
In Melbourne, Kiss fans can buy "pole position" tickets for the GP show, providing close access to the front of the stage as well as general admission tickets.
After the Melbourne show, the band will head to Sydney and Brisbane before a New Zealand and European tour.
The third season of "Gene Simmons Family Jewels" will premiere on the A&E network tonight (Tuesday, March 11) with back-to-back episodes beginning at 10:00 p.m. ET/PT.
Paul will be featured in the Los Angeles Times' Calendar Section's 'My Favorite Weekend' which profiles celebrities and their ideal weekend activities.
Paul was interviewed and will be featured in an upcoming issue of Family Circle Magazine. Family Circle has a readership of nearly 4 million.
Paul will be the subject of h Magazine's upcoming ICON editorial profile in April. Past ICONS featured include some of the entertainment industry’s greatest performers.
They are SO looking forward to it! In the meantime, they have their own concerts at home with “Lick It Up”, “I Was Made For Lovin' You ” and “God of Thunder”. KISS make-up is stolen from mum’s drawer.
KISS is an “everyday task” at our house! – KISSology vol 1, 2 and 3!!!
Regards,
Anita Westby Rygh
http://www.p4.no/story.aspx?id=264665.
"It is not often that I get to see any shows when I travel for my GRAND FUNK gigs, unless we are on a festival bill with other bands of course. But this past Friday night was very different as I was able to see ACE FREHLEY and THE TUBES in concert at the same showroom in Michigan that GFR would play on Saturday night.
"I thought it would be a great double bill, as I knew THE TUBES from years ago, being on a bill with them in the early '80s with Michael Bolton oddly enough. I caught the last half of the show, and 'White Punks On Dope' is a fun song. Fee Waybill was quite entertaining in his 12 inch heels and crazy glam outfit. It is power pop with a crazy sense of humor. They ended the show with 'Talk To Ya Later'. Another strong hit from the band.
"But truthfully I was really there to see Ace like all the KISS fans in the crowd. I was aware that he was touring with a solid band, and that he was doing all the hits from his solo career and KISS. I had NOT seem him as a solo artist before so I was looking forward to the show. I was aware he wasn't feeling well that night as the sound man, Night Bob, is an old friend of mine. He said Ace was getting over a chest cold, but to be honest Ace didn't let it keep him down.
"As he sang later in the set 'Ace is back, I told you so!' After some high pitch feedback noise from his excellent looking Les Paul Custom signature model, Ace got down to business pleasing the crowd. I didn't take notes with the set list, but of course I enjoyed songs like 'Breakout' (dedicated to Eric Carr), 'Parasite', 'Strange Ways', 'Rip It Out', 'Rock Soldiers', and 'New York Groove'. He even did a bit of 'I Want You' in one of the songs."
Read the rest of Bruce's message at this location.
"Australia and New Zealand... you wanted the best and you're about to get it!
"On Saturday KISS wrapped up an exciting week of rehearsals for the Down Under leg of their KISS Alive 35 World Tour. The band rehearsed a wide range of classics from all periods, including 'KISS Alive!' in its entirety!
"KISS can't wait to rock the Australian and New Zealand KISS Armies again... It's been four years since their last Australian show, and over 12 years since their last New Zealand show."
Check out photos from the rehearsal sessions at this location.
Earlier this week, Paul and Gene lent their voices to next year's special episode of Nickelodeon's highly rated animated show, The Fairly OddParents. Can't release too many details yet, but their appearance in the episode is KISS related!
"Well, after nearly four months of not being able to schedule recording on 'BK3', I finally jumped back in. (Between traveling to Brazil, Mexico, Japan and all over the U.S. was hard to book!) So day one was well... it was like diving in a very deep pool. I didn't really sleep very well the night before. My brain was in over thinking mode! You know when you dream things like your cell phone won't work, or why am I missing my pants!? Frustration dreams. The biggest challenge for me with my solo discs are always vocals. So since almost ALL the guitars and bass are done, it was finally time to take that step."
Read more at this location.
What's going on with KISS?
I'm on my way to rehearsal in about an hour. We'll be playing in Australia and New Zealand next month, and then we're doing a really large tour of Europe. Stadiums in Stockholm and Helsinki sold out in 20 minutes.
A band I thought was a cool novelty act way back when has managed to make quite a go of it.
What can I say? Sometimes beauty is in the ear of the beholder.
Tell me about the art? Who knew you even painted?
I actually started about eight years ago. I was getting divorced, and sometimes you reach a point in traumatic situations like that where you can scream and bang your head against the wall or do something else. Someone suggested I should paint. I didn't know what I was going to do, but I knew I wasn't going to depict reality.
Given the personality of the band, I figured your paintings would be full of girls. But they're actually tame.
They're somewhere between abstract and abstract expressionism. As far as I'm concerned, there are no rules in art. The only boundaries are the edge of the canvas.
You've been around the world many times over. Who are some of your favorite artists?
It's humbling how many great artists there are who aren't famous. In the last century, Picasso embodied everything that art is. He saw art in everything. Then there's Mark Rothko and Jackson Pollock. Anybody who looks at a Pollock and says they can do that, I say try. The beauty of everything that's done well is that it appears easy.
Do you collect?
I've had pieces from time to time, but I've let a lot of great stuff slip through my hands. Andy Warhol wanted to do my portrait and I always said, 'I'll do it tomorrow.' Then Andy left this world. I had a great Miro, but my house isn't a museum.
With pieces selling for $14,000 and up, I imagine painting has been pretty lucrative for you.
$2 million last year. I guess it's pretty lucrative.
Why are you coming to Boston?
If you're going to spend that kind of money, it's a huge bonus to meet the artist. I've had some great times in Boston. I used to spend summers in Rockport when I was young, and I love the Orpheum. There were all those years we couldn't play Boston because of the fire marshal, but it's a great city. I'm looking forward to it.
Here's a quote from Dan Forcey, VP of Content Development, regarding the news:
The print book has been selling really well for us here at Platinum and we're very excited about it. There are several reasons why we're doing this.
First and foremost is that Gene, Paul and Scott (Scott Mitchell Rosenberg, CEO of Platinum Studios) are trend-setters and usually at the forefront of what is hot. (KISS was in comics back in the 70's, thirty years before a lot of rock stars like Fall Out Boy, My Chemical Romance and all the other bands "discovering" the comics medium right now.) Scott and Gene both see the world moving towards the digital distribution, like DD and websites like Wowio (hint, hint), and they want to be on the trailblazers like they always have been.(Remember when everyone said iTunes wouldn't work?)
Secondly, Gene and Paul plain love Adam's work and want HIM to be the vision that guides 4K from here on out. You guys may not know this, but Gene and Paul both insist on their approval over every printed page of KISS 4K, but they let Adam, and only Adam, do what he wants on the title here online. Actually, I'm kind of jealous of the guy sometimes because they give him more free reign than me. :-)
Anyway, it's not the end of the 4K in print, not by any means, (hinting again) it's just a new example of KISS being the guys that everyone else follows behind.
Here's a link to the webcomic: drunkduck.com/KISS_4K_the_webcomic/
Photos of Frehley's March 3, 2008 show at Metropolis in Montreal, Quebec, Canada can be found at MetalUniverse.net.
When he's not breathing fire, spitting fake blood or flicking his long red tongue about like a horny snake, Kiss band-leader Gene Simmons likes nothing better than to tell jokes.
Unsurprisingly, given Simmons' legendary ego, today's joke is about himself.
"You ready?" he asks from his home in Beverly Hills. "Okay. God is sitting on his throne, and there's a knock on the door. He says `Who is it?' The door opens and there's Gandhi. God asks him what he believes in. Gandhi says `World peace.' God says `OK, fine, c'mon over here and sit on my left hand side.'
"There's another knock at the door. This time it's Mother Teresa. God asks her what she believes in and she says `Feeding the poor.' God says `OK, fine, whatever, come over here and sit on my right hand side.' There's a third knock on the door. Again, God asks who it is and what they believe, to which I reply `I'm Gene Simmons, and I believe you're sitting in my goddam chair'!".
Simmons cracks up at his own punchline but the joke is intended to make a serious point. "Yes, it is. My point is that when it comes to riches and power, I'm jealous of God. I want it all!"
Simmons' voice is deep and oily and his accent a languid New York drawl. He's one of the funniest people I've ever talked to and perhaps the most obnoxious. He doesn't care who he offends.
"Hell, no. I'm too rich to care," he chuckles. "People give me a hard time for being a ruthless businessman but these are the kinds of people who cut my grass and take out my trash. I, meanwhile, am deliriously happy.
"Why? Because I get to be me. People say money can't buy you happiness but I have no time for such loser notions. I am happy and I'm hungrier for money now than I've ever been."
Simmons is smart, witty, driven, articulate and a jerk. He says what he thinks at all times and his pronouncements are unencumbered by wisdom or doubt. He's all for women's rights, so long as he retains the right to shag as many of them as possible.
He grew up poor, the son of a Hungarian concentration camp survivor, but is low on compassion for those less fortunate. He has made millions playing thunderously loud rock'n'roll, an occupation loaded with counter-cultural cache, yet he supports the war in Iraq and voted for George W Bush.
"I'll tell you where I stand politically. In terms of social issues, I'm very liberal. I support gay marriages and I think women should rule the world and get paid as much money as men. But in terms of fiscal issues, I'm very conservative. I'm against the welfare state and I support giving people jobs, not charity. In my view, if you're too lazy to work, you need a bitch slap from God.
"In terms of foreign policy, I'm conservative too. I don't buy the idea that if our troops leave the Middle East, the Taliban and al Qaeda would wake up the next day and say `You know what? I think we should turn over a new leaf and stop trying to blow up the world. Let's just stay here in the desert and read books.' If you think that's gonna happen, you're on crack. These people are nut jobs."
Now 58, Simmons was born Chaim Witz in Haifa, Israel, and moved to New York with his Hungarian mother, Florence Klein, when he was eight. His father had abandoned the family several years earlier and his mother worked two jobs to support herself and her only child. Simmons was "emotionally scarred" by childhood poverty, he says, and this gave him a burning desire to be rich.
In his late teens, while studying for a Bachelor of Education degree, Simmons played bass in a string of bands, ending up in Wicked Lester with Kiss co-founder Paul Stanley in the early 70s. The pair drafted in drummer Peter Criss and lead guitarist "Ace" Frehley soon after, and gave their first performance as Kiss in 1973.
They took to the stage wearing their trademark make-up: Demon (Simmons), Starchild (Stanley), Spaceman (Frehley), and Catman (Criss). In a splendid Spinal Tap moment, Simmons onceset fire to his own hair while attempting to breathe fire.
Over the next 18 months the band kept getting louder, flashier, more visually outrageous and eventually their unique mix of anthemic glam rock, comic book superhero outfits and schlock-horror theatrics paid off. By 1977, a Gallup poll proclaimed them the most popular band in America.
"It felt like we'd waded out into calm water then suddenly a tsunami had hit us," recalls Simmons. "We could kid ourselves that success came because we were so talented and attractive but there's such a thing as being in the right place at the right time, too."
The late 70s was a golden time for Kiss. Their live tours broke attendance records around the world, their Kiss Army fan-base became huge and their merchandising operation netted $US100 million between 1977 and 1979 alone.
But as the 70s faded into the 80s, the novelty began to wear off. Live tour attendances fell, album sales plummeted and tensions within the band became unbearable. Peter Criss left in 1979 and Frehley followed him a few years later. A second wave of popularity followed during the 80s and the band has now sold more than 100 million albums worldwide.
There have been sporadic reunions of the original members over the years, but Simmons and Stanley "own" the band, so other members have been regularly replaced. In 2000, Kiss announced the first in a seemingly endless series of "farewell" tours, yet they're still with us, taking the old jalopy for one more spin around the block.
"Well, you know, people still want to see us, so who are we to disappoint them?" Simmons says. After 35 years together, we're still having the time of our lives, so why stop? I love playing live! When I get up on stage, I feel like the god that I am. Not only powerful but also deeply attractive.
"You know, if you're a rock star, you can wake up each morning next to a girl whose name you never bothered to learn! If you're not a rock star, it's all `what sign are you, let's have dinner, I won't put out on the first date' and other such torture that girls will put you through. But if you're in a big band, you cut to the chase."
Simmons has never been married, but had long-term relationships with Cher and Diana Ross before taking up with his current partner, former Playboy model Shannon Tweed, 25 years ago. They have two children, Nicholas (18) and Sophie (15).
"Yes, I've been with Shannon for 25 years but I refuse to get married because I think it's a sham. For one thing, men are poorly designed for monogamy. We tend to be promiscuous. It's biological. Women manufacture one or two eggs a month, during which time the male of the species manufactures 10 billion sperm!
"This tells you that the Bible is correct and a man was designed to `spread thy seed'. So if I sleep with a lot of woman, just think of me as doing the Lord's work."
In which case, the Lord should be paying Simmons overtime. In his 2001 book Kiss and Make-up, Simmons claims to have had sex with 4600 women and just last week, a secretly filmed Simmons "sex tape" was posted on the net. In it, the long-tongued lothario gets busy with an Austrian model called Elsa while Foreigner's "I Wanna Know What Love Is" plays in the background.
Stifling a strong urge to ask the obvious question (why Foreigner?), I ask if Simmons' partner is happy about him sleeping with other women.
"No. But Shannon and I are not married and I do not answer to her. We care for each other, but I don't ask her permission to do anything. I am my own man, and I'm also delusional enough to think I'm right about everything. In fact, if I was a benevolent dictator, I think I could eradicate most of the world's problems very quickly. For instance, in my world, drug dealers would be put to death on the spot."
Simmons is anti-drugs and says he has never been drunk or high in his life not even smoked a cigarette.
"Murderers would be put to death, too. I'm sick of all this permissive society bullshit! If someone kills somebody, I don't want to hear how that person's father molested him or whatever. I want to hear that he's been shot.
"Death is a wonderful cure for violent lunatics. Please! I don't want to find out what made you violent; I want to kill you! If a mad dog starts biting people, shoot him, for God's sake. Don't waste my time telling me why he's mean."
We should perhaps feel grateful that Simmons is too busy to go into politics. Besides playing music, he's an actor, a publisher, a writer, a TV producer. His projects have included a short-lived men's mag called Gene Simmons' Tongue, a cartoon series, a cable TV dating show and the reality shows Rock School and Gene Simmons Family Jewels. He has made guest appearances in Miami Vice, Third Watch, Ugly Betty and Family Guy.
He is also a merchandising tycoon. Visit his www.genesimmons.com website and you can buy Kiss belt buckles, Kiss coffee tables, Kiss baby bibs, even a Kiss rubber duck for your bath.
"Our licensing and merchandising is a complete juggernaut and secretly the envy of every band. I mean, it's all very well being Radiohead or REM, but we have more imagination. How about 13m Kiss toothbrushes that sing "Rock'n'Roll All Night" inside your mouth when you brush your teeth? People have five senses, and I want Kiss to invade them all. Sure, I want you to come to a Kiss concert and see us and hear us, but then I want you to go home and eat Kiss cereal.
"Ideally, I want the air you breathe to be Kiss air, because then I can charge you for every gulp you take of that air."
Perhaps the most notorious piece of Kiss merchandising was a garish limited-edition coffin called the Kiss Kasket, so popular it has now sold out.
"Well, I think everything in life should be branded, including your coffin. Even so, I have no desire to be buried in a Kiss Kasket myself. Being under the ground has no appeal.
"I prefer flames. I'm a pyro kinda guy. I'd prefer to go up in smoke and afterwards they can put a tombstone somewhere saying `Gene Simmons: Thank You and Good Night'."
*Kiss, Ozzy Osbourne, Poison, Alice Cooper and many more perform at the two-day Rock2WGTN even over Easter weekend at Wellington's Westpac Stadium.
KISS Pole Position patrons will receive both a General Admission ticket, and a KISS Pole Position upgrade voucher from Ticketek.
KISS Pole Position patrons are advised to exchange the Pole Position upgrade voucher (with the KISS logo) for a KISS souvenir pass and lanyard as soon as they arrive at the circuit on Sunday, March 16 - in order to avoid any delay accessing the KISS concert, which is scheduled to start at 7pm sharp.
KISS souvenir pass and lanyard collection booths will be operational from 8.30am (as soon as gates open) in the KISS concert area (Circuit Map Grid Reference - R14), on Sunday, March 16, 2007 only.
Fans may enter the concert area any time from 8.30am.
Having worked with author Dayna Steele in the past, Simmons was the perfect choice to write the foreword to "Rock to the Top", saying, "Rock stars may know how to live it up, but to get to the level where KISS is, requires sacrifice and business savvy. Dayna has spent years learning and developing business practices that she's just giving away in this book."
A top female rock and roll on-air personality, Steele spent years traveling the globe and interviewing countless bands and rock stars like Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, Ozzy Osbourne, David Bowie, Steven Tyler, Bruce Springsteen, Sammy Hagar and Bono . . . to name just a few!
The great music and insights bestowed upon Steele by these rock legends were what helped her compose this symphony of lessons about the importance of passion, confidence, organization, networking, knowledge, the need for appreciation and the power of a brand.
Best known as Houston's "First Lady of Radio", Steele — since leaving the airwaves — has gone on to head up a successful marketing and public relations firm, a space-related e-commerce company and an online community for girls destined to be tomorrow's leaders, scientists, mathematicians and engineers.
"Rock to the Top" is as much a business book as it is a romp through backstage anecdotes with the likes of AEROSMITH, VAN HALEN and KISS. An added bonus are the photos peppered throughout the book featuring Jon Bon Jovi, Sting and more . . . all from the author's personal collection.
The recovering alcoholic and drug user - whose days with the legendary rockers exemplified the sex-drugs-and-rock 'n' roll cliche - says he has to keep such temptations at arm's length.
"This time around, I'm real serious about my sobriety," Frehley says in a recent phone interview from the 21st floor of the Seneca Niagara Casino in Niagara Falls, N.Y.
"I've surrounded myself with sober people, so it's really not that tough. It's very comfortable for me at this point, I just hope I can maintain it. I believe I can, but one day at a time, right?"
It's clear that keeping clean is top of mind for the genial Frehley, who launches into a description of life on the road by saying how nice it is "remembering what you did the night before," and by referring spontaneously to his "clean date" - Sept. 15, 2006 - and his 17 months of sobriety.
"But who's keeping track?" he cackles with laughter, one of several outbursts that seem to emerge at the slightest provocation.
Still, Frehley, speaking with a slow-paced gravel delivery, says he doesn't regret much from his storied past, crediting those rocky experiences with bringing him to where he is today.
Frehley's battles with addiction are said to have fuelled his split with KISS bandmates Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley in 1983, about three years after the departure of original drummer and party cohort Peter Criss.
While Simmons and Stanley committed to a drug-free lifestyle, Frehley indulged to excess, finding himself getting into trouble on a number of occasions, and dragging others down with him.
"I did some silly things in those days and (there were) a lot of car accidents and missed recording sessions and you know, this that and the other thing. I'm glad that all that mayhem and insanity is behind me," says Frehley, who once led police on a 145-kph car chase in 1982.
"I'm probably happier now than I have been in a long time, I should have done this a lot sooner."
Being on tour can be an especially hard test, and rebounding from a lapse in judgment is not easy. Frehley notes he fell off the wagon at a show with Tommy Lee two years ago and it took him the whole summer to get back on track.
"The road can drive you crazy," says Frehley, who took on the persona of the "Space Ace" while with KISS.
"If you're partying too much, that can wear you down, make silly decisions. I mean, look how many famous rock stars we've lost to drugs and alcohol."
With his addiction in check, Frehley says he's excited by the prospect of a career comeback, noting he's planning to release a solo album in April inspired by his self-titled debut in 1978, which spawned the hit "New York Groove."
The '80s saw Frehley release more pop-oriented solo material under the moniker Frehley's Comet, but it was that first disc that remains a favourite among fans. Frehley says he studied the old album for inspiration in crafting the new one, reportedly working again with friend and drummer Anton Fig, house drummer for "Late Show with David Letterman".
But those expecting a preview at his concerts won't get one, he says.
"It's not that I don't want to play a couple of the new songs but it's like, everytime I do a concert it ends up on YouTube the next day. Everybody's been waiting for this album for so many years, I really wanted it to be a surprise," he says, going on to attempt a description in his heavy Bronx accent.
"Most of my songs are pretty mindless. You know, there's a song called 'Pain in the Neck'...there's another song called 'Sister.' What are they about? I have no idea."
"I can't tell you how many times in the past people have come up to me and said, 'Wow, I really understand what you meant in that song,' and I have no idea what they're talking about."
"Usually, I just agree with them," he says, erupting into another cackle.
The 56-year-old guitar hero says he's all too aware that fans look up to him in more ways than one.
"I think a lot of people maybe partied a little harder than they normally would because they were fans of mine and they knew I was doing that," he says.
"I don't want to get up on a platform and tell people not to drink and use drugs, all I can do is say: 'Hey, you know, maybe by my example, maybe if you're thinking about turning your life around, I did it. Maybe you can do it."'
Frehley kicks of a string of Canadian dates Monday in Montreal, followed by stops in Quebec City and Toronto. Later dates include appearances in Winnipeg, Calgary, Edmonton and Vancouver.
His appearance will be open to the public and free of charge.
Paul Stanley’s Wentworth Gallery Appearances:
Friday - April 11, 2008 - 6-9 PM
Saturday – April 12, 2008 6-9 PM
Wentworth Gallery
South Park Mall
4400 Sharon Road
Charlotte, NC
VIP Reception – 5 -6 PM - Please call for details
RSVP: 704-365-2733 or 800-732-6140
His iconic image, with a Gibson Les Paul dangling from his shoulders and a look of interstellar ecstasy on his face, adorned the bedroom wall of every self-respecting rocker-in-waiting during that era.
As influential as his work has been, Frehley’s “Rocket Ride” hasn’t been particularly smooth. He battled substance abuse problems, fought with his headstrong bandmates, tried several times to quit Kiss, and finally did in the early ’80s.
Though he was clearly the most centered and consistent musician in Kiss, Frehley’s solo career — his 1978 debut effort released while still a member of Kiss notwithstanding — was hit and miss. He rejoined the group for its 1996 reunion tour, a sketchy “comeback” album, and a “farewell” tour, before calling it a day once again.
Now in his late 50s, Frehley is finally ready to offer a proper follow-up to that 1978 album, and he’s got a hot new band backing him on a tour leading up to the new album’s spring release. Frehley sold out the intimate Bear’s Den in something like three minutes, and a second show’s tickets, placed on sale shortly thereafter, were snatched up equally rapidly.
Frehley and his virile band — rhythm guitarist, bassist and drummer, all of whom could sing well and did, often — avoided any music from the forthcoming record, instead focusing on material from throughout Frehley’s storied career with Kiss, a healthy dose of that nigh-on-flawless debut solo album, and a few of the best songs from his ’80s solo nods “Frehley’s Comet,” “Second Sighting” and “Trouble Walk-in’.”
The crowd, not surprisingly, went completely nuts throughout.
“This is pretty cool,” cackled Frehley in his still-thick Bronx accent, at one point. “I feel like I’m gettin’ to know all of you guys.”
The set list was every Frehley and Kiss fan’s dream. It commenced with “Rip It Out” from the first solo album, segued directly into “Hard Times” from Kiss’ “Dynasty” effort, and proceeded at rapid clip through some absolute classics, among them “Parasite,” “Snowblind,” “Into the Void,” “Torpedo Girl,” “Strangeways” and “Rock Soldiers.”
The highlight, though, was a pair of tunes found in the career- defining 1978 live disc “Kiss Alive II.” The first, “Shock Me,” became Frehley’s signature song and a showcase for his pyrotechnically vibrant guitar solo, replete with smoking guitar, during the band’s concerts.
Hot on the heels of “Shock Me,” “Rocket Ride,” the “Alive II” song that gives this current Frehley tour its name, was simply overwhelming. Heavy arena rock simply gets no better than this. Though the Bear’s Den is small, Frehley and company gave an arena-worthy performance, and they played at an arena-level volume.
Throughout the show, Frehley seemed relaxed, with it, healthy, happy. He’s back and ready to begin again.
The interview is now available for download at this location.
His appearance will be open to the public and free of charge.
Paul Stanley’s Wentworth Gallery Appearances
Friday – April 25, 2008 6-9 PM
Saturday – April 26, 2008 6-9 PM
Wentworth Gallery
Wentworth Gallery – Mall at Chestnut Hill
199 Boylston St # 44
Chestnut Hill, MA
*VIP Reception – 5 - 6 p.m. (Call for details)
RSVP: 617-630-9134
He's also turned his penchant for promotion, which fueled the band's fire-breathing success in the 1970s, into a second act: marketing. Clients include the Indy Racing League, for which Simmons crafted the slogan "I am Indy."
Then there's the Gene brand: His A&E reality show, "Gene Simmons: Family Jewels," is currently taping its third season. All those commitments keep Simmons on the road for almost half the year, and that's when the band isn't touring. We caught up with the rocker in New York City to talk travel.
Days on the road
About 180. We may tour next year, and that'll take ten months. But I go to all the IndyCar races and travel anywhere that includes the TV show.
Favorite way to fly
Overseas airlines. They treat you like a king. Singapore Airlines is just terrific.
Full service
At LAX, two blocks away from the airport, there's this secret thing. I drive up to a place, a guy gets in, I drive to United or American or wherever, and he takes the car. No parking, no torture. When I land, I make the phone call. Car drives up, I get in and drive off. It's called Airport Valet. It's my favorite thing.
Highs or lows
I like a clean bed and a clean bathroom. The rest of the accouterments I don't really care about. I've stayed at Motel 6, and they do a good job for the price. I used to like the Plaza Hotel in New York, and they seemed to like me because every time I went they gave me a suite and a butler. But I could go to Holiday Inn, and there'd be a party, and you'd have the time of your life. I'm what it's about.
Sweet spot
I still like the Carnegie Deli in New York, showing up at 2 A.M. and doing sinful things like having a hot pastrami sandwich, lean, extra mustard, pickle. Of course, you have nightmares from hell, but that's the price.
Best tool
I don't carry my computer, ever. Every hotel has them. And I refuse to get a CrackBerry. I talk on the phone. People want access to me, and it makes the deals go down faster. I have a two- or three-year-old Razr. Terrific reception.
Celebrity perks
Chicks. And access. Celebrity gets the door open. You can't create business, but celebrity gives you access to people because they're curious about you.
Video: Watch a Clip of Gene here.
At his lowest point a few years back, Ace Frehley took a good long look at his options: He could either be a living rock icon, or a dead one.
He had flirted with the second one far too long as the lead guitarist for Kiss. It was time to give the other one a try.
Bottoming out after yet another Kiss ‘farewell’ tour in 2001/2002, Frehley decided his life – and legacy – was too good to waste. He’s a founding member of one of the biggest rock bands in history – what more reason do you need to get out of bed?
“By all rights, I shouldn’t even be alive,” says the man who cranked out Kiss classics like “Shock Me” and “Cold Gin.”
“I get up in the morning and thank God I’m alive. I’m just thrilled to be able to have another chance to get up there and play rock and roll at this stage of the game. I’m not a kid, you know. I’m 56-years-old.”
The last piece of the Kiss puzzle in the early ‘70s (Frehley joined after answering an ad in the Village Voice), he’s often embraced by fans as the band’s backbone. While co-founders Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley had the merchandising and showmanship down cold, and drummer Peter Criss was the quiet anchor, Frehley delivered some of the band’s best songs and blistering solos.
Even rock snobs who hated Kiss in the ‘70s gave Frehley his due.
But as Kiss grew bigger, so did Frehley’s frustration and alcohol/drug abuse. By 1980, Kiss had become a watered-down cartoon, and he bailed after 1982’s “Creatures of the Night.”
A solo band, Frehley’s Comet, kept him busy in the ‘80s and ‘90s until Kiss came calling again in 1996. A reunion tour with all four original members was the biggest road show of the year, leading to another tour in 1998. And another in 2001.
It was too much. By this point, old grudges had resurfaced, Criss had left again, and Frehley closed the Kiss chapter of his life.
Last Halloween, he opened another chapter with a stellar solo show at New York’s Hard Rock Cafe – his first time on stage in five years. It went so well, the Frehley show is back on the road, including two shows at the Seneca Niagara Casino Feb. 29 and March 1.
Of the four, the best-selling album and arguably the most beloved among the Kiss Army was by lead guitarist Ace Frehley.
A few years later, Frehley would leave Kiss to pursue a solo career.
Though albums such as 1987's Frehley's Comet and 1989's Trouble Walkin' were well-received by fans and many critics, Frehley's solo career never seemed to fulfill the promise of his debut.
It's been nearly 20 years since his last solo album and in that time Frehley rejoined Kiss for a successful and lucrative reunion tour that ended on less-than-friendly terms in 2002.
Now, Frehley and his guitar will be heard once again on laser-embedded plastic (or digitally compressed and encoded files, if you prefer) and on stages around the country touring with a new band and a new purpose. The show stops at the House of Blues Cleveland tonight.
''I've been working on the record all summer and I just started getting cabin fever, so I decided to put a band together and we played a show on Halloween at the Hard Rock Cafe in New York City for my buddy (longtime NYC radio disc jockey) Eddie Trunk,'' Frehley said from Atlanta, where he was preparing to perform a sold-out show that night. ''And I had so much fun doing that, that I hired a new agent and said, 'book me a tour.'
''It's as simple as that. No master plan, just go out and play.''
As for the Bronx-born-and-bred Frehley's near 20-year break from the studio, ''Wow, I didn't realize it had been that long,'' he said, laughing heartily.
''I was all ready and set up to track a record when I was offered the Kiss reunion. I got back with Kiss and that kind of derailed me from 1996 to 2001 and it took me a while to get my wits back.''
Frehley said he plans to have the album, Pain in the Neck, ready for a spring release but is still putting the finishing touches on it, including some scheduled six-string contributions from buddy/acolyte Slash.
Though most of the tunes were written in the past several years, Frehley also looked to his own past for guidance.
''I've been listening to my first solo album with Kiss, because everybody says that's their favorite record. I was trying to figure out what made it so special, so I'm trying to incorporate a lot of what that record had for this new CD.
''It has a lot of different aspects and shows different musical sides of me and it's something I'm trying to recapture. I don't know if I can do it but I'm gonna take a shot at it.''
Among the sounds fans can look forward to on the album are the title track and Hard for Me, which Frehley said were two of the heavier tunes; the slower Kashmir-like Genghis Khan; and a ''catchy tune that's maybe geared towards commerciality'' called Below the Angels.
But tonight, fans won't hear any of the new songs. Although Frehley doesn't spend much time perusing the Internet, he does know that any new song he performs is likely to wind up on YouTube a few hours later. But he wants the record to be ''a nice surprise for people who have been waiting so long.''
What this means for fans is that the set list is packed with all their favorite Frehley tunes and a few Kiss tunes.
But more importantly for Frehley, the tour is about having fun and dispelling recent Internet rumors of Frehley's drug-related suicide and some of the unkind parting shots delivered by reunited Kiss band mates suggesting he had fallen back into old habits.
''The record to me is secondary to the fact that I needed to come back and let everybody know I'm alive and well,'' he said. ''Some of my old band mates kind of dragged my name through the mud a little, so I figured that it was time for me to re-emerge and let everybody know I'm not dead.''
And while his old band mates will be piling on the makeup and the platforms and touring Europe this summer with guitarist Tommy Thayer in Frehley's classic Space Ace garb and makeup, Frehley remains polite about the current Kiss lineup.
''Tommy Thayer used to be my tour manager. He's a sweet guy and a good guitar player and he used to play in a Kiss cover band years ago,'' Frehley said, pausing for maximum comic effect.
''And today he still does,'' he added with a hearty guffaw.
''I don't really approve of it, I don't really think it's the right thing to do, but you have to call Gene (Simmons, Kiss bass player/singer) about it,'' he said, politely dismissing the subject.
As with many successful rock musicians from the 1970s, Frehley has good but fuzzy memories of Cleveland. ''Yeah! Cleveland's a rock 'n' roll town. I remember getting caught in a blizzard at Swingos . . . it had round beds. How can you forget that. Being stuck in a snowstorm with round beds. That was crazy,'' he said.
Frehley said he won't have time to go to the rock hall, although he said he thinks he's been there. Besides, those kinds of accolades don't mean much to him.
''Someone asked me 'Do you think about the fact that you influenced four generations of guitar players?' And I go 'I didn't know I was that old.' But it's something I don't think about. You know I do what I do and if somebody likes it that's great; it's a plus.
''But I'm the luckiest guy in the world. I'll go out onstage tonight and I'll play. It's what I love to do and I get paid for it.
''Who's got it better than me?''
Thanks so much to Mr. Simmons, his family and everyone who helped make Barrett’s only dream a reality. It is a memory he will cherish forever.
Be sure to check out the new season of Gene Simmons Family Jewels on A & E TV. It’s a really fun show to watch…but be warned, you’ll get hooked!
If you’d like to check out the video for yourself, please go to: Here!.
You will be able to choose different videos from a list on the right side of the page. Click the one featuring Kids Wish Network. Let us know what you think!
Stanley, 56, is having a penthouse suite built atop Palms Place near suites owned by pop singer Jessica Simpson and pro wrestling icon Hulk Hogan.
Stanley has been out front as a fundraiser and supporter for AboutFace, an organization that helps raise awareness for individuals with facial differences. He was born with Microtia, a congenital deformity of the pinna (outer ear).
Audio of Paul Stanley singing in Toronto production of "The Phantom of the Opera": here.
The Indianapolis KISS Fan Expo will also feature KISS drummer Eric Singer! The Expo will be held Sunday March 2nd from 1:00PM to 8:00PM (12:00PM for VIP holders) at the Holiday Inn Indianapolis East 6990 East 21st St. Indianapolis, IN 46219.
KISSONLINE will be attending the Expo and selling exclusive KOL merchandise!
You can listen to the show live via the Internet at www.chom.com.
In a recent interview with DelmarvaNow.com Ace stated about his current solo tour, "Everyone in my new band is starting to lock in together and we all get along great on and off the stage. Things are good. Sobriety helps. It's much easier for me to tour now that I'm not waking up with a hangover every day.
"There's an old saying, 'The more you do, the more you can do.' I just think it's important that I get out there and show everyone that I'm trying to make a comeback."
Regarding why he's not playing new songs on the current tour, he said, "I'm going to wait until after the album comes out because I don't want everything on YouTube. I don't think we'll really be able to add more than three new songs to the set anyway. Everybody wants to hear certain songs from certain records. It's hard figuring out what to drop."
Fan-filmed video footage of Frehley's February 22, 2008 concert at the Center Stage in Atlanta, georgia can be viewed Here: (courtesy of "DaveJr64") 1, 2 and 3
Want to see the latest KISS designs? Want to share the latest in KISS with friends and the rest of the Army? Then get the widget and post it on your MySpace, KISS blog, KISS tribute site and more!
Buy merch from Kiss at www.zazzle.com/kissmerch
Almost all the garbage seems to have diminished or disappeared re a video from my past.
Once again, I can't tell you how much I appreciate your overwhelming show of support for Shannon, Soph and Nick.
You should know for the record, the garbage was recorded without my knowledge and is a page from my past. It happened and there's nothing I can do to repair that. The black and white footage may have been decades old. The entity behind the garbage has repeatedly tried to make money off of this and we have always refused. This is not the first time the entity has tried to blackmail and extort us. We have always refused and we will continue to refuse. I'm told the legal team has been tracking down the parties involved and they will be dealt with appropriately.
Most importantly, the love I have for Shannon, Soph and Nick I hope is evident in our relationship. Yes. We have a tv show, but the people in the show are real and the love you see between us is real.
Simmons and Stanley had big plans, based on their desire to take the whole glam thing to its logical pinnacle – over-the-top theater-rock. They needed a killer guitarist, a picker with both flash and taste, to complete the picture.
Guitarist Bob Kulick, who’d just finished his audition for Simmons and Stanley ahead of Frehley, was still in the room, tearing down his equipment. Frehley, apparently, was noodling away on his axe incessantly, to the point where his two potential employers were ready to toss him out of the joint.
They let him stick around, though, and when Frehley improvised a killer solo on the fledgling Simmons tune “Deuce,” well, weird or not, the guitarist had clinched the deal. He’d stumble out of the loft a member of KISS, the group that would within a few short years become the biggest band on the planet.
Both the spaced-out attitude Frehley exuded that day, and the also-ran guitarist Kulick, would play a big part in the unfolding of Frehley’s career.
Today, Frehley, a founding member of KISS and one of the most influential rock guitarists of the post-Hendrix age, is at the beginning once again.
“I feel like this new album is really the follow-up to my first solo record,” he says, speaking by phone from his publicist’s office, prior to hitting the road for his first full-fledged solo tour in more than a decade. He’ll perfrom two sold-out shows Friday and Saturday in the Bear’s Den at the Seneca Niagara Casino, Niagara Falls.
“The stuff in between” – several solo efforts in the ’80s, beneath the Frehley’s Comet moniker – “that was all overproduced and a little too pop-oriented. I listened to the wrong people, I guess. I have a tendency to do that!”
Here, Frehley erupts in his trademark cackle, something he does often during our conversation. His thick New York accent and self-deprecating wit combine to endearing effect.
It’s a personality that has gotten Frehley into trouble over the years, as much as it has simultaneously made him the most centered member of KISS, musically speaking. When the band first hatched the plan to assume alter egos and don character-specific makeup, Frehley’s choice seemed a no-brainer – he was the “Space Ace,” an ethereal being who stumbled elegantly across the stage, looking like the only thing keeping him tethered to an earthly plain was the Gibson Les Paul hanging off his hips.
Frehley appeared heavy-lidded, vaporous, mildly disinterested and eminently cool. Trouble was, this didn’t happen to be an act. By the time KISS had become a mega-platinum sensation, the Space Ace had developed some serious substance abuse problems, ones that on occasion made him a no-show during recording sessions and a thorn in the others’ side on the road. In fact, when KISS made what has proved to be their most enduring studio album, the 1976 tour de force “Destroyer,” Frehley was so immersed in his alcohol and drug habit that he missed several recording sessions. Enter his former audition competition Kulick, who played several uncredited solos on the album. All of this stung Frehley, and planted the seeds of the band’s dissolution.
Simmons and Stanley, KISS’ self-crowned kings, have always been adamantly anti-drug, clean and sober types. Frehley teamed with drummer Peter Criss to form a sort of kabuki-makeup toxic twins, Mick and Keith in garrish attire. The troubles in the band intensified as it became ever more successful.
“There’s a lot of love there,” sighs Frehley, recalling the group he first left in 1982, rejoined in 1996, and parted ways with once again in 2002. “But it’s a dysfunctional kinda love. It always seems to fall apart after a while. Like a bad marriage.”
Beginning of the end
When KISS took the decision, at the height of its initial popularity in 1978, to simultaneously release four solo albums from its members, the idea was to present a unified front to the public, as if to cover up the fact that the band was crumbling from within. Frehley surprised everyone by making the strongest album of the four, and claiming the only top 40 hit, with his spacey version of funk-inflected “New York Groove.”
“That felt good,” he says today. “I’d always felt pushed to the sidelines by Gene and Paul, because they wrote most of the tunes. But I knew I had it in me, and that record proved the point, I guess.”
With his longtime friend (and now “Late Show with David Letterman” house-band drummer) Anton Fig, Frehley tracked many of the songs he’d failed to place on KISS albums, layering guitars and his Joey Ramone-esque vocal stylings into an otherworldy hard-rock melange. Thirty years later, the album still sounds fresh, exciting and compellingly strange.
“That’s exactly the vibe we’ve gone for on this new record,” Frehley says, referring to the album he and Fig have finished tracking and plan to release in the early spring. “I’d gotten away from the raw thing I do best. I think anyone who liked that first solo album will really like this one too. It’s really the album that should’ve come out right after that one, 30 years later.”
Present-day recording technology is such that Frehley will work on final mixes for his album from his laptop computer while on the road, but he won’t be playing these new songs at the Bear’s Den, or anywhere else, prior to the album’s official release.
“Nah, not with YouTube the way it is now,” he laughs. “I’ll play a new song one night, and it will be all over the Internet the next day. I just don’t want people to hear these songs until I actually release them.”
Kissed off
Fans last saw Frehley on stage when KISS reformed in 1996 for a reunion tour featuring all the original members. On that tour, Frehley’s playing was strong, inspired even. By the time the band hit the road again, to promote its first album with all four original members in nearly 20 years, the flame seemed to be waning a bit.
“It is what it is,” says Frehley when asked about that reunion album, the mixed bag that is “Psycho Circus.”
“That’s really all I can say about it.” Understandable, considering the fact that “Psycho Circus” is a KISS album in name only – much of it is a collection of leftovers from previous non-Frehley albums, and all four members play together on only a few of the songs. All of this, one supposes, contributed to Frehley’s decision to leave the band once and for all, following its 2002 tour dates.
By that point, Frehley had fallen back into old, familiar and destructive habits.
“Yeah, I was making the same mistakes all over again,” he says.
“I’ve been clean and sober for a little over a year now, though. It’s not that it’s easy. Some days I feel like I can take on the world. Some days I wake up and I’m lucky if I can find my own ass with both hands. It’s one day at a time, y’- know. But I’m looking forward to hitting the road and playing music with my friends, with a clear head.”
"It was a quiet household," Simmons said. "I come from a broken home. My father left us when I was 6 or 7 years old, and my mother worked from sun up until sundown, so there was never any music at home."
Instead, he discovered rock 'n' roll music "naturally" by listening to the radio. Simmons said the early rock he listened to "crawled into my blood."
Born Chaim Witz in Haifa, Israel, in 1949, Simmons was the only child of his mother, Florence Klein, a holocaust survivor. Simmons and his mother immigrated to the United States when he was 8 years old. They settled in Queens, N.Y., and Chaim adopted a more American-sounding name: Eugene.
Simmons attended Richmond College in New York and graduated with a degree in education. After college he had a number of positions: He was a sixth-grade teacher in New York's Spanish Harlem, an assistant to the editor-in-chief of Glamour magazine, and a deli cashier.
In 1973, Simmons settled on his real passion. Along with his friends Peter, Paul and Ace, he formed the band Kiss.
The idea behind the band was that they would "take no prisoners." While Simmons admits that "we didn't quite know what that meant," the group took on a bold bravado onstage that made it famous.
"At the beginning, this was a four-headed beast called 'Kiss' that had the balls to get up onstage and grab the world by the scruff of its neck and proclaim. 'You wanted the best, you got the best, the hottest band in the world,'" Simmons said. "The rally cry, the manifesto, is 'Rock and Roll All Night and Party Every Day' … it's a feel-good manifesto of a party."
Simmons' onstage character is known as "the Demon," which came from the documentary "Man of a Thousand Faces," about Lon Chaney, a silent film legend.
Simmons resides in Beverly Hills, Calif., with his partner of 24 years, Shannon Tweed, and their two children. These days, the Simmons family is featured in its own A&E reality show, "Gene Simmons: Family Jewels," now in its third season.
Watch a Clip of Gene on Nightline Here.
The letter, sent to Valleywag.com, reads, in part, "The video in question was surreptitiously filmed without Mr. Simmons' knowledge by a woman named Traci Anna Koval.
"To the the extent that Ms. Koval ever claimed to have any interest in the video, which is both disputed and inconceivable, given its surreptitious filming, such rights were acquired by our client Allied Industry in 2003, pursuant to a written assignment and release agreement in which Ms. Koval assigned all of her interest in the video to Allied Industry, including the copyright, represented and warranted that no additional copies would be exploited or distributed and expressly consented to injunctive relief."
The video, which surfaced on Tuesday, shows Simmons in bed with a woman identified as a spokesmodel for Frank's Energy Drink. Simmons reportedly endorses the drink.
Photos on the site promoting the sex video show the couple going at it in several positions, with Simmons keeping his shirt on (and his pants around his ankles) and the woman wearing lingerie.
Simmons and longtime love, former Playboy model Shannon Tweed, have been a couple for over 20 years and have two children, 19-year-old Nicholas and 15-year-old Sophie.
You can read the full cease-and-desist letter here.
The KISS frontman and a blonde woman reportedly appear together in a grainy sex tape that can be seen on GenesSecret.com, which revealed the video on Thursday, Feb. 20.
Some sources identify the woman as Elsa, an Austrian spokesmodel for an energy drink. In the video, a person who looks like Simmons is seen in various sexual activities with the blonde without ever removing his t-shirt.
Simmons, 58, has a longtime relationship with partner Shannon Tweed, a former Playboy Playmate. They have two children together: Nicolas, 18, and Sophie, 15. The foursome have been featured on the reality series "Gene Simmons' Family Jewels."
The same day the video surfaced, Simmons posted on his personal website the following statement: "Hi everyone, You may have heard or seen garbage that has sprung up from my past. Rest assured the proper legal team is looking at all ramifications and options. And us? Shannon, Nick and Soph are happy and healthy. All is well. And thank you all for the kind words of support."
The video is available to those over 18 (of course) and for the cost of $9.95 for a one-day trial. GenesSecret.com declares, "This isn't Shannon ... This is Gene giving you his best on screen performance yet! Find out all the benefits of being the spokesperson for a the latest energy drink, Frank's Energy."
Simmons last appeared on and was subsequently fired from the celebrity edition of "The Apprentice." The next season of "Gene Simmons' Family Jewels" premieres on A&E on Tuesday, March 11 at 10 p.m. ET.
RockConfidential.com: What did you think when you first heard about the Gene Simmons sex tape being out on the ‘Net?
Taylor: I was shocked by the news of this sex tape, and was very skeptical about it when you contacted me. I, like many others, Googled it when I got home to find out what this was all about. I was surprised by what I saw.
RockConfidential.com: Do you think Gene knew he was being recorded? In your opinion, would he be so bold to do something like that?
Taylor: When I first heard about it, I did think for a minute that Gene probably had something to do with it, but after viewing the sex tape and taking some things into consideration I now believe that he did not know that he was being filmed. Firstly, I honestly don't think it's Gene's style to let the world see his dick and to see him fuck this horrid slut. (I'm calling her that because it is outrageous to film someone without his or her consent and then try to prosper by the release of such a tape. Hideous!!!) He really does care about his family at home, he loves his kids. As much of a businessman Gene is, I don't think he would go this far to get some hype for the new season of "Family Jewels". The show is one of the top rated shows on TV without the help of such a tape. Secondly, you can see that the recording was done on a low-quality hidden cam. One would think if he set it up that the quality would be a little better, at least on a camcorder, not a web cam.
RockConfidential.com: Does any part of you think this may just be hype to push the new season of "Family Jewels" and Frank's Energy Drink? Would Gene go this far to promote his projects?
Taylor: I don't think Gene would go this far, however, I do think the young lady in question would go this far to get publicity and who is to say she didn't have a deal with Frank's Energy Drink to set this up. In this TMZ world we now live in, anything is possible. In my honest opinion, I really don't think would set this up. He doesn't need to do something so tacky to promote himself. He is in demand everywhere he goes, all the time; he doesn't have to stoop to these levels for publicity.
RockConfidential.com: You've been around Gene a lot the past few years. How much of the womanizing is a put on and how much is real?
Taylor: In the past few years, I would say more than a few. I've been friends with Gene over several years and I have seen him in action. Girls flock to him, throw themselves at him. How far he takes that, well, that is for him to know and for us to wonder.
Read the entire interview at RockConfidential.com.
"And us? Shannon, Nick and Soph are happy and healthy. All is well.
"And thank you all for the kind words of support."
Rockpages.gr: What was your first reaction when KISS approached you to produce one of the most bizarre musical combinations: rock 'n' roll and classical music?
Mark Opitz: Australian promoter Michael Gudinski recommended me to KISS. My reaction was not one of the bizarre but of the size and scope of the project. The actual audio recording alone required three tracks and a team of 12 engineers plus crew. The video side added at least another 40. The mix of rock and classical is not a new concept so that part didn't concern me as much as making sure we captured every note.
Rockpages.gr: Did you have the chance to spend time with KISS? If yes, what do you remember from them and how you would characterize each one of them?
Mark Opitz: We did spend a lot of time with KISS. After the recording of the event, we spent a week with them reviewing the material and fixing some technical errors. During that time there was a lot of one-on-one and I am sure a mutual respect developed. After that we flew to L.A. for two months to put the whole thing together for the DVD, CD, TV etc. During this time it was Gene [Simmons] and Paul [Stanley] who we would see maybe once a day for lunch and chat at the studio. We did spend time in Paul's home for a quiet dinner with him and his lovely lady. Paul is the main music guy and Gene is the big-picture guy in the relationship. Of course, there is also the manager Doc McGhee. I found Peter [Criss] to be a really nice guy who was just really happy to be there and taking part. Tommy Thayer is the ultimate professional and very easy to work with. Overall there is a much focused feeling about them all.
Read the entire interview at Rockpages.gr.
The site's video still show a man who appears to be Simmons - bassist for the rock band KISS and star of the reality TV show "Gene Simmons' Family Jewels" - having sex with a woman identified as an Austrian babe named "Elsa," a spokesmodel for Frank's Energy Drink. Simmons reportedly endorses the drink.
Photos on the site promoting the sex video show the couple going at it in several positions, with Simmons keeping his shirt on and Elsa wearing lingerie.
The video is available for a $9.95 one-day trial; a monthly subscription costs $29.95.
Additional content on the site, none of which features Simmons, is provided exclusively by Webmaster Central . A Webmaster Central spokesperson said the company was not connected to the sex video and only provided additional content for the site.
GenesSecret.com is an offshore site operated in Panama. The site's owner has not been identified.
Simmons made a name for himself in the flashy, makeup-covered band KISS, not only for his musical talents, but also for his long tongue and sexual conquests. Simmons claims to have slept with more than 4,600 women.
Simmons' popularity soared again with the hit reality TV show "Gene Simmons' Family Jewels," which airs on the cable channel A&E and documents the rocker's business exploits and interactions with his son Nick, daughter Sophie and longtime live-in girlfriend and former Playboy Playmate Shannon Tweed.
Simmons was a presenter at the 2007 AVN Adult Movie Awards in Las Vegas, and also received a special Golden Tongue award for his physical attributes.
You can check out Bruce's Hollywood '08 Rock 'n' Roll Fantasy Camp blog by clicking here.
Shedding their regular garb, whether it be business suits, scrubs or uniforms, and dawning ripped jeans, rock t-shirts and leather jackets, ordinary people have found the rock star buried deep in each of them at Rock 'n' Roll Fantasy Camps passed. Taking the Guitar Hero thrill to an entirely new level, Rock 'n' Roll Fantasy Camp creates a rock star experience like no other, making it a reality for those who have only dreamed about it. From the second campers wake up to the second they go to bed, they aren't just dreaming a dream but they're living the life of their rock idols.
"Rock 'n' Roll Fantasy Camp was, as billed, a life-changing experience. To say that it was perfect would be an understatement," said past camper Jonathan Weiswasser. "What drew me the most was the ability to play with Bill Wyman and Jack Bruce, but I left with the fondest memories of jamming with Jon Lord, and getting to know the other counselors so well. Words really do not do it justice. The experience was nothing short of brilliant."
The Hollywood camp was held at a major rock and roll studio, and culminated in a live concert at L.A.'s legendary House of Blues on the Sunset Strip. Highlights include playing and writing an original song, performing live on stage to a sold-out audience, a souvenir DVD for each camper of their own jam at the final night, daily jam sessions with the stars, master classes in drums, bass, guitar, songwriting, etc. and much more.
May
28 Hartwell Arena - Helsinki, Finland
30 Stockholm Stadium - Stockholm, Sweden
31 Valhall Oslo - Norway
JUNE
1 Koengen - Bergen, Norway
3 Forum - Copenhagen, Denmark
Tickets for these shows go on sale on February 22, except the Helsinki show which goes on sale February 26.
Eric Bloom (BLUE ÖYSTER CULT)
Brian Robertson (MOTÖRHEAD, THIN LIZZY)
Tony Franklin (THE FIRM)
Doane Perry (JETHRO TULL)
Pat Travers
Joe Lynn Turner (RAINBOW)
Jeff "Skunk" Baxter (THE DOOBIE BROTHERS)
Jack Russell (GREAT WHITE)
Bruce Kulick (KISS)
Manny Charlton (NAZARETH)
Rick Derringer
Steve Lukather (TOTO)
Albert Lee
Dweezil Zappa
Rick Wakeman (YES)
John Wetton (KING CRIMSON)
Geoff Downes (ASIA, YES)
Steve Morse (DEEP PURPLE)
Keith Emerson (ELP)
Billy Sherwood
Tony Kaye
Alan White (Yes)
Paul Di'Anno (IRON MAIDEN)
Taime Downe (FASTER PUSSYCAT)
Jani Lane (WARRANT)
Joe Leste (BANG TANGO, BEAUTIFUL CREATURES)
John Corabi (MÖTLEY CRÜE, UNION)
Marq Torien (BULLETBOYS)
Kelly Hansen (FOREIGNER)
Bruce Kulick plays guitar on "Dazed and Confused". Also his brother Bob Kulick plays guitar on this track, along with Jack Russell from GREAT WHITE on vocals, Tony Franklin from THE FIRM on bass, and Doane Perry from JETHRO TULL on drums. Bob Kulick produced three of the songs on this collection and plays 12-string electric guitar on the song "Babe I'm Gonna Leave You".
"LedBox - The Ultimate Led Zeppelin Tribute" track listing:
Disc 1:
01. Good Times, Bad Times
02. Houses Of The Holy
03. Babe I'm Gonna Leave You
04. When The Levee Breaks
05. Dazed and Confused
06. Whole Lotta Love
07. You Shook Me
08. Immigrant Song
09. Ramble On
10. Rock And Roll
11. D'yer Mak'er
12. Stairway To Heaven
Disc 2:
01. Fool In The Rain
02. Dancing Days
03. Heartbreaker
04. Black Dog
05. All My Love
06. Kashmir
07. Misty Mountain Hop
08. The Ocean
09. Houses Of The Holy
10. The Rover
11. Dancing Days
12. Nobody's Fault But Mine
13. Stairway To Heaven
Frehley can be seen in a hilarious Dunkin' Donuts television commercial in which he shoots fireworks from his guitar in an office board room full of corporate executives.
"That was a one-time-only thing," said Frehley, who called the Beachcomber from his home in upstate New York. "I'm not promoting KISS these days, I'm promoting Ace Frehley."
He'll perform Wednesday at Rams Head Live in Baltimore. "Everyone in my new band is starting to lock in together and we all get along great on and off the stage. Things are good," Frehley said. "Sobriety helps. It's much easier for me to tour now that I'm not waking up with a hangover every day.
"There's an old saying, 'The more you do, the more you can do.' I just think it's important that I get out there and show everyone that I'm trying to make a comeback."
A forthcoming solo album by Frehley is in the mixing stages and may be released in April or May. Don't expect to hear new songs such as "Fractured Quantum," "Hard For Me" or "Pain In the Neck" in Baltimore, though. "I'm going to wait until after the album comes out because I don't want everything on YouTube," Frehley said. "I don't think we'll really be able to add more than three new songs to the set anyway. Everybody wants to hear certain songs from certain records. It's hard figuring out what to drop."
The album was tracked at Frehley's estate. "I've been recording late at night. The only down side to having a studio at home is that my family is nearby, so it always seems like there's some kind of crisis going on," he said. "When I do record at someone else's studio I can get away from it all and concentrate on the music."
His former home in Connecticut included an underground studio where KISS recorded its 1981 album, "Music From the Elder." "I don't know why I built it underground," Frehley said. "I would always choose the unorthodox way of doing things back then."
Frehley co-founded KISS in 1973 and designed the band's famous lightning bolt logo. Hated by critics but loved by metalheads, the theatrical quartet was named the most popular band in America in a 1977 Gallup poll. Frehley quit KISS as its career went through a rough patch in 1983.
The original KISS lineup reunited and put its makeup back on for a 1996 road outing which was named the No. 1 grossing tour of that year by Billboard. Frehley and drummer Peter Criss eventually left again; this time, however, band leaders Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley slapped their makeup on newcomers. Frehley was replaced by Tommy Thayer.
"Tommy's a sweet guy; he used to be my road manager," said Frehley, who laughed and added, "Tommy used to be in a KISS tribute band -- and he still is!
"Tommy is a friend; if someone is going to wear my costume and makeup, I guess I'd prefer that it be him. That's not to say that I agree with it, because I don't. But it is what it is."
Criss has feuded in the press with Simmons and Stanley since the second KISS split, but Frehley said he keeps in touch with all three of his ex-bandmates. Criss' recent solo album features a song called "Space Ace," which is a tribute to Frehley. "Peter said he's going to send me a copy of his album but I haven't heard it yet," Frehley said. "I still get along with everybody. I was always the peace maker, even back in the '70s. If guys in the band were fighting about something, I'd always try to get them to calm down and talk about it."
In 2005, Frehley re-appeared on stage at a Pearl Jam concert where he jammed on an encore version of Neil Young's "Rockin' In the Free World."
"One day my daughter said, 'Pearl Jam is playing in Atlantic City (N.J.) and I want to go.' I remember her blasting their records out of her room in the '90s," Frehley said. "She wanted to bring some girlfriends she hadn't seen in 10 years so I took them to the show. Next thing I know, the band is inviting me on stage."
Pearl Jam guitarist Mike McCready admitted that his solo in "Alive" copied licks from Frehley's solo in the KISS song "She" ... which is in turn borrowed from guitarist Robbie Krieger's solo in The Doors' "Five to One."
"I steal from someone and then they steal from me and so on," Frehley said. "That's what rock 'n' roll does. It all goes back to the records from the '50s and '60s."
In 2006, Frehley played the KISS tune "God of Thunder" at VH1's inaugural Rock Honors ceremony with an all-star band. "That was a lot of fun. We didn't even rehearse it with Rob Zombie (on vocals). I went to L.A. and rehearsed with Tommy (Lee), Slash, Gilby Clarke and Scott Ian and then we flew a private jet into Vegas," Frehley said. "It came off great. Sometimes spontaneity can give a song a little edge."
Unfortunately, Frehley said he also "fell off the wagon" at that show. He said he's been clean ever since, though. "I'm a lean, mean rock 'n' roll machine," he said. "I was going to the gym for a while, but my schedule is so busy right now that it's a workout in itself."
Frehley designed the Spaceman character because of his interest in science fiction and science fact. He claims he's had more than one UFO sighting. "I saw them a couple of times when I lived in Connecticut. I've seen them go straight and then stop and make a right-angle turn," Frehley said. "You can come to your own conclusion as to whether we have any kind of aircraft that can operate like that. Maybe we do; technology has come a long way in the past 10 years.
"It's all speculation. But what I saw didn't look like it was from this earth."
A computer wizard who designed morphing video images for KISS' stage show during his second tenure in the band, Frehley said he's been experimenting with 3-D models and animation and would like to produce an animated feature with music at some point.
While he'll always be associated with KISS, Frehley said he doesn't spend much time looking back. "I wouldn't mind writing a book at some point, but I don't know if I'd want it to be an autobiography. There are still some confidentiality agreements and contracts that I'm bound to, but I don't like to talk business," he said. "I don't have any interest in another reunion -- but I never say 'never.'"
Visit www.yebotv.com to enter.
"Just back from Japan with the ERIC SINGER PROJECT (ESP) and what a great time we had playing and visiting Tokyo. I have always loved Japan as the people are so polite and hard working, and the food and service is impeccable.
"We arrived via NWA on Flight 1 (I thought that was cool) on Friday afternoon, and off to the city. The airport is almost 2 hours away, and our promoter friend Takashi and the band told crazy stories to kill the time. We checked into the hotel, and we were pleased with the size of the rooms which were large considering how small they can be in Japan. We then went off to dinner. We found a cool Chinese place, ironically! But the food was tasty, of course, and we knew we would have sushi the next few days for sure.
"It was great to finally settle in and sleep, but I took a great pix from my hotel window. They love neon in the city, and blue is my fave. Next morning it was time to go sound check, and do the meet and greet and KISS Expo at the ESP school academy club that is in the facility there. It is a very modern beautiful building and there is a room where the KissOnline.com people were using for merchandise sales that had an incredible guitar collection that the owner of the ESP schools has acquired over the years. I nearly fainted!
"Sound check was fun, and then lunch at an amazing sushi place where the food just comes around on a conveyor belt! We stuffed ourselves, and that was perfect Japanese food! After lunch it was time for the signing session for the fans, and like pervious times, they gave us all wonderful gifts. From sake to socks, to candy and hats and shoes and shirts, how cool was that!
"Eric and I did a Q&A for the fans, and then it was break time. We made plans for some shopping in Harajuku which the singer from NO DOUBT, Gwen Stefani, made famous with her take on the Japanese dancers and her clothing line. There was a great jewelry place called Justin Davis that Eric knew made cool stuff. So we had fun picking out gifts. That area of Tokyo is very vibrant, and I really was happy I got to see it. I found great gifts and enjoyed the energy.
"Back to the venue for show number one. We really had a great long show planned and it was very exciting. The fans in Japan are so passionate about watching, although they are a bit more reserved than some other cultures you know they don't miss a note. We were excited to have given them a cool show, and time for some of the band to visit the Hard Rock, or just rest. I chose the quiet of my room!
"After a good nights rest, it was time for the same plans at the venue. Meet-and-greet, Q&A and then our show. I did spend some time with the crew that was helping us going over the guitars that ESP (the guitar company) provided for me to play. Some of the guys went out again to Sushi, but I ate with the crew, as even the easy food bought at a 7-11 type of place in Tokyo is VERY good cuisine!
"I was able to do some local shopping in the Takadanobaba area where the Academy is located. (Say that 10 times fast!) I am a big fan of Japanese products and there is a '100 Yen' shop, which is a take-off of the dollar shops we have here in the States. I found the usual cool items for my home that I love from Japan.
"Back to the venue after my shopping and walk, and the band discussed our set list which we shortened. It was Sunday and that worked better for the club. After the show which was I thought even better than the first night, we took photos with the crew, and we thanked all of the staff and gave them ESP DVDs (the live one from Australia) which they all were very happy about. We gave away the giant bottle of Sake from our friend Kuni, and gave away the Jack Daniel's too! Hope they had a good party with the alcohol!
"Back to the hotel, and I had a nice dinner with some friends from Japan, (thank you!) in a Denny's style place that is, well MUCH better than a Denny's! No matter where you go in Japan, the food is simply perfect. So I want to thank Takeshi and his great staff for looking after us so well. Too many names to get into here, but they all did a great job for us. Our friend Hiro was great hanging with us all the time, and Kuni who we all have known for years was there and made things very rock n roll!
"Thanks to the ESP school crew, Kaz and his staff, and the people from the Shigemori Pedal company who gave us gifts as well made perfectly in Japan! Special thanks to Keith Leroux and his friend Scott from the U.S. for coming and making the two shows a success. Thank you Keith Tarrier for the cool live pix as well.
"I look forward to coming back."
“YOU WANTED THE BEST. YOU GOT THE BEST. THE HOTTEST BAND IN THE WORLD.” For nearly a decade rock fans across Europe have impatiently waited to hear these famous words that open every concert of legendary rock band KISS.
The wait is finally over!
Today KISS announces their 2008 European KISS Alive/35 Tour set to span seventeen countries, including stops at some of the biggest summer music festivals and first ever KISS concerts in Moscow, St. Petersburg and Verona. This tour marks the first time the band will appear in Europe since their sold-out Psycho Circus Tour in 1999.
KISS invented stadium rock in the 70’s with their sci-fi Kabuki costumes and make-up, explosive theatrics and, of course, their trademark platform boots.. In their extensive world tours, they’ve attracted the most rabid fans: The KISS Army. Now celebrating thirty-five years of rockin’ the globe, KISS founders GENE SIMMONS and PAUL STANLEY along with longtime band members guitarist TOMMY THAYER and drummer ERIC SINGER vow to bring to the European KISS Army the time honored KISS spectacular that has made their performances legendary.
"I've always prided myself in living up to and beyond the legend. I can tell you we are ready to seize the moment and add to that legend. We remain KISS to our souls, and that truth will be deafeningly clear this summer." – Paul Stanley, KISS
Along with the screaming guitars, lights and pyrotechnics that have made KISS “The Greatest Rock n Roll Show On Earth”, the band brings their vast repertoire of classic music. Having sold 85 million records worldwide, KISS has become the soundtrack for a generation. Not only will the KISS faithful hear anthems like “Rock n’ Roll All Night”, “Shout It Out Loud” and “Detroit Rock City”, they can expect a few surprises and rarely played live KISS classics gems as well.
“For 35 Years, we have prided ourselves in our opening: YOU WANTED THE BEST, YOU GOT THE BEST, THE HOTTEST BAND IN THE WORLD. We are throwing down the gauntlet. Let those who are faint of heart, take heed. We will take no prisoners” – Gene Simmons, KISS
For more information about the KISS 2008 European Tour, to join the KISS Army and to purchase Kiss VIP Packages go to KISSonTour.com.
KISS Tour Dates Announced February 12, 2008
May
11 Munich Olympiahalle GERMANY
13 Verona Arena ITALY
15 Belgrade USCE Stadium SERBIA
24 Moscow Olympissky RUSSIA
26 St Petersburg Newarena RUSSIA
June
4 Hamburg Color Line Arena GERMANY
6 Prague Saska Arena CZECH REPUBLIC
9 Berlin Velodrom GERMANY
10 Mannheim SAP Arena GERMANY
11 Oberhausen Arena GERMANY
Download Festival UK
15 Arrow Festival HOLLAND
17 Paris Bercy FRANCE
18 Stuttgart Schleyerhalle GERMANY
21 Bilbao Kobetamendi SPAIN
Check out KISSonTour.com for announcement of additional European tour dates!
KISS VIP PACKAGES
In addition to KISS Army member only presales, www.kissontour.com will be exclusively offering KISS Meet & Greet and KISS Pre-Show Soundcheck packages. Below are all the details on the packages and be sure to keep checking KISSontour.com for when these packages go on sale.
KISS Meet and Greet Package *
- Exclusive Meet and Greet with KISS
- Personal photograph with the band
- 8X10 photoo
- KISS Tour Program
- KISS Europe '08 Shirt
- Official KISS Meet & Greet Laminate
- $50 coupon good for the official KISS on-line store
KISS Pre-show Soundcheck *
- Exclusive Pre-show Soundcheck
- KISS Tour Program
- KISS Europe '08 Shirt
- Official KISS Pre-show Laminate
- $25 coupon good for the official KISS on-line store
KISS Meet and Greet and Pres-show Soundcheck Package *
- Exclusive Meet and Greet with KISS
- Exclusive Pre-show Soundcheck
- Personal photograph with the band
- 8X10 photo
- KISS Tour Program
- KISS Europe '08 Shirt
- Official KISS VIP Laminate
- $50 coupon good for the official KISS on-line store
*All M&G package elements (shirt, laminate, 8X10, tour book) will be distributed by our road coordinator at the meet and greet session. Store vouchers will be emailed to each guest prior to show date. Packages do not include tickets to the event.
For the first time ever, KISS will rock Belgrade, Serbia! The band will perform May 15 at Belgrade's USCE Stadium.
In the first episode, Gene Simmons will take a lie detector test to determine if he has been faithful to Shannon Tweed. Shannon has been Gene's companion for twenty-four years and is the mother of his two children, Nick and Sophie.
Shannon will administer the questions for the lie detector test. The test will reveal to fans if the 4,800 women Gene claims to have been with all happened before his and Shannon's relationship began in 1983.
Other episodes during the third season will focus on a Gene Simmons Roast featuring friends and comedians, the first ever KISS concert where the band performs as a trio, behind the scenes of Gene on NBC's The Celebrity Apprentice, Gene and Shannon's official honeymoon in Hawaii, and Nick and Sophie in Mexico.
Gene Simmons Family Jewels premieres on Tuesday, March 11th at 10 PM ET/PT on A&E.
Rockpages.gr: You had written with Bryan Adams two tunes ("War Machine", "Rock and Roll Hell") which ended up on KISS' "Creatures of the Night". You had stated in past interviews some details on these two songs. In retrospect, do you think that this was a misjudged move from you two?
Jim Vallance: "Do you mean, was it a mistake to work with KISS? I don't think it was a mistake. Bryan and I were young, we wanted to be successful song writers, and we got a call from KISS, one of the biggest bands in the world. Of course you're not going to say 'no thanks.' I was slightly disappointed that we had to share credit with Gene on 'Rock And Roll Hell', but it was also a good lesson for us. Gene's a smart guy. I respect his intelligence."
Rockpages.gr: Gene Simmons had said in various circumstances that he had written the basic riff structure of "War Machine" and then came you and Bryan and offered some lyrical solutions. Is this the truth behind this or do you have another story?
Jim Vallance: "Believe me ... after 25 years, sometimes you don't remember all the details. I've read the interviews where Gene says he sent us a riff, but I don't remember it happening that way. Plus, I keep EVERYTHING, and I don't have a tape from Gene in my collection. I'm not saying my memory is right, and Gene's is wrong. I'm just telling you what I remember. But here's an interesting clue. Checking my files, I see that Gene only claimed a 10% share of 'Rock And Roll Hell' (for the single verse of lyrics he contributed). On 'War Machine' he claimed a full one-third share, the same share that Bryan and I received (one-third each). That tells me that Gene believed — and perhaps Bryan and I believed — that Gene's contribution to 'War Machine' was more significant than I remember!"
Read the entire interview at www.rockpages.gr.
On having his and partner Shannon Tweed's facelifts filmed for their reality series "Gene Simmons Family Jewels":
"If you want to see me wiping my ass on camera I will. I'll take a s--- on air, I don't care.
"I'm delusional. I thought I was beautiful before and I'm even more stunning now. The male of the species doesn't have to worry about those things, we just have to have a good job, then we'll attract the female.
"The female of the species is unfortunately stuck in that biological thing of stimulating the male of the species. Which is why the beauty industry is so powerful — women."
On being "happily unmarried" to Tweed since 1985:
"Women reluctantly point to our family and say it works. But they don't like the non-married part because no social security is involved: a financial obligation, if you will. I refuse to have a financial obligation to anyone other than the mother who gave me life.
"Women's biology means they make one or two eggs a month and by their middle years stop being able to procreate entirely, so their biological urge is to corner a man so when they can't reproduce they have a man.
"The phrase is 'I'm going to get my claws in him' or 'he's a good catch' — because he's trying to run away. Man's tendency is not to stick around. Which is unfortunate when you look at all the fathers and husbands who've walked out. Women are never surprised when that happens, they're just surprised it's happened to them.
"The reason I'm crazy about Shannon is she's a modern, 21st-century woman and she should be teaching all other women to get a life, get a hobby. Stop torturing the men."
On his arrangement with Tweed:
"I just don't care. That's why you never read about me in those trash mags women are addicted to. If I go to a strip club, and when I'm in Australia I intend to, I'll stand in front of the club and pose with the strippers all you like. You can take my photo and put them in your magazines because I'll be smiling."
On writing a book called "Ladies of the Night" — "a personal and historical perspective of the oldest profession in the world":
"They [prostitutes] make a very good living doing what biology dictates, which is they charge for their companionship.
"What's the difference between that and a 15-year-old kid who eagerly tries to feel up his girlfriend but has to pay for the movie tickets and take her out to dinner? Men will always pay, they have always paid, call it what you will — whether it's marriage, girlfriend or ladies of the night.''
On his two well-adjusted teenagers Nicholas and Sophie:
"They're both extraordinary young people because that's their job. They have no other purpose except to do well in school and be charming. I'll take care of all the rest, I'll risk my life, I'll make all the money.
"The idea of negotiating with kids is lunacy. It's pathetic what's happened to the male of the species. The father disciplinarian has all but disappeared in society. I see all these grown men negotiating with kids who've just learnt to wipe their asses. It's f---ing lunacy.''
On why there is no new KISS album:
"There's no new KISS material because there's no record industry.
"Any band who tries to do new material is trying to climb a slippery mountain. Every day record companies are folding. It'd be nice to have new KISS songs, but what's the business model? Do you just put songs on the Internet for free? Then what?''
On people who download music illegally:
"They're crooks. I would have sued the very first one and the very last one. As soon as you take somebody's property, that's stealing. People say to me 'You're rich, you have enough money'. It's actually not for anyone to decide that. I'll let you know when I'm too rich. The last time I checked, what we do isn't called charity, it's called the music business.
"Here we are today with exactly what I said would happen happening. The very same people that love the music the most have slit its throat and they're surprised it's dying. 'How come my new band can't get a shot?' 'Cos you killed it, bitch.
"Every day college kids who probably love music more than anybody are the same people slashing the record industry's throat by file sharing and downloading. It's the saddest thing for new bands. Doesn't affect me or KISS. We can continue to play stadiums and do very well, and we release DVDs.
"But there isn't a chance for a new band to become the next BEATLES or KISS because there isn't the infrastructure to do it."
1) Q104-FM - Jim Kerr Show - Friday at 7:30 a.m.
2) Good Day New York (FOX NYC) - Friday at 8:45 a.m.
3) WABC-TV - Saturday at 7:15 a.m.
Paul's Art Show info:
Friday, February 8, 6 to 9 p.m.
Wentworth Gallery – Riverside Square Mall
171 Riverside Square
Hackensack
RSVP: 201.488.7661
Saturday February 9, 4 to 7 p.m.
Wentworth Gallery – Short Hills Mall
1200 Morris Turnpike
Short Hills
RSVP: 973.564.9776
Fellow ex-KISS member Peter Criss and his wife Gigi have issued the following statement: "We want to send our deepest sympathies to the Frehley family. We love you."
If you would like to offer your condolences, visit the Space Ace Online web site.
Frehley, who is recording the as-yet-untitled album at his home studio in Westchester, N.Y., aims to have it finished by Feb. 20, when he starts a North American concert tour. He reports he is currently negotiating with "two or three record labels" to put it out but says he'll release it first through his official web site, which is currently being revamped, and perhaps also via iTunes.
"Basically, I'm trying to get back into the mindset I was in when I did my first solo record [1978's 'Ace Frehley']," Frehley says. "That record seemed to have all the elements everybody liked -- a real cool instrumental, a hit single, some real heavy rockers, a nice variety of different genres of music."
Among his favorite new tracks are "A Little Below the Angels," hard rocking "Pain in the Neck," and an instrumental called "Fractured Quantum" which is a follow-up to his previous instrumentals "Fractured Mirror" and "Fractured Too." Another favorite is "groove song" titled "Genghis Khan," which he likens in tone to Led Zeppelin's "Kashmir." Don't expect to hear any of the new songs at his concerts, however.
"Every show's on YouTube, every song," explains Frehley, who used 12-step programs and a personal physician and therapist care to clean up after he left Kiss for a second time in 2002. "I don't want to play any of the new songs 'cause I don't want to give away anything. I want that magic and mystique of hearing something for the first time when you're supposed to, so I don't think I'm going to play any of [the new songs] until the CD's released."
Instead Frehley will play a set filled with Kiss favorites he wrote, plus material from his previous solo releases. He admits some ambivalence about doing "Cold Gin," " 'cause I don't drink anymore and I don't promote it. But it's such a kick-ass song... I think that me talking about the fact I'm clean and sober and I'm not a party animal anymore is plenty. I can still get away with playing it."
“For 35 Years, we have prided ourselves in our opening: YOU WANTED THE BEST, YOU GOT THE BEST, THE HOTTEST BAND IN THE WORLD. We are throwing down the gauntlet. Let those who are faint of heart, take heed. We will take no prisoners” – Gene Simmons
"I've always prided myself in living up to and beyond the legend. I can tell you we are ready to seize the moment and add to that legend. We remain KISS to our souls, and that truth will be deafeningly clear this June." – Paul Stanley
For more info on the Download Festival visit : http://www.downloadfestival.co.uk/info/index.aspx.
KISS (headliner)
LOSTPROPHETS (headliner)
THE OFFSPRING (headliner)
JUDAS PRIEST
MOTÖRHEAD
RISE AGAINST
HIM
MOTÖRHEAD's Lemmy put his glass of Jack Daniel's down long enough to tell Kerrang!, "We killed them last time and we'll kill them again this time as well!"
Illinois punks RISE AGAINST also can't wait to play to a field full of muddy rock fans: "Bring it on!" laughed bassist Joe Principe. "It's going to be a lot of fun. We love playing in England, so Download will be a definite highlight. I think we will never take for granted when people ask us to play festivals like that. I think that it's a great honour. There's a million bands out there and they pick us to play. It means that we're doing something right!"
The 2008 Download festival will take place at Castle Donington, UK the weekend of June 13-15.
Tickets for Download 2008 will go on sale on February 8 at 9:00 a.m. Prices are as follows: a full weekend ticket: £130, standard camping: £20, camper van: £40, family zone camping: £20, lockers: £11, parking £10 in advance or £15 on the day. There will be a variety of ticket packages available to buy, including the RIP packages (a VIP package) from £315.
For Club or VIP Experience packages, please call 020 7009 3484 to discuss your requirements.
Disabled customers can call 0121 767 9729 to discuss accessibility arrangements. Please note, disabled customers will be provided with one free ticket for their helper, where required. Should additional helper tickets be required, please call the disabled access ticket line on 0121 767 9729 or email access@downloadfestival.co.uk
For more details, visit www.downloadfestival.co.uk.
The Monday Muse: Paul Stanley
Who knew that KISS front man Paul Stanley had such a passion for painting? Certainly not me! Turns out "The Starchild" made his debut as a painter in 2005 and continues to create emotionally charged compositions, citing Kandinsky, Mondrian, Klee, and Rothko as influences. And collectors are gobbling his works up; Stanley's art sales exceeded $2 million for 2007.
Stanley will present his work at two special appearances at the Wentworth Galleries in Hackensack on Friday, February 8 and Short Hills on Saturday, February 9. Both events are free and open to the public, but require an RSVP.
Friday, February 8, 6 to 9 p.m.
Wentworth Gallery – Riverside Square Mall
171 Riverside Square
Hackensack
RSVP: 201.488.7661
Saturday February 9, 4 to 7 p.m.
Wentworth Gallery – Short Hills Mall
1200 Morris Turnpike
Short Hills
RSVP: 973.564.9776
Other bands confirmed for this year's festival include metal gods JUDAS PRIEST and Finnish love metallers HIM.
Tickets for Download 2008 will go on sale on February 8 at 9:00 a.m. Prices are as follows: a full weekend ticket: £130, standard camping: £20, camper van: £40, family zone camping: £20, lockers: £11, parking £10 in advance or £15 on the day. There will be a variety of ticket packages available to buy, including the RIP packages (a VIP package) from £315.
For Club or VIP Experience packages, please call 020 7009 3484 to discuss your requirements.
Disabled customers can call 0121 767 9729 to discuss accessibility arrangements. Please note, disabled customers will be provided with one free ticket for their helper, where required. Should additional helper tickets be required, please call the disabled access ticket line on 0121 767 9729 or email access@downloadfestival.co.uk
For more details, visit www.downloadfestival.co.uk.
This year's Special Guest will be announced late next week. KISS tribute band Mr. Speed will perform live at the Expo and KISS merchandise & collectibles will be on sale throughout the day. There will also be a trivia contest and a raffle. Kids 12 and under are admitted free!
KISSONLINE will be attending the expo!
A limited number of VIP Laminates as well as regular tickets are on sale now. For Tickets or more info Click Here:
Simmons, musician, marketer and empire builder, who created and maintains the KISS global brand juggernaut, will discuss how marketers can take advantage of the convergence of media, entertainment and consumer power to develop relationships and brands that endure.
IEG offers services that include sponsorship consulting, competitive intelligence and valuation. IEG also publishes IEG Sponsorship Report, the international biweekly newsletter on sponsorship; the IEG Sponsorship Sourcebook, the definitive guide to sponsors, properties and agencies; and other industry publications and resources.
Neil Cavuto, anchor and managing editor at FOX Business Network, is one of the most respected business journalists in America.
Mar. 16 - Melbourne, Australia - Ing F1 Grand Prix
Mar. 18 - Brisbane, Australia - Entertainment Center
Mar. 20 - Sydney, Australia - Acer Arena
Mar. 22 - Wellington, New Zealand - ROCK2WTGN Festival
May 13 - Verona, North-East Italy - Arena Di Verona
May 24 - Moscow, Russia - Olympic stadium
May 26 - St. Petersburg, Russia - Lednikovyj Dvorec
"With Paul (Stanley), he was amazing. And I had this sort of quite dark song with sort of operatic tendencies in it. And I just thought he would be great for this, and asked him, and he really wanted to do it, so that was it!"
Stanley played "Phantom" in the Canadian version.
"So," Brightman continued, "there was always a connection between that and the rock thing and opera thing, which is great."
Brightman starts a world tour in the U.S. in the fall.
Special Guest and Kiss triute band, to be announced. On display, for the fiirst time since the 1995 Official Kiss Convention Tour, the set of 4 original 77-78 Love Gun costumes. These 4 costumes, which were purchased from the Offical Kiss Auction in 2000, are complete and on the mannequins.
Kiss merchandise and collectables will be on sale throughout the day. There will be a Kiss look-a-like contest. Enter and win $$in Kiss merchandise. KISSONLINE will also attend the Detroit Expo!
To purchase an advanced ticket, you can either use paypal or a credit card over the phone. 734-641-7450 hours between 10:30am-6:00pm. Children 12 and under get in free.
Listen and chat live at www.radiorealitycheck.com.
Sarah Brightman is the best-selling soprano of all time because she's not really a soprano, in the operatic sense. She's a transcontinental pop star who can hit high notes (kind of). Like 2003's "Harem," "Symphony" will lend nicely to an ornate touring spectacle, but not of the Arabian hip-swiveling kind: This collection plays Brightman's inherent Goth card. "Fleurs du Mal" rocks out like symphonic Led Zeppelin, with power strings and a full choir backing Brightman's breathy bleating. Andrea Bocelli's commanding tenor saves "Canto Della Terra," and Kiss' Paul Stanley does admirably on the out-of-place "I Will Be With You," which also gets the epic orchestral treatment, despite its folky structure. Apparently if you load the dominant preferences of every country on Earth into the music mashup machine, this is the stuff that pops out.
Lorenzo: Could you and Gene [Simmons] still write songs like the early KISS albums?
Stanley: That's a great question. I think we could write something similar. The thing is, music is more than the notes and the words. Music often becomes the soundtrack to your life. What makes those early songs so meaningful for many people is that they can remember what was going on in their lives when those songs were being played. No matter what I write today, as good as it's going to be, it doesn't have that impact. Arguably, I think "Psycho Circus" as a song is as good as anything I've written, and yet I understand that people would rather hear "Detroit Rock City".
Lorenzo: When was the last time you listened to a KISS CD in your car and which one was it?
Stanley: I have a compilation CD of basically everything. It's fun to listen to. I listen to it kinda like you look at old snapshots.
Lorenzo: What album has the most songs on that compilation?
Stanley: Interesting... umm, probably if you go in terms of songs from one album, probably "Destroyer".
Lorenzo: Were you ever into the heavier bands like METALLICA and SLAYER, or can't you appreciate that kind of music?
Stanley: I can appreciate that other people appreciate it. I don't put METALLICA and SLAYER in the same breath. I think METALLICA has at times really straddled the line of commerciality and what they originally came from whereas a lot of other bands of that genre have stayed pretty narrow in their scope. No, it's not my thing. It's not a value judgment. It's like food is the same as music — whether I like it or not is not the determining factor if it's good or bad.
Read the entire interview at www.so-mag.com.
"Paul Stanley [KISS] and his son Evan were in attendance [at this year's NAMM show in Anaheim, California] at [the] Washburn [booth], and, of course, when we met I got some birthday cake as it was a day before Paul's big day. Tommy Thayer [KISS] was there, as was Eric Singer [KISS, ALICE COOPER], and my brother Bob who was able to get around on his crutches. Spoke with Nikki Sixx [MÖTLEY CRÜE], who was a bit shy 'cause of the crowd wanting him badly, but it was great to see him looking good and healthy. His book is doing great.
"Speaking of a guitarist with a hit book out, Slash [GUNS N' ROSES, VELVET REVOLVER] had a huge line as well at Marshall, as Paul did at Washburn when he did his signing. I did my autograph session at Music Star, the company that puts out my 'Kiss Forever' DVD. Eric Singer, Eddie Ojeda [TWISTED SISTER] and Rudy Sarzo [DIO, ex-QUIET RIOT] were there as well, and, of course, I kept running into so many other players, too many to mention. Lots of rock stars at this event for sure!
"David Fishof was there from the Rock and Roll Fantasy Camp, and we chatted about the big L.A. Camp coming up in February. Also ran into Mickey Dolenz from THE MONKEES who will be a counselor at that camp (I love THE MONKEES). I watched HEART play at the Hilton lounge as they did a special party for Epiphone. 'Wow' is all I can say! Great band and vocals. Saw Billy Gibbons from ZZ TOP at the Fender party on Friday night. He sounds amazing every time he plays."
Read the entire message at this location.
"[The] phone interview [I conducted] with Ace Frehley [on Friday, January 18] represented the realisation of another lifetime ambition. I've always been fascinated by the enigmatic former KISS guitarist, who admitted during our conversation: 'On some days I wake up and feel like I can ponder the inner workings of quantum mechanics. On others I'm lucky if I can find my ass with both hands. With me, every day is a crapshoot.' I was hooked up with Frehley to promote his gig at London's Astoria on April 11. Ace was suffering for a 101-degree fever and had a disconcerting habit of braying with laughter at the most serious questions, but was pretty candid in a throughly enjoyable encounter. He casually mentioned the times his well-publicised excesses brought brushes with death, but now claims to be 16 months sober. Even so, I was susprised when he stated that he can no longer be around drunk or drugged-up people. So did Frehley now realise why Gene Simmons has been so scathingly critical of him in the past? 'Sure, to an extent,' he replied, perhaps unexpectedly. Read the rest of the story in the next issue of Classic Rock [magazine]."
Stanley, who in addition to his songwriting and performing responsibilities for KISS, is an accomplished solo artist, painter and stage performer, collaborated with Brightman on the duet "I Will Be with You (Where the Lost Ones Go)" off the forthcoming album “Symphony.” Interestingly, both are "Phantom of the Opera" alums with Brightman having originated the role of Christine Daaé in the Andrew Lloyd Webber production and Stanley who received rave reviews for his portrayal of The Phantom in the Toronto stage version.
“As a fan of Sarah’s stage, recording and concert work, I was immediately intrigued with the potential of what our voices together might create,” said Stanley. “We were both really pleased with how our duet turned out and performing live together is a real possibility.”
Paul Stanley just completed a highly successful 2007, garnering over $2 million in sales for his art work distributed through Wentworth Galleries. Stanley is also slated to tour Australia and New Zealand with KISS in March of 2008 with possible Europe and US dates to follow.
You can order the Album here!
About Paul Stanley
For more than 30 years, Paul Stanley has reigned supreme as one of the single-most recognizable front-men in the history of rock and roll. He’s the principal songwriter, driving force and unwavering voice of KISS. A visionary and trendsetter since the early 1970s, Stanley’s passion for both the musical and visual arts has perhaps been the key to the astonishing ongoing world phenomenon known as KISS. Stanley single-handedly penned such escapist anthems as “Love Gun,” “God of Thunder” and “Black Diamond.” He was the golden throat that throttled “Detroit Rock City,” the charismatic swagger behind “I Was Made For Lovin’ You,” and stripped of makeup, was the unmasked troubadour that breathed vocal life into the ballads “Reason to Live,” “Forever” and “Every Time I Look At You.” His artistic and visual input has been seen in his designs of KISS album covers, stages and apparel.
An accomplished solo performer, Stanley recently released "Live to Win" [New Door Records/ Universal Music Enterprises his first solo album in more than 25 years, and second overall. In "Live to Win," Stanley strips his emotions to the bone and adorns them with a melodic sheen, with songs about the power of the human spirit and commitment to not compromising ideals.
An art major and graduate of the prestigious high school of Music and Art in NYC, Stanley recently returned to his passion for painting, creating portraits and abstracts that are emotionally charged compositions. He aims to maximize the direct, physical impact of his paintings through scale, texture, color and simplicity of images. In a few short years of exhibiting, Stanley’s works have been acquired by numerous art collectors and he has been commissioned to create large works to be displayed by an international corporate entity. Stanley’s tremendous success as a painter has translated in to well over $2 million in art sales for 2007. For additional information on Paul Stanley please go to www.PaulStanley.com.
About Sarah Brightman – Symphony
“Symphony” is the soprano's first new studio album since 2003. Produced by her long-time producer Frank Peterson, the diverse repertoire of Symphony will have a broad appeal to both her original fans from her days in “Phantom of the Opera” and the international smash hit "Time to Say Goodbye" to fans of her more contemporary experiments with classical-rock and electronic-dance styles.
The repertoire ranges from beautiful ballads ("Symphony," "Fleur Du Mal"), epic power rock scores ("I Will Be with You") to interpretations of the work "Jupiter" from Holst's The Planets on "Running" to Faith Hill's "There You'll Be" sung in Italian as "Sarai Qui," and many more, with a colorful variety of male duet partners including Andrea Bocelli on "Canto Della Terra," Fernando Lima (Mexican tenor) on "Pasiòn" (popular telenovella theme song), and Paul Stanley (from KISS) on "I Will Be with You (Where the Lost Ones Go)." The album also showcases her linguistic vocal skills by singing in Spanish, Italian, French, and, for the first time, German.
Cramer, who was acting as a judge on "The Apprentice", admitted he didn't want to fire Simmons, who the "Mad Money" host said was the best marketer and salesperson among the cast. But Simmons admitted that part of him wanted to get the boot after realizing some of the contestants were less interested in the "entrepreneurial spirit" of the show than being on television.
"In the end, a captain must go down with his ship," Simmons said. But, turning from that modesty, he told Cramer: "I was the best thing on that show, and you know it."
Watch Gene Simmons' interview from today's (January 18) edition of "Mad Money" at www.cnbc.com.
For the fourth task, the remaining celebrities are challenged with the task to run a one-day Broadway ticket booth under the biggest time crunch thus far, and the celebrities work feverishly, hawking tickets on the street. The teams are given eight Broadway Shows to choose from as they try their best at negotiating which four each team would sell. Two celebrities begin the task on the wrong foot, with a bitter argument. Piers Morgan tries to increase sales by dressing up in a knight's costume to sell tickets to 'Spamalot.' In the end, the team that makes the most money from ticket sales wins, and one celebrity is fired on Thursday, January 24 (9:00 PM ET/PT).
In next week's episode, as the competition gets heated, David Hyde Pierce shows up in support of an old celebrity friend.
Trump's eyes and ears on the task are his daughter Ivanka and Vince McMahon (Chairman of The World Wrestling Entertainment).
Tiffany Fallon, Nadia Comaneci were the first two celebrities fired by Donald Trump. The remaining celebrity "candidates" competing for charity are: Trace Adkins, Carol Alt, Stephen Baldwin, Jennie Finch, Nely Galan, Marilu Henner, Lennox Lewis, Piers Morgan, Omarosa, Tito Ortiz, and Vincent Pastore.
"The Celebrity Apprentice" is produced by Mark Burnett Productions in association with Trump Productions LLC. Mark Burnett, Donald Trump are executive producers, Eden Gaha and Page Feldman are co-executive producers.
Friday Jan.18th
Zildjian @ 3PM
Saturday Jan.19th
Musicstar Prod. @ 12:30pm
PEARL drums @ 2pm
Zildjian @ 3pm
Attendance at the NAMM trade show is restricted to companies who make, buy, and/or sell musical instruments and products.
Special Guests this year are Bob Kulick and the ultimate KISS tribute band Mr. Speed. Bob will be doing a Q/A and will be available for autographs and photos. KISS merchandise and collectibles will be on sale throughout the day. There will also be a trivia contest and a raffle.
KISSONLINE will be attending the expo!
A limited number of VIP Laminates as well as regular tickets are on sale now. For Tickets or more info Click Here:
Gene Simmons joined a long and distinguished list of former SBH keynoters including Steve Forbes, William Simon, Dr. John Rutledge, John Fund of the Wall Street Journal, Wally "Famous" Amos, Howard Jarvis, Governors, Mayors and Congressmen, among others.
Many business people asked me - before they heard Gene Simmons speak - why would I invite a rock star to address a business conference, sprinkled with many top business and political leaders?
My response prior to the speech was that I had not invited just a music legend - most people (like myself until three years ago) had not the faintest idea of the depth and reach of this imaginative, successful and rich entrepreneur-but I invited him for his marketing genius and many paths to success. (By the way, Gene Simmons doesn't like that word, entrepreneur, because he says, its too hard to pronounce, spell and most people don't know what it really means or even care anyway.
When my second of four sons, Stuart Matthew, now 40, was a teen, he loved Gene Simmons and KISS. I remember once telling him, "turn off that damn noise, and tear down those freakish hippy posters!" Stuart has had the last laugh now.
When I first saw Gene Simmons three years ago on the A&E television hit, "Gene Simmons' Family Jewels," I was hooked. I don't as a rule like "reality" shows, especially those that featured the Osbornes and the family of gangster John Gotti. But Simmons is different. His beautiful partner of 25 years, former Playboy Playmate of the Year Shannon Tweed, their two personable over-achieving and respectful teens, Nick and Sophie, and Shannon’s sister Tracy Tweed, bring something different. The show is about Gene Simmons' business, family and life. And it's a good life.
"Ozzie and Harriet," it's not. But the Simmons' series is about a family that does many things, is wealthy without being ostentatious, and lives by (without being preachy) solid core values.
The kids from an early age learned a work ethic-neither have ever been given an allowance-and they know business. And business is what Gene Simmons is all about. They also know respect and how to negotiate with all kinds of people.
Gene Simmons' background is incredible. Born in Israel, immigrating to New York at age 8 with his Mother who survived the Holocaust-his greatest inspiration and driving force-he spoke no English and was ridiculed for it. (Guess they didn't have enough lawyers and ACLU to file lawsuits for language adaptation in those days).
Today, he only half jokingly says, many of those people now work for him. He celebrates the careful branding of products and services.
Without Gene Simmons, and his marketing acumen, there would not be a KISS band and legend, still going like the Energizer Bunny 35 years later. He has licensed more than 3,000 items under the KISS name, which he and his partner still zealously own and guard, from "condoms to coffins."
He owns a book company, a record company, founded NGTV.com on the Internet, a Simmons Comics group, his clothing line, Moneybag, co-starred in three movies, has written three books, appears on many business and investment television shows as well as hosting his "Gene Simmons: Family Jewels."
He recently did a smash show in Las Vegas, will be the subject of an upcoming celebrity roast and appears weekly on "Donald Trump's Celebrity Apprentice." (NBC-KHNL, Thursdays, 8 pm).
He and his marketing partner, Simmons/Abramson Marketing, are the worldwide branding entity for the Indycar series, which operates more than 18 major auto races, including the fabled Indianapolis 500.
And, contrary to what I and others erroneously thought in the 1970s, he and KISS never did drugs, and talks of the dangers of all substance abuse to young people, is passionately pro-American (the American Dream is Gene Simmons' reality), and strongly supportive of the U.S. armed forces. (He and Sophie recently made a tour of military facilities in California and visited veterans and the injured from past and present wars. He is a man of many interests and a big heart.
But getting Gene Simmons to Hawaii was no easy task. As you might imagine, he is in demand-and pricey. It took more than four months of letters, emails, phone calls, and begging to get Simmons to take a chance on Hawaii and SBH.
Along the way I became more acquainted with lawyers, television execs, the entertainment pecking order, giant egos, marketing people, airlines, hotels and car rentals.
Without our superstar cosponsors, Jeff Stone's Ko Olina Resort & Marina, Robin Campaniano's AIG Hawaii, The Edwards family's 1 Hot Garage, Joe Nicholai's JN Automotive and others, it could not have happened.
Part of the arrangement is that A&E is filming two half-hour Hawaii episodes to highlight the beauty and the business of our state. (The programs should air at mid-year).
In his keynote speech to SBH, before a packed, sold-out, admittedly curious audience in the Ala Moana Hibiscus Ballroom last week, he spoke not of the "Ten Points to Make You Rich Like Me," but of the many more points and paths to personal success and happiness.
He stuck to the basics, like dependability, standing by your word, showing up, and the importance of a good work ethic. He was very specific and graphic. He stressed the fact that young people should do many different things and learn from each.
Gene Simmons emphasized the importance of business relationships and of the art of listening. He was hard on some people in the audience who asked him questions after his presentation – hard on them as a good mentor should be. He said they talked abstractly of their "ideas," but had not thought out the path to realization of those dreams and ideas.
Simmons, however, has a real soft spot for women (Mothers in particular) and girls who he said should go to organizations like Junior Achievement early. (That made the local JA Hawaii execs in the audience want to shout out loud).
His speech ended with a prolonged standing ovation.
Honolulu Mayor Mufi Hannemann presented an official proclamation declaring "January 9, Gene Simmons Day in Honolulu."
Simmons was generous with his time afterwards. Yes, he signed autographs and took pictures, but he also listened to and engaged local investors with more than just business ideas.
Simmons is always listening to new business proposals and has a sharp eye and sharper mind-"dress British, think Yiddish" -to stay ahead of trends, preferring to set them himself.
Will there be some business and new Simmons investment in Hawaii? Possibly. For those of us who want a diversified and more self-reliant market-based Hawaii, and one that is taken seriously for its business opportunities, Gene Simmons, Inc. offers an outstanding opportunity. Stay tuned.
In the meantime, after the Simmons speech, akamai business and investors told me, now we know why you brought Gene Simmons to Hawaii as the SBH keynoter. "He was the best ever."
Commented festival organizers Z Records: "BLACK 'N BLUE have signed contracts for the event which will be the band's first European appearance since 1983! The band will feature all original members except for Tommy Thayer [guitar, now in KISS].
"Everybody at Z is excited about the band's appearance which will lay to rest much speculation about the band and their forthcoming release which has been banded about by uninformed sections of the press over recent years."
BLACK 'N BLUE frontman Jaime St. James added in a statement: "We have not rocked on any European soil since 1983, so if you weren't at Hammersmith Odeon when we opened for WHITESNAKE then you missed us... Wow, hitch up your panties and get ready for an autoblast, you lovely bastards....I can't wait."
Z Rock 08 festival billing is now shaping up as follows:
BLACK 'N BLUE
BONFIRE
BRITNY FOX
VON GROOVE
SHY
STORMZONE
REDLINE
For more information, visit www.myspace.com/zrockfest.
Yet that's exactly what mega-selling English soprano Sarah Brightman does on "Symphony," which arrives in stores January 29 via Manhattan Records.
"I just wanted to back away from everything and do something a little different. That, of course, takes a little time," Brightman says of "Symphony," her first collection of new material in five years. "Sometimes you have to step back a little and create something new."
Innovation and reinvention have been trademarks of Brightman's 30-year career. Born in 1960, she began dancing at local festivals when she was only 3. By the time she was 16, she earned a spot in Pan's People, the resident dance troupe on BBC's "Top of the Pops." Her next step was as a member of progressive dance troupe and pop group Hot Gossip.
It was as lead singer for Hot Gossip that Brightman's recording career began with the 1978 hit "I Lost My Heart to a Starship Trouper," which propelled her to pop star status in the United Kingdom. Not content to reign on the pop charts, Brightman went on to forge a successful career in musical theater, most notably originating the role of Christine in ex-husband Andrew Lloyd Webber's "Phantom of the Opera" on the West End and later reprising the role on Broadway.
CROSSOVER PIONEER
As a recording artist, Brightman has covered a wide territory, including pop, dance, opera and classical music.
"She created this genre that we now call 'classical crossover' or 'pop opera,"' Manhattan Records GM Ian Ralfini says. "She opened the door for other artists, including Bocelli, Hayley Westenra and Josh Groban. She was there first.
Indeed, since 1997, Brightman has scored 11 top 10 albums on Billboard's Classical Crossover chart, including two No. 1s and three No. 2s. But she modestly downplays her role in the classical crossover boom, preferring to speak of her love for her art.
"I'm very passionate about my classical music," she says. "I've also had a lot of success in popular music, like pop music and dance music. I've also worked for many, many years in theater. All these styles that I have worked within, especially in music theater, created something very unique to me."
According to her label, Brightman has sold 26 million records worldwide. The best-selling soprano in history, she's earned more than 150 gold and platinum certifications in 34 countries. Among her most successful albums are 1998's "Time to Say Goodbye," which has sold 1.4 million copies in the United States, according to Nielsen SoundScan; the title track is the best-selling single in German music history.
For "Symphony," Brightman headed to Germany to record with longtime producer Frank Peterson. "This album has such a new twist to it," Brightman says. "It has classical qualities in it that I've always enjoyed, but it has a slightly dark quality. Within everything that happens in life, there's a heavenly side to it and then there's a dark side to it. I know it sounds fairly abstract, but when you go through the album, you get this feeling of heaven and hell within it."
MORE INVOLVED
And while five years may be a long time for the industry to wait, Brightman believes that the preparation time served the music well. "I was involved much more in the songs than I normally (am) because I had more time to do so," she says. "For the last four years, I've been going all over the world and doing concerts and I've done a movie recently (the April release "Repo! The Genetic Opera"), which was great fun. So there have been lots of other things going on, but I did have lots more time to be involved in the writing side of it."
Has the turmoil and uncertainty in the world had an impact on her songwriting process? "Yes, of course it has," she says. "I think it has with a lot of people who are artists. It's very natural. All of those things are coming into our creative output because all human beings are touched by what is happening and they are becoming more and more aware."
In Peterson, Brightman has found a creative compatriot, skilled at helping the artist breathe life into the diversity of sounds that her repertoire comprises. "When you find collaborations with people that just work, they just work," she says, noting that she and Peterson have worked together so long they have developed a kind of shorthand between them. "I seem to be working with the same people for many, many years and relationships actually get better and the work becomes more deep because of it."
DIVERSE DUETS
Brightman also enjoys forging new partnerships, such as the duet with Kiss' Stanley on "I Will Be With You (Where the Lost Ones Go)." "It's unlikely and likely," she says of the pairing. "There is obviously the very theatrical side, which we both have. It's interesting with rock music and with classical music -- there is a similarity there in a way. They are both very dramatic."
"Symphony" also marks the first time Brightman has worked with Lima. "His management asked if I'd be interested," says Brightman, who recorded "Passion" with the Spanish vocalist. "I listened to the song and I said, 'This is quite different for me to do, but I just feel it will work.' I went into the studio not knowing what was going to happen and really like what came out of it."
The duet with Bocelli on "Canto Della Terra" followed Brightman's appearance on Bocelli's recent PBS special in Tuscany.
"It's always wonderful working with him because years ago we did that love song called 'Time to Say Goodbye,' which became a hit all over the world. So there are treasured memories and the (new) song is very, very beautiful," she says. "I thought it would be a lovely song for this album. There's a lot of light and a lot of gold in this particular song.
"His voice and mine really blend. It's quite rare. I've sung with different duet partners all over the world -- classical, nonclassical -- and it's not very often where you come across a partner where the voices seem to fit with each other. And ours do."
MACY'S PARADE
To market and promote "Symphony," Manhattan Records is placing Brightman in a variety of high-profile situations to give her mass-market exposure. She sang from a float during Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade, and will be the featured vocalist on the NBC special "Fashion on Ice," which airs January 20.
Label executive Ralfini says there are plans to work a single to adult-contemporary radio, but the label hasn't yet decided which song. On the TV side, Brightman will shoot her own PBS special, slated to air during the March pledge drive.
Later in the spring, Brightman plans to launch a tour, a prospect that excites her.
"I think the secret to my success is the audiences," she says. "They come to see me and are really, really behind the projects. When I start albums, I can actually see the tours and how I'm going to create them and what I'm going to do. It's a big picture."
You can order Symphony right here.
"Me, Lars [Chriss, guitar] and Sampo [Axelsson, bass] are currently working our asses off, writing new songs for the upcoming LION'S SHARE album. Almost all the songs are written now and hopefully we can enter the studio in February starting the vocal sessions. This album will be nothing but a Metal Beast! The lyrics on this one will be linked together and in that perspective this CD will be something of a concept album. We'll give you a more detailed studio report when the time is right, so stay tuned!"
Fan-filmed video footage of LION'S SHARE performing the song "Clones of Fate" at last year's Sweden Rock Festival, which took place in June 2007 in Sölvesborg, Sweden, can be viewed below.
LION'S SHARE will release its new album, "Emotional Coma", in the U.S. on January 29 via Locomotive Music. The CD was issued by AFM Records in Europe and Spiritual Beast in Japan/Asia and features guest solos from ex-KISS guitarist Bruce Kulick, and MEGADETH guitarist Glen Drover.
Check an an e-card for the album at this location.
Eric Singer: Icons of Rock's "All Access to Drumming" DVD and "Kissology - Vol. 3 1992-2000" DVD
Bruce Kulick: Icons of Rock's "Kiss Forever" DVD, "Kissology - Vol. 3 1992-2000" DVD and Rock N' Roll Fantasy Camp
Rudy Sarzo: Icons of Rock's "Bass Essentials" DVD, as well as the tell-all book "Off the Rails" which details Rudy's tenure with OZZY OSBOURNE
Eddie Ojeda: Icons of Rock's "Twisted Method" DVD and solo CD
Other celebrities appearing on the show include Nadia Comaneci, Tiffany Fallon, Jennie Finch, Nely Galan, Marilu Henner, Piers Morgan, Omarosa Manigault-Stallworth, and Tito Ortiz.
The celebrities will be competing for cash donations to their favorite charities, with the grand prize being a check for $250,000 to the winner's charity.
Gene Simmons is Ruthless: Clip 1, Clip 2, Clip 3
Simmons added that he understands he's lucky to have a job he loves to do. "This notion that you have to have passion and you have to love what you're doing is the biggest load of crap I've ever heard," he said. "Most of the people on the planet don't have that advantage. They have to go to work at jobs they hate, they'd be lucky to have a job. The rest of us who happened to do what we love doing, that's a privilege and a blessing. But the notion you have to love what you're doing is nonsense. Just work and get paid, that's enough of a value."
Watch the interview at YouTube.
CLICK HERE to see a portion of the interview on EXTRA! 's website.
CLICK HERE to find out where & when the full segment will air in your specific area.
"Heroes of the Night" is available now for pre-order, and will begin shipping on January 15, 2008. The brainchild of Connecticut-based rock outfit EMERALD MONKEY, the album features guest appearances by members of BONHAM, SHOTGUN MESSIAH, ZAN CLAN, and more. The CD also includes exclusive bonus tracks and computer accessible enhanced CD content.
"Heroes of the Night" is a track-by-track re-creation of KISS' "Creatures of the Night", the 1982 release that returned KISS to the hard rock style that first launched their enormous rise to rock n' roll power, and re-inspired a new generation of musicians. In addition to EMERALD MONKEY's head primate, Jimmy D, "Heroes of the Night" features appearances by Rob Love (ZAN CLAN), Bill Bruce (SHOTGUN MESSIAH), Chris Laney (ZAN CLAN, ANIMAL), Daniel Macmaster (BONHAM), Peter M. Ahern (RED CHINA BLUE).
"Heroes of the Night" bonus material: In addition to the complete "Creatures of the Night" track listing, you will also find a stellar version of "Shout It Out Loud", performed by former BONHAM vocalist Daniel Macmaster, a bonus three-song EP from EMERALD MONKEY, as well as enhanced CD features including music videos, exclusive images, digital liner notes, and more.
For pre-order information and full "Heroes of the Night" details, visit www.TributeAlbums.com.
Both appearances are open to the public and free of charge.
Paul Stanley's Wentworth Gallery Appearances
Friday February 8, 2008 6 - 9 PM
Wentworth Gallery – Riverside Square Mall
171 Riverside Square
Hackensack, NJ
RSVP 201-488-7661
*Call for details on the special VIP Reception with Paul Stanley
Saturday February 9, 2008 4 -7 PM
Wentworth Gallery – Short Hills Mall
1200 Morris Turnpike
Short Hills, NJ
RSVP 973-564-9776
*Call for details on the special VIP Reception with Paul Stanley
CLICK HERE to visit the Wentworth Gallery web site .
Listen and chat live at www.radiorealitycheck.com.
"Ugly Betty" stars America Ferrera as Betty Suarez, Eric Mabius as Daniel Meade, Alan Dale as Bradford Meade, Tony Plana as Ignacio, Ana Ortiz as Hilda, Ashley Jensen as Christina, Becki Newton as Amanda, Mark Indelicato as Justin, Michael Urie as Marc, Judith Light as Claire Meade, Christopher Gorham as Henry, Rebecca Romijn as Alexis and Vanessa Williams as Wilhelmina Slater. Freddy Rodriguez is a recurring guest star as Gio.
Guest starring are Gabrielle Union as Renee, Paul Hipp as Phil Roth and Gene Simmons as himself.
"A Thousand Words by Friday" was written by Henry Alonso Myers & Sheila Lawrence and directed by Matt Shakman.
"Nick has usurped my throne, as the alpha-male of all alpha-males," Gene Simmons, who stars in A&E's "Gene Simmons Family Jewels", told an Australian publication called The Advertiser. "So when I'm in public and the girls run over and I'm thinking to myself, 'Simmons, you devil, you've still got it'. And you know when they giggle? [That's when] I'm thinking, 'Yeah babe, I've still got it' and they go: 'Where's Nick?'"
Read more at BuddyTV.com.
"Gene Simmons' blood is on my hands.
"Actually, it's not real blood, and technically, it's on my towel. But never mind. I am a roadie, at least temporarily. When KISS announced this spring that its four founding members (Simmons, Paul Stanley, Ace Frehley, and Peter Criss) would reunite for the first time since 1979 for a world tour, I realized there would be no better opportunity to answer a question almost as pressing as the exact length of Simmons' tongue: What exactly do roadies do? The tour promised to re-create the burlesque excess of KISS' '70s stage shows, complete with Kabuki- bondage costumes and rocket-launching guitars. If there was roadie work to be done, this was my chance.
"So here I kneel one July afternoon at Cleveland's Gund Arena, the 15th stop on a tour that has improbably become the summer's must-see nostalgia showcase, with a potential gross of at least $50 million. (Gary Bongiovanni, editor of the industry trade magazine Pollstar, estimates KISS could be the top-grossing — and gross-out — tour of the year.) Every night, before he's hoisted to the rafters by steel wires in one of the show's most crowd-pleasing effects, Simmons, the band's demon-seed bass player, drools blood from his mouth. And each day after, someone on the crew has to clean it up."
Read more at www.ew.com.
Metal-Rules.com: Wasn't this current tour with ALICE COOPER originally supposed to be one to promote a new album, the release of which was delayed for some reason?
Eric: "We were working on new material before the tour started and were originally planning to record a new record so we could tour for it. We did a bunch of demos, they wrote a bunch of songs and the producer that Alice was thinking about using at the time was busy with AEROSMITH, so he kept waiting. And before you know it he had this book coming out called "The Golf Monster" and he had to do the promotion for the book and all of a sudden we had to start rehearsals, so it just never got made. So he's going to do a new record at the beginning of the year."
Metal-Rules.com: Does the new album have a title yet?
Eric: "I'm not sure what he's going to call it because he's got a general concept or an idea that he's talking about, what he'd like to do, but now it's been almost another year, so as we all know, life changes. I'd imagine some of the same ideas he'd liked to do will still be explored, but you never know. It depends on who produces it and what kind of material comes up because now there are different people in the band."
Metal-Rules.com: Right now, however, you've got some gigs lined up with KISS in Australia and New Zealand, right?
Eric: "I'd heard there was supposed to be three Australian shows and one New Zealand show. I hear all kinds of things just like you do, but you've got to remember I'm out on tour. I don't handle any business to do with KISS, I don't do any business or musical decisions. Anything they do decision wise, I don't have any involvement with, so I don't always know what's going on. To be honest, many times I hear it from the fans or read it on the internet myself. That's how I find out what's going on because I'm here in Helsinki, Finland, on the other side of the world, and I don't pick up the phone and go 'What's going on?' I find out when they tell me, its better this way sometimes. I don't always appreciate... I mean honestly I would like to know so I can make plans for my life. Sometimes it's a little difficult, but I don't need to know everything every single day, that's what my point is."
Metal-Rules.com: How was it like to be in the recording studio with BLACK SABBATH for the first time?
Eric: "Well, it was Tony Iommi, you have to remember. It was great, look, Tony writes great guitar riffs for that style that he does heavy D-tuned guitar stuff, there's nobody better. A lot of people write some cool riffs, but I'm sorry, his riffs are the best. Anytime you hear any heavy band, even in the '80s when METALLICA came along and MEGADETH or PANTERA, it's all still copying BLACK SABBATH, in my opinion. BLACK SABBATH, nobody sounded like that before them. I mean I have heard bands that were heavy, but nobody sounded like them. So for me, not only was it a great experience, it was an honor. Anytime you get to play with, to work with someone who's been an influence on you musically, that's a great experience."
Read the entire interview at Metal-Rules.com.
Frehley, whose "Space Ace" persona during his Kiss tenure made him the hero to a few generations of guitarists-in-waiting, will perform inside the Seneca Niagara's intimate Bear's Den. During the performance, the guitarist and his band will debut tunes from a forthcoming album, Frehley's first outside of the confines of Kiss in nearly 20 years.
Tickets for the event -- which, considering the size of both the venue and the Frehley mythos, are sure to vanish quickly -- will go on sale at noon Monday. They're priced $30 and will be available at the Eight Clans Gift Shop in the casino, all Ticketmaster locations, through www.Ticketmaster.com or by calling 852-5000.
Adrian Erlandsson (CRADLE OF FILTH, NEMHAIN)
Barry Kerch (SHINEDOWN)
Chad Smith (RED HOT CHILI PEPPERS)
Craig Nunenmacher (BLACK LABEL SOCIETY)
Eric Singer (KISS, ALICE COOPER)
Gene Hoglan (STRAPPING YOUNG LAD, DEATH, DARK ANGEL)
Jimmy DeGrasso (MEGADETH, SUICIDAL TENDENCIES, Y&T)
Johnny Kelly (TYPE O NEGATIVE)
Matt McDonough (MUDVAYNE)
Mike Mangini (ANNIHILATOR, EXTREME)
Morgan Rose (SEVENDUST)
Vinnie Paul (HELLYEAH, PANTERA)
Important: The NAMM Show is **NOT** open to the public. The only attendees are NAMM member companies and their invited guests.
Stanley, 55, an art major and graduate, returned to painting about seven years ago, finding a strong demand for his work which goes on show at the Wentworth Gallery Garden City in New York on Jan 4.
Stanley spoke to Reuters about his art and music, speaking softly and pausing to think through his answers in stark contrast to his brash, on-stage persona "The Starchild:"
Q: Your art has become quite a business, selling for $2 million last year?
A: "It is incredible. For me the dollar figure is more of an acknowledgment of how people are embracing the art. If I became enamored or taken with the number I think it would take away from the creative spirit or what I am doing. The fact I started this phase of my life in art as a very personal and solitary pursuit has borne success because of its integrity."
Q: Have you been surprising by the reaction to your art?
A: "Totally. I have been humbled and staggered by the acceptance of my art. I started it as something therapeutic and cathartic for me without the intention of ever showing anything but from the first time I hung a piece in my house people were drawn to it."
Q: You said it was therapeutic during your divorce in 2000?
A: "Yes. It is way for me to purge. It is almost a stream of consciousness where you use color and texture as opposed to words. Once a piece is done it is almost a mirror, a time capsule, of me at a certain point."
Q: Is it addictive?
A: "Very much so. Not to minimize the pursuit of art but in the same way as going to the gym makes you feel good, you find yourself craving it. I had my left rotator cuff replaced a few weeks ago and my concern at that point was not if I could play guitar but if I could still paint."
Q: How do balance your art with your music?
A: "I don't bring paint brushes on the stage and I don't bring a guitar into the studio. You can compartmentalize and prioritize and there is time for everything."
Q: Some of your paintings feature the Kiss faces in their well-known make-up. Are those the top sellers?
A: "I did the four portraits of the band as a tip of the hat to our fans and believed they would be extremely popular. I have to say I found it really gratifying that those pieces are probably the least popular. I think it is great. It shows that the people acquiring the art are not acquiring it because of its Kiss content. That kind of blind adulation would be money poorly spent as far as I am concerned."
Q: You had to leave some shows last year due to a rapid heartbeat. Are you OK now?
A: "I am fine. That problem is something I have had my whole life. It won't kill me. It is a condition where my heart will spontaneously speed up but it is really not an issue unless you are about to go on stage. I saw quite a few doctors in my travels around the world and other than it being disruptive it is nothing more than that."
Q: So back on the road next year?
A: "We're heading to Australia and New Zealand in March. They are rumors of a European tour and perhaps a U.S. tour. We are one of those fortunate exceptions because our fan base is always broadening. We have had the advantage of being around for 35 years. We are always gaining new fans and some old fans come along with their kids. It is the young Kiss army."
Q: Has the band's off-stage act cleaned up over the years?
A: "Well, I am certainly not dead. I guess in some ways you might say if you sit at a banquet long enough you may have your fill and this has been one long banquet. You get to value home, family and friends more and more."
Q: You remarried in 2005 and have a second child, a young son. Any chance of a reality show about your family?
A: "I would rather have glass under my finger nails."
The real-estate mogul's NBC series tests familiar players' business sense in "The Celebrity Apprentice," premiering Thursday, Jan. 3. After an "Apprentice" season in Los Angeles, the show is back in New York for its seventh round, with 14 competitors from different walks of fame.
The rivals for a $250,000 grand prize for charity include actors Stephen Baldwin, Marilu Henner ("Taxi") and Vincent Pastore ("The Sopranos"); music stars Gene Simmons (of KISS fame) and Trace Adkins; and athletes Nadia Comaneci, Jennie Finch, Lennox Lewis and Tito Ortiz.
Also competing are model-actress Carol Alt; Tiffany Fallon, Playboy's 2005 Playmate of the Year; "America's Got Talent" judge Piers Morgan; media mogul Nely Galan; and, returning to the show, the memorably fierce Omarosa.
Pleased to have "Apprentice" back on Thursdays (where he says the unscripted series "used to beat 'CSI: Crime Scene Investigation' on a regular basis"), Trump admits the casting of the first celebrity edition "took a while. Some people just didn't want to be fired, but others absolutely wanted to be on the show. We ended up getting a cast we're really happy with."
A self-described "Apprentice" devotee, the lively Henner was thrilled to be one of the first celebrities summoned.
"I was the only one, except for Omarosa, who had probably seen every episode from the very beginning," she says. "After this experience, I am not only an even bigger fan of Donald Trump, but also of his kids."
Henner wasn't unnerved by their critiques while taping the boardroom sequences. "I don't know if it was the actress in me, but I just got a kick out of it. All I could think was, 'This is cool!' Also, we were doing it for charity, so it wasn't like we were vying for the same job."
Previous "Apprentice" wannabes went through their challenges in relative anonymity; not so for the celebrity players. "I actually think that makes it better," Trump says, "and it's easier for the show. You're not building up stars. These people already are stars, so there's a following automatically."
Trump didn't hesitate to put Omarosa back in the contest. "She's very smart, she's very tough, and she can be nasty. She's actually tougher on this show than she was the first time." Henner knew who she was going up against, and she says her view of Omarosa "ended up being completely the opposite of what it was at the beginning."
Going in with prior "Apprentice" knowledge can have "pluses and minuses," Henner says. "You might be too reverential, or you might think, "This is how they did it before. Should I do it another way?' I think the biggest adjustment was that we weren't playing 'The Apprentice'; we were playing 'The Celebrity Apprentice,' and you definitely had to get into a groove with that."
Trump hopes involving celebrities will re-energize "The Apprentice" overall. "NBC put on three [editions] one season," he says. "They were trying to capitalize on it, but it was a big mistake. I said I wouldn't do it anymore, but NBC wanted it. I'd had the idea for a 'Celebrity Apprentice' for a while, but the old group at the network didn't want to change anything. I wanted to, and we're already looking at doing another season of it."
This year's special guests are Eric Singer and Bruce Kulick (GRAND FUNK RAILROAD, ex-KISS). John Corabi (MÖTLEY CRÜE), Chuck Garric (ALICE COOPER) and Richie Scarlet (ACE FREHLEY band) will also perfom.
For info and to purchase tickets, go to this location.
You can check out Bruce's entire Fave 5, as well as read what Kulick had to say about why each song means so much to him, by clicking here.
* Q104.3 "The Jim Kerr Show" in New York City – "Live" segment at 7:30 a.m.
* Fox & Friends - live national television show! Segment to air between 8:30 a.m. and 9:00 a.m.
* CW 11 - Paul will be taping a segment that will air Friday
* ABC News Radio - Segment will be recorded and aired Friday
Paul will appear at the Wentworth Gallery located at the Roosevelt Field Mall in Garden City, New York on the following days/times:
Friday, January 4, 2008 6:00 - 9:00 p.m.
Saturday, January 5, 2008 6:00 - 9:00 p.m.
Living the quiet life at the Jersey Shore, Criss vows "to practice what I preach [this] year."
"I have a big mouth for a lot of people, but I never take my own advice and do it myself," said Criss, who lives in Wall Township and is best known for the ballad "Beth" and his cat makeup. "Kids will come up to me, young drummers, and ask me for advice, and I tell them, 'Keep playing, keep practicing, it's about the music, not about the money. Hopefully the money will come later,' and not to get stressed about it. I need to do that, too."
When Gene says amateurs he's relating to his competition as compared to the marketing empire he built with KISS. He said that he's poised to be "the apprentice."
"I'm wonderfully poised to be the apprentice, but I have also got my guard up because the person that finishes the line isn't always the rabbit," he said. "Sometimes it's the hair...of the dog (laughs)."
"The Apprentice: Celebrity Edition" kicks off January 3 on NBC-TV. Other celebrities appearing on the show include Nadia Comaneci, Tiffany Fallon, Jennie Finch, Nely Galan, Marilu Henner, Piers Morgan, Omarosa Manigault-Stallworth, and Tito Ortiz.
Watch Artisan News Service's interview with Gene Simmons on YouTube.
The Stanley and Brightman duet 'I Will Be With You' will be heard on her forthcoming album 'Symphony'.
The song was originally used as the theme for the 10th Pokemon film 'Dialga Vs Palkia Vs Darkrai'. Sarah sang the Pokemon version with Manfred Mann's Earth band singer Chris Thompson.
Other guests on Sarah's album include Andrea Bocelli, Alessandro Safina and Fernando Lima.
Sarah is the former wife of composer Andrew Lloyd Webber. It was in Webber's productions that she first made her name. Her most famous role was that of Christine Daae in The Phantom of the Opera.
She has also played the parts of Jermina in 'Cats', Emma in 'Song and Dance', Rose Vibert in 'Aspects of Love' and Kate in 'The Pirates of Penzance'.
Sarah's last studio album was 'Harem' in 2003. In 2006, Stanley released his second solo album 'Live To Win'.
On March 16, Kiss will perform a one-off show in Australia at the 2008 Formula One Grand Prix in Melbourne.
Even so, Simmons joins up for the next installment of "The Apprentice," debuting Jan. 3 on NBC, where celebs try to win $1 million for their charity. How cutthroat was it? Simmons says it wasn't for the faint of heart. "I can't be specific, but the truth is that there was literally more than one doctor that was brought onto the set because of the physical exhaustion."
1 Gene, you've done much more in life than rock the house, so you might be great at all the Apprentice tasks. What else have you done in life?
I started off as a sixth grade teacher in Spanish Harlem. I also worked for Vogue magazine as an assistant. I was a man Friday to the editor in chief years ago and did lots of stuff. I also worked as the assistant to the director of Puerto Rican Interagency Council, a government-funded research and demonstration project. I've done it all.
2 How did Donald Trump lure you into doing "Celebrity Apprentice"?
I went to a restaurant and I saw the powerful, attractive and world-famous Donald Trump there. And on the way out, we exchanged pleasantries and it was sort of a "Hey, you want to do the show?" kind of thing. It was very fast and I went to myself, "Well, I got a lot of stuff, KISS is going back out on tour, I got to tie my shoe and -- wait a minute. That's an interesting idea." ... Of course because I'm delusional, I thought I was going to sit in the judge's seat on "Celebrity Apprentice." I didn't know Donald Trump was going to throw me right into the pits of hell with people like Marilu Henner. She's all smiles and innocent, and little miss goody two-shoes. She's a killer.
3 What makes you want to compete in something like "The Apprentice"?
You know, I'm blessed to be the king of my own domain, ad infinitum, ad nauseum. But the question is if the rug is pulled out from under you and you don't have your support system, your staff, and your infrastructure, how good are you really? I'm also an entrepreneur. Entrepreneurs, it seems to me, by and large are self-motivators and self-starters. They'd rather do it themselves and sort of outsource and use somebody else's infrastructure to get to where they want to go -- it's a cheaper business model. So I wanted to see how good I was in another situation. I was curious. I mean, I'm the rat that knew the maze to get to the cheese as a rocker. But how good am I in a brand new maze? The question is -- and this is what any champion in any field will eventually have to ask himself or herself -- once you've got enough money, once you've got enough fame and the glitz, and the glamor and the power, and the accoutrement of the American dream, when all the flashbulbs are gone and the girls stop kissing you, and you put the awards away and the sun comes up the next morning, and you're there by yourself -- will you get up at the crack of dawn and try to beat your own record?
4 What did you learn about Donald Trump from this experience?
I learned that the people who have a problem with Donald Trump and the "You're fired" routine aren't pragmatic. You know, they think you're supposed to say nice things in life and that, you know, nobody can be fired. The truth is in life if people don't like what you do or you don't make sense, it's nothing personal. It's business. This is business and how you feel about it personally is beside the point. So my suggestion for everybody watching this show is to put on your thick skin, 'cause -- buckle up. It's going to be a rough ride.
5 Do you think some of your fans will now see you in a different light as a hard working, hustling Apprentice to Trump doing menial and businesslike tasks? Will this blow our image of you?
The disadvantage I had on the show is that I come from the boogeyman world, which is the rock world. I do some other stuff, but if you're in the rock world you're supposed to be big and bad, and you're supposed to be surrounded by beautiful women all the time. And, you know, people think of the accoutrements, the posse and the guys. People think you flinch and somebody brings you Champagne. I don't drink at all, by the way. So in some ways this Apprentice goes certainly against what I'm supposed to be projecting. But so what?
Since exhibiting his work through the Wentworth Gallery chain in February, Stanley has sold roughly $2 million in original paintings and prints, with pieces going for as much as $75,000.
"The amount of sales has been staggering," the soft-spoken rock icon said recently at his house. "That, to me, is a symbol of people embracing the art. But if I look at it purely as dollars, then I move away from what got me into this in the first place."
His subjects range from his father to the Statue of Liberty to abstract shapes - anything, he said, that reflects his emotional state at the time. It's different from songwriting, however.
"When I paint, the options are limitless — there is no framework, except the edge of the canvas, and anything I can do in there is up to me," he said. "In songwriting, there are very set rules."
Read the entire article at www.paulstanley.com.
He's 56 years old, clean and sober, but he's still Ace; in other words, he still seems like he has come here from another planet. Take these nuggets of on-stage banter:
"We whipped this one up a few days ago," he said, introducing "Stranger in a Strange Land". "I don't know what album it's from." (It's from his 1987 solo album "Frehley's Comet", if you're keeping score at home.)
After the song: "That was a book, wasn't it, 'Stranger in a Strange Land'? Someone wrote a book called that ... I should write a fuckin' book!"
Later, he addressed current events. "Didn't someone get eaten by a fuckin' tiger a few days ago?" he asked in apparent disbelief. "What the fuck is that about? I saw it in the paper and I died. I almost took a shit."
A couple times he wondered aloud if he had played Jaxx before. He was under the impression he had but was unable to find his picture in the hallway with other performers who have graced the venue's stage. (The Jaxx web site says Ace has played there twice.)
His rambling, which appeared to amuse him as much as the audience, helped create a relaxed atmosphere suitable to the intimate setting. The music, however, was no laughing matter. Frehley and his band — guitarist Derrek Hawkins, bassist Anthony Esposito and drummer Scot Coogan — cannot have been together long and while they weren't flawless, they were a lot tighter than I expected. At this point, Ace seems more interested in playing guitar than singing; he has a habit of getting to the microphone just a hair late for some lines and looking down at his guitar — and moving away from the mic — a little too early, letting his vocals trail off before completing the line. It's been a while since he has played some of these songs, so that might have something to do with it.
Read the entire review at Live-Metal.net.
"Today, I'm clean and sober. I celebrated a year of sobriety in September. It's nice to be healthy and get more accomplished. Life's good today," he says.
But that doesn't mean he's forgotten how to laugh.
When asked what his New Year's resolution is, Frehley replies in his trademark cackle, "What's my New Year's resolution? You know, I haven't even thought about it, to be honest. Things have actually gone really good. I'm being a good boy these days."
The last time Frehley was in town, Ronald Reagan was president, hair metal ruled the charts and Frehley was busy fronting his own band, Frehley's Comet (the band performed at the Allentown Fairgrounds in 1987).
"I've been all over the world. But I forget where, so you have to remind me," he says jokingly.
On Monday night, Frehley returns to the Lehigh Valley to ring in the New Year with his new backing band (guitarist Derrek Hawkins, bassist Anthony Esposito, and drummer Scot Coogan) at Crocodile Rock Cafe in Allentown.
The appearance is one of several stops that will carry Frehley into the early part of 2008, as he gears for the release of his as-yet-untitled studio album, his first since 1998's "Loaded Deck."
"I'm really looking forward to (the tour). It's been like five years since I toured," Frehley says.
"I did a Halloween show (at Hard Rock Cafe in New York City), and I had such a great time. I just told my agent to book a tour. I said, 'Let's go.'"
Frehley says, "(The new album) is progressing great. The record is more like my first solo album, my first album with KISS. I think everyone is going to dig it. There are some real heavy tracks on it."
Since taking off with KISS in 1973, he has established himself as one of rock's most innovative and prolific guitarists.
His Chuck Berry-meets-Jimmy Page fretwork defined the band's explosive sound; his lightning-fast runs on KISS classics such as "Cold Gin," "Parasite" and "Shock Me" have become required learning for generations of guitarists.
"For me, I like to get back to basics. The biggest difference today is digital editing and working with Pro Tools -- that's a big advantage. But you have to be careful not be caught up because sometimes you can fall into a trap. It's almost too many decisions, so I try to limit myself," Frehley explains.
In 1978, he scored a radio hit of his own with "New York Groove" from his debut solo album. But frustration with the band's musical direction led to his departure in 1982.
He found continued success throughout the '80s fronting his own band, Frehley's Comet, while rediscovering his passion for art (Frehley also designed KISS' famous lightning bolt logo).
"The artwork kind of relaxes me," he says. "I just came up with a new logo of an ace of hearts and a girl on a rocket. That's probably going to be the backdrop (at the shows)."
Frehley and original drummer Peter Criss reunited with bassist Gene Simmons and singer / rhythm guitarist Paul Stanley in 1996 for the hugely successful "Alive! Worldwide Reunion Tour" before parting ways once again in 2002.
"It was real strange doing the reunion tour. Putting on the makeup, it was almost like going back in time. There were times when I felt like I was back in the '70s. But, you know, it was fun while it lasted," Frehley says.
Since leaving the group, the Bronx native has juggled a variety of music- and nonmusic-related projects, including a well-received performance during the 2006 "VH1 Rock Honors" awards ceremony as a guest reviewer for TV Guide. He's even tackled an occasional acting gig.
"I think I'm up for a part in a mob movie -- what else?" Frehley says with a laugh.
Earlier this year, he once again donned his silver starburst face paint and moon boots for a guest spot in a Dunkin' Donuts TV ad. The clip became an instant hit and a favorite on YouTube.com.
"I thought it was funny, man. I got a lot of good response from people. I thought about trying to get (Dunkin' Donuts) to sponsor the tour. You know, free coffee and donuts," Frehley says, followed by another high-pitched laugh.
"It was a gas. I hadn't put the makeup on in like five years. I couldn't remember if it was six points on the star or seven. Actually, I still don't remember."
01. Rip It Out
02. Hard Times
03. Parasite
04. Snowblind
05. I Want You
06. Rock Soldiers
07. Shot Full Of Rock
08. Into The Void
09. Breakout
10. Stranger In A Strange Land
11. Strange Ways
12. New York Groove
13. Shock Me
14. Rocket Ride
15. Medley
16. Love Gun
17. Cold Gin
18. Black Diamond outro
19. Deuce
Kissology Vol. 2 1978-1991 and Kissology Vol. 1 1974-1977 also continue to sell extremely well. Last week Volume 1 sold 4378 units, and Volume 2 sold an additional 9073 units!
In the article, KISS guitarist/vocalist Paul Stanley had the following to say regarding Page's influential guitar-playing style:
"What was interesting about the guitar players in THE YARDBIRDS is how they all took their love of the blues and took it in different directions, particularly when you listen to Jeff Beck and Jimmy Page, who seemed less purist and more adventurous. It's interesting to note that both THE JEFF BECK GROUP, which he formed after his stint in THE YARDBIRDS, and LED ZEPPELIN came about at virtually the same time. LED ZEPPELIN's first show as LED ZEPPELIN was October of 1968, and they were rehearsing before that. The Jeff Beck ['Truth'] album came out in August '68. So both, in a sense, were incubating at the same time.
"It's interesting to see how much broader and wider Jimmy Page's vision was of what was possible. Jimmy understood the complexities and subtleties of producing and arranging and brought that to his band. As brilliant as Jeff Beck was, that's something he couldn't do, whether it was the limitations of the people he played with, which he himself has said he found frustrating, or just the fact that consistently Jimmy Page turned out to be a visionary. Jeff Beck had to use his phenomenal guitar talents to try and compensate for a lack of interesting or original material.
"The great thing about somebody like Jimmy Page is he brought a lot of influences and flavors to the pot. He was able to realize that for something to be heavy didn't mean that it had to be crude; that part of what makes something heavy was the depth and the ontricacy or the lightness. Here's a guy who knew Celtic music, rockabilly, American folk and international music forms, besides the obvious admiration for Robert Johnson and everyone who followed in his footsteps. They [ZEPPELIN] were all fans of Sandy Denny and FAIRPORT CONVENTION. He understood that for something to be truly bombastic, it had to have depth, and depth doesn't come from cranking up an amplifier.
"The idea of being able to paint sonically, to paint with light and dark and to see things cinematically, almost so that your canvas is large and your color choices — you're not afraid to use the whole palette. That's what makes those songs so dramatic. If 'How Many More Times?' was just one guitar cranked, it wouldn't have anywhere near the drama that it has. To a listener sho doesn't really understand what they're listening to, that's what it might sound like. But in fact it's so much more. And that becomes evident when you hear somebody trying to emulate it by just taking a guitar ande cranking it up through an amplifier."
Exclusively available at www.artguitar.com, the RiffMaster Pro features a fully functional PA system powered by Peavey, the world's largest manufacturer of musical instruments and professional sound equipment, along with two limited-edition AG RiffMaster Guitar Controllers.
"Peavey Electronics is the leading designer of professional speaker systems and we’re happy to partner with them to offer a quality unit that amplifies the videogame rock experience for gamers and musicians alike," stated Steve Spurgeon, CEO of ArtGuitar. "The RiffMaster Pro can also be used to plug in real instruments giving bar owners a unique way to attract consumers to their establishment."
The Peavey speaker combination includes four 10" high output power speakers and two tweeter drivers within a 412-stack exterior design. The enclosure also features a "through" connection to allow for additional extension speakers to be added. The head unit, designed to be positioned above the frame, is intended to hold a gaming console and creates a high output quality sound when used with music-based videogames. Also included in the bundle, is a quality Peavey microphone and two AG RiffMaster Guitar Controllers from ArtGuitar to provide the most authentic interaction with music videogame tournaments.
"This complete bar and nightclub tournament speaker system offers a unique alternative to conventional karaoke," stated Jim Beaugez, marketing communications director of Peavey Electronics. "And the quality AG RiffMaster Guitar Controllers are sure to create a gaming experience that bar goers will be lining up to experience."
The limited-edition AG RiffMaster Guitar Controllers included in the bundle are genuine life-size Peavey guitars modified for play with guitar-based music videogames on the PlayStation 2 computer entertainment system. Choose from 17 different designs featuring legendary rock bands MEGADETH, OZZY OSBOURNE, KISS, PANTERA and LYNYRD SKYNYRD.
To order the RiffMaster Pro or to learn more about ArtGuitar, please visit www.artguitar.com.
"I trust you all are having a great holiday with friends and family and I hope you all can be happy for whatever blessings in life you really have. Perfect example for me to share is my brother (Bob Kulick) breaking his leg doing what he loves to do, playing softball, on Sunday, December 16th and then realizing he was to be in the hospital for four days. He became a bionic man, with a titanium rod and plate in his leg, and will have a lengthy rehabilitation, which is something very new to him. He remembered four years ago when I was injured by a crazed gunman shooting me through the leg, and grazing my temple, that I could help him understand being in the emergency room and what may follow.
"Actually, Bob has a bit more rehab than even I had, although I had knee surgery four months after taking the bullet through my thigh muscle, as I twisted that knee pretty bad. Elective surgery was my situation, but Bob did great two days after he broke both bones in his left leg, and he is doing well all things considered. His doctor expects a full recovery. So once again, be grateful for all you can do, like walk up and down stairs, and all the other simple things we take for granted. And remember to take good care of your health, as my brother will recover more quickly because he is in good shape. Seeing our parents struggle, as fortunate as we are to have them around, has always been tough on our nerves.
"So in overview of my 2007, I wanted to share some highlights: touring Europe with the ERIC SINGER PROJECT in March and seeing some incredible countries (and fans!); performing in Brazil and Argentina; jamming with Jack Bruce of CREAM in London and recording at Abbey Road Studios; sharing the stage with Paul Stanley at two of the Fantasy Camps I appeared at; traveling all over the U.S. and Niagara Falls with GRAND FUNK RAILROAD; seeing the huge success of 'Kissology Vol. 2' and 'Vol. 3' (thank you all), recording, co-writing and performing in L.A. with 'American Pie' actor Thomas Ian Nicholas; receiving a double-platinum award from Kanye West for the 'College Dropout' co-write; receiving a platinum disc for LORDI, the band from Finland for whom I played a wicked guitar solo; making huge progress on my 'BK3' disc; buying quite a few new amazing guitars, and selling a few I didn't need as well; appearing at various KISS expos around the country (returning just recently from Brazil, again!); and ending up the year with a huge show with ESP in Mexico City!
"In conclusion, I did want to just say be grateful for all you have in your life. I have been very blessed with my work, and I am thankful to all the fans and the opportunity they have given me to entertain and share my music with you all. So have a wonderful holiday season and a Happy New Year!"
He still likes the ''rock 'n' roll all night'' part -- as he will prove at Allentown's Crocodile Rock on New Year's Eve-- but the partying bit has grown stale for the former Kiss guitarist.
''I'm doing well,'' he says in a thick Brooklyn accent from a New York City studio, dividing his attention between answering questions and working with a guitar roadie on modifying one of his trademark special-effects Les Pauls. ''I've been clean and sober for a long time now.''
Clean and sober, maybe, but back in the rocking world for sure. He has assembled a new band -- guitarist Derek Hawkins, bassist Anthony Esposito and drummer Scott Coogan -- and is working on a new CD due for release in March or April.
''It's gonna be a special night,'' Frehley says of the Croc Rock gig, the fourth stop on his latest tour. ''We're all pumped up for it. We'll come in ready to tear the place apart. The new band really kicks [butt]. We're gonna do Kiss classics, Frehley's Comet classics, new stuff. It should be a great night.''
Frehley says the intensity will be jacked up because a group of friends from New York are heading to Allentown for the show.
And what about celebrating New Year's Eve afterward?
''I'll leave it a question mark for now,'' Frehley says. ''If I said I was gonna celebrate at the hotel, they'd probably be mobbed and wouldn't like that.''
Paul Daniel Frehley answered a Village Voice audition ad to become one of the founding members of Kiss in 1972. Kiss' combination of anthemic teen-angst rock, driving rhythms, playful fretwork and spectacular pyrotechnics were as responsible for the band's success as the trademark makeup and Gene Simmons' ever-uncoiling tongue and always-ready Polaroid camera (the equivalent of today's ''Tommy Lee cam'').
The 56-year-old guitarist revived his Spaceman face-paint days in Kiss a few months ago, when he was featured in a Dunkin' Donuts commercial. ''I was trying to get them to sponsor the tour, man,'' he says (and you just know he isn't joking). ''It was a lot of fun to do.''
Coincidentally, Frehley's tour is kicking off just after last week's DVD release of ''Kissology: Volume Three 1992-2000.''
''I didn't even know it was going on,'' Frehley says of the latest Kiss concert release. ''Nobody checked with me. It's a mystery to me. I didn't get a … phone call. They didn't confer with me. Gene always takes the ball and rolls with it.
''It used to [tick] me off, but I've been away from [Kiss] for five years, so it's like water off my back. I'm excited about the new band, the new tour. As long as I get my [royalty] checks [from Kiss record sales] … .''
Frehley says the buzz about his upcoming album is that it harkens back to the days of his first solo effort, ''Ace Frehley,'' the only commercially successful of four solo albums released by the members of Kiss in 1978.
Frehley's hit from that album, ''New York Groove,'' is included in the new Kissology concert DVD set.
He is also responsible for writing ''Cold Gin,'' a song that became an anthem among teen drinkers in the mid-1970s. ''And I didn't even drink gin then,'' he quips.
The new Kiss DVD also features the band performing ''Detroit Rock City'' at the Palace of Auburn Hills.
''We opened up the reunion tour in Detroit,'' Frehley says. ''That was a rush, man. It was sold out. It was insane. Detroit has always been an excellent audience for us. We were headlining larger venues in Detroit when everywhere else around the country, we were still playing smaller venues. People thought we were from Detroit for a while, we were so popular there.
''But that's the past,'' he adds. ''It was all good stuff. Now I'm doing my own thing and I hope everybody enjoys it.''
Ace Frehley, with Broken Frame, 8 p.m. Monday, Crocodile Rock, 520 W. Hamilton St., Allentown, 610-434-4600, http://www.crocodilerockcafe.com . Tickets: $25; $30 day of show.
The concert is part of a four-day mini-tour designed to propel his new solo quintet into the recording studio in January. His untitled full-length CD is scheduled for a March 2008 release.
Space Ace is a founding member of KISS, the makeup-wearing glam rock band made famous by their fiery, theatrical stage show and such hits as "Rock and Roll All Nite" and "Calling Dr. Love."
At the height of their popularity, in 1978, Frehley, bassist Gene Simmons, guitarist Paul Stanley and drummer Peter Criss each recorded a solo album. The records were released simultaneously. It gave Frehley a taste of what a musical life without KISS might be like and helped to lead him away from the band four years later.
After the successful "Frehley's Comet" album in 1987, his career spiraled into a black hole of alcoholism, then was rejuvenated when he rejoined KISS from 1996 to 2002.
Today, Ace Frehley is sober and ready to launch into a new recording he says will sound like his first solo album as a member of KISS.
When the members of KISS set out to make solo albums back in 1978, was there a competitive spirit to see whose album would sell best?
Oh, yeah.
Before we all left to do our own records we had a big meeting. I might have read it wrong but the feeling I got from Paul and Gene was... I remember them saying to me, "Hey, if you need any help on your record don't hesitate to call." But I perceived it as a condescending comment, like you're going to need help or something.
Gene had everybody and his brother on his record. I did my whole record on my own with me and Anton Fig on drums. I guess my head was in a good place at that time.
What were the best years of KISS in terms of camaraderie?
In the early days there was a lot of camaraderie. I used to room with Gene. We used to stay at Holiday Inns. Paul and Peter roomed together. There was a lot of insanity, a lot of girls, a lot of parties, a lot of crazy times. I don't regret any of it, you know?
As a musician, how difficult was it to be a character in makeup and costume?
It was a royal pain... especially when we had to make personal appearances. It was one thing to put the makeup on, the costume and do the show, because by the end of the show you sweated off half the makeup. After shows we'd just jump into the shower and get cleaned up. But when you wake up in the morning (to make a publicity appearance) and have to put that stuff on, it was the worst. That started getting to me more and more towards the end.
Where did the smoking guitar idea come from in your KISS days?
I came up with the idea one day when I was up in Canada on the road and bought some smoke bombs. I ended up putting one in the volume control compartment of my Les Paul. I knew there was a canal because the wires had to go to the pickups. I figured if I lit off a smoke bomb in there it would have to seep out from around the pickup, and it worked, but it ended up screwing up the volume and tone control.
I did that a couple of times, and then I ended up getting together with an engineer, and we routed out the back of the guitar and put in a metal box, and the smoke came out of the guitar pickup closest to the neck, which was actually a fake pickup.
At what point did friction surface within KISS and pull you and Peter Criss away?
There was always a little friction. Me and Peter were the party animals of the group. That created friction.
In 1987, when "Frehley's Comet" debuted at No. 43 on the Billboard 200 chart, did you feel vindicated?
From the time I had the success with my (first) solo album I knew that I had to leave the group and make my own way. There was a lot more I needed to express both artistically and musically that I couldn't do in KISS, because everybody wanted to sing lead, everybody wanted the spotlight. It was always a power struggle.
I was just noticing some (KISS) videos recently that had been re-edited where I don't get as much spotlight as I originally had. It's just stupid stuff like that, you know?
My biggest problem was once I got away from them and I got on my own, I was left to my own devices. Being a party animal ended up doing me in for a while.
Drugs and alcohol brought your career down, especially during your solo years. How were those days for you?
It was a struggle. Thank God I'm clean and sober today. It's amazing how much easier things are without all that nonsense. Ironically, back in those days I used to think I needed it to perform. It actually made things a lot harder. But that's the disease of alcoholism.
When KISS reunited for "Psycho Circus" and the Farewell Tour, which ended in 2002, how was it performing with those guys again?
It was kind of strange because doing the old songs and being in the makeup and costume it was like a flashback. It was a lot of fun in the beginning because the fans were great, and whenever I give people pleasure by performing it makes me feel good. But after a while it got played out.
When I walked away after the Japan and Australia tour, I thought the reunion tour had definitely been overdone. I was really surprised the guys went out and dressed somebody else in my makeup.
When did they obtain the copyright to your character's makeup and costume?
It was a negotiation after I left the second time. I get a royalty on merchandising.
After you left the second time, Tommy Thayer, your guitar technician in KISS, was made the new Ace. What was your reaction?
It seemed a little desperate. Gene's all about money. I'm all about music and art. When I make decisions it's not always based on how much money I'm going to make.
I could have released this new record I'm making a year ago because I had enough tracks, but it has been over 10 years since I released a studio album, so it's got to be a really special record.
What was the best KISS album?
It's got to be a tossup between "Destroyer" and "Alive I."
According to RealityTVWorld.com, Simmons decided to jump onboard despite his reputation as a tongue-wagging, demonic-face-painted rocker and reality patriarch.
"I went to a restaurant and I saw the powerful, attractive and world-famous Donald Trump there," recounted Simmons. "And on the way out, we exchanged pleasantries and it was sort of, 'Hey, you want to do the show?' kind of thing. It was very fast and I went to myself, 'Well I got a lot of stuff, KISS is going back out on tour. I got to, you know, I got to tie my shoe and - wait a minute. That's an interesting idea.'"
After giving it some thought, Simmons said he realized he's "lucky enough — blessed — to be the king of my own domain" and was eager to learn if that would still be the case if he was taken from his comfort zone.
"The question is if the rug is pulled out from under you and you don't have your support system, your staff, your infrastructure, how good are you really?" he wondered aloud to reporters. "The other thing is the entrepreneurs, it seems to me, by and large are self motivators, self starters. They'd rather do it themselves and sort of outsource and use somebody else's infrastructure to get to where they want to go... The question is how's Gene Simmons in a situation where you've got other people? In other words, in a team situation. So it's a totally different model and I was curious how good I was. I'm the rat that knew the maze to get to the cheese. But how good am I in a brand new maze?"
Simmons apparently handled the maze well, according to Trump, who said the "Family Jewels" star was "true to himself" during the competition and "made some tough decisions." While The Donald was proud of most of the mice running through his maze, he said some of them did bump heads.
Read more at RealityTVWorld.com.
"I was real excited about going to the show. I remember it like it was yesterday. They were using Rickenbacker amps, which you can't find anymore. Back then Page wasn't using a Les Paul, he was using a Telecaster. Between him and Robert Plant they destroyed. They took over the Fillmore East to the point where, after they went off and the headliner was coming on, half the people walked out and didn't come back. I still think about that first time I saw LED ZEPPELIN at the Fillmore from time to time. God, I wish somebody had a video camera back then; it was incredible."
"I call her 'Mona.' And I figure from my own personal experience, every icon could use some new fresh paint," said Paul Stanley.
So Stanley brought the Mona Lisa into the 21st century. He also pays his respects to the Statue of Liberty, and to both of his parents.
This is the other side of the rock 'n' roll star you're used to seeing. He paints a story of a broken heart in a work called "Scream."
And then turns it down several notches to create a quiet painting called "Alone."
In 2007 his art sales were more than $2 million. But for someone who's already rich, it's about more than making money.
"What I'm trying to do with my art is connect with people emotionally. I think one of the beauties of abstract art is probably that it appeals to you emotionally, rather than intellectually. I'd rather get a smile or somebody going, 'Whoa!' than somebody going, 'Hmmm,'" said Stanley.
Stanley's abstracts include "Green Planet," "Winter Sun" and "Purple Haze."
"I love color and somebody was describing my work and said to me, 'You know, you're fearless with color,' and I said, 'What's there to be afraid of?' You know -- it's color!" said Stanley.
And he's not afraid to use color, or even his fingers, if it achieves the desired effect in a painting.
"You don't need a degree to know what good art is. Good art is what you love. When you go into a restaurant, you don't have to have someone tell you what bad food is. When you spit it out, guess what? It's bad," said Stanley.
But painting has been good for Stanley, who has found it therapeutic and eye-opening.
"I tore my rotator cuff and I had surgery five weeks ago. Ten years ago if that happened, I would have said to the doctor, 'Will I be able to play the guitar?' I said to the doctor, 'Will I be able to paint?'" said Stanley.p>Paul's original works start at about $14,000, but his giclee reproductions begin at about a thousand dollars.
Late Thursday, the network decided to move the show's debut back to Thursday, Jan. 3. Earlier this week, NBC had moved the premiere to Jan. 10.
All that, however, was before ABC decided to move its last original episode of "Grey's Anatomy" to Jan. 10. The network is instead going with an all-repeat lineup on the 3rd and holding an original "Ugly Betty" for the next week. ABC also moved the premiere of its drama "Cashmere Mafia" from Jan. 3 to Sunday, Jan. 6, where it will follow the last pre-strike episode of "Desperate Housewives."
The upshot is that "Celeb Apprentice" will go back where it started on Jan. 3, staying out of the way of the highly rated "Grey's." It will still have to face off against FOX's broadcast of the Orange Bowl and may have to contend with interruptions for news reports from the Iowa caucuses. NBC News says it will provide updates on the voting with "special reports throughout primetime."
NBC will sandwich the "Apprentice" premiere between an episode of "Deal or No Deal" and an original "ER."
NBC has decided to hold off on the show's premiere a week, pushing it back from Jan. 3 to Jan. 10. Its timeslot -- 9 p.m. ET Thursdays -- and everything else about the show remains the same.
The move will protect the show from a couple of other likely big ratings draws on Jan. 3. FOX broadcasts college football's Orange Bowl that night, and ABC is slated to air the last original "Grey's Anatomy" completed before the writers' strike.
It also extends the "Apprentice" run one more week into the spring, when -- barring a strike settlement -- supplies of original programming will be getting pretty thin.
"The Celebrity Apprentice" will bring together the likes of actress Marilu Henner, rock star Gene Simmons, former heavyweight champ Lennox Lewis and model Carol Alt, among others, to compete in business-related task under the eye of Donald Trump. The winner will earn a $250,000 donation to a charity of his or her choice.
According to a program description, "Listed" "counts down the 20 'fathers of heavy metal.' These bands' grandiose lyrics, theatrical performances and ear blasting power made them groundbreakers in their genre. The 'Metal God' himself, JUDAS PRIEST's Rob Halford, stars as one of the special guest commentators."
"Listed: 20 Fathers of Heavy Metal" includes the following artists:
01. BLACK SABBATH
02. LED ZEPPELIN
03. IRON MAIDEN
04. JUDAS PRIEST
05. METALLICA
06. AC/DC
07. MOTÖRHEAD
08. DEEP PURPLE
09. KISS
10. DEF LEPPARD
11. MÖTLEY CRÜE
12. VAN HALEN
13. MEGADETH
14. SLAYER
15. ALICE COOPER
16. SCORPIONS
17. ANTHRAX
18. MINISTRY / NINE INCH NAILS
19. PANTERA
20. SYSTEM OF A DOWN
For more information, click here.
* Disc 1 has an "amazing' five-minute compilation of KISS' recording sessions (between November 1995 and January 1996) for the album that became "Carnival of Souls".
* Disc 2 has the band's soundcheck for their performance under the Brooklyn Bridge for the MTV Video Music Awards back in 1996.
* Disc 3 has a 6:20 second clip from the BC Place Millennium December 31, 1999 concert from Vancouver. Paul Stanley counts down the millennium and at the stroke of midnight and Ace Frehley sings "2000 Man".
Other celebrity participants include "Sopranos" star Vincent Pastore (he was Sal "Big Pussy" Bonpensiero), Olympic gold medalists Nadia Comeneci and Jennie Finch, "Taxi" star Marilu Henner, Piers Morgan from "America's Got Talent", and former "Apprentice" Omarosa Manigault-Stallworth.
Simmons is hoping his face time with the Donald will leverage some of his other business endeavors. "I'm in the Gene Simmons business," he told the AP of his plan.
The celebrities will be competing for cash donations to their favorite charities, with the grand prize being a check for $250,000 to the winner's charity.
Video footage of Simmons explaining what it takes to win in life and on the show can be viewed below.
According to Zimbio.com, on the series' premiere episode, airing Thursday, January 3 (9:00 PM ET/PT), the celebrities try their hand at one of the most quintessential New York jobs: hot dog vendor. The team that makes the most money wins. However, being famous has its privileges, as candidates try to use their contacts to sell wieners at $5,000 and $10,000 a pop. The stars not only bring out their famous friends (including New York Met David Wright) to help, but they catch the eye of New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg. For the first time the 14 celebrities are stripped of their managers, personal assistants, agents, and publicists and are thrown out of their comfort zones. They quickly begin to size up each others egos, as they come face to face trying to split into two teams and choose team captains.
Trump's eyes and ears on the task are his daughter Ivanka and eldest son Donald Jr.
"The Celebrity Apprentice" is produced by Mark Burnett Productions in association with Trump Productions LLC. Mark Burnett, Donald Trump are executive producers, Eden Gaha and Page Feldman are co-executive producers.
Watch the footage on YouTube.
At long last, Zlozower has compiled the definitive VAN HALEN hardcover coffee table photo book, "Van Halen - A Visual History: 1978-1984". The 232 page treasure is jam-packed with hundreds of classic and never-before-published photos.
This visual history collects live, session, candid and backstage photos from Zlozower's behind-the-scenes perspective, along with testimony from the rock pantheon paying homage to the band, including members of LED ZEPPELIN, GUNS N' ROSES, ALICE COOPER, DEF LEPPARD, KISS, Joe Satriani, Steve Vai, Alice Cooper, MÖTLEY CRÜE, along with band insiders such as original manager Marshall Berle, producer Ted Templeman, Pete Angelus, Eddie Anderson, Dean Kramer, and many more. And the foreword has been penned by none other than David Lee Roth!
As part of VAN HALEN's entourage, "Zloz" toured America with the band, becoming their primary photographer. He was their friend who had the intimate access to the band that no one else had. Whether on the stage of a football stadium, poolside at a Holiday Inn or at Dave's dad's house, Neil and his camera were there and in everyone's face. He is also one of rock's most notorious and prolific photographers. His work has appeared in countless magazines and album covers. When you consider that Neil's prints sell for several hundred dollars each, it's pretty amazing that you can now own approximately 260 pictures from his prized collection for the very reasonable price of $34.95.
For more information, visit VanHalenStore.com.
Click here to watch a segment from the September 4, 1996 soundcheck.
But the greatness of Kramer doesn't stop at the music — Eddie photographed the moments in-between recording when the artists were listening back to their tracks for the first time. What exists in the Kramer Archives today are incredibly intimate shots of these legends hearing their songs for the first time and reacting to them in the moment- golden moments of creative inspiration.
Today (Friday, December 14), Eddie's contribution to music and pop culture is being celebrated at the Eddie Kramer Retrospect at Von Dutch LA (819 N La Brea, between Melrose and Santa Monica Blvd in Hollywood). Kramer himself will be there to sign prints and share stories. Don't miss this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for true classic rock fans and candid photography fans. There will also be a very special surprise musical guest.
Eddie Kramer Retrospective
Von Dutch Los Angeles
819 N La Brea,
Los Angeles CA 90038
Preview begins at 5:00 p.m.
Event is from 7:00 p.m. to 10:00 p.m.
"Symbolic" has sold just under 50,000 copies in the United States in the 12 years since its release, according to Nielsen SoundScan.
“We cancelled this concert because of lack of contracts. We could not come to an agreement on the content of the contract,” said Dennis MacDonald, president of Vancouver-based Big Mountain Concert Company (BMCC). “We find it very interesting that someone has accused us of being in breach of a contract that never existed.” MacDonald also clarified that it’s the band’s management and touring agents that are suing Big Mountain and MacDonald himself — not the members of KISS.
A statement of claim filed in B.C. Supreme Court on Nov. 28 by three separate Los Angeles-based companies seeks the $900,000 U.S. they allege was agreed to be paid for the 90-minute performance scheduled for Sept. 15, plus general damages and costs. The suit claims that the concert was cancelled by MacDonald and/or BMCC and the plaintiffs were willing and able to live up to their part of the agreement, including performing at the concert.
As a result of the cancellation, “the plaintiffs have suffered and will continue to suffer losses, injury and damages, including… injury to their respective reputations and loss of goodwill in their respective businesses, trades and professions,” the suit reads.
The suit claims a contract was made partly orally, partly in writing and partly by conduct and “it was understood and agreed by all the parties that the contract was final and binding.”
But MacDonald told The Question on Monday (Dec. 10) that BMCC representatives never signed the contract because they weren’t in agreement with it. “It’s abundantly clear that we disagreed with the contract,” he said.
An original deal was drafted in mid-July but weeks kept slipping by without the details getting nailed down, MacDonald said. The band’s representatives kept changing details such as technical and support requirements for the show, he said.
“There were changes that kept coming in in the last couple of weeks that kept adding to what our expenses would be,” MacDonald said. “It gets to the stage where you say you’re going to lose money on this if we proceed and these people continue to add on costs.”
When the concert was cancelled on Sept. 3, BMCC reps cited “logistical problems” as the reason it was called off. MacDonald said BMCC held out as long as it could without final details and in the end the added costs became “completely prohibitive.” He said thousands of tickets were refunded.
Breton Murphy, manager of corporate communications for Tourism Whistler, said none of the local organizations that worked to facilitate the concert is involved in the lawsuit, and to his knowledge nobody from TW has been contacted about the dispute.
Wentworth Gallery, one of the nation's leading fine art retailers, is proud to present an art exhibition by artist and rock icon Paul Stanley. The KISS front man will present his work at two special appearances at the Wentworth Gallery at Roosevelt Field Mall in Garden City, Long Island on Friday, January 4 and Saturday, January 5.
Both appearances are open to the public and free of charge.
Paul Stanley's Wentworth Gallery Appearances
Friday - January 4, 2008 6-9 PM
Saturday - January 5, 2008 6-9 PM
Wentworth Gallery
Roosevelt Field Mall
Garden City, NY 11530
RSVP: 516.742.6100
*Call for details on the special VIP Reception with Paul Stanley
"Got an invite to the 'Gene Simmons Roast' and it was a hilarious evening. It ran so late I couldn't even stay till the end, but some of the jokes about Gene and KISS in general were brutal, but very funny. He asked for it, and he got it. I also had the pleasure of speaking with Nicholas, his son. Imagine a young, spitfire version of Gene, without the knowledge of fame and fortune. A classy offspring, so Gene and Shannon (Tweed) have done great with their unique style of family. He is a family jewel! Sophie [Gene's daughter] was not in attendance as it was a bit blue and, shall I say, inappropriate.
"Also spoke with Geoff Tate from QUEENSRŸCHE, ALICE IN CHAINS' Jerry Cantrell, and Scott Ian from ANTHRAX. METAL SKOOL was the house band, and they are very funny to entertain. I know they will have to edit this event, as it was taped for A&E.
"By the way, I did not roast Gene, that was left for the comedians and his son.
"Can't wait to see the final version.
"Thanks to Gene for the invite. I had a great time!!"
Hollywood.com has posted exclusive photos from the "Gene Simmons Roast". Check them out at this location.
Each "roast" focuses on a particular celebrity as its target. A panel is selected from the celebrity's peers and current, popular comedians to comically point out the foibles of the personal and professional lives of the celebrity in question.
The "Gene Simmons Roast" was hosted by comedian Jeffrey Ross and is scheduled to air on A&E sometime in April 2008.
Ross stated before the event: "I'm roasting my childhood hero... Growing up, Gene was my favorite member of my favorite band. But that doesn't mean I'm not gonna take him down hard."
A poster for the "Gene Simmons Roast" can be found at this location.
A couple of video clips shot outside the Key Club the night of the "Gene Simmons Roast" taping: Clip#1, Clip#2.
"Beast Loose in Paradise" will be released as a downloadable single via www.zed.fi on December 24 and as a physical CD on January 9. There will be two edits of the song: "Radio Edit" and the "Dark Floors Version". The "Dark Floors" version will include a longer intro.
"Beast Loose in Paradise" — which is one of two new songs the band recently recorded — will appear in LORDI's upcoming feature film "Dark Floors".
In a recent interview with MonsterDiscoHell.com, the group's mainman Mr. Lordi stated about the new material, "These two songs were composed mainly during the Ozzfest tour. As a matter of fact I remember composing the chorus and the main riff of 'Beast Loose in Paradise' in Milwaukee and the chorus and verses of 'Studs and Leather' in St. Augustine."
He continued, "The origin of the main riff of 'Studs and Leather' goes way back. That one was taken from the unreleased LORDI album 'Bend over and Pray the Lord!' (which was supposed to be released as LORDI's debut album in 1999)! Though the tunes were changed, but the rhythm is still the same. The verse of 'Beast Loose in Paradise' is from another therapy band sessions from last Christmas. And the rest of both of the songs was basically made between the Ozzfest and TYPE O NEGATIVE tours... I think that's the first time some part of a song was made like this in the history of this band. The arrangements are done pretty much while the songs are demoed. The rest while rehearsing the songs and the final decisions in studio when recording."
Asked if there was any truth to recent report in the Finnish music magazine Soundi that the new LORDI songs would be "more brutal and raw" than the material on "The Arockalypse", Mr. Lordi said, "Our music is not gonna get any brutal or heavier, but not any lighter [either], that's for sure! I think it's gonna be pretty much the same. But it's so hard to think and say for myself. You'll be the judges then. I'd say these two songs are familiar LORDI. Although 'Beast Loose in Paradise' is more 'movie-esque' and 'horror-ish' on purpose. And some might say it's even heavier, but at the very least the chorus will be familiar and melodic LORDI stuff. And "Studs and Leather" is basically 'Heaven's on Fire' meets 'Balls To The Wall'. But as I said, it's really hard to describe them myself. And like I've said before, it's pointless to start forming opinions based on what I've said as to what the the next album's gonna be like. These songs were made for the movie and do not necessarily represent the future material in any way."
LORDI recently postponed its previously announced December 14 hometown gig at Lappi Areena in Rovaniemi due to ongoing post-production work on "Dark Floors". Tickets already purchased for the December concert will be valid for the new show. Tickets will also be refundable at the point of purchase.
"What an amazing trip I just returned from! For the second time in 2007 I got to visit Brazil. This time I did three shows starting off in Sao Paulo, then Belo Horizonte, and lastly a city called Curitiba. I was backed by a band called MUNDO CAO which is kind of 'World of The Dogs' to my translation!
"Brazilians are wonderful people and you should know they speak Portuguese NOT Spanish. So I always have a bit of a difficult time, as I want to use my knowledge of Spanish whenever I am in South America.
"I arrived on Tuesday, tired but ready for a good lunch, and then, of course, a nap as the flight over was quite long.
"The evening started with me doing some interviews for various magazines that cover rock in Brazil. Then we started our rehearsal. The guys in my band on this trip were Zeca on bass guitar and vocals, Fabio on rhythm guitar and vocals and Marcos on drums and vocals. They were prepared for my arrival although as always there are some nuances to learn to get the material tighter. I was happy to go have a bite afterwards and I must add that the food in Brazil is VERY tasty!"
Read the entire report at this location.
Through Zazzle's innovative on-demand technology platform, fans can instantly create and customize one-of-a-kind KISS products that will be shipped within 24 hours. Offering a large library of customizable digital KISS art, Zazzle allows fans to create their own unique KISS collectibles. Fans can mix and match KISS art with tons of great products, and they can even personalize products by adding their names, birth dates, favorite shows, KISS slogans, etc.
Every single KISS product Zazzle ships to customers is made — literally — one at a time, right after you click "Purchase Now." Zazzle also has a 100% percent satisfaction guarantee, if you don't love it, send it back.
Currently there are dozens of KISS designs available on items such as t-shirts, hoodies, posters, stickers, bumper stickers, buttons and postage stamps. New KISS designs and collectibles will be added in the near future.
Visit the KISS section of Zazzle by clicking here.
But there he is, large as life, cleaning up after the cat, washing the dishes and climbing into bed in his bright red pyjama suit.
Ageing rocker Gene Simmons, tongue-wagging KISS frontman and bassist who claims to have slept with over 4,600 women, is about to reveal all for Australian television.
Gene Simmons' Family Jewels is a reality television show that follows the family life of the rockstar, his former Playboy Playmate of the Year partner Shannon Tweed and their two children Nick, 18 and Sophie, 15.
The first series of the show will go to air in Australia from January 9 on Foxtel's Bio Channel.
Simmons says he didn't consult his family before filming started because, well, he's Gene Simmons.
"I have a peculiar lifestyle, I don't really check around to see if it's okay," Simmons told AAP from Beverly Hills.
"I sort of do what I want to do and then people whose lives I make possible trust that my judgments are correct.
"The idea of democracy in a home is highly overrated."
However, the rocker doesn't seem quite as tough on the first episode of the show, as his wife forces him to do the housework on her birthday.
It's a very different insight into the man who fronts one of the world's most successful bands.
KISS recorded 32 albums over 36 years and their record sales exceed 75 million worldwide.
Simmons himself has written two books, Kiss and Makeup in 2001, and Sex, Money, Kiss in 2003, produced the film Detroit Rock City and has his own record company.
And Family Jewels isn't Simmons' first foray into reality television.
He starred in Gene Simmons' School of Rock, where he taught classically-trained music students the art of rock and roll.
Again, Simmons says he is attracted to reality television simply because he is Gene Simmons.
"I'm in the Gene Simmons business and anything I want to do that appeals to me, I do and I don't really question it much," he says.
"I did (Rock School) because I wanted to do it, it's sort of like if you're lucky and blessed in the way I have been and continue to be, life gives you a menu and you have a choice.
"Most of the people on the planet don't have any choices.
"You know, you go to work at jobs you hate, you wind up having to go to your mother-in-law's house, the church forces you to get married.
"I refuse to lead my life that way, I do what I want to do ... I pick what I want from the menu of life."
Simmons says he also refuses pressure to marry his partner of 23 years, model and former Playboy Playmate of the Year Shannon Tweed.
He says the pair are "happily unmarried" rather than "married and miserable".
"As we both know, when the girls get together you always ask the same thing: 'why can't guys commit, why are they after my girlfriend?'," he says.
"Because it's the nature of man and you will forever be tortured by it.
"And you will finally come to the conclusion the only thing wrong with marriage is one of the two getting married tends to be a man."
The show is now in its third season in the US and Simmons' renowned magic touch with women - he claims to have slept with 4,897 women - is being stolen from him by his son.
"Nick has usurped my throne, as the alpha-male of all alpha-males," he says.
"So when I'm in public and the girls run over and I'm thinking to myself, 'Simmons, you devil you've still got it'.
"And you know when they giggle? (That's when) I'm thinking 'Yeah babe, I've still got it' and they go: 'Where's Nick?'."
The show reveals Simmons' children as polite, intelligent and well-behaved.
So how did he manage it? With attitude, of course.
"The old adage of you'll do as I say as long as you live under my roof is a very good rule," he says.
Episodes of Family Jewels include home video footage of Simmons dancing with a younger Sophie at a wedding, sitting with his children as toddlers at the dinner table and spending time with them backstage at a KISS show.
Simmons says just because he is famous, doesn't mean his children could get away with everything and their childhood was relatively normal.
"I think society has become far too permissive, that's why you have 12-year-old crack addicts running around, because there's no repercussion for bad behaviour," he says.
"And that's why both Sophie and Nick are A-list students and are charming and well-behaved, because (they're) not allowed not to be."
Simmons hasn't left his touring days behind, with KISS scheduled to play at the Australian Grand Prix in March next year.
"Of course, to get up on stage and to be an extrovert and make a complete spectacle out of myself, of course, is a privilege," he says.
"And also, it's time to show all the little bands how the big boys do it."
Segments of Wellington's Christian community are voicing concern about the festival, saying that it is disappointing the concert is being run over Easter Sunday, which is a very important day for the Christian community.
St Mark's Church warden Keith Newell says the nature of society these days means churches have to accept concerts like these, although he hopes their concerns are recognized. www.youtube.com
Check out the photos at this location.
As previously reported, Kulick attended the Florida KISS Expo on November 4 at the Holiday Inn Main Gate East in Kissimmee, Florida. Bruce took part in a question-and-answer session and was available for photos and autographs. He also performed many of his classic KISS guitar solos live.
Watch fan-filmed video footage of Bruce Kulick performing the KISS song "Unholy" at LapaMultshow on December 6 in Belo Horizonte, Brazil: www.youtube.com
"Kenny has been battling cancer for the past year now and unable to work. All of our friends wanted to step up and help raise as much money as possible to help Kenny and his wife Diana with their day-to-day needs," says Thayer. "There will be a raffle and auction of fabulous rock 'n' roll memorabilia including a Paul Stanley signature guitar signed by all members of KISS, a guitar signed by all members of BLACK 'N BLUE, KISS DVDs, vintage T's and other great swag."
Tommy will join many local area musician friends Saturday night at Berbati's Pan nightclub in downtown Portland. All proceeds will go directly to Kenny and his wife Diana. Advance tickets are $18.00 and $20.00 at the door.
In docs filed with the Supreme Court of British Columbia, lawyers for KISS contend Big Mountain Concert Company pulled the plug just 12 days before a planned September 2007 concert in Whistler, B.C., resulting in "injury to their respective reputations."
Check out the lawsuit at this location (PDF file).
Saturday, December 8, 2007
8:30 PM
Berbati's Pan
Portland, Oregon
Advance Tickets $18.00 / At The Door $20.00
In addition, the BLACK 'N BLUE bandmembers (not including Thayer) will meet on December 7 to plan the completion of the long-awaited "Hell Yeah!" release for Z Rock Records.
"Nothin' to Lose":
"Detroit Rock City":
Filling the weekly Wednesday 21.30 slot, the series will make its Australian premiere on January 9, offering a look into the life of the KISS legend and his family. It originally aired stateside on A&E.
Friday, December 7:
09:00 p.m. Dodger Stadium 98 Concert
11:00 p.m. "Kissology Vol. 2" Special
Saturday, December 8:
12:00 a.m. Dodgers Stadium '98
02:00 a.m. "MTV: Unplugged"
03:00 a.m. Sydney 1980
04:00 a.m. "Kissology Vol. 2" Special
05:00 a.m. [to be announced]
06:00 a.m. KISS Video Hour
07:00 a.m. "Kissology Vol. 2" Special
08:00 a.m. Sydney 1980
09:00 a.m. "MTV: Unplugged"
10:00 a.m. Houston 1977
11:00 a.m. "Kissology Vol. 2" Special
12:00 p.m. Dodgers Stadium '98
02:00 p.m. KISS Video Hour
03:00 p.m. Houston 1977
04:00 p.m. "MTV: Unplugged"
05:00 p.m. "Kissology Vol. 2" Special
06:00 p.m. Sydney 1980
07:00 p.m. KISS Video Hour
08:00 p.m. "MTV: Unplugged"
09:00 p.m. "Kissology Vol. 2" Special
10:00 p.m. Dodgers Stadium 98
Palm Beach Gardens (Nov. 30)
Boca Raton (Dec. 1)
Wellington pentecostal church Lifepoint says the lineup of bands - including former bat-biter Ozzy Osbourne and Kiss - are "not appropriate" and will have "negative influences" on the city during the two-day Rock2Wgtn festival on March 22 and 23.
They plan to lobby other church groups and will look at taking their concerns to Wellington City Council.
"It's not appropriate from our angle of things," said pastor Karen Crawshaw.
"I don't think we can force our views on others but at the same time we think it's a very negative influence on our city.
"It'll put a damper on the things the church traditionally focuses on at the Easter season."
The condemnation follows confirmation that another hellish rock act, Finnish heavy metal band Lordi, has been booked to appear at the Wellington event.
The band, whose five members dress in elaborate costumes as monsters and demons, won the Eurovision song contest last year.
The winning song, Hard Rock Hallelujah, includes the lyrics "I got horns on my head, my fangs are sharp and my eyes are red" - and prompted Finland's religious leaders to warn that the band could inspire devil worship. But vocalist Tomi Putaansuu, a former film student who calls himself Lordi, denies any Satanic leanings.
Concert promoter Phil Sprey has said the concert's lineup, expected to draw 80,000 people to Westpac Stadium over two days, would have a broad appeal.
Mr Sprey said the names of three more international bands and "two or three" Kiwi acts would be released over the next three weeks. The music would appeal across the generations - from children, to people in their 60s.
"It's a celebration of a weekend, a day everyone's supposed to be happy and cheerful. All we're doing is adding to that," he said.
But Ms Crawshaw said the music genre "brings together people who have a great deal of pain".
"I guess they find expression in that but it doesn't have a positive answer. The Easter story has a positive answer."
Father David Kennerley, of St Mary of the Angels Catholic Church, said the issue was more a reflection on how society was, rather than a religious matter.
"It's not the sort of thing I'd be going to," he said.
Mr Sprey said tickets would be available through Visa pre-sale on December 17 and to the public on December 20.
Prices would be announced shortly.
The artwork was reportedly obtained from Criss' ex-wife Lydia Criss through her private auction several years ago via Backstage Auctions. A certificate of authenticity from Lydia Criss and Backstage Auctions is included with each piece.
Click here to view the entire gallery.
To listen to the program live, visit www.paulandyoungron.com and pick a station.
Paul will also be the "in-studio" guest on WPTV-NBC 5 (Palm Beach) tomorrow during the 6 a.m. (EST) hour.
For more information, click here.
AVANTASIA's "Lost in Space - Part 1" and "Lost in Space - Part 2" EPs recently entered the German Media Control chart at position No. 9. It is the highest single chart entry in the history of Nuclear Blast Records.
An e-card for "Lost in Space - Part 1" and "Lost in Space - Part 2" — can be accessed at this location.
Apart from the identical title track, both releases feature completely different, exclusive songs plus videos, a poster, studio reports, a "making-of," a slideshow, and loads of enhanced bonus material, each for the price of a CD single.
The cover artwork for the upcoming album AVANTASIA, entitled "The Scarecrow", can be found at this location. Due at the end of January via Nuclear Blast Records, the CD is expected to feature guest appearances by the following artists:
Alice Cooper (vocals)
Amanda Somerville (vocals)
Bob Catley (MAGNUM; vocals)
Jorn Lande (ex-MASTERPLAN; vocals)
Kai Hansen (GAMMA RAY; guitar)
Michael Kiske (ex-HELLOWEEN; vocals)
Oliver Hartmann
Roy Khan (KAMELOT; vocals)
Rudolf Schenker (SCORPIONS; guitar)
The event — which is said to be a benefit for "wounded warriors" — will be hosted by comedian Jeffrey Ross and will feature "roasts" by the following celebrities and comedians:
Brian Poshen
Carrot Top
Dave Navarro
Craig Gass
Danny Bonaduce
Eddie Griffin
Fred Armisen
Jim Norton
John Heffron
Lisa Lampanelli
Ralphie May
Shannon Tweed
Steve-O
Each "roast" focuses on a particular celebrity as its target. A panel is selected from the celebrity's peers and current, popular comedians to comically point out the foibles of the personal and professional lives of the celebrity in question.
The "Gene Simmons Roast" will be in a similar format as the one for Pamela Anderson, going from 8:00 p.m. to approximately 10:00 p.m. PST and air on A&E sometime in April 2008.
Commented Ross: "I'm roasting my childhood hero... Growing up, Gene was my favorite member of my favorite band. But that doesn't mean I'm not gonna take him down hard. What should i say about him???"
A poster for the event can be found at this location.
"Tommy Thayer [KISS guitarist] just made a surprise visit to the Chicago KISS Fan Fest!
"The event opened at noon with the announcement that KissOnline would be raffling off a Tommy Thayer-autographed 'Rock the Nation' tour book at 2pm. When the raffle was held, the winner, 12-year-old Brandon Kisereu, came up on stage to get his prize and asked why it was not signed. We told him we'd take care of that — and then the side door opened and Tommy came onto the stage. The crowd went crazy! You could see the look of shock on people's faces — it was quite a moment!
"After signing Brandon's tour book, Tommy explained that he was in Chicago for Thanksgiving and wanted to stop by and thank the fans for all of their support! He then spent the next 45 minutes answering all kinds of questions from the crowd. Topics included Eric Carr, BLACK 'N BLUE, a salute to the US troops, the recent KISS trio concert, and of course many KISS questions! One fan told Tommy how much they appreciated him taking time out of visiting with relatives to spend some time with the fans — with that, the crowd applauded again!
"Before leaving, Tommy visited with Bruce Kulick backstage and then stopped to sign autographs and take photos for the many KISS fans who figured out which door we were taking him out the building! (KISS fans are smart!!)"
Check out photos from the event at this location.
Frank's Energy Drink has engaged the services of Simmons and his firm Simmons Abramson Marketing to generate brand awareness for Frank's, the energy drink known for its lederhosen-clad Energy Girls and its promise to "keep you yodeling all night long."
Hollywood-based Simmons Abramson Marketing is one of North America's leading brand-focused marketing agencies. The firm is managed by Simmons and partner Richard Abramson. Simmons Abramson manages the worldwide marketing, public relations, sponsorship, merchandising and branding efforts for the IndyCar Series, which includes the Indianapolis 500 race, an American sports classic.
Simmons, currently starring in the third season of A&E's hit TV show "Gene Simmons Family Jewels", generated a media stir recently when he joined the Frank's Energy Girls at several 7-Eleven convenience store locations in Vancouver.
The details are as follows:
Wentworth Gallery
Roosevelt Field Mall
Garden City, NY 11530
RSVP: 516.742.6100
Friday, January 4, 2008 6 - 9 p.m.
Saturday, January 5, 2008 6 - 9 p.m.
Dec. 27 - Jaxx - Springfield, VA
Dec. 28 - Jaxx - Springfield, VA
Dec. 29 - The Norva - Norfolk, VA
Dec. 31 - Crocodile Rock - Allentown, PA
Frehley is aiming for an early 2008 release date for his new solo album. The guitarist — who recently celebrated one year of sobriety after relapsing during the summer of 2006 — has finished recording around 10 new songs for the effort but is looking to lay down two or three more in the next couple of months in order to make the CD "really special," he revealed during an appearance on the "Friday Night Rocks" radio show.
Ace's new album was reportedly recorded with a trio of Ace, Anton Fig on drums and new bassist Anthony Esposito (LYNCH MOB).
Less known is Gene Simmons, comic book freak. Recently we called upon Simmons, 58, who publishes his own line of comics, to talk about his passionate relationship with Superman.
Q: What's your deal with Superman?
A: Well, Superman caught me as an immigrant. I came to America (from Israel in the 1950s), and I didn't look like everybody else. I didn't talk like everyone else, and yet I didn't actually feel lower than anybody else. I did feel like Superman inside.
I was immediately drawn to the idea of the cape and fancy outfit because we all wanted to show off, but I loved that underneath that was a mild, meek guy.
Q: Did your love of superheroes at all influence the presentation of Kiss?
A: There's a direct correlation. With Kiss, there was a certain stage persona and an offstage persona, an alter ego. For the first 10 years or so we protected our secret identity. People wanted to see what we looked like offstage, and we didn't do that for the longest time.
Q: Do you still have Superman stuff around the house?
A: Sure. I've always wanted to have Superman meet Kiss.
Q: Does DC (Superman's publisher) know about it?
A: I don't know. They're probably not aware that with Kiss and Superman together, their sales would skyrocket because we have more fans than they do.
Q: I'm curious as someone who's getting married ...
A: Who is?
Q: I am, in the next year or so ...
A: Don't do it.
Q: ... I'm wondering how your partner ...
A: No partners. It's just me and Shannon. Women are free now.
Q: I'm wondering what she thinks of Superman.
A: Oh, women don't have a clue. They never did. It's biological. Our aspiration to be heroes, to physical greatness and ruling the world is something totally foreign to them.
Q: How are you able to keep your Superman stuff and other comics from being thrown out?
A: Well, I own everything, you see. It's my house and my stuff. I don't get the you-live-with-a-woman and she can say "we" and "ours." No, that doesn't play in my house. It's my house. I bought it. You bought it. It's your stuff, not our stuff.
Now the secret can be told, says NBC, which made public Monday the names of the cast members.
Not that they needed any introduction. Not all of them, anyway.
Stephen Baldwin explained his participation by noting he already had "done a bunch of reality . . . I thought it would be fun to play the game.''
Likewise Gene Simmons of Kiss, star of his own reality series and unabashed self-marketer.
"I'm in the Gene Simmons business,'' he said, so doing "The Apprentice'' can only help promote his many other ventures. "Everything helps everything.''
Vincent Pastore (aka "Big Pussy'' from "The Sopranos'') was also instantly recognizable. Other famous faces include country music star Trace Adkins, Olympic gymnastics gold medallist Nadia Comaneci and heavyweight boxing champ Lennox Lewis.
But others on hand did need a bit of introduction.
Like Nely Galan, former entertainment president of the Telemundo network and executive producer (and "life coach'') of "The Swan,'' an extreme makeover program that aired on Fox a few years back.
Or the vaguely familiar-looking woman introduced as Marilu Henner, best-known from the sitcom "Taxi'' a quarter-century ago.
The 14 celebrities will not be vying for a job with Donald Trump, as in the previous six "Apprentice'' seasons, but instead will compete in business-oriented tasks around New York City to raise money for their favourite charities. The official "Celebrity Apprentice'' will win a $250,000 bonus to donate.
Tasks will be judged in the boardroom by executive producer-host Trump and his advisers, including, once again, his children/colleagues Ivanka and Donald Trump Jr.
As they met with the press in mid-October, the gathered rivals were set to face their first challenge the next day, when taping began. The show debuts Jan. 3.
Cast members for this rejigged "Apprentice'' -- which in the past relied on scrappy, ambitious star-wannabes -- were selected from a field of some 125 celebrity applicants, Trump told reporters.
"They were all begging to be on the show,'' he said. "The hardest thing was breaking it down to these 14.''
One deciding factor: Each of the chosen has had experience in business, Trump said. "These people have all done something very dramatic with money.''
Can they do it again, with cameras watching every move?
Actress-model Carol Alt acknowledged some initial nervousness.
"They're going to follow us in real time and that's scary, of course,'' she said. "I think with most all of us, we want control of our image -- it's part of the work that we do.''
Galan echoed Alt's trepidation.
"I've produced reality shows,'' Galan said. "To be on the other side is a little creepy. It's my karmic boomerang.''
Other cast members include Playboy Playmate of the Year Tiffany Fallon, Olympic softball gold medallist Jennie Finch, "America's Got Talent'' judge Piers Morgan, Ultimate Fighting Champion Tito Ortiz and Omarosa, the contestant on the first "Apprentice'' season in 2004. She is perhaps best remembered for making everybody on the show angry.
Why did Omarosa agree to come back?
"I did it for redemption,'' she told reporters.
"We'll do 15 dates or so," he adds. "We'll also go to Australia and New Zealand and maybe do four to six shows, but nothing comprehensive until we feel like it."
The first date to be announced is March 16 in Melbourne, in conjunction with the Formula 1 ING Australian Grand Prix. Tickets go on sale Nov. 30.
Meanwhile, it's been nine years since Kiss' last studio album, but Simmons says fans shouldn't hold their breath for another one. "There is nothing in me that wants to go in there and do new music," he says. "How are you going to deliver it? How are you going to get paid for it if people can just get it for free?
However, Simmons is preparing a boxed set of his solo music, "Monster," which he says will feature "150 unreleased songs." And, "Kiss will have another boxed set of unreleased music in the next year."
"This bonus disc will be carried by all independent stores (e.g.: Amoeba, Bull Moose, Dimple, Down In The Valley, Electric Fetus, Independent, J&R, Looney Tunes, Newbury, Plan 9, Rolling Stone, Salzers, Silver Platters, Twist & Shout, Vintage Vinyl, Waterloo, Zias, etc.) as well as national accounts (like Amazon, Borders, Circuit City, FYE, Hastings, Target, Virgin, etc)."
KROQ Weenie Roast - Irvine Meadaows Amphitheater Irvine, CA 6/15/96 track listing:
01. Deuce
02. Love Gun
03. Cold Gin
04. Calling Dr. Love
05. Firehouse
06. Shock Me
07. 100,000 Years
08. Detroit Rock City
09. Black Diamond
10. Rock And Roll All Nite
Commando Rock: You're working now on your new solo album, "BK3". What can you tell me about this material?
Bruce: It is still being worked on. I have the 11 songs that will appear, but there are so many things still being worked on regarding a few of the songs, that I take the progress one week at a time. This disc of new Kulick music has to be the next step in my evolution of BK as a solo artists. I also have a few special guests involved. But all the news will come out in time about that.
Commando Rock: What are the main differences between "BK3" and the other two records you released previously ("Audiodog" and "Transformer")?
Bruce: Well, I have a co-writer and producer who is very talented. His name is Jeremy Rubolino. We have been working together for a few years on this new music. He pushes me in ways I can't. So I am very excited about the new music.
Commando Rock: Both you and your brother, Bob, are part of the history of KISS. Together you released last year the DVD "Kiss Forever". Tell me about this project.
Bruce: We were approached at the NAMM show, and I thought it would be great for me to do an "update" on the songs of KISS. My other instructional effort was only from the "Asylum" disc for KISS. I enjoyed explaining the tunes, and Bob did the KISS-related tunes that he was involved in.
Commando Rock: Among all the bands you played in, without a doubt KISS is the most popular. Is being known mostly because of this period in your whole career something that bothers you?
Bruce: Not at all. It is a VERY positive thing, coming from KISS. Of course people ask what make up you wore. Those are the ones that are really aware of the band etc. But how many bands can you be a member of that is known around the world. People's faces really look excited when I say, "I played lead guitar with KISS for 12 years!" Wow that sounds awesome even to me!
Commando Rock: It's been 10 years since your last album with KISS was put out ("Carnival of Souls: The Final Sessions"), but you've kept contact with the other members of the band. What is your relationship today with the members of KISS?
Bruce: Well, I have worked with Paul of course on his solo disc, and Gene as well. I did two Fantasy Camps with Paul and that was very cool to jam with him onstage again with him. Gene and I keep in touch often and I am a fan of the A&E show. It was wild to be watching the footage a month ago that will be on "Kissology 3" and hear us all comment on the shows from my era. Very cool. Of course, Eric and I are very close.
Commando Rock: How did you feel when the reunion of the original line-up of KISS was confirmed that result in you leaving the group?
Bruce: Well, the success was not surprising to me. So of course they had to carry on in make-up. But I still think the "Revenge" band was important!
Commando Rock: The reunion lasted till 2000, and after that a lot of other musicians played guitar and drums. Would you say that the relationship with Paul Stanley and Gene Simmons is difficult to keep?
Bruce: They are like brother in a family. They will always disagree to a point but keep the amazing creation called KISS moving forward . Can't say they aren't good at it!
Commando Rock: Did you ever think about going back to KISS? If you were invited back today, what would be your answer?
Bruce: Tommy has done the "Ace" role just fine. If they want to do a "Revenge"-style tour etc, that would make the most sense to ask ME of course. Know a promoter with LOTS of money to make that happen?????
Read the entire interview at this location.
The Paul Stanley Preacher comes in four models, allowing for a wide array of features and designs for musicians to choose from. Each instrument will allow guitarists worldwide to harness the legendary, rock-driven tones of the Star Child himself. All the guitars in the series feature a mahogany-set neck and body, Grover 18:1 tuners, and are the result of intense collaboration between Paul and Washburn.
"What I wanted to do in designing the Preacher was to create a new guitar with an old soul," said Paul Stanley of KISS. "In essence, a historical classic that could have, but never actually existed. The design incorporates all the features, tone and spirit of an old iconic guitar but with better neck access and a unique take on a familiar shape. I was determined to retain all the characteristics that made a legendary guitar the gold standard for the last 50 years and yet create something new, unique and improved. I like to call it 'history with an attitude.'"
Paul Stanley worked intimately with Washburn on the design and construction of each unique guitar in the Preacher Guitar series. By lending his ideas and technical expertise, four exceptionally innovative instruments are now available for guitar enthusiasts everywhere.
"Paul Stanley has mesmerized fans for decades with his distinctive sound and style," said David Karon, Artist Relations Manager at Washburn. "He has contributed that same dedication and attention to detail during every step of the design process. From the shape, feel and tone of the guitars, Paul has had a vision for the Preacher Series and his vision has paved the way for one of the best Washburn guitars available."
The guitars will be offered with various components and features, including two models that are handcrafted in Washburn's custom shop. The Preacher Series includes:
PS9200
* Crafted in Washburn's custom shop
* Art deco headstock inlays
* Seymour Duncan Pearly Gates pickups
* Available in black and white
PS9000
* Crafted in Washburn's custom shop
* Rosewood fingerboard
* Pearl trapezoid inlays
* Available in gold top and honey-burst flame maple
PS7200
* Egnator pickups
* Tune-o-matic bridge
* Ebony fingerboard
* Available in black
PS7000
* Rosewood fingerboard
* Trapezoid inlays
* Gloss finish
* Available in honey-burst flame maple
The Paul Stanley series is available online and at major music retail outlets, including Musician's Friend, Music 123 and more. To locate a Washburn dealer, please visit www.Washburn.com.
"The rumors are true. KISS will provide a spectacular conclusion to the 2008 Formula 1 ING Australian Grand Prix by performing their full stage show for race goers in Melbourne on Sunday, March 16th, 2008.
"KISS will be flying to Australia especially for the Grand Prix and are looking forward to being part of what is widely regarded as the best round of the Formula One world championship."
Commented KISS guitarist/vocalist Paul Stanley: "Let me see — high-octane, roaring horsepower testing the threshold of sound and speed. And then the Formula One Grand Prix! No way we'd miss this! We'll be firing on all cylinders and the audience will need their seatbelts."
"We miss Australia," added Gene Simmons. "The people. The culture. And the Melbourne Grand Prix. This is gonna rock!"
A limited allocation of tickets named "KISS Pole Position" will be available for a reserved general admission area at the front of the stage. Patrons in this area will receive an exclusive souvenir ticket and lanyard on entry to the "KISS Pole Position" area.
Tickets go on sale on November 30.
Simmons is writing his third book -- "Ladies of the Night," a "personal and historical overview" on the profession of prostitution -- coming this spring via his own publishing company, Simmons Books. He also has Simmons Comics, with three comic book series based on characters he's created. The list goes on.
And if that weren't enough, Simmons manages a host of efforts with partner Richard Abramson as part of Simmons Abramson Marketing. Of those is NGTV.com, a popular video Web site featuring uncensored celebrity interviews and music videos in which Simmons is both the chairman and an investor.
Simmons took a few moments to chat with Billboard about NGTV.com, and discuss his thoughts about the overall digital music market.
How did you get involved with NGTV?
I think they wanted to add my name to the roster, possibly to raise funds and attention. I brought over my partner Rich Abramson and told them we'd come on board subject to a few provisos. One was that it would no longer be called NetGroupie. I came up with No Good TV and trademarked it. I found the building where it's based. And it's been a nice steady climb.
What drew you to the company?
Part of it is the uncensored thing. But a ship is only as good as the people who work on it. They have a terrific team of young, talented people who didn't just look at the clock -- and everybody does what they needed to do. That's my style too.
For a young company, it's taken off quickly. To what do you attribute their success?
You can't put your finger on it, but you can recognize pieces of the puzzle. The VIPs of the world in pop culture decide among themselves where they want to go and who they want to be associated with. That's called buzz. It's difficult to create it.
It's like if you open a disco in the middle of Manhattan and it has 20,000 square feet with modern this and modern that, and you expect the stars to go ... good luck. But you can have a little roach-invested bar downtown in the Meatpacking district and the stars will come out knowing full well they'll be photographed.
NGTV is one of the few projects that you're associated with that you didn't create yourself. What makes this different?
I trust my own gut. I like to create my own stuff, but every once and a while something comes across that just looks too good to be true. The day-to-day is still Kourosh (Taj, co-founder and head of programming). All I've done is co-raising the money with Rich, and branding it No Good.
You've got the third series of the Kissology DVD coming out next month. Is there much more we can expect coming?
There'll be 10. No one -- and that includes the Beatles and Elvis -- can touch our (KISS') merchandising and licensing. Nobody. Outside of the music world, it's only Disney and Lucas. But in the music world, they can't shine our shoes.
Any touring plans?
We'll tour a few dates next year. We don't have anything to prove to anybody or do press to convince anybody we're important. We're doing KISS festivals around the Indy car racing series. Simmons Abramson Marketing markets and brands Indy cars. I came up with the I Am Indy brand, by the way. They go on the night before. We'll do 15 dates or so. We'll also go to Australia and New Zealand and maybe to four to six shows -- but nothing comprehensive until we feel like it.
It has been nine years since we've seen a new KISS album. Any plans to get back into the studio?
The record industry is in such a mess. I called for what it was when college kids first started download music for free -- that they were crooks. I told every record label I spoke with that they just lit the fuse to their own bomb that was going to explode from under them and put them on the street.
There is nothing in me that wants to go in there and do new music. How are you going to deliver it? How are you going to get paid for it if people can just get it for free? I will be putting out a Gene Simmons box set called "Monster" -- a collection of 150 unreleased songs. KISS will have another box set of unreleased music in the next year.
The record industry doesn't have a f*cking clue how to make money. It's only their fault for letting foxes get into the henhouse and then wondering why there's no eggs or chickens. Every little college kid, every freshly-scrubbed little kid's face should have been sued off the face of the earth. They should have taken their houses and cars and nipped it right there in the beginning. Those kids are putting 100,000 to a million people out of work. How can you pick on them? They've got freckles. That's a crook. He may as well be wearing a bandit's mask.
Doesn't affect me. But imagine being a new band with dreams of getting on stage and putting out your own record. Forget it.
But some artist like Radiohead and Trent Reznor are trying to find a new business model.
That doesn't count. You can't pick on one person as an exception. And that's not a business model that works. I open a store and say "Come on in and pay whatever you want." Are you on f*cking crack? Do you really believe that's a business model that works?
So what if music just becomes free and artists make their living off of touring and merchandise?
Well therein lies the most stupid mistake anybody can make. The most important part is the music. Without that, why would you care? Even the idea that you're considering giving the music away for free makes it easier to give it away for free. The only reason why gold is expensive is because we all agree that it is. There's no real use for it, except we all agree and abide by the idea that gold costs a certain amount per ounce. As soon as you give people the choice to deviate from it, you have chaos and anarchy. And that's what going on.
For more on NGTV and how its affecting the music industry, look for the feature in Billboard's Nov. 24 issue.
"Maximum Threshold" is an Internet radio show dedicated to presenting up-and-coming hard rock bands and successful bands as well as interviews, news and music reviews.
To hear the program, go to MaximumThreshold.net beginning at 8:00 p.m. EST. A live video stream will be available on the front page of the web site.
Lydia's book, "Sealed with a Kiss", traces her and Peter's history from when they first met in the mid-'60s, through their marriage and the band's rise to superstardom, to their divorce in 1979 and the years since. Lydia could have just focused on her time in and around KISS, but she told The Pulse of Radio it was important to show the context in which the band formed. "It was a really wild time in New York and, well, in America, you know?" she said. "It was the '60s, and it was Flower Power, and — what was it, 'the Summer Of Love,' and you know, that's an exciting part of my life. And it kind of... it's important to see how it builds up to why Peter is the way he was in KISS, and why I was the way I was, and, you know, even the band."
"Sealed with a Kiss" has a huge amount of rare and unpublished photos Lydia's personal archives, including many from when the band first formed.
The book is available at the official LydiaCriss.com web site, where you can also have her personalize it by signing it almost any way you can imagine.
According to Wikipedia, Aucoin is widely credited with having "discovered" KISS, with whom he worked for eight years. He parted ways with the group in 1981 due to "creative and directional differences," with one of the alleged factors being his "vast unruly and expensive business organization which was eating up huge sums of money KISS were not making after the 'Unmasked' / 'Elder' debacles." He has now started to work alongside KISS on new DVD projects related to previously unseen concert video and unpublished photos.
Aucoin is back in the management business and has formed a company with his partner Kosta Kantzoglou called Aucoin Globe Entertainment. As of late 2006, he has two bands he is working with full-time: CROSSBREED and LORDI.
Thayer gave the order to fire, and his men, armed with carbines and three .50-caliber machine guns, killed 31 enemy troops without a single casualty in his squad. As the men moved through the forest, they encountered a smattering of resistance but captured hundreds of German soldiers along the way.
The next day, while searching for an ammunition dump, the men walked along a gravel road that led to an encampment. The stench of rotting flesh stopped them cold. They had stumbled into a German-run concentration camp. The enemy had fled already but some 17,000 people -- men, women and children -- lay sick and starving. When some of the survivors saw the Americans, they grasped at their boots and combat fatigues.
Thayer looked around. About 4,000 bodies lay around the perimeter. The smell of death mixed with stale cigarette smoke and human excrement. He offered water and some of his meager rations to a few of the survivors. Some choked to death on the spot, not having had food or water for such a long time.
He had the radioman send an urgent message: We need all the help we can get. "They were clinging to us, begging for help," Thayer remembers. "The smell really stuck with me. In my whole life, there's nothing that ever hit me like that."
For decades, thoughts of the concentration camp and gunning down those SS troops stuck with the young lieutenant from rural Carlton. "Shooting people, my God," he says. "For years, I felt guilty about having killed people. Killing is not a natural act."
The stellar military career, though, continued as Thayer earned accolades for his service. Bronze Star. Silver Star. Combat Infantry badge. He retired as a brigadier general, was inducted into the Infantry School Hall of Fame and became an honorary colonel of the 14th Infantry Division. He also was named civilian aide emeritus to the secretary of the Army, a title that required him to travel the world in support of U.S. troops.
Still, something ate at him. Until November 1992.
Thayer, on his way to a 40-site Holocaust memorial tour throughout Europe, was walking in the airport in Vienna when a man approached him.
"Are you Jim Thayer?" the man asked.
"Yes."
"If you hadn't come when you did, I wouldn't be alive today," the man told him. He was 14 at the concentration camp. "You saved my life."
That brought a certain peace to Thayer, the orphan farm boy raised by his grandparents on 28 acres of wheat, oats and barley in the mid-Willamette Valley. An only child, his parents split up when he was 4. His mother left him in the care of her parents while she worked as a teacher in the Northwest and beyond. His dad, always in ill health, was always on the road as a Fuller Brush salesman.
He graduated from the then-Carlton High School in 1940 before heading to the University of Oregon on a journalism scholarship. Several months later, the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor, and the United States went to war. Thayer signed up for the Army. "It was patriotism," he says. "Pure and simple."
After basic training and officer training school, he shipped out to Europe in January 1945 and remained there for a year after the war was over.
His career spanned 65 years, and it's still going.
Thayer spends a lot of time in his home office in a farmhouse he shares with his wife of 53 years, Pat, on five acres in Beaverton. He recently returned from two weeks with one of his four sons that retraced his steps in World War II.
He compares that war, to today's wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. "It's much more difficult nowadays," he says. "We knew who the enemy was when we were fighting. It's hard to tell who is who in Iraq."
If you ask yourself why fight in a war, you can't give a good answer, he says. But you do have to care. The complexities of war aren't as simple as us versus them, he says. As a soldier, if you ask yourself "Why fight in a war?" you won't be able to give a simple answer.
Today, on Veterans Day, Thayer, 85, likely is sitting atop the back seat of a fancy car, participating in a parade that honors those who fought in past wars. After the holiday, as civilian aide to the secretary of the Army, he'll visit Walter Reed Army Medical Center to monitor conditions and improvements in health care after the recent scandal.
When he talks about the soldiers involved in the current conflict, he speaks with the tone of a concerned parent. He thinks a lot about those fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan. He worries for their care and safety. "We can have a lot of thoughts about this war, one way or another," he says, looking out the window of his office. "But my job is to help the soldiers. It's what it was when I first enlisted and it's what it is today.
"They're doing a duty and we need to make sure we support them. Hell, war is a terrible thing. We just need to remember that a lot of them are kids."
The set, which has had its projected release date changed several times, will feature the following tracks:
01. I Love It Loud
02. Rise to It
03. All Hell's Breaking Loose
04. Heaven's On Fire
05. Thrills in The Night
06. Tears are Falling
07. Who Wants to Be Lonley
08. Uh! All Night
09. Reason To Live
10. Turn On The Night
11. Crazy Crazy Nights
12. Let's Put The X in Sex
13. Rock Hard
14. Forever
15. Unholy
16. Domino
17. Every Time I Look At You
18. God Gave Rock & Roll to You
Kiss, starring Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley, are well known for their theatrical make up and stage antics.
The event is being organised by Wellington-based promoter Capital C Concerts, who are already bringing Elton John and Bon Jovi to New Zealand this summer for one-off concerts.
Promoter Phil Sprey says the other acts will be announced shortly, but he is promising a unique 'Rocktacular', with a landmark special effects package.
Monsters Of Rock, Sao Paulo, Brazil August 27, 1994 track listing:
01. Creatures Of The Night
02. Deuce
03. Parasite
04. Unholy
05. I Stole Your Love
06. Cold Gin
07. Watchin' You
08. Firehouse
09. Got To Choose
10. Calling Dr. Love
11. Makin' Love
12. War Machine
13. I Was Made For Lovin' You
14. Domino
15. Love Gun
16. Lick It Up
17. God Of Thunder
18. I Love It Loud
19. Detroit Rock City
20. Black Diamond
21. Heaven's On Fire
The conference, "Small Business 2008: Hawaii's Economic Tipping Point", will be at the Ala Moana Hotel, from 8 am to 2pm on Wednesday, January 9, 2008. Advance registration is required.
Simmons, who appears on many business programs regularly such as the recent Michael Eisner program on MSNBC, will share his entrepreneurial secrets and, "Ten Points to Make You Rich Like Me."
A full crew from A&E will travel with Simmons to film two Hawaii episodes featuring him at the SBH conference, at conference partner, JP Mariott Ihilani Resort in Ko'olina, and other island attractions. Small Business Hawaii is grateful to Jeff Stone of the Resort Company and his staff for arrangements for this very special event.
The Las Vegas show with Gene Simmons fronting Royal Crown Revue will take place at Beacher's Madhouse, the world's most talked about variety extravaganza, located in The Joint at the famous Hard Rock Casino in LasVegas. Doors open at 9 a.m., with a red carpet entrance, and the entertainment is set to begin at 10 p.m.
Gangster big band Royal Crown Revue was recently announced as the backing band for Gene Simmons, following an earlier press release announcing that Gene Simmons would be fronting a mystery band. Over the past week Gene Simmons and Royal Crown Revue have been rehearsing for the event at undisclosed location in Los Angeles.
The Las Vegas show at the Hard Rock Casino with Gene Simmons will be the final West Coast performance for Royal Crown Revue prior to their sold-out tour of Australia. Royal Crown Revue will be performing two East Coast shows before year's end, one in Boston on December 12 at Sculler's Jazz Club, and one in New York City on December 13 at The Blender Theater at Gramercy.
Royal Crown Revue is currently in the studio recording their version of ELVIS' "Blue Christmas", with the single being released to national radio in early December.
For more than thirty years, Paul Stanley has reigned supreme as one of the single-most recognizable front men in the history of rock and roll. He's the principal songwriter, driving force and unwavering voice of KISS. A VISIONARY AND TREND SETTER SINCE THE EARLY 1970's, Paul Stanley's passion for both the musical and visual arts has perhaps been the key to the astonishing ongoing world phenomenon known as KISS. His artistic and visual input has been seen in his designs of KISS album covers, stages and apparel. As an art major and graduate of the prestigious high school of Music and Art in NYC, Paul has returned to his passion for painting, to share with you the deep emotions his art conveys. Paul Stanley creates portraits and abstracts that are emotionally charged compositions. He aims to maximize the direct, physical impact of his paintings through scale, texture, color and simplicity of images.
For more information, click here.
Rock 'n Roll Fantasy Camp matches ordinary people with rock star counselors who teach them the ins and outs of writing and performing music.
Launched in 1997, Rock 'n Roll Fantasy Camp now has annual camps in Los Angeles, Las Vegas, New York and London. To help celebrate its 10th anniversary, musicians Slash, Roger Daltrey, Joe Walsh and Jack Bruce, among others, will gather November 7-11 for a special camp at Las Vegas' Mandalay Bay Hotel & Casino.
A photo of Ace, Jay Messina and Halsey Quemere at Studio 4 can be found at this location.
Frehley is aiming for a January 2008 release date for his new solo album. The guitarist — who recently celebrated one year of sobriety after relapsing during the summer of 2006 — has finished recording around 10 new songs for the effort but is looking to lay down two or three more in the next couple of months in order to make the CD "really special," he revealed during an appearance on "Friday Night Rocks".
"As we previously reported, KISS licensee ICUP is working on a cool new table top KISS pinball machine. Here's an exclusive sneak preview of these new artwork sketches submitted for product approval. After apporoval of these sketches, ICUP will submit colorcomps of the artwork and then pre-production samples. If all goes well in these approval stages, the table top KISS pinball machine will be manufactured for sale to the public next year.
"In the sketch - the top part is the back glass and the bottom part is the playing field."
Rock Band comes out on the Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3 platforms on November 20, and PlayStation 2 on December 18.
The complete Rock Band soundtrack is (* indicates cover version):
THE ROLLING STONES - "Gimme Shelter"
AEROSMITH - "Train Kept a Rollin'"*
THE WHO - "Won't Get Fooled Again"
BOSTON - "Foreplay/Long Time"
MOUNTAIN - "Mississippi Queen"*
THE POLICE - "Next to You"
DAVID BOWIE - "Suffragette City"
BLACK SABBATH - "Paranoid"*
BLUE ÖYSTER CULT - "Don't Fear the Reaper"
THE RAMONES - "Blitzkrieg Bop"
DEEP PURPLE - "Highway Star"
KISS - "Detroit Rock City"
MOLLY HATCHET - "Flirtin'With Disaster"
THE OUTLAWS - "Green Grass & High Tides"
SWEET - "Ballroom Blitz"*
RUSH - "Tom Sawyer"*
BON JOVI - "Wanted Dead or Alive"
THE CLASH - "Should I Stay or Should I Go"
PIXIES - "Wave of Mutilation"
FAITH NO MORE - "Epic"
R.E.M. - "Orange Crush"
IRON MAIDEN - "Run to the Hills"*
FOO FIGHTERS - "Learn to Fly"
METALLICA - "Enter Sandman"
NIRVANA - "In Bloom"
STONE TEMPLE PILOTS - "Vasoline"
WEEZER - "Say It Ain't So"
SMASHING PUMPKINS - "Cherub Rock"
RADIOHEAD - "Creep"
BEASTIE BOYS - "Sabotage"
HOLE - "Celebrity Skin"
GARBAGE - "I Think I'm Paranoid"
SOUNDGARDEN - "Black Hole Sun"
THE HIVES - "Main Offender"
QUEENS OF THE STONE AGE - "Go With the Flow"
THE STROKES - "Reptilia"
JET - "Are You Gonna Be My Girl"
OK GO - "Here It Goes Again"
NINE INCH NAILS - "The Hand That Feeds"
YEAH YEAH YEAHS - "Maps"
RED HOT CHILI PEPPERS - "Dani California"
COHEED AND CAMBRIA - "Welcome Home"
FALL OUT BOY - "Dead on Arrival"
THE KILLERS - "When You Were Young"
NEW PORNOGRAPHERS - "Electric Version"
According to the site, "the place was packed and the line outside the building grew very fast with time. The stage was visible right away and featured walls of amplifiers (Marshalls and Frehley's — yes, they had 'Frehley's' on them!) and the backdrop that showed a witch with Ace's makeup on a 'rocket'...although take a good look on the rocket, though. The image on the backdrop was a typical Ace — spacey and funny.
"The first segment was the costume contest hosted by three comedians and Ed Trunk, won by Metal Sludge's CC Banana dressed as 'Ace Peeley.' And then, after a very, very long wait due to some technical difficulties, Ace and his band came out accompanied by an enormous roar from the crowd. This must've been the loudest reception I've ever heard. Ace immediately started with 'Rip It Out' and didnt stop until the fourth song! The band sounded incredibly tight and Ace looked and played better than ever! According to longtime KISS fans, it was THE best Ace since the early '80s! For 'New York Groove', Ace played his lightning guitar and Anton Fig joined on drums. Incredible show with incredible energy."
Ace Frehley's setlist for last night's performance:
01. Rip It Out
02. Hard Times
03. Parasite
04. Snowblind - I Want You
05. Rock Soldiers
06. Breakout
07. Into The Void
08. Strange Ways
09. Shock Me
10. New York Groove (w/ Anton Fig)
11. Shot Full Of Rock
12. Rocket Ride
13. Medley (My Generation, How Many More Times, Bring It On Home, Highway To Hell)
14. Love Gun
15. Deuce
16. Cold Gin
Check out pictures from last night's concert at Diamant Noir.
Watch fan-filmed video footage from last night's show: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7
In celebration of the 30th anniversary of KISS's "Alive II" LP (October 24, 1977), Lydia will be offering her book, "Sealed with a Kiss", for half price ($30.00 plus shipping) for one day ONLY on Halloween so tune in for details on how you can participate.
"If Paul goes out of tune, it's not his fault, it's my fault," says Francis Stueber, referring matter-of-factly to one of his many responsibilities as guitar technician for KISS's Paul Stanley, with whom he's worked closely since 2002. "Usually I change his guitar every four to five songs so he doesn't have to worry about going out of tune. It's pretty straightforward with KISS; Paul only plays one tuning and he plays no more than six guitars. Really the only reason I change guitars is for aesthetics."
Stueber's also worked behind the scenes for HEART, THE OFFSPRING, and REO SPEEDWAGON's Kevin Cronin — gigs that have established him as one of the most in-demand guitar techs in the U.S. But it's his work with KISS that's brought him the most recognition. Stueber's relationship with Stanley, which began back in 2002, continues to this day. He's worked on all subsequent tours and one-off shows, on behalf of KISS as well as Stanley's solo efforts. He even took the stage with Gene Simmons and Tommy Thayer during the "Gene Simmons Family Jewels" episode where they performed for the troops, and was on hand when Stanley cut his 2006 solo album "Live to Win". And, of course, he maintains Stanley's personal guitar stash, which includes a number of Les Pauls and SGs.
Read the entire article at KissOnline.com.
The 17-year-old found fame on TV series Rock School, which saw the legendary Kiss frontman teach a group of kids how to play instruments and sing.
Chris admits he wants to give Simmons a career update - but concedes the rocker is probably 'too busy' to get in touch.
Speaking at London's Hard Rock Cafe Rocktober event, he says, "I've got his phone number and email address, but I haven't called him. He's a busy man. I think maybe he just wants me to get on with it. He's a clever, clever guy. Whatever his reasons for not getting in touch I know will be valid.
"He was my mentor. He taught me absolutely everything. It would be nice to get in touch with him again and tell him what I've been up to and stuff. Because it's all down to him really, what I've been doing."
Click here to order the KISS Guitar Hero faceplate.
Friday, November 30, 2007
Wentworth Gallery - The Gardens
3101 PGA Blvd
Palm Beach Gardens, FL 33410
561-624-0656
Saturday, December 1, 2007
Wentworth Gallery - Town Center Mall
517 Town Center Mall
Boca Raton, FL 33431
561-338-0804
The venue details are as follows:
The Chance
6 Cranell St.
Poughkeepsie, NY
(845) 471-1966
www.thechancetheatre.com
It should be noted that Ace's appearance at The Chance has not been confirmed by an official source and should be treated as a rumor only.
The Entrepreneurs' Organization is a global community of business owners, all of whom run companies that exceed $1 million (U.S.) in revenue.
Over 1,500 business owners rocked from the opening of "Deuce" through the ending of "Rock and Roll All Nite" as KISS tore through a 17-song set. The atmosphere was reminiscent of a spring break party with many attendees standing in the pool that surrounded the stage, singing along to each song as beach balls flew through the air.
KISS' setlist was as follows:
01. Deuce
02. Shout It Out Loud
03. Makin' Love
04. Calling Dr. Love
05. Lick It Up
06. I Love It Loud
07. Do You Love Me?
08. Firehouse
09. Heaven's On Fire
10. Christine Sixteen
11. I Was Made For Lovin' You
12. God Of Thunder
13. Let Me Go, Rock & Roll
14. Love Gun
15. Black Diamond
Encore:
16. Detroit Rock City
17. Rock and Roll All Nite
Check out photos at this location.
Paul Stanley is a legendary American hard rock guitarist and vocalist for the classic rock band KISS. Paul's persona in KISS is "The Starchild" and this persona is carried through in the design of the products.
Launches at Hudson Bay Corporation (HBC) Zellers and Home Outfitters stores across Canada will take place on November 3, 2007.
"We were thrilled to work with Paul Stanley on this project and are proud to be able to offer Canadian KISS fans a little piece of rock n roll history in the form of an autographed, Paul Stanley-designed guitar," said Todd Taylor, sales manager for Erikson Consumer.
Click here to visit the Zellers and Home Outfitters' Paul Stanley page.
Limited to only 5,000 pieces worldwide, this electric guitar is designed and hand-signed by Paul Stanley of KISS. The guitar package is sure to become a highly sought after collectors item and comes with a certificate of authenticity, Paul Stanley guitar strap, three Paul Stanley guitar picks, and a Paul Stanley collector's poster. The package will retail for $299.99 and is expected to increase exponentially in value.
"To offer such a piece at this price is absolutely unprecedented," said Matt Golden, product manager for Erikson Consumer. "You typically see similar collector's items retailing for thousands, not hundreds of dollars. "Based on the demand, buzz on the streets, and feedback from anxious clients, we and HBC expect a very fast sell-out to very happy fans."
The guitar is a solid hardwood body design featuring nickel silver frets, an adjustable truss rod, four-bolt detachable neck, three-position selector switch, volume and tone knobs, individual adjustable bridge system, humbucker pickups and diecast tuners.
Accessories in the series include Paul Stanley Distortion Pedal, Paul Stanley Guitar Picks, Paul Stanley Pick Folio, and Paul Stanley Black Guitar Strings.
The Paul Stanley Distortion Pedal can be used with any electric or bass guitar connected to an amp. Features include a contour control with "MAX" setting for heavy distortion tones, heavy cast metal construction, and it works with either a 9V battery or A/C adapter (sold separately). It will retail for $74.99.
The Paul Stanley Guitar Picks are available in 12 different full-color designs. One package includes 12 medium gauge picks and will retail for $9.99. They can be stored in the Paul Stanley Pick Folio, $29.99, which holds 144 guitar picks — 6 double-sided sheets, each holds 12 picks per side — and zips closed to keep your collection safe.
Paul Stanley Black Guitar Strings are black coated light gauge strings made of Class 1 nickel. The package includes 009 .0115 .016 .024 .032 and .042 sizes and a spare high E-string included. The string package retails for $14.99.
Breaking the 100 million clip view mark is the latest in a string of achievements for No Good TV. In the past three months alone, the network has been the subject of a cover story in the Hollywood Reporter and has also enjoyed feature coverage in USA Today, Variety, the Los Angeles Times, the Associated Press, the Boston Herald, TV Week, the Denver Post and the San Francisco Chronicle, among others. Original series "In Bed with Carrie", hosted by No Good TV's own Carrie Keagan, is nominated for Best Web Talk Show in the first annual TV Guide Online Video Awards. Keagan herself was recently inducted into the Broadcast Film Critic's Association. No Good TV also recently signed with the Endeavor talent agency and partnered with 3 Arts Entertainment to launch a late-night television series with Robert Morton ("The Late Show with David Letterman") on board as executive producer.
"We'd like to thank our friends at YouTube for their tremendous support. They have created true digital democracy online by providing an amazing vehicle for new networks to connect with a mass audience," said Kourosh Taj, Co-President and Head of Programming for No Good TV. "Of course, we are especially grateful to all our fans worldwide and our friends in the entertainment industry who get a kick out of being NO GOOD!"
Read the full press release at this location.
Simmons and other alleged cast members Carol Alt, Stephen Baldwin, John Cena, Marilu Henner, Lennox Lewis, Tito Ortiz, Vincent Pastore, and former "Apprentice" cast member Omarosa will raise money for various charities throughout the competition.
According to RealityBlurred.com, TMZ.com captured several of the stars it named selling hot dogs in New York City on Friday, October 19. Those people were Lennox Lewis, Gene Simmons, Vincent Pastore, John Cena, and Stephen Baldwin.
The site says "production goons did everything they could to block our shot — which just seemed ridiculous, considering that a huge crowd of people was already gawking."
Check out the video footage at this location.
"Sealed with a Kiss" traces Lydia and Peter's history from when they first met in the mid-'60s, through their marriage and the band's rise to superstardom, to their divorce in 1979 and the years since. Lydia could have just focused on her time in and around KISS, but she told The Pulse of Radio it was important to show the context in which the band formed. "It was a really wild time in New York and, well, in America, you know?" she said. "It was the '60s, and it was Flower Power, and — what was it, 'the Summer Of Love,' and you know, that's an exciting part of my life. And it kind of... it's important to see how it builds up to why Peter is the way he was in KISS, and why I was the way I was, and, you know, even the band."
"Sealed with a Kiss" has a huge amount of rare and unpublished photos Lydia's personal archives, including many from when the band first formed.
The book is available at the official LydiaCriss.com website, where you can also have her personalize it by signing it almost any way you can imagine.
"The Other Side Of The Coin" is a compilation of previously published interviews and articles from the KissFAQ web site. It also includes additions to material previously published in the "Kiss Album Focus" trilogy and some unpublished material. The unpublished material includes unused magazine articles, sections previously cut from the "Kiss Album Focus" books, the "Rock And Roll Over Tour Focus", and updated "Kiss Family Trees" and the "Kiss Concertology, 2002-7".
Q: Will there be three bonus discs, as there have been on the first two volumes?
Ken: "Yes! Three in total, on initial pressings only. 1) The KROQ Weenie Roast/Irvine, CA 6/15/96 (first reunion performance in make up) [58 minutes]; 2) Madison Square Garden/Reunion Tour 7/27/96 [1 hour, 42 minutes]; 3) Sao Paulo Brazil 8/27/94 ('Revenge/Alive III' tour with Sphinx stage) [1 hour, 34 minutes] Sao Paulo is my fave of the three actually. Intense performance, they look fresh... different and classic tunes. Though the Weenie Roast is a trip to see again. Retailers and complete set lists per show TBA."
Q: Will there be any limited edition bonus goodies (like the back stage pass in "Vol. 1", or the Phantom ticket in "Vol. 2")?
Ken: "Yes, and no. The Coventry show (12/22/73) replaces any bonus goodies this time out, and will be available only on initial pressings, as well. There will be a cool full color booklet with comments again, of course."
Q: Easter eggs?
Ken: "Yes, this may still be in play, but I believe there will be three of them. Besides the amazing/surprising coolness of the 'Carnival Of Souls' studio footage, one other that I know of will be a soundcheck song (without makeup) before the Brooklyn Bridge/MTV awards taping. Not sure which song, but safe to assume it ain't 'The Oath' or 'Always Near You/Nowhere To Hide'... sorry kids!"
Q: Don't we already have The Palace '92 performance on "KISS Konfidential"?
Ken: "Nope. The footage on 'Konfidential', as cool as it may be, was a bit of a mash-up between different shows, put to the 'Alive III' audio only. I was lucky enough to see this footage in the editing studio with Roger and Alex Coletti. It's crystal clear, and I felt I had seen very little of it. It's the pure Detroit audio/video... untouched/affected like 'Konfidential' was. Though they did point out where a mic had cut out here and there, and other vox had to be flown in. It's cool that 'War Machine' made it, obviously. As well as 'Parasite'."
Q: Have we seen the "Behind The Scenes" for "Unplugged"?
Ken: "Very little of it. What I have seen so far was super cool stuff, mostly narrated by Alex Coletti ('Kissology' and 'Unplugged' producer). It's very cool that he is shedding some light on his experiences (especially since he is such a fan and was clearly living a dream)... there's riveting stuff. Ace and Peter almost back out of 'Unplugged' at the last minute... so songs like '2,000 Man' are rehearsed without them on the actual 'Unplugged' stage (If I remember correctly, Paul takes a crack at it!) and THE highlight for me was when Alex sneaks behind the piano during the six-man rehearsal of 'Nothin' To Lose' (at SIR) and plays the piano part. Peter smiles from ear to ear when it happens. Awesome!"
Q: Don't we have Dodger Stadium in bootleg circles?
Ken: "Nope... not this edit. This version is special because Alex and Roger and his crew unearthed the single camera feeds from each member and have constructed their own edit of the entire show. Conspiracy theorists unite, though, as Peter's solo feed did not materialize... so the men (and women) behind the curtains admitted that they had to use dress rehearsal footage to fill in Peter whenever possible. This was not a Gene directive, kids, so relax!"
Q: Commentary?
Ken: "Yes, though I didn't witness any of it, I know that Gene, Paul, Bruce and Tommy worked long and hard one day to get this all done. They did this right after we did our trophy presentation and all were in GREAT spirits. I do believe they all four did some stuff together where it made sense (e.g. convention/unplugged footage). Bruce later told me he heard and participated in some classic stories, as well as some all together new ones, with Gene and Paul. Sadly Eric Singer was on tour and couldn't make it the one day this session was scheduled.
Q: Will there be a "Kissology 3" special on VH1 like there were for the first two?
Ken: Yes, but this is for the band to reveal, I can say it will be very different, definitely bigger (like 'Volume 3' as a whole); some very cool surprises in store... I believe it will air LIVE at least a few weeks before KISSmass! And that's a wrap! (sorry)."
"In Bed with Carrie" features uncensored chats with the stars shot in some of the finest hotel suites in the world, with liberal use of the mini-bar.
No Good TV just signed with the Endeavor talent agency to launch a late-night network series.
The first disc begins with a complete performance recorded at the Palace of Auburn Hills in Detroit from November 1992. It also features the complete August 1995 "MTV Unplugged" set which found the original Kiss lineup of Gene Simmons, Paul Stanley, Ace Frehley and Peter Criss perform together on stage for the first time in nearly 16 years.
The second disc chronicles the original lineup's subsequent successful reunion tours of the late '90s, including the Detroit kickoff of the 1996 outing. Five tracks recorded near the Brooklyn Bridge in New York for the same year's MTV Video Music Awards round out the DVD.
Disc three boasts a performance from the August 1999 film premiere party for "Detroit Rock City" and a June 2000 concert at New Jersey's Continental Airlines Arena. The fourth disc eschews the chronological structure to offer a December 1973 set from New York, when Kiss performed the majority of its self-titled debut two months before its release.
Certain versions of "Kissology" will also include a fifth disc, which features the group's June 1996 performance at L.A. radio station KROQ's Weenie Roast.
In 2005, Stanley explained that the Kissology series was inspired by classic film by another renowned rock artist. "That Scorsese/Dylan piece ('No Direction Home: Bob Dylan') was eye opening, at least to me, in terms of how you can be immersed in a time capsule, and not only see the music and be part of the crowd, but also get a sense of who Dylan was then," he said. "That set a really high bar, and I think that is more likely our approach at this point."
"Kissology - Vol. 3 1992-2000" has been super-expanded to four DVDs, featuring over 100 live performances, commentary from Paul Stanley, Gene Simmons, Bruce Kulick and Tommy Thayer as well as a 20-page full-color booklet.
Five concerts are included:
* Detroit – 1992
* Detroit – 1996
* Los Angeles – 1998
* New Jersey – 2000
* Queens, NY - 1973
One version of the release will feature a fifth bonus disc of KISS' performance at the KROQ Weenie Roast on June 15, 1996. Tracks include: "Deuce", "Love Gun", "Calling Dr. Love", "Firehouse", "Shock Me", "100,000 Years", "Detroit Rock City", "Black Diamond" and "Rock and Roll All Nite".
For the complete track listing, click here.
According to the New York Times, the toothbrush doesn't have a speaker. Instead it uses a patented technology that transmits songs and musical vibrations via the bristles and teeth to the inner ear. (It takes pressure, not a brushing movement, to make Tooth Tunes play; kids can trick the brush into playing without actually brushing.)
The song lasts for two minutes, meaning it essentially acts as a timer to keep your kids brushing. And keeping a child brushing longer increases the odds that he or she will hit all the surfaces of the teeth. In one 2005 British study, kids spent about two minutes in the bathroom for tooth brushing, but most of the time the brushes weren't even inside their mouths. They spent 10 seconds brushing the front teeth, 13 seconds on the back teeth…and 30 seconds biting the brush and sucking water out of it.
Sold in drugstores or wherever you buy a regular toothbrush, the Tooth Tunes lasts about six months. Hasbro music entertainment president Dave Capper said it's been easy to sign artists to allow their songs to be used in the brush. According to Capper, KISS bassist Gene Simmons put one of the brushes in his mouth, smiled and said, "We're in."
Now kids in bathrooms everywhere are swaying to the classic "Rock and Roll All Nite". Said Capper, "The song has to be great for brushing."
A Tooth Tunes commercial featuring Stanley and Simmons can be viewed here.
TheSundayPaper.com: Do you think you've been well received by the art world?
Stanley: "I couldn't care less about the art world. I'm not interested in the snobbery that goes with any field. I'm only interested in people who connect because they love something or they love the work. I'd rather think of people as art lovers and collectors, and those people certainly have come in big numbers, because there are quite a lot of originals that sell, and to be blunt about it, they're not cheap. The sales in the last year are staggering, and I'm thrilled that something I initially did as a very personal means of expression and release has become something that other people relate to."
TheSundayPaper.com: How have you found the crowds at gallery shows to be different from rock audiences?
Stanley: "Interesting question. There certainly is a certain amount of crossover, but they both stand on their own. I'd have to say there are people buying paintings and other art that have never been to a KISS concert, and vice versa. I think it's great for both. The fact that people will initially come into a gallery and be drawn to some of my work without knowing who did it is very satisfying. And also knowing that some people [will come] who've never been to an art gallery, because I think the intimidation that pretty much is initiated by art critics keeps people away. The art critic would like you to believe your opinion isn't valid because it's not educated like his is. The truth of the matter is that it is valid."
TheSundayPaper.com: How is this creative process different from working with KISS?
Stanley: "This is unique in that it's purely my own. There's no collaboration and there's no opinions I have to deal with. That's always the ideal situation for me. I'm not really interested in anyone else's input on opinion when I'm creating a song or a painting. I'm certainly interested in what you think afterward. But the first person I have to please is me, and if I'm not pleased I don't care if anyone else is."
Read more here.
Friday October 19, 2007 6-9 PM
Wentworth Gallery - Phipps Plaza
3500 Peachtree Rd NE
Atlanta, GA 30326
RSVP: 404-233-0903
Saturday October 20, 2007 6-9 PM
Wentworth Gallery - Perimeter Mall
4400 Ashford Dunwoody Rd
Atlanta, GA 30346
RSVP: 770-913-0641
He's also turned his penchant for promotion, which fueled the band's fire-breathing success in the 1970s, into a second act: marketing. Clients include the Indy Racing League, for which Simmons crafted the slogan "I am Indy."
Then there's the Gene brand: His A&E reality show, "Gene Simmons: Family Jewels," is currently taping its third season. All those commitments keep Simmons on the road for almost half the year, and that's when the band isn't touring. We caught up with the rocker in New York City to talk travel.
Days on the road
About 180. We may tour next year, and that'll take ten months. But I go to all the IndyCar races and travel anywhere that includes the TV show.
Favorite way to fly
Overseas airlines. They treat you like a king. Singapore Airlines is just terrific.
Full service
At LAX, two blocks away from the airport, there's this secret thing. I drive up to a place, a guy gets in, I drive to United or American or wherever, and he takes the car. No parking, no torture. When I land, I make the phone call. Car drives up, I get in and drive off. It's called Airport Valet. It's my favorite thing.
Highs or lows: I like a clean bed and a clean bathroom. The rest of the accouterments I don't really care about. I've stayed at Motel 6, and they do a good job for the price. I used to like the Plaza Hotel in New York, and they seemed to like me because every time I went they gave me a suite and a butler. But I could go to Holiday Inn, and there'd be a party, and you'd have the time of your life. I'm what it's about.
Sweet spot: I still like the Carnegie Deli in New York, showing up at 2 A.M. and doing sinful things like having a hot pastrami sandwich, lean, extra mustard, pickle. Of course, you have nightmares from hell, but that's the price.
Best tool: I don't carry my computer, ever. Every hotel has them. And I refuse to get a CrackBerry. I talk on the phone. People want access to me, and it makes the deals go down faster. I have a two- or three-year-old Razr. Terrific reception.
Celebrity perks: Chicks. And access. Celebrity gets the door open. You can't create business, but celebrity gives you access to people because they're curious about you.
The 2007 Florida KISS Expo:
Sunday November 4
1:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. (2:00 p.m. for VIP holders)
Holiday Inn Main Gate East
5711 W. U.S. Hwy 192
Kissimmee, Florida 34746
For hotel rooms, call 1-800-327-1128 and ask for the KISS Expo rate.
At the time, See probably never figured he’d run into Simmons again . . . much less 32 years later at an ethanol plant construction site in Plainview, Texas.
But that’s exactly what happened last week when Simmons, the former lead singer of the 1970s rock band KISS, flew into town for a quick visit at the ethanol plant being built east of the city.
“Gene has a strong passion for helping the environment, and he came here to learn how (ethanol) is made,” explained See, construction project manager at the plant that is about halfway finished and 5-6 months away from completion.
“It was quite interesting to have a chance to sit down and talk to Gene one on one,” added the 49-year-old See, who used to dress up as Simmons’ KISS character for Halloween.
Simmons’ visit last Thursday afternoon came on short notice, and was kept very secret.
“Can you imagine what it would have been like had people known he was coming out here,” asked Mark Richards, maintenance manager for White Energy.
During Simmons’ visit, only plant employees were allowed on the premises. That was too bad for Barry Frye, husband of White Energy administrative assistant Hayley Frye.
“He was extremely jealous. He loves KISS,” Hayley, 20, said of her 26-year-old husband. “I was taught (when) I met my husband that I had to become an ’80s rock fan before I could come into the family.”
Simmons played the long-tongued Demon in KISS, the band whose trademark face painting and stage costumes helped make them wildly popular in the mid-’70s.
KISS’s elaborate live concerts — including numerous stops in Lubbock and Amarillo — featured firebreathing, blood spitting, smoking guitars and pyrotechnics. The band has been awarded 45 gold albums, and their worldwide sales exceed 80 million albums.
In 1983, KISS abandoned their makeup and enjoyed a commercial resurgence throughout the rest of the decade. Buoyed by a wave of KISS nostalgia in the 1990s, the band announced a reunion of the original lineup in 1996 when the KISS Alive/Worldwide Tour was the top-grossing act of the year.
The band continues to perform on occasion today, and Simmons also is the subject of a reality TV show on A&E called Family Jewels. The show revolves around Simmons’ life with former Playmate Shannon Tweed (they’ve been “happily unmarried” for 20-plus years) and their two children, Sophie and Nick.
Besides music and reality TV, another interest for the 57-year-old Simmons is ethanol.
“He’s very into promoting ethanol and supporting us and backing us up,” said Richards, pointing out that Simmons is not an investor in the local plant but asked to take a tour nonetheless.
“He just wanted to come out and see the plant,” Richards added. “More than anything, he really is looking at promoting ethanol.”
Added See: “Gene’s goal is to create more awareness in the American public on how important it is for the U.S. to use more renewable energy like ethanol. He hopes to start an ethanol education program in the public school systems.”
See said Simmons, wearing blue jeans and a pink shirt, flew into Plainview on Thursday on a charter jet with his publicist and a photographer. He arrived around 3 p.m. and spent about 1 1/2 hours touring the plant and meeting with ethanol officials.
“We met in the conference room and he shared his views on ethanol,” Richards said. “He said he’s a big promoter of it and very much into cleaner fuel. He’s a very environmental-minded individual.”
See said another reason for Simmons’ interest in ethanol is to lessen the country’s dependence on foreign oil.
“He’s all about America,” See said of Simmons, who was born in Israel and emigrated when he was 4 years old to the United States, growing up in Brooklyn. “He said he doesn’t care if (ethanol) is more expensive. That is just one part of what the world needs to do.
“He’s out to do good things with his money,” added See, pointing out that Simmons is heavily involved with ethanol in the Indy Racing League.
Richards and See came away very impressed with Simmons, not only because of his interest in ethanol but as him as a person.
“He’s a very intelligent man who has a lot of stake in different things,” Richards said.
See called Simmons “very articulate and well-spoken. He has a lot of passion about doing the right thing. He has a lot of integrity.”
Both men said it’s hard to believe Simmons plays the Demon character in KISS.
“You wouldn’t think he was a bad-boy rock star. You can tell it’s all entertainment, all the rock and roll type stuff,” said See, adding that Simmons, a former school teacher, never drank alcohol and never used drugs.
“He’s a very nice individual, very professional and very genuine,” Richards said. “He’s just a good guy. I truly enjoyed visiting with him.”
Before he left, Simmons signed the gas tank on Richards’ motorcycle.
“I’m going to customize it out (in KISS decor) and keep it as a keepsake-type deal,” he said.
“He’s really a pretty good guy.”
"This is a photo taken of yours truly rehearsing with a new, secret band for a one of a kind event... which we plan on shooting for our 'Gene Simmons Family Jewels' show.
"When and where 'the event' will take place MIGHT be announced here in the near future. And, if you can, you may want to attend. This is some of the coolest stuff I've ever been involved in. It rocks.
"I have deliberately left out photos of 'the band' for a number of reasons. Stay tuned."
Commented SILENT RAGE guitarist/vocalist Jesse Damon: "After we signed with Frontiers Records this summer, and going into this new CD, we started discussing songs and direction. We also wanted to make this a killer CD with some special touches and performances. I called Bruce to see if he could come on board to perform on a song we had just recorded for the new CD called 'Man or Machine', and told him I had written it back around the KISS 'Revenge' era, and the band had re-worked it some. I thought he'd be perfect for including his guitar solo touches on the song. He said yes, and turned out a killer performance.
"It's always a treat and a pleasure to work with Bruce. What a fantastic guitarist and true professional! We had also asked Eric Singer [KISS, ALICE COOPER] to record the drum track for it, and he would have, but his touring schedule conflicted with our recording schedule, and he wasn't available until December. Big bummer. We'll catch him next time around!
"We're looking forward to unleashing this next CD of 11 songs plus a bonus track."
SILENT RAGE formed in 1985 and became immediately well-known in the Californian scene, thanks to the captivating vocals, their style of blending guitar and bass and signature song writing. Their debut album, "Shattered Hearts", was produced by the legendary Paul Sabu in 1987 and gained immediate attention from the hard rock fans all over the world. One year later, Gene Simmons signed them to his own label and in 1989 "Don't Touch Me There" came out. This album reached #1 on European import charts and is still today regarded as one of the top examples of melodic hard rock sound of the late 80's. A third studio album, "Still Alive", was released in 2002.
Frehley said his new website should be up and running before the end of the year and his new album should be out in January 2008.
As for his relationship with Kiss, Frehley said Kiss have to pay him every-time they (Tommy Thayer) use his make-up, and he has to pay them whenever he uses the make-up. He said he is on good terms with Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley and also talks to them from time to time.
Listen for a replay of the Eddie Trunk Show show right here on KNAC.COM, Monday morning at 7am (Pacific Time).
Bonus materials include never-before-seen silent Super-8 film of KISS in Stockholm 1976; extended footage from the 1996 KISS press conference on the USS Intrepid; the "Beyond Vaudeville" KISS spectacular program; and 90 minutes of outtakes from the film.
"Bill Ward the original and founding drummer of BLACK SABBATH showed up in Fresno, CA for the show this past Monday. It is always good to see Bill! He is one of the nicest and kindest people you will ever meet! And he is a drum God in my book. He helped created heavy metal in its formative years."
Click here to view a photo of Singer with Ward and Vinny Appice.
Eric Singer recently spoke with DrumsWeb's Julio Herrera. Video of the interview is available for viewing in five parts at this location.
INsite: Obviously you followed the musical path that you did with KISS but was there an interest in other art forms at an earlier age?
Stanley: Well, I'd always done different forms of art and I was fairly gifted as others told me and that's why I was admitted to the High School of Music and Art as an art major. I think that, you know, KISS is obviously a product of both and KISS allowed me to have an outlet that incorporated both. I got to design stages, I got to design album covers and also to play music but the two also can live very independently of each other.
INsite: Hypothetical question for you. If you never meet and connect with Gene Simmons, is it conceivable that painting or some other art form would have played a bigger part in your life earlier on?
Stanley: It's a hypothetical question and perhaps one of the reasons I succeeded is because, and I have to preface this and say I don't recommend anybody doing it, I didn't allow myself a fall back plan so my survival was dependant upon my success. I didn't think in terms of the "What if," I only thought of "What had to be." You know, I think when you're motivated by a determination to survive you put a whole lot more in to it and again, that being said, I wouldn't want anybody else to try that because the cost of failure incredibly high.
INsite: What encouraged or prompted to you pick up the brushes and begin painting at this stage of your life?
Stanley: About six or seven years ago I was getting divorced and I really, like many people in that position, had a lot going on and a lot that maybe needed to get released. A friend of mine, my best friend, said that I needed to paint and my having never really applied myself to painting, somehow that connected with me and I went out and bought canvasses and paints and brushes and all kinds of other supplies and just decided to throw caution to the wind. The only thing that I was clear on from the get-go was that I wasn't interested in making a flower pot look like a flower pot. I was more interested in painting a reality that didn't necessarily have to be a literal or visual depiction of something so I wanted to approach it more of a stream of consciousness, where perhaps instead of using words I was using colors and textures to put my emotions, or what was going on inside me, on canvas. It was purely a relief and, I guess, cathartic therapy for me that once other people started seeing clearly connected with them.
INsite: With regards to expressing your emotions as it relates to music and painting, do you find it to be any more of a challenge to do that through painting as opposed to song writing?
Stanley: They're very, very different. The framework and structure that you work in with music is much more restricting because you have a melody and then you need to come up with the music that matches it, and then you need to come up with a lyric that rhymes. It's much more structured. With painting I find that the only limitations are the size of the canvas. It's much more, really about putting my reality on canvas and it's almost for me, a journey where I don't know where I'm going but I always know when I'm there.
INsite: When you're on stage with KISS or one of your solo shows, the adrenaline is flowing and you get that immediate feedback from the audience. It's obviously not the same situation with this art form.
Stanley: It's very different. This is a project that comes out of a very solitary work. You know, it's me alone in a room and, in a sense, when I go into a gallery I'm surrounded by myself. I'm surrounded by pieces of myself. It tremendously satisfying and gratifying to then have other people so turned on by it. No doubt, I've said before, my fame and notoriety certainly gets my foot in the door but it doesn't stop anybody from slamming the door. Nobody is going to spend a lot of hard earned money because they like your song. That's not going to be enough of a reason to buy a piece of art.
INsite: This tour of the Wentworth Galleries follows your recent "Live to Win" solo tour. Is there any synergy of the creative forces within you with your solo CD and your paintings?
Stanley: I think we define ourselves by the challenges we take on and what we do with them. I'm always looking for another way to express myself so whether it's painting or a solo album or doing "Phantom of the Opera" or doing KISS, whatever it is, it's part of my need or desire to do as much as I can. The boundaries and limitations or ideas that people have of who I am are purely their own and I don't live by those. I'm not defined by anybody else's ideas of what I should or shouldn't do.
INsite: KISS played four shows this summer. You're busy with everything you're doing and Gene has been busy with his "Family Jewels" television show and everything else he's involved with. Can you comment on the future plans for the band?
Stanley: I think KISS will continue to the level that people expect, in the sense that when we play, we can give our all. For us or for me to commit to a full tour is a huge commitment because we have a lot to live up to, I have a lot to live up to and the only way I can do that is by feeling confident that I can go out there and give it my all. Going out and doing four shows this summer was basically just to grease the gears and get the motor running. There'll be more shows for sure. KISS is a large part of who I am. It's not all I am but, you know, it definitely is a cornerstone.
Commented Trunk: "Well, I told you this show would sell out quick and I wasn't hyping you! I knew this would be a big deal and I've heard from people all over the world coming to see it. Really makes me proud that this sold out simply from a few mentions on my radio show one night and, of course, the info here on [my web site]. You guys rule!
Trunk added, "Spent today in NYC with Ace. We had lunch at the Hard Rock Café and I showed Ace the stage and venue for the event. He's totally pumped about getting on stage and I'm already making my song requests for the set! Remember, my radio show on Q104 is the ONLY way to now get into this event! Just listen to the show the next four weeks. Anytime I play a song with Ace on it 25th caller gets free tix to this now-sold-out event.
"Ace will be on with me this Friday night and there is a chance a few more tix might be released through Ticketmaster in the coming days. I will let you know if and when this happens exclusively on this site and on the radio show."
Frehley is very happy to be back playing for the first time since his halcyon days with KISS, the band he co-founded. He's been holed up in the recording studio of late working on his upcoming solo album, due for a 2008 release. "I can't wait to get up on stage and rock 'n' roll," says Ace of the one-off show that already is garnering tremendous response.
Although information on the set and who will play with Frehley is being kept under wraps, Ace says to expect KISS classics and solo originals. The traditional costume contest, complete with prizes, will, of course, be part of the festivities.
Frehley is very happy to be back playing for the first time since his halcyon days with KISS, the band he co-founded. He's been holed up in the recording studio of late working on his upcoming solo album, due for a 2008 release. "I can't wait to get up on stage and rock 'n' roll," says Ace of the one-off show that already is garnering tremendous response.
Although information on the set and who will play with Frehley is being kept under wraps, Ace says to expect KISS classics and solo originals. The traditional costume contest, complete with prizes, will, of course, be part of the festivities.
According to Trunk, "All the details to be announced this Friday night [September 28] on my radio show! Trust me, this will be special and you will not want to be shut out. There will no doubt be people willing to travel from all over the U.S. and probably the world to see this artist again! This will be a ticketed event sold through Ticketmaster only. Exclusive announcement this Friday night on Q104.3 NYC from 11PM-2AM EST. Remember you can hear the show live anywhere in the U.S. online at www.q1043.com as well. Hold the date and get ready for the biggest Eddie Trunk Halloween Bash yet!"
Ace has recorded 10 new songs for a brand new studio album, tentatively due next year. The recordings were made with a trio of Ace, Anton Fig on drums and new bassist Anthony Esposito (LYNCH MOB). Ace's touring band will feature Ace, Anthony and other players yet to be announced.
Not on this year's ballot is the band that the web site Future Rock Hall considered the heaviest favorite to be inducted in 2008: METALLICA. Other acts that were snubbed include RUSH, KISS, JETHRO TULL, STYX, YES, GENESIS/PETER GABRIEL and ELECTRIC LIGHT ORCHESTRA.
Q: Are you maniacal to get your children to succeed like you succeeded?
Gene: "No. What I wanna do is what every bird does in its nest — it forces the kids to go out there and figure it out for themselves. By the way, in terms of an inheritance and stuff, they're gonna be taken care of, but they will never be rich off my money. Because every year they should be forced to get up out of bed and go out and work and make their own way."
Q: What are you gonna do with your money?
Gene: "I might give it all away. But the point is, there's gonna be a yearly allowance so that their rent and their food and all that stuff's gonna be taken care of, but if you wanna riches, you should do that yourself — you should never thank your parents, 'I was born into money.' 'Well, that's nice, but what have you done lately?' Because I don't them to say, 'Thanks, dad, for making me rich.' No, you wanna be able to stand on your own two feet and say, 'I did that.'"
"Why so many episodes?" Gene writes on his web site. "Because you're watching us. And we thank you."
Glam-Metal.com: You are working on a new solo CD. Any perspective titles for the CD and do you have release date?
Bruce: It's been hard to get the work done on it due to my traveling this summer. It's going to be called "BK3" or at least that's the working title that has been sticking as this is my third solo record. Plus graphically with those letters, I can do something strong as I have had some people present some things for me. On my website which is www.kulick.net I show a blog for every time I go into the studio, which is 15 days now. I'm hoping certainly by the end of fall or maybe getting it out by the end of this year. If not, early next year. I'm very serious about doing it. I'm really excited about the songs and the progress I made. When I home I'm recording, but I can't record on the road because I don't have a touring bus.
Glam-Metal.com: Any special guest appearances on the CD?
Bruce: Yeah! It's exciting so far and I'm thinking of other people but one guy I have recorded with who I met through the Fantasy Camp is Doug Fieger (THE KNACK). We hit it off really well and he is a fan of vintage guitars like myself. He lives in L.A. and we're able to keep in touch. I found the song that I knew that I couldn't sing on and needed a real rock singer, a guy who sang on a hit single. He came in and sang it and I'm real excited. The song is called "Never Enough". There is a photo of us in the studio when he came in on my website from about a month ago. I'm hoping for Corabi (John) schedule permitting, that he can sing a song or two for me. If not, there are some other people I've been thinking about. I may some interesting surprises up my sleeve. When they actually happen is when I'll mention it.
Glam-Metal.com: What did you think of the results in "Kissology Vol. 2"? Did you have any say in any of the final cuts?
Bruce: I didn't have final say but they did ask me to do the commentary track, which is great! I did have some footage from some of those years that they can use. Some of it's on the personal side like my wedding, where they guys were at. I can understand some of it not being looked at seriously, where they could use Eric (Carr) in the hospital which is really intense at the end of the credits. My favorite part on the damn thing is ….Well I'm certainly proud of the "Hot in the Shade" and "Crazy Nights" but that Ritz thing is really amazing! That's footage I never saw before and you can tell we were having a great time playing for New York. It came in at No. 1 so it's going to be, I don't know like triple platinum? Were going to get the award for that and I'm really proud of it! The next one maybe will come out by the end of this year. They are not going to wait two years. Sooner I would think.
Glam-Metal.com: You do a lot of appearances for KISS Expos throughout the world. How cool is it to get together with your fans and share old stories with them?
Bruce: When I can. I've been down to South America, Peru, Chile, Brazil and Argentina. The best way to do it is not only a performance but an Expo with a performance with a band. The Q&As are interesting but generally around the world the questions are quite similar. It's great though. It's cool to see fans that there favorite album is "Asylum" or they love "Carnival of Souls". Or they ask "Why isn't the MTV thing out on DVD anymore?" you know (laughs)? "Why weren't you asked to be back in the band?" stuff like that. I never get a real shocker of a question but I appreciate how the fans are about it. They know at least I'll give them an honest answer with it and I'm not just some robot with it.
Read the entire interview at Glam-Metal.com.
"Yesterday, thanks to Alex and Roger Coletti ('Kissology' producers), I was able to drop by the Doc McGhee [KISS manager] offices and get a sneak peek at 'Kissology Volume 3' footage and do a special award presentation (on behalf of Fontana distribution) for 'Kissology 2'.
"Gene [Simmons] and Paul [Stanley] were slated to arrive at any given moment, but Alex and Roger had already cued up footage of 'Volume 3' for the commentary session they were about to do with the band. Bruce Kulick, a longtime friend (whom I had recorded with on the Boot Camp 'As You Were' release [available on iTunes!]) was already on hand, and it immediately turned into quite the experience as I was able to sneak a peak at one of the Easter eggs for 'Volume 3'! Yes, it's true, folks — the often-rumored (but never-before-seen) 'Carnival of Souls' studio footage exists, and the five- or six-minute montage that Alex and Roger had put together was stunning. Bruce was seeing this footage for the first time, and you could see (hear) all of the memories come back to him. It was quite the thrill to see footage of Bruce firing up a completely different (but altogether smokin'!) solo for 'Hate', and to watch Paul record his 12-string parts for 'I Will Be There'; but one of the most amazing moments was to watch Gene coach the children's choir for 'Childhood's End' in the studio as Paul remains in the control booth and decides to pull the rug out from everyone with an elaborate prank designed to scare the kids (by growling into the control booth mic 'DO NOT TOUCH ANYTHING!') There’s also a segment of the band shooting photos for what turned out to be the album cover... not to forget the awe-inspiring sounds and sights of Gene and Paul standing at a studio mic together doing elaborate BEATLES-esque harmonies that later never made the album. And that's just six minutes of 'Volume 3', folks!
"Expect an even larger package of content than either of the previous volumes, spanning 1992 through 2001, to be precise. It's too early to give any other details away, but I'm confident one and all will be immensely satisfied. All involved are targeting a late December KISSmass 2007 release!"
When asked about some KISS fans' objections to Peter's makeup being used by another drummer, Criss said, "Same here. I feel the same way like you as a fan. And I get upset with it and it comes down to money, man, and power and politics. And I have nothing to do with that. And when I did have something to do with that, it got backfired and it knocked me on my butt. And so now all I have to say is, it's gotta be a fair baseball — it has to be. 'Cause it's only common respect."
He added, "We put a foundation of something for respect — for you and me. And, of course, it seems no big deal to some people, but it is a big deal. And to me it's kind of like taking the Lone Ranger's mask and putting it on another guy — it just wouldn't be the Lone Ranger, man. And I say that to some kids — 'Look, you can put my makeup on, but you're not Catman. You don't have my hands, you don't have my heart, you don't have my brain and you weren't there from Day One."
Peter Criss released a new solo album on July 24, titled "One for All". Criss produced the album himself for the first time, and guest musicians include keyboardist Paul Shaffer and bassist Will Lee of "Late Night with David Letterman". The album includes a range of styles, from rock and jazz to blues and Broadway, and includes covers of "What a Difference a Day Makes" and "Send in the Clowns".
Syndicated radio host and VH1 Classic VJ Eddie Trunk conducted a short interview with Peter Criss on July 16. Watch the four-minute clip — which aired on the MSG network — here.
"The first day of the 2007 Japan KISS Fan Expo took place today [Saturday, September 22] in Tokyo as Japanese (and a few Australian) KISS fans gathered together to celebrate KISS. The Expo featured special guests Bob Kulick, Nate Morton (Paul Stanley solo band), Fran Stuart (Paul's guitar tech) and Michael Norton (brother of late KISS guitarist Mark St. John).
"For the first few hours fans shopped for KISS collectibles and visited with the special guests, who signed autographs and took photos with all who attended. Next up were question-and-answer sessions with Nate, Fran and Bob, which focused on working with Mr. Stanley. Bob also spoke about his work with KISS over the years. A touching tribute to Mark St. John followed, featuring a talk with Michael and a video/audio presentation that included photos of Mark throughout his life. The Expo ended with live performances from Japanese KISS tribute band KISS DOLLS and an Expo-only band featuring Bob (lead guitar), Fran (rhythm and lead vocals), Michael (bass) and Nate (drums). Appropriately enough, the band's scorching set included only Paul Stanley-written songs from both KISS and his 1978 solo album."
Check out photos at this location.
Gene, you were at a Kanye West show the other night … Why?
Simmons: Uhhh, chicks. I don't know how to tell you this, but you don't actually believe that we ever overcome this, do you?
Both of you are CEOS and rock stars. What's the secret to being successful at both?
Simmons: And good-looking!
Stanley: Only a fool would be a rock star without protecting the hard work they have done and reaping the rewards. The person that says they're only in it for the music is in for a sad awakening when they are working at a hamburger stand asking if they want fries. For us it becomes common sense if money is being generated, it should rightfully go into our pockets. We try to maximize everything we do. We're proud to be rich and make no apologies.
Simmons: Hey, aren't you sick and tired of dumb rock stars? I mean, it's like going back to the hotel and you go to his room and you're like, "Oh my God, finally!" Then he turns out to be dumb as rock. I mean, it's like us taking a girl with big tits back to our hotel. If she can't converse, then … Wait — never mind! That is fine!
Well, I've never gone back to a hotel room with a rock star.
Simmons: Yes, you have! I saw you at the Black Crowes concert! I saw you with Chris what's-his-name.
Yom Kippur begins Friday night. Will you be atoning for anything this year?
Simmons: You know, in all seriousness, I think we've done pretty good. I think God is smiling down on us.
So you won't be fasting?
Stanley: It's obvious that we don't. [Pats his stomach]
"I wanted to report from the road a bit. It has been two weeks so far with HEAVEN AND HELL, ALICE COOPER, QUEENSRŸCHE tour package. The shows have been a real treat for rock/metal fans with a long night of classic tunes that span a few generations. I forgot just how smoking Tony Iommi is on guitar! It is very kool and a real honor to share the stage with such killer drummers such as Vinny (Appice) and Scott (Rockenfield)! These guys are badass and even nicer people..."
Watch fan-filmed video footage of ALICE COOPER performing on September 8, 2007 at Nikon at Jones Beach Theater in Wantagh, New York: here
Watch a preview of the "Conversations with Michael Eisner" episode featuring Gene Simmons here.
Unlike any other interview program on television, "Conversations with Michael Eisner" re-creates the experience of being at a power lunch with the giants of their industries. The interviews focus on the importance of creativity and innovation in all pursuits, from business to politics to entertainment.
Tiger Electronics is a division of Hasbro, which released the hugely successful KISS Tooth Tunes Toothbrush. Hasbro is also planning to introduce several new KISS items early next year. Paul and Gene were on hand to promote the Tooth Tunes and the Power Tour guitar. The guys did many press interviews, including USA Today and a lively interview with TV show "Extra".
To close the event, Paul and Gene performed "Rock And Roll All Nite" on stage with the help of several audience members. Paul actually played a Power Tour electric guitar as Gene sang with the crowd joining in! Ever the rocker, Paul tried over and over to smash the guitar at the end of the song, and when the guitar would not break in two Paul joked that the guitars are indestructible!
Check out photos at this location.
Xeng Ral is a soldier whose sole purpose is to serve in defense of Etheria, his home planet. Xeng Ral is not an elite soldier, by any means — rather, he is simply one amongst many. But something happens to Xeng Ral while performing his duty, as has happened to others before him: he begins to question his purpose and contemplate his autonomy. He is affected by this... changed. He realizes his own capacity for individualism and wishes to explore it further. He begins to speak of himself as "One." In Etheria's collective society, this will not do. The Etherian solution to individualistic behavior is to "recondition" the Etherians who attempt to break away from the collective mentality. However, Xeng Ral does not want to be reconditioned, and is able to escape by donning a protective zippered dimensional suit (which will become the character's trademark look and claim to fame) and entering a wormhole that eventually lands him on Planet Earth.
This is where the adventure truly begins...
Series mastermind Gene Simmons credits a sci-fi classic as part of the inspiration for Zipper, as well as his own personal immigrant experience.
"The sense of Zipper came to me from Heinlin's Stranger In A Strange Land," says Simmons. "A human being, who was born on Mars and was raised by Martians, comes to Earth. The (Silver) Surfer is an alien, who comes to Earth. I was born in another country and came to America. All of us share a sense of being from the Outside. We are all Outsiders. Though I speak English well enough to have taught it in 6th Grade in Spanish Harlem (as well as all the other subjects), I still chuckle when I hear words like HOT DOG. I still envision a...'hot dog'. Literally. I find myself musing about how bizarre people are. 'What fools these mortals be'... indeed.
"Zipper is not from here," Simmons continues. "He is from the Nether Ether. A place Not Here. A place with different values—in fact, if you take Nietzche's take 'there is no universal good or bad' it's simply a cultural point of view, then you might understand some of the areas we will deal with. What I mean is, for head hunters in the Amazon, killing and eating a human being is perfectly fine. But here, if you're Jeffrey Dahmer, you are a monster and depraved. It's all a point of view. Zipper is not from here and the suit he wears is what we might wear when we do very deep into the depths of the ocean. The pressure would crush us, if we didn't have 'protective outer covering'... and that's what Zipper has. Picture Spider Man's outfit and inside is Venom."
To learn more about Zipper and other Simmons Comics Group titles and merchandise, visit www.Simmons-Comics.com and www.idwpublishing.com.
Gene Simmons' Zipper #1 will be available in November and is available for pre-order now. Diamond Order code SEP07 3766.
Download a six-page preview (PDF) here.
The camp pairs participants with rock stars for songwriting, recording and jam sessions. The event culminates with a "Campalooza" concert at the House of Blues in Las Vegas.
Other rockers on hand to mentor campers this year include Vince Neil of Motley Crue, Simon Kirke of Bad Company, Alan White of Yes and Bruce Kulick of Kiss.
Past participant Paul Stanley of Kiss said the camp "isn't just a fantasy of the people who attend, it's my fantasy too. It's a way for me to say thank you to fans. And, getting up and playing with people with such exuberance and energy is really a gift to me as well."
Besides making music with legends, campers can take business courses and learn the ins and outs of professional recording. It is scheduled for Nov. 7 through 11 at the Mandalay Bay Hotel & Casino in Las Vegas.
Paul Stanley's Atlanta Wentworth Gallery Appearance
Friday October 19, 2007 6-9 PM
Wentworth Gallery -- Phipps Plaza
3500 Peachtree Rd NE
Atlanta, GA 30326
RSVP: 404-233-0903
Saturday October 20, 2007 6-9 PM
Wentworth Gallery -- Perimeter Mall
4400 Ashford Dunwoody Rd
Atlanta, GA 30346
RSVP: 770-913-0641
Check out a photo at this location.
Jason Dussault: "Gene created this logo 28 years ago and trademarked it, which is obviously a moneybag. What a brilliant thing to trademark. He has also trademarked some other great names, like Dominatrix, which you would assume would be trademarked. I think he just trademarked that a year ago.
"We met a year ago. I made Gene this leather jacket, which was the demon smiting a samurai. It was my version of the demon from Kiss for Gene, his character. He really liked it, he liked the quality of the brand. He said 'I've got this logo, I'd like to do a high-end brand with it. What do you think?'
"I said 'Yeah! Of course, are you kidding? Let's do a deal.' So we struck a deal. A year down the road we've got these beautiful products, which is leather carry-ons, leather laptop bags, some great wallets, some handmade T-shirts. These are all hand-dyed, I actually dye them myself. Very forward thinking, different fashion for the alpha male."
Vancouver Sun: So why did you [Gene] want to get involved with something like this?
Gene Simmons: "I'm involved in a few different businesses that have nothing to do with each other, [including] a marketing company called Simmons Abrams Marketing that works on the Indy Car series, and NGTV.com, which does live broadcasts on the Internet. And I'm in Kiss, I get up onstage, I'm behind the scenes.
"But at the end of the day it all comes down to people. You don't want to work with somebody who looks at the clock, who looks at a nine to five thing. Jason is a possessed man. If you can channel that passion for stuff into business, into a point of view. It's a work ethic. Most people worry about jobs, we simply love work. There's a difference. We don't look at the clock. And that's the kind of partner I want to be involved with, a guy that actually sees the big picture and [will do] whatever it takes, no matter how long. That will think out of the box, go for it.
"We're doing lots of stuff together, this isn't the only business we're involved in. There will be others, because he's a multi-faceted kind of guy. Most people do one thing, they're masters of one trade. One trick pony, they call 'em. [Jason's] in the investment community, in the creative community. That's the way to do it, you've got a nice broad range.
"See, the problem with asking me a question is that I will talk your head off. So be careful what you ask for."
Sun: Why did you copyright 'moneybag' back in the 1970s?
Simmons: "Actually there's a distinct difference between a copyright and a trademark. I started signing Simmons with a double slash, just because I was... arrogant... like most guys who play guitar. Before I really knew what it was. Then we brought out our [Kiss] signatures as jewelry. An astute lawyer said 'Gene, maybe you want to trademark the two lines going through the S.' And I did, and there was no sort of challenge to that. Then I was wondering if anybody actually owned the moneybag logo, with the dollar sign inside. It turned out no-one had [trademarked it], so 28 years ago I trademarked that, and have been using it.
"I used to have a magazine, Gene Simmons' Tongue, Simmons records, Simmons books. In other words, engage in inter-state commerce, so it bolsters the underlying rights of the trademark."
Sun: And you love the moneybag, clearly. You love money.
Simmons: "Well, I think any fool that tells you he doesn't is a fool that I call a liar. Because if God appeared to every person on the face of the planet and says 'I know what's in your pocket.' I'm going to give you two choices. I can make you have less money, or I can make you have more money. Because after all, I'm God. What would everybody answer?"
Sun: More.
Simmons: "Yeah. So I'm just like them. And anybody who says I'd rather have less money, send your cheques to Gene Simmons, P.O. Box....
Sun: Do you ever take it easy, though? I was watching your TV show...
Simmons: "Wait, wait. You start a question and follow it with a paragraph, you're killin' me. Yes, there's lots of time to take it easy. It actually says Rest In Peace at the end, when they stick you in the ground. While you're alive, in all seriousness, every day, if you treat it as if it's the only day you'll ever have to live, is going to be a really rewarding day. Surround yourself with the great things in life. Great people, good food. Work your butt off and go to sleep at night totally exhausted. You'll sleep great, food will taste great and your schwanz will work magnificently.
"Is schwanz a Canadian word?"
Sun: I think that's an international term.
Simmons: "Schmeckel?"
Sun: I've never heard schmeckel. So last night on the Family Jewels...
Simmons: "Oh you mean Gene Simmons' Family Jewels. It sounds better that way, don't you think?"
Sun: Anyway your wife...
Simmons: "Whoa, slow down. What was that word you said?"
Sun: She's not your wife?
Simmons: "Why does everybody say that? No, I've never been married. I've never even thought of it. I think it is a beautiful ideal, but the only thing wrong with marriage is that one of the two tends to be a man. We can't do it. That's why there is so much misery. Every woman in the world is tortured, she can't figure out why the marriage thing doesn't work for men. And it is because marriage doesn't work for men. We try, we really do. We can hold our breath, but not forever.
"Have you been married?"
Sun: No. Last night on the show they stole your black book to try and get you to take some R&R.
[This leads Simmons to lift up his leg, roll up his pants and take the black book out of his cowboy boot.]
Simmons: "This is how I know what's going on. It tells you the phone number I have to call this morning, then it tells me which hotel I'm in. A year from now, if I want to know what did I do today, I know exactly."
Sun: Richard Branson's number is here. Why are you going to be phoning Richard Branson? Is that Richard Branson's home phone number?
Simmons: "Yessssss..."
Sun: Can I copy it down?
Simmons: "But he won't take your call. We have some business together. That might include getting him into Indy Car. You know, people are fascinated by celebrity. Listen. There is no difference between the people that everybody hold in high esteem, celebrities, even beautiful women, you think they're really special and stuff, they're really not."
[He turns to four buxom women in lederhausen behind him and they giggle, collectively.]
Simmons: "They're not. They're not. And I'll tell you why. Walk up to any girl and treat her like a human being first and foremost. If you talk to her about her beauty and stuff, it's very shallow. If you engage in a conversation, respect people as people... it's not about the celebrity, it's about the people. And if you can make a connection with a person... that's why [Jason] and I are in business together. I've made a connection with who and what he is. I know what's inside, a hard-working guy who loves the work of it...
Sun: Kiss was supposed to play a gig this weekend, but it got cancelled.
Simmons: "I know very little detail about it, except there's a local promoter and it was supposed to be at Mount Whistler. I would urge people to find out what happened by talking to the promoter. Our legal team is scouting the woods of Canada to find this guy. More than that I honestly can't tell you, I don't know the details."
Sun: So it wasn't you guys cancelling the gig?
Simmons: "Oh no."
Sun: How many gigs do you play with Kiss a year now?
Simmons: "This last year I think we played five. Four. We played outdoors, mostly playing to the Indy Car series of races like the Indy 500, which our company does branding and marketing for.
Takes up time. We also have our TV show on NGTV.com and a lot of other things. So there isn't that much time. but we will go out. Everything takes time, and everything that's worth doing is worth doing well. It will take a year or so. We've been talking with Queen. Kiss and Queen, would you like that? [Slips into an English working class accent] It's a bit of all right, you know what I mean?"
Dussault: "I saw the second-to-last show, and it was unbelievable. I still can't believe he can spit blood and blow fire and groove around like he was in his 20s. And the voices sound, without offense, actually sound better, deeper. It was a fantastic show, I'm sorry that Vancouver missed it."
Simmons: At the same time, by the way, I'm putting together the Gene Simmons Big Band. Twenty horns, about six girls...who can sing. Emote. Keyboard players and stuff like that. We're going to debut it in Las Vegas for our TV show in a short while. In fact the last day of rehearsal is the day before the Dussault Custom Ink event is going to happen. Tell him the details."
Dussault: "We're opening a Melrose location [in Los Angeles], which is going to be our flagship store. 8010 Melrose, it'll be open Nov. 8th. It's going to be unbelievable. We're going to close down an entire block."
Simmons: "What he's saying is, he got certain people to call the mayor's office."
Dussault: "There are certain benefits to knowing Gene Simmons, for sure."
Sun: You called the mayor of L.A.?
Simmons: "Sure."
Dussault: "He shut down the street for us."
Simmons: "And why not? We're bringing in the Indy Car series to L.A., which is going to bring $1.2 billion [worth of] business into L.A. Why can't I call him anytime I like?
"By the way, he's a good guy. It's all about business. It's not about the celebrity, it's not about that. It's about 'Close down this street and here's why.' If it makes sense, you do it. And we'll have some guests and some other TV people coming."
Dussault: "We do yeah. Gene Simmons' Family Jewels will be filming live, as well as Criss Angel Mindfreak. We'll also be working on some big bands."
Simmons: "Is Criss going to be there?"
Dussault: "Criss is going to be there."
Simmons: "Really? I'm excited. How did you get Criss?"
Dussault: "A powerful and attractive man got me on the phone with him, what can I say? Actually that's a great story, and that's the way it works. I came to Gene and said I'm having a big launch, we're having a big opening, we want to make a big splash, what do I do? Is there a big band I should hire, what do you think? He said well you know what, bands are okay, but then everybody's going to be there to see the band and they're going to be loud and you're not going to be able to talk. The best way to do this is to get someone like Criss. Someone who's on his A game right now, who's in the press all the time, he's sleeping with big celebrities."
Simmons: "Allegedly."
Dussault: "Allegedly... It just happens that easily. [Gene] picks up the phone and gets in touch with his people, who happen to be The Firm in L.A., one of the largest talent agencies."
Simmons: "He's also got his own TV show, so you get double bang for the buck."
Dussault: "Exactly. You get two A&E shows filming."
Simmons: "So what it the cost of doing all that?"[He makes a zero with his hand.]
Sun: How big a store is it going to be?
Dussault: "It's not the size that matters... [Everyone laughs.] Not to say it's a small store, it's about 3,000 square feet. It's two separate stores, one is private shopping for celebrities in the back, the other is the full experience. It'll be called the Dussault Motel. It was inspired actually by Rob Zombie, his 1970s horror movies. The minute you walk in the door you go through a diner that's set in the `70s. I had set designers and builders and painters paint it out so it looks like it's been there for 40 years. The clothing is in the motel rooms, and the checkout is where you get changed.
"I've had sales people that I've been poaching from some of the top stores in Los Angeles come in and say they've never seen anything like this before. I've travelled the world, and spent a lot of money on clothes, and I've never seen a store like this. It will be the hottest retail experience in the world."
Sun: Speaking of a lot of money on clothes, these aren't cheap, these clothes.
Dussault: "That's exactly right, they're not cheap, they're high quality. The attention to detail, nobody has taken something like a hoody, which is one of the most popular clothing items in the world right now, and taken it to the level that I've taken it to. The sales people here, they sell through monthly our products because of the attention to detail. People don't want to take it off."
Sun: There are some autographed T-shirts?
Dussault: "Yeah, there are some t-shirts here that are autographed. This is for the alpha male, this is for the guy who wants to be a little bit different and wants to wear something no one else wears. If you want to wear what everybody else is wearing at the club or walking down the street, this isn't for you. This is for someone who is different... Gene was good enough to sign a number of these, so Leone's is the only place on the planet where you can buy this shirt. We're sold out online. If you want a signature shirt you have to get it here. Hand-dyed, hand-painted. This is all vintage material. A lot of designers with this logo may have just done a checkered pattern shirt or whatever, but I wanted to do something that was completely different."
"I think, I know, that from a lot of the other interviews I've had in the U.S. that the hip-hop culture goes for this, the rocker culture goes for this. It spans all the way across."
Simmons: "Chicks like money, too."
Sun: And you were attracted to this because...
Simmons: "It's because it's the American dream. I know you guys are sick and tired of hearing the American thing, but... I feel for you. But it is the American dream. I am an immigrant, I'm a child who came to America, heard about the promised land and have made all my dreams come true.
"Unfortunately, no matter how nice everybody is in Vancouver, and how much I love Canada - and I do, you make the most beautiful women in the world, I live with one. But there's only so far you will go. That's just life. The hustle and the bustle and the deal-making... you guys should invade America and make it part of Canada, then you'd have enough people and a lot of money and no limits.
"You've got to understand that the guy who runs California, one of 50 states, is the head of the fifth largest economic power on planet Earth. Do you understand the scope of that? Ninety-five per cent of the countries of the world don't make as much money as just the state of California. It's enormous. There are no limitations.
"So when a band comes here and says we've sold 10,000 or 50,000 records, or we played to 5,000 people, great. I don't want to tell them, it's a popcorn fart.
"Look, live in Canada, wave the maple leaf, love your country, but go and get the money in America. Go in there, grab the money and bring it back here, Because if you want lots of money, it's there, not here."
Sun: Let's go back to Kiss for a second... What gave you the idea to dress up in the first place, to do the Kiss uniforms and then do the other stuff? Back in 1972/73, nobody else did that.
Simmons: "Look, originality is highly overrated. It doesn't mean a lot if you're the first or the last. The only thing that matters is that people pay a lot of money to go to an event, a live concert. Mostly it's guys in tie-dyed T-shirts looking at their shoes who look like they should be delivering Domino's Pizza.
"I went to concerts and I listened with my eyes. Otherwise, why get up out of bed? Stay at home and listen on your stereo, it'll sound better and nobody is stepping on your feet. So a live concert is an event. And as far as we're concerned, we had the point of view that the people onstage who are getting more of your money for a ticket than the cost of a few CDs deserve to give you something more than 'Here's my next song.' And therein lies the thought. 'Let's put together the band we never saw onstage.' Audio and visual overload.
"We went as far, in 2002, we did the first and only 3D tour. You came in, you got your tickets and 3D glasses, and we invested millions in these 3D screens, so that when you saw us onstage, you saw it real. When you saw me reaching and pointing, it would come right into your face. It's never been done before because it's so expensive, but you know what? You gotta give, you've gotta give back to the fans. Ultimately they're my bosses, they're your bosses. We'll all in the same business. You're in the media, I'm in a band, Jason's in streetwear and other stuff. We're all in the same business, the people business. We have to figure out how to give bang for the buck, so they like us."
Sun: So what gave you the idea to do the blood, the tongue?
Simmons: "Well, the tongue is really the result of the doctor pulling me out by the wrong appendage... I grew up in America with a lot of imagery. Television mostly, and comic books and superheroes. By the way, Simmons comic books is up and running, check it out at genesimmons.com. Love the Americana part of it. Where else were superheroes invented?
"I guess I became a sort of a pastiche. Oh, a little French, francais, je comprend. Kind of a puzzle of Americana, from Godzilla's boots to that stuff. None of it made any sense, it was free association. It was almost impressionistic. I would be more of an impressionistic artist than a realist. You get up onstage - if Shakespeare is right and all the world is a stage, we're all trying to figure out how to get people's attention...
"We were just trying to be different. In terms of meaning? Highly overrated."
Simmons previously stated, "I have owned the trademark Moneybag logo for over 25 years. I have used it on my magazines, book imprints, my record company and a few other areas. Until I met Jason Dussault, I held off on really going out into the marketplace with an apparel line. It has to do with finding a kindred spirit and Jason is it. He and I share a passion for only doing things in life that mean something. Together we are creating cutting edge, in-your-face fashions. The Moneybag line, at long last, is a reality."
Gene Simmons in Vancouver promoting Moneybag (courtesy of Vancouver Sun Online): Youtube.com
Best known as "that guy who replaced Ace Frehley," Tommy's been the Spaceman since 2003, but he's been a part of the KISS family for over 20 years, co-writing songs, producing and directing DVDs, and even teaching Ace how to play his leads before the 1996 KISS Alive reunion tour. Although he's based in Los Angeles, the 1978 graduate of Beaverton's Sunset High gets back to Oregon frequently to party with his family.
Read more at this location.
"Going forward, the sights of the label extend far beyond its geographic origins as the company seeks opportunities to nurture, mentor, record, and publish new up-and-coming talent as well as established artists and bands that are looking for a place to call home. EON Records is well connected in the recording, publishing, distribution, and promotional aspects of the music industry and seeks — through collaboration — partnerships that can further the cause of credible local and national talent.
"In the past, John Thayer has made music his avocation while owning and managing two successful business products companies. After growing his first company into the largest independent supplies and furniture dealer in the N.W. Region, the business was sold to U.S. Office Products in 1996. His second company was founded in 2001, and has grown into one of the largest independent office product dealers on the West Coast with sales offices in Portland and San Francisco. John has continued to nurture his passion for music over the past ten years becoming a dedicated singer and composer while writing and producing his own library of songs."
Leone carries MoneyBag, which is designed by Vancouver fashion designer Jason Dussault, who brings a high-end rocker's polish to the label. Simmons said that he has owned the MoneyBag logo for 28 years and has used it in book publishing, comics, clothing, and musical instruments. Earlier this year, Simmons formed a partnership with Dussault Custom Ink, which has designed hoodies for Nelly Furtado, Rob Zombie, and Prevail of the SWOLLEN MEMBERS.
"It's a nice, small operation," Simmons said. "Small operations can rule the world, like the two guys in a garage who created Google."
Read more at Straight.com.
The AG Riff Master is actually a real guitar from Peavey, but it's been heavily modified to have the standard Guitar Hero fret buttons and strum bar embedded within it. The strings have been removed so players can actually use the guitar to play the game, but the rest of the guitar -- including the rosewood neck, tuning pegs, and frets -- are all intact.
As for the body design, Art Guitar's first offering will feature the iconic masters of merchandizing, KISS (photo), decked out in full stage garb and ready to rock and roll all night, with the obligatory partying every day to follow. KISS is no stranger to the series, having lent their song "Strutter" to Guitar Hero II, and having signed the aforereferenced "Rock and Roll All Nite" to appear in Guitar Hero III.
Authenticity and eye-catching novelty have a price, however. The AG Master Riff will sell for $399. And those who like the idea of the guitar but don't cotton to KISS can take heart; Art Guitar plans to announce a variety of other body designs for the AG Master Riff in the coming months.
The Kiss Coffeehouse opened to huge crowds last summer and features signature KISS coffees, including Kiss Army Blend and French Kiss Vanilla, the Kiss Frozen Rockuccino, cookies, brownies and other sinful sweets.
Tiger Electronics is part of the Hasbro toy company — which released the KISS Tooth Tunes. Hasbro will also be releasing several new KISS products soon.
Simmons then added, "The idea that anybody would call that a sport is delusional."
Simmons's long-time live-in companion, former Playboy centerfold Shannon Tweed, was born in St. John's Newfoundland. Simmons said he has been told to set aside three weeks for his visit, but wouldn't say when he would arrive in the province.
In his interview with the Georgia Straight, Simmons discusses fashion, his expanding business empire, EcoDensity, and his claim that he has had sexual relations with approximately 4,800 women in his life. For more details, check out the next edition of the Georgia Straight, which will be available in Vancouver and across the Lower Mainland on Thursday (September 13).
"Had another week of travel with GRAND FUNK, but found time on my short stay home to do some guitar parts and do an overview of the 'BK3' disc. First up was my 12 String Martin D20 from 1970, which is VERY easy to play. Tuning, of course, is always hard on 12 string instruments, but we got a great sound from this Martin.
"We needed a few parts on the song 'I Will Survive'. After we got that part done I added a high tuning part as well. Then we moved onto 'Love And Desire' for some acoustic parts in the chorus. I used my Gibson Elvis Dove, which is very full-sounding.
"One more part needed to be done on a very UNION-sounding song. No real title yet, but the working title is something with 'Dream' in it! Jeremy played the part on the demo, so I handed him the guitar and I was glad to have my 1968 Gibson Southern Jumbo do the honors. He had some cool inversions that I preferred he played. After a few takes we had our acoustic done for that song."
Read more at this location.
Wentworth Gallery is located at Prospect Square (1025 Prospect Street) in La Jolla, CA. For details on the VIP Reception with Paul, call 858-551-7071 or 800-732-6140.
Fox 6 News interview: Video
KUSI interview: Video
For more information, click here.
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"Last night [Monday, Septemebr 3] Paul appeared at B.B. King's in New York City for the Rock 'N' Roll Fantasy Camp's closing concert. Paul performed with all 10 camp bands and their counselors, including Spike Edney (QUEEN), Glenn Hughes (ex-DEEP PURPLE, BLACK SABBATH), Alan White (YES), Simon Kirke (BAD COMPANY), Jane Wiedlin (THE GO-GO'S) and Corky Laing (MOUNTAIN).
"Paul was in particularly fine vocal form Monday, belting out 'Shout It Out Loud', 'Rock 'N' Roll All Nite', 'Detroit Rock City', 'Strutter', LED ZEPPELIN's 'Rock N' Roll', BAD COMPANY's 'Can't Get Enough Of Your Love', ROLLING STONES' 'Honky-Tonk Woman', IDES OF MARCH's 'Vehicle', CREAM's 'Sunshine Of Your Love' and FREEs 'Alright Now'. He also teased the crowd with a short a cappella version of 'Love Gun'.
"Former KISS guitarist Bruce Kulick joined Paul on 'Rock 'N' Roll All Nite', 'Detroit Rock City' as well as the song 'I'm Your Captain/ Closer To Home' which featured Paul singing with original GRAND FUNK RAILROAD singer Mark Farner."
Check out photos at this location.
They have the spaceboots.
They even have the black-and-white face paint.
But at this KISS concert, Gene Simmons does his own sound check.
The four members of Destroyer, a KISS tribute band, joined five other acts mimicking groups such as Iron Maiden, Mötley Crüe and Black Sabbath on Sunday as part of the eighth annual Scorcher music and entertainment festival.
And while these not-quite rock stars can’t match the beard ZZ Top front man Dusty Hill or the tongue-flicking prowess of Gene Simmons, don’t tell them they can’t rock just as hard.
“Everything’s got to look and sound just the same,” said Michael “Mongo” Smith, whose ZZ Top tribute band took the Dodge Arena stage two days after the real rock icons rolled through town.
“But we get to have more fun,” he said. “We didn’t write the songs, and we only get to exceed expectations.”
Scorcher, which also featured stunt bike performances, the Texas Bikini Team and Mexican rock band Camila, has gained a reputation along the tribute band circuit for providing a venue for faux classic rock acts, Smith said.
And for those who might question how large a community of musicians impersonating aging rock stars can be, Smith rattled off a list of half a dozen world-wide touring acts off the top of his head.
There are the Iron Maidens, an all-girl group performing the hits of the ‘80s metal band, and Mini KISS, an act made up of little people who can rock and roll all night and still have the energy to party every day.
“We were one of the first groups to do this,” Smith said. “But since the ‘90s there’s been an explosion. There are tribute bands all over the country.”
His own band, Tres Hombres, charged through a rendition of “Sharp Dressed Man” on Sunday, eliciting whoops and cheers from a crowd of aging classic rockers.
“They sound just as good,” fan Dave Sobecky said. “They’ve got the same guitar licks. They’ve got the same groove.”
The trio spent eight years perfecting their act, down to the sunglass, costumes and body language. But the secret to a great tribute band, Smith said, staying within the broad strokes while putting a new interpretation on the details.
Some, however, take that cover act credo to extremes. The Tres Hombres ran across the oddest tribute band they have ever seen while touring in Holland.
“They were a Grateful Dead group that sang their songs in Hollandese – or whatever the hell you call it,” Smith said.
“That’s Dutch,” his band mate, Robert Miller, interrupted. “Hollandese is a sauce.”
So much for a literal interpretation.
Dave Navarro: Now we were talking about the music industry and the state of things now, you guys (KISS) were obviously pioneers in the rock world, you have millions of fans around the world, how have you seen it changed?
Gene Simmons: It really has. The thing that's changed is the industry around it. It's still basically the same — you've got people who've got something to say. Whether you're a rapper and you do it with lyrics — because there's no difference between "Wild thing, you make my heart sing" — it's just spoken the same way a rapper does it. It's a different message written by a different person for a different audience. The thing that's changed is that there's no industry. We've allowed the fox to come into the hen house and then we're shocked that there are no eggs and no chickens left. Those college geeks that thought that they deserved to download stuff for free without paying for anything ruined it for everybody. So if you look around and there's no record industry, it's those guys, the same guys that METALLICA sued, we'll sue 'em right now, we'll flush 'em down the toilet. Anybody who thinks that they should have access to something that belongs to me deserves to go to war with me. Those guys ruined it for everybody.
Dave Navarro: And even if you agree to the iTunes thing now, people can pay and go and download, people are downloading songs.
Gene Simmons: It's too late …
Dave Navarro: They're downloading one song because they don't buy albums anymore.
Gene Simmons: It's too late because the record industry is dying to figure out a way to survive. It's over, it really is. Less and less bands actually make any money making music anymore and have to go back to the old ways which is to go out and play live.
Dave Navarro: Here's what I'm noticing is that a lot of bands, my last band, people close to me, is that because they're not selling records, there's not an immediate return on records, there's not an immediate single — the companies are going to pull tour support.
Gene Simmons: Yeah, but whoever invented the idea that a record company should support a band? What lunatic ever expects that? Imagine being in a business where you have to pay money, an advance, cash, to a band. Record companies were the best friend you and I ever had. They give you a big advance, you never have to pay the money back. If it loses and it bombs, you never pay the money back. They'll earn back their money, then they continue to pay you royalties. That's the best friend you ever had. Then they have to go manufacture it, promote it, advertise it, PLUS they want to get you out on tour and they'll pay you to go out on tour. They don't participate in your licensing, your merchandising or your live ticket sales
Dave Navarro: Now they have a piece of all of that — the new deals are with merchandising …
Gene Simmons: But they're paying for you. Because you know why they're doing that? Because they can't make any money on records. It's done — the record industry is dead.
You can watch the Spread Entertainment archived clips at this location.
We have set aside a limited pre-release of tickets that will be available exclusively to KISS ARMY Premium Members. If you are a Premium Member, go to the URL below and log in with your KISS ARMY User Name and Password:
http://www2.kissonline.com/service.php?module=tickets
Once you are logged in, complete the ticket request form with your contact details and await a confirmation email. Starting on Tuesday August 28th at 8am PDT, you will be contacted by phone by a member of the secureTicket team who will complete the process of buying tickets. On Tuesday August 28th at 9pm PDT, the pre-sale will end.
PLEASE NOTE: This is a General Admission venue, so there are NOT seat assignments. However, there are a few different seating areas in the venue (listed below with ticket prices). The secureTicket agents will be able to answer any questions about the venue's seating area as well as provide you information on travel accommodations.
Ticket Prices (inc GST and service charge):
VIP $288 (Canadian Dollars)
Gold $161 (Canadian Dollars)
Silver $144 (Canadian Dollars)
Viewers can cast their votes from now until September 6th, on the Gene Simmons Family Jewels viewer's choice Web site at www.aetv.com/viewers-choice. Dad is Gene Simmons -- the legendary, tongue wagging demon of KISS. Mom is Shannon Tweed -- former Playmate of the Year, actress and model. And their kids, Nick and Sophie, are, well... surprisingly charming, well-behaved teenagers dealing with the trials and tribulations of adolescence, even though Mom and Dad are truly like no one else's parents.
Viewers can watch clips from 10 episodes, then choose their favorite from the list.
KISS ARMY FAN CLUB MEMBERS will have early access to Tickets. On sale info for MEMBERS will be posted this weekend.
General Public Tickets on sale Wednesday, August 29th at 8:00 am PST
Venue: Coca-Cola Tube Park, Whistler
Time: Opening acts 4:30 pm – 7:45 pm / KISS on stage at 8:15 pm
(Gates, outdoor barbeques and beer gardens open at 3:00 pm)
It may be Fall in Whistler, but the Big Mountain Concert Company will turn up the heat as they stage a rare, outdoor appearance by KISS on Blackcomb Mountain, Saturday, September 15th. This incredible concert will be the first of three exciting weekends starring big-name, international artists in the spectacular mountain setting of Whistler, Host Mountain Resort of the 2010 Winter Games.
KISS is one of the world’s biggest rock bands and they have played more than 3,500 concerts in front of 78 million fans around the world. “We’re absolutely thrilled to be playing host to this legendary band,” said Tourism Whistler Vice President of Marketing, Arlene Schieven. The world famous rockers will bring their extraordinary show to the slopes of Blackcomb Mountain at the Coca-Cola Tube Park Saturday, September 15th in a unique one-time outdoor concert event.
KISS invented stadium rock with their sci-fi Kabuki costumes, outrageous theatrics and, of course, their trademark make-up. In their extensive world tours, KISS has cultivated the most loyal fan base in music known as The Kiss Army. The stunning showmanship this band brings to the stage is overshadowed each time by their huge body of music. Destroyer, Rock and Roll All Night, Love Gun and Alive became the soundtracks for an entire generation of fans. KISS has sold 80+ million records throughout their career, and has earned more than 55 gold, platinum and multi-platinum awards since receiving their first gold record for KISS Alive! in 1975.
KISS rocked 800 million viewers at Super Bowl XXXIII, breathed fire into the closing ceremonies of the 2002 Winter Olympic Games and welcomed the New Year in Times Square for four consecutive years. Now they are ready to rock Whistler.
Tickets for KISS LIVE IN WHISTLER go on sale Wednesday, August 29th at 8:00 am PST and are available online at www.secureTicket.org or by calling 1.888.223.6620. For more information about KISS in Whistler go to www.bigmountainconcerts.com, www.whistler.com, www.kissonline.com or www.secureticket.org.
Tickets: $65.00 - $250.00 plus GST and applicable service charges. Seating is general admission.
Tickets will be available at Secure Ticket by calling 1.888.223.6620 or online at www.secureticket.org
The concert is a production of the Big Mountain Concert Company, in cooperation with the Resort Municipality of Whistler, Tourism Whistler and Whistler Blackcomb.
NEW YORK (Billboard) - If its predecessor captured Kiss at its pinnacle, "Kissology ... Vol. 2" documents the awkward growing pains the band experienced during its middle years, when Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley recruited replacements for Ace Frehley and Peter Criss, and eventually ditched their trademark costumes and makeup.
And that makes for good drama, which the band smartly doesn't shy away from addressing. The rift between bandmates is painfully apparent during a telling 1979 interview with the late Tom Snyder.
The inclusion of clips like the 1983 MTV special segment "Unmasking" makes this set surprisingly strong. While the live footage is inconsistent (particularly egregious is a 1989 show from the Crazy Nights tour), it really doesn't matter. Makeup or no makeup, Vinnie Vincent or no Vinnie Vincent, this is essential viewing for Kiss fans.
Spread Entertainment TV airs between 8:00 p.m. and 9:00 p.m. EST (5:00 p.m. and 6:00 p.m. PST) on Thursdays. For more information, click here.
KISS guitarist/vocalist Paul Stanley has issued an update on his condition after he was forced to pull out of the band's July 27 show in San Jacinto, California, about 90 miles (145 km) east of Los Angeles when his heart started beating at more than twice the normal level.
Stanley wrote on his web site that he was advised performing would be risky, and the show went on without him. Fellow principal Gene Simmons told fans the group would play as a trio, and turned the show into a tribute to his ailing bandmate.
For the guitar player, or just the collector who wants an incredible display, these guitars will fit both bills. Prices range from $239.95 to $399.95 at KissMuseum.com.
On the topic of preparing for the shows, Thayer said, "You know, it's really not that different as far as preparation goes. You have to be equally ready to go out and do one show or 100. I prefer doing full length tours. I was talking to Eric after we did the short run, and he said that it's too bad we have to stop after just doing several shows as opposed to more, because it takes a few shows for the band to really get warmed up and in a groove, and I agreed."
Singer added, "It is what it is.... As the saying goes… We all know the material so it is not that hard to get ready for a show. Not easy either since KISS shows are a lot of preparation and hard work. Everyone has other obligations and hopefully there will be a full length tour in the future."
Read more at The Kiss Underground.
The project, a partnership between KISS and VH1 Classic, is overseen by producers and avid KISS fans, Alex and Roger Coletti. A couple of excerpts from their recent interview with Goldmine magazine follow:
Goldmine: Discuss your responsibilities as producers in putting together this archive project.
Alex Coletti: The way the project started was with an agreement between KISS and MTV Networks that we would go through their archives and curate it and come out with three DVD box sets that will chronologically cover the band's entire history. As we got into KISS' archives — as cool a place as it is — we realized that there's a lot more material that needs to be included on these DVDs, so that meant going to a lot of outside parties and collect all the great TV performances.
Goldmine: Both of you are longtime KISS fans. How did that shape your vision of "Kissology"?
Roger Coletti: One of the most important things for us in putting this box set together was not so much giving fans footage they've never seen but giving them the best KISS footage we could find in the best possible way we could present it.
Alex Coletti: First, what we should make clear is that while we cleaned up the concerts and TV performances and worked on the audio and video, we didn't shape the piece in any way. These are historical documents. But there's one exception to the rule, and [it] literally stands out. On the first DVD, there's a mini six-and-a-half-minute documentary about KISS' visit to Cadillac, Mich., on Oct. 9-10, 1975. There was a lot of footage that the band had in their archives, separate audio and video reels and 8- and 16-mm film. Roger got on the phone with Jim Neff, the assistant coach of the Cadillac High football team, and we used his interview as a guide. I think we were able to put together something very unique that no one's ever seen. The band loved it, and I think that really is the centerpiece on this DVD.
Goldmine: There's some nice previously unseen footage of the band performing a concert in the Cadillac high school gym.
Roger Coletti: Yeah. Of all the footage that we found on KISS's visit to Cadillac, Mich., and there was a lot of footage, the footage of the band playing in the gym was the greatest surprise that we found. I don't even think the band realized that footage existed. Once Alex and I had decided everything we wanted to put on the first box, we flew out to meet with Gene (Simmons) and Paul (Stanley) and Tommy (Thayer) and showed them the footage. We showed them footage that they had never seen. That was really fun. Also, the DVD opens up with footage of KISS performing the song "Acrobat" in Long Beach, Calif., in 1974. That song never appeared on a KISS album and only appears on the DVD as a live recording. So we found footage of them playing the song live, and the band was quite amazed to see that footage.
Read the entire interview at www.goldminemag.com.
Commented Axel: "'Love Gun' is one of my favorite KISS tracks and I was wondering why they didn't include it on their unplugged album a few years ago. It's an excellent hard rock track but is also working as a ballad. We played that ballad version live since a few years now and therefore it was very easy to choose that track for the cover album too. It wasn't very easy to get the permission from the original American publishing company and Paul Stanley to re-arrange that song as a ballad, but after a few weeks we finally got the OK,' after they had heard our version. So I guess they must like it!"
Download the "Love Gun" one-minute sample at this location.
Axel Rudi Pell is scheduled to release "Diamonds Unlocked" on October 1, 2007 (Germany: September 28; USA: to be announced), his first album consisting exclusively of compositions by other musicians, proving his expertise when it comes to the history of rock and pop music. Axel Rudi Pell has recorded ten cover songs, among them surprising new versions of real classics. "I have always stressed that I don't have a hard rock and metal fixation," he points out. "I don't think in terms of pigeonholes. If I like a track for whatever reason, I don't care about its stylistic direction. Every song on this album made me want to cover it at some stage when I heard the original."
"Diamonds Unlocked" was recorded by the tried-and-tested lineup consisting of Axel Rudi Pell, vocalist Johnny Gioeli, keyboardist Ferdy Doernberg, bassist Volker Krawczak and drummer Mike Terrana. Pell produced the album single-handedly, and Charlie Bauerfeind took care of the mix.
"Diamonds Unlocked" track listing:
01. The Diamond Overture
02. Warrior (RIOT)
03. Beautiful Day (U2)
04. Stone (CHRIS REA/THE LAW)
05. Love Gun (KISS)
06. Fools Game (MICHAEL BOLTON)
07. Heartbreaker (FREE)
08. Rock The Nation (MONTROSE)
09. In The Air Tonight (PHIL COLLINS)
10. Like A Child Again (THE MISSION)
11. Won't Get Fooled Again (THE WHO)
Simmons states, "I have owned the trademark MONEYBAG(TM) logo for over 25 years. I have used it on my magazines, book imprints, my record company and a few other areas. Until I met Jason Dussault, I held off on really going out into the marketplace with an apparel line. It has to do with finding a kindred spirit and Jason is it. He and I share a passion for only doing things in life that mean something. Together we are creating cutting edge, in-your-face fashions. The MoneyBag(TM) Line, at long last, is a reality."
Dussault comments, "I have always looked up to Gene as a role model and my teenage dreams became a reality when I got to meet the man himself and we hit it off, the result being the MoneyBag(TM) collaboration. It is my great honor to have Gene at the MAGIC Marketplace promoting MoneyBag(TM)."
GENE SIMMONS co-founded KISS 34 years ago. It continues to be the juggernaut of licensing and merchandising and has just come off of the 5x Platinum selling KISSOLOGY DVD Box Set, which debuted at #1 and the 3 x Platinum KISS ALIVE I, II, III, IV box set. Among other activities: KISS COMICS GROUP joint venture, the SIMMONS COMICS GROUP joint venture, SIMMONS ABRAMSON MARKETING (which does worldwide branding/marketing for the INDY RACING LEAGUE), the TV series GENE SIMMONS FAMILY JEWELS, and the cartoon MY DAD THE ROCK STAR on Nickelodeon. Simmons is a Venture Capital advisor, Real Estate developer and the man with the most prodigious tongue on the planet.
Dussault Apparel(TM) will be showing its expanding line of premium lifestyle apparel at the MAGIC Marketplace, from August 27-30, 2007, Booth # CT4933. MAGIC Marketplace: Each February and August, the fashion industry converges on Las Vegas for one of the most influential four days in the business - the MAGIC Marketplace. MAGIC connects a global audience of serious buyers and sellers of men's, women's and children's apparel and accessories. Thousands of retailers spanning single store boutiques to mass market domestic and international chains come to the Marketplace to access more than 3,600 manufacturers showcasing over 5,000 brands and private label resources. MAGIC International is the world's largest and most widely recognized producer of trade shows for the apparel industry. (www.magiconline.com)
Dussault Apparel, Inc. has an agreement to acquire the premium fashion brand Dussault Custom Ink(TM) (www.dussaultink.com). A designer, manufacturer, wholesaler and retailer of high-end quality apparel, its expanding product line includes custom designed hoodies, jeans, jewelry, T-shirts, hats and leather goods. An accelerated growth company, Dussault Custom Ink(TM) is opening its flagship location in Los Angeles, California, on fashionable Melrose Ave.
www.dussaultapparel.com / www.GeneSimmonsMoneyBag.com
Forward-Looking Statements
This news release contains "forward-looking statements," as that term is defined in Section 27A of the United States Securities Act of 1933 and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. Statements in this press release that are not purely historical are forward-looking statements and include any statements regarding beliefs, plans, expectations or intentions regarding the future. Such forward-looking statements include, among other things, the participation of Gene Simmons at the Company's booth at the MAGIC Marketplace.
Actual results could differ from those projected in any forward-looking statements due to numerous factors. Such factors include, among others, Dussault's ability to design and manufacture its products, the ability of the products to gain market acceptance; and the difficulties faced by an early stage retail fashion company in the competitive retail fashion industry. These forward-looking statements are made as of the date of this news release, and the Company assumes no obligation to update the forward-looking statements, or to update the reasons why actual results could differ from those projected in the forward-looking statements. Although the Company believes that the beliefs, plans, expectations and intentions contained in this press release are reasonable, there can be no assurance that such beliefs, plans, expectations or intentions will prove to be accurate. Investors should consult all of the information set forth herein and should also refer to the risk factors disclosure outlined in the Company's recent current reports on Form 8-K, our annual report on Form 10-KSB, our quarterly reports on Form 10-QSB and other periodic and current reports filed from time-to-time with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
RockConfidential.com: The first thing that grabs me is that there is no mention of "Asylum" or that particular tour in the menu. Why was it overlooked? (I see the live clip of "Tears Are Falling" during the 1987 menu, though…)
Kulick: It has been a frustrating thing regarding the documentation of that tour. There is very little good stuff out there.
RockConfidential.com: Have you ever seen any pro footage with full audio from the "Asylum" tour?
Kulick: I have asked fans and collectors alike, and there is NOT.
RockConfidential.com: It appears that "Animalize" and the "Animalize" tour doesn't get mentioned, either. Why?
Kulick: I am not sure, but realize that some footage that exists sometimes cannot be cleared to be included. Unlike bootlegs, this is very official product that has to be properly signed off on etc. And sometimes the ownership or other issues are quite complicated.
RockConfidential.com: Does the band have any pro footage of Mark St. John playing live or perhaps a show where you both played?
Kulick: NOT that I am aware of. I have a photo somewhere, and not a great one!
RockConfidential.com: Are there key shows from your career with KISS that you would like to see the light of day?
Kulick: Donington in the UK. A huge show in Canada with WHITESNAKE. We played the Marquee in London sometime as well. How about a benefit at the Stone Pony in NJ! There are others later than that, but I am just mentioning some from this "Kissology 2" era-correct performances.
RockConfidential.com: Hearing the commentary from Paul regarding Eric Carr's illness and passing sheds some light on what we've heard since his death. You had to be in a terrible spot at that time. Paul says the band was cut off from Eric and his family. Did that apply to you as well?
Kulick: Yes that did. I would hear about things from Carrie Stevens. But it was a difficult time for all.
RockConfidential.com: You're obviously going to be in the next volume — "Revenge", "Alive III", "Kiss My Ass", "Unplugged", "Carnival of Souls". What kind of stuff exists that may get included that we haven't seen? Do you think "MTV Unplugged" will see life again on DVD?
Kulick: I hope the "MTV Unplugged" event does appear again. I am not really sure what will be in the next volume but I know it will be cool for sure. I am so proud of the fact some new KISS product from my era is out there. As you know, I meet so many fans of those years with Eric Carr and the "Revenge" KISS and the fans are quite supportive!
Read the entire interview at RockConfidential.com.
"My life's an open book," Simmons said. "There is no reason why anybody should ever show up in the rags that women buy on the way out of the supermarket — you know, the 'National This' or 'Enquirer That.' The only reason people show up in the magazine is because they have dual lives — a public life and a secret life. I don't have a secret life."
Variety reported in June that A&E in the U.S. has said yes to a third season of "Gene Simmons Family Jewels", upping its order to 24 half-hour episodes from last season's 20 installments.
According to Variety, the decision was an easy one: "Jewels" is A&E's second-highest-rated series ever in the 18-to-49 and 25-to-54 adult demographics, behind only "Dog the Bounty Hunter". "Jewels" did even better in its second season than in its first, leaping by 15 percent in total viewers to a 1.5 million average and climbing by 11 percent in adults 18 to 49 and by 8 percent in adults 25 to 54.
A&E's relationship with Mr. Simmons started with a one-shot "Biography" hour of the rock legend and KISS bassist/vocalist. That "Biography" episode scored so well in the Nielsens that A&E negotiated with Mr. Simmons and "Jewels" executive producer Leslie Grief to create a 13-episode weekly half-hour series that would delve into the rock star's life with his common-law partner, former Playboy Playmate Shannon Tweed, and their teenage son and daughter.
"Sea Tales" is a collection of the world's most beloved fairy tales set in a vivid underwater world of fantasy. Each animated "sea tale" is one of over a hundred classics born from the minds of Robert Lewis Stevenson, Mark Twain, Oscar Wilde and Hans Christian Anderson, to name a few.
"The Three 3 Little Sea Pigs" and "Thumbelina's Underwater Experience" are thoughtfully adapted and re-cast using wonderful and whimsical creatures of the sea. Furthermore, each beautifully animated tale is narrated by some of Hollywood's best-loved talents.
According to Wikipedia, Rubik's Cube (commonly misspelled rubix, rubick's or rubics cube) is a mechanical puzzle invented in 1974 by the Hungarian sculptor and professor of architecture Erno Rubik. Originally called the Magic Cube by its inventor, this puzzle was renamed Rubik's Cube by Ideal Toys in 1980 and also won the 1980 German Game Of The Year (Spiel des Jahres) special award for Best Puzzle. It is said to be the world's best-selling toy, with some 300,000,000 Rubik's Cubes and imitations sold worldwide.
Spread Entertainment can be seen every Thursday at 8:00 p.m. EST / 5:00 p.m. PST on Mania TV. To watch the program, go to Maniatv.com.
The couple photographed Miss April 2001 Katie Lohman as part of a bet for their hit A&E reality show, "Gene Simmons Family Jewels". It's up to Hugh Hefner to decide who is the better photographer — Gene or Shannon. At stake: A trip to Vegas for Shannon's sister's wedding, which "happily unmarried" Gene has absolutely no interest in attending.
If Shannon wins, Gene goes to the wedding. If Gene wins, Shannon goes solo. The winner of the "shoot-off" will be announced Sunday, August 19 on "Gene Simmons Family Jewels" (check local listings for airtime).
Gene and Shannon are part of a growing list of celebrity guest photographers for Playboy.com. Previous celebrity photographers include William Shatner, Carmen Electra, Dale Earnhardt, Jr., Tommy Lee, Ja Rule, Nelly, Jenny McCarthy and Flavor Flav.
You can listen to the program live via the Internet at this location.
Obtain the DVD set "Kissology Vol. 2: 1978-1991."
Within its three biographical discs of rock-and-roll-all-night lies a hilarious encounter between said "Tomorrow" show host and four dudes tricked out in pseudo-space gear and outrageous makeup, all laid helpless by the giggles.
Except, of course, for Kissmaster Gene Simmons, who slumps sulking in his chair for reasons he explains in another of the DVD's delights, optional audio commentary, looking back now on NBC's 1979 late-night tête- ... -tête.
"He was the Barbara Walters - bigger than Barbara Walters," today's imperious Simmons says of the expressive Snyder, who would have loved hearing that before he died July 29. "Important entities would sit there and they would sort of delve into the what-is-it-that-makes-this-thing-tick, who-are-these-people. So we were honored to be on the show."
Guitarist Ace Frehley was, in fact, so honored that he got completely blitzed, and acted plastered, which Snyder loved, beseeching Ace to describe his "outfit."
"I think this outfit is self-explanatory. I'm a plumber," Frehley deadpans before another burst of mirth.
"Listen," replies the talkmeister devilishly, "I've got a little piece of pipe backstage I'd like to have you work on."
"Tell me about it!" blurts Ace, dissolving into convulsive cackles.
"When [Ace] would have a few - gallons," Simmons drawls in commentary, "he would turn into a happy guy. The result is kind of a grumpy old man who used to stick his tongue out" - that would be Simmons - "and a bombed guitar player."
The exchange is laugh-out-loud hysterical. God help the closed-captioners trying to transcribe all the antic crosstalk dialogue. (Yes! It's captioned this time!)
Why doesn't everybody strip-mine TV history the way these Kiss sets do so deliciously? The highlight of last year's three-disc "Kissology Vol. 1: 1974-1977" was another talkfest artifact: the rockers' ultra-early '74 appearance on daytime's amiable "Mike Douglas Show." As Kiss' Paul Stanley recalled in commentary, "Mike Douglas pretty much made Merv Griffin look like Ozzy Osbourne."
But it was Douglas' co-host that week, mature Catskills comic Totie Fields, who memorably looked beyond Simmons' skull-and-crossbones leather and flesh-veiling makeup to call the Israel native "a nice Jewish boy. You can't hide the hook." That surreal clash of cultures - what did Douglas' housewife viewers make of Kiss at a time when even rockheads weren't sure what they were? - was supplemented on Vol. 1 by other classic tube excerpts. "The Midnight Special." "Don Kirshner's Rock Concert." And the show-biz bizzarerie of 1976's "Paul Lynde Halloween Special." (Quips the fey Lynde, "Just what I've always wanted - four kisses on the first date!")
"Kissology Vol. 2" covers a longer period and a broader swath of territory. This one unearths TV appearances from Australia, Germany, the Netherlands and Portugal, in addition to ABC's "Fridays" rock-out. Add in CNN and MTV coverage of the band, led by video jockey J.J. Jackson's chat during the 1983 "unmasking" when they revealed their faces sans makeup. Simmons and co-founder Stanley recently sat down to provide fresh commentary on it all, bluntly assessing their youthful behavior, the band's evolution and various missteps along the way.
The vintage clips remain the most priceless (though a crisp wide-screen European cut of their NBC TV movie "Kiss Meets the Phantom of the Park" is a hoot of its own). The "Tomorrow" show finds Stanley recalling how the Queens boys "started out playing in Amityville, Long Island, and we always said, 'This is the Garden. Every night.'" Even then they knew they were making what they already called "Kisstory." Now it's satisfyingly amassed and interpreted for all to savor.
Hey, didn't these guys ever visit Merv Griffin?
KISSOLOGY VOL. 2: 1978-1991. Rockers' interviews with Tom Snyder and MTV, plus NBC's "Phantom of the Park" TV movie, alongside vintage concert footage; out this week from VH1 Classic, list price $35.
Adams was the original KISS "Demon Wrestler", preceding Dale Torborg who later brought the facepaint and costume back into the ring. He can be seen below at his debut performance on stage with KISS in 1999 as the band performs "God of Thunder" on "WCW Monday Nitro".
One interview is from 1988 and was taken right before the band's concert in Helsinki, Finland, the other interview is from 1992 where they talk about their coldest concert they did in Oulu, Finland in 1983 where it was so cold that Paul had to play with gloves on and steam was coming off the people in the audience.
You can see both interviews here.
"VH1 Classic has always been about bringing the classic music of the 70's and 80's to the channel's die-hard fans," said Tom Calderone, Executive Vice President and General Manager, VH1. "With the successful launch of the new VH1Classic.com earlier this year, we are now able to give our viewers more ways to watch the music and bands they love, such as this rare Kiss concert event from Sydney."
The Sydney concert, which took place on 11/22/80 will feature performances of KISS hits including: Detroit Rock City, Cold Gin, Strutter, Shandi, Calling Dr. Love, Is That You, I Was Made For Lovin' You, Love Gun, Rock And Roll All Nite and Black Diamond.
Footage from the Sydney, Australia concert will also be available on the VH1 Classic Records' release "KISSology: Volume Two 1978-1991," the second installment of the definitive 3-part collection on DVD Tuesday, August 14, 2007.
"KISSology: Volume Two 1978-1991" is an expanded 3 disc set boasting nearly 7 hours of rare or never-before-seen footage featuring notorious television interviews and early KISS music videos. Volume two follows KISS from the height of mid 70's KISSteria, through the departure of Peter and Ace, the KISS unmasking and the Eric Carr years. Additionally, this DVD set includes the previously never-before-seen European theatrical version of the 1978 cult classic KISS film -- "KISS IN ATTACK OF THE PHANTOMS" -- complete with scenes not seen in the U.S. version.
The new VH1Classic.com has quickly resonated with users. Since its launch in April, 2007 time spent on the site has increased 31 percent per unique visitor. To learn more about these series and other VH1 Classic series and specials please visit http://www.vh1classic.com.
Launched in May 2000, VH1 Classic is a 24-hour network that present videos, concerts and music specials all day long, featuring the best of rock, soul and pop artists from the 60's, 70's and 80's, including The Beatles, The Stones, Tina Turner, Led Zeppelin, Marvin Gaye, The Who, Stevie Wonder, The Police and many more. Learn more at http://www.vh1classic.com.
Commented Paul: "Kyoto symbolizes for me that all civilizations have a connection to spirituality at their core and that although a religion or other outside influences may ultimately distort its purity, we innately seek a relationship with a higher power."
To pre-order or for more information, call Celebrites Galleries at 1.800.578.6991 Wailea, 1.800.428.3338 Lahaina.
Paul's track was used in the episode titled "Make Love, Not Warcraft" in a scene where the "South Park" boys are playing an online video game (they have to win from a mad gamer to save the World of Warcraft).
The 59th annual Emmy Awards ceremony is to air live on U.S. TV on September 16.
Written by Sean Taylor, who also authored “Fishnet Angel,” and illustrated by artists Flavio Hoffe and Esteve Polls (who also illustrated a tale in the debut Simmons Comics Group release, “Gene Simmons House of Horrors”), “Dominatrix” is the story of Dominique Stern, a professional dominatrix who becomes ensnared in a world of government cover-ups and international conspiracies. After a client loses his composure during an intense session and blurts out top-secret information, Dominique finds herself a reluctant superhero, who must save herself, her friends, the jerk who got her into the mess, and quite possibly her country.
“Dominatrix' came to me in a flash,” says series-creator Simmons. “Comic books and pop culture in general, have always toyed around with the leather/rubber-bound heroine. It's sexy and kick-ass. [But] they always skirted the sexuality issue. I decided to meet it head-on. so to speak.
Simmons based the character on a semi-real dominatrix he knows socially.
“After talking with her about the lifestyle,” he says, “[I] combined it with clandestine "Manchurian Candidate" and Nick Fury's Hydra stuff [a super-spy from Marvel Comics]... oh, yes, and pills. Special pills.”
To complete the spicy story and package, the first comic book is graced with a sexy, painted cover (also available as a poster) by "CVO" creator Alex Garner, who will provide covers for each issue.
“Gene Simmons' Dominatrix #1” will be available in August and is available for pre-order now. Visit Simmons Comics for more information.
"I wanted to let all of you know that I AM ABSOLUTELY FINE!" Stanley writes on his web site. "I'm going to the gym as usual, painting as usual and will be going into the recording studio this week.
"Like many, I have had a rapid heartbeat condition most of my life and I never have had any type of restrictions. When I've had an episode, although momentarily disrupting and taxing, it has no residual effect. This is nothing new and my doctors have known about it. In short, It doesn't change, hasn't changed and won't change my life.
"To make it clear... I WILL BE AT ROCK & ROLL FANTASY CAMP IN NY. I WILL BE AT THE WENTWORTH ART GALLERY SHOW in Des Peres, MO. and anything else that's on schedule. I'm stoked and looking forward to it all.
"Thanks for the literally thousands of calls and e-mails from all of you. You all mean the world to me. Now ONWARD!"
Video footage from KISS' July 27 concert is available at this location.
A notable exception is Peter Criss. As a founding member of KISS in the 1970s, he not only sang, he wrote -- in fact, he wrote the band's biggest hit, the ballad "Beth." And one was just as likely to see his trademark cat makeup emulated on the faces of young fans as they were to see that of bassist Gene Simmons, rhythm guitarist Paul Stanley or lead guitarist Ace Frehley.
Criss left "the hottest band in the world" at the height of its popularity in 1979, and Frehley followed in 1982. When they rejoined in 1996, the result was the one of the highest-grossing tours of the decade. Since then, it's been an on-again, off-again romance for Criss and KISS, and each departure has resulted in Simmons' ridiculing the drummer's musical abilities.
Now, Criss is responding. On Tuesday, he released "One for All," his first solo album in 13 years. In a recent phone interview, he talked extensively about the new album, his days with KISS, and why Simmons is never invited to his house for dinner.
Q"One For All" is your first solo album since "Cat #1" in 1994. What made you decide to make a new album after all this time?
AI started thinking about it doing the (1996-97) reunion tour. As the tour went on, things got weirder, and all these major things happened in the span up to the (2000-01) "Farewell" tour. I lost my dearest friend along the way ... so many things came to me in an epiphany, of how really important the fans are to my life. And I'm grateful to what I have and to the Lord. So I kinda had a lot of stuff to lament. I'm a music man -- you sing out your blues, you sing out your troubles, you sing out your good stuff, and hopefully, someone listens ...
I must do these things, if not for me, for the fans that love what I do. Over the winter, I finished a rock album -- I've gotta do the lyrics this summer. I finished my swing album, which is my dear passion. So I've been a busy guy, and it's been cool, because I'm somewhat free. I don't have an A&R guy (record company scout) over my shoulder sayin', "Oh, I don't think I hear a hit, I don't like this." And I don't have the other three in the room. Let me tell ya, when the four's in the room, it's a scary room.
Q Why did you decide to concentrate mostly on ballads for this record?
A I didn't want to scream at you to get it. I felt that my biggest hit was a ballad, so I utilized on that theory. I felt most people love the way I sing slow songs better than fast ones. I could be wrong. And I also felt since it was autobiographical, it needed to be sung more than screamed.
Q Your last recording experience, "Psycho Circus" (by KISS in 1998) was very much a confrontational one, where you and Ace were barely involved. So this must have been a refreshing experience for you.
A Very much so. The "Psycho Circus" thing was another example of history repeating itself. Power and money is a scary thing. And when you get it -- and I've gotten it and I've abused it, used it, as we all do -- that's what happened. (Producer) Bruce Fairbairn died, God bless his soul, after that album. Talk about stress; I can only imagine. But what bothered me the most was probably what bothered the fans -- it was a magical moment for the band to go in and be a band again and do an album ... there are some songs on this album that I wrote for that album. I wrote "Hope" for that album, and I wrote "Justice for All," which you'll hear on my rock album.
Q Back in the old days, they would choose at least one of your songs for each KISS album. Why didn't they do that for "Psycho Circus?"
A It got vicious, man. A lot of changes happened. Yeah, you're right, it was kinda cool back then. But it just wasn't going to be that way this time, and I saw that and I went, "OK, well, I just hope to God I record it again some day."
Q Since we're talking about KISS and all the turmoil involved with the breakups, what happened? You left during the "Farewell Tour," came back for the Melbourne Symphony project ("KISS Symphony: Alive IV," 2003) and the (2003) Aerosmith tour, and then you were gone again.
A Let's put it this way -- I thought Ace was going to be on the Aerosmith tour, and he wasn't ... I said to my wife and friends, "This is it for me. Without Ace, it ain't the original band, and I'm just not going to do it any other way."
Q What was it like, looking over and seeing someone in Ace's costume and Ace's makeup, playing Ace's licks, and it's not Ace?
A Absolutely scary. Some nights, I'd get so lost in the music and the crowd and the hoopla, I almost thought it was Ace. You look over for a split second, and there he is. The guy copied him so well, lick for lick, it was almost like it was Ace. And then it would hit me, and you'd go, "Wow, that's really scary." But in the dressing room, you definitely felt a difference. That's for sure. And it sucked. It just sucked.
Q How do you feel about (current KISS drummer) Eric (Singer) wearing your cat makeup?
A I don't care. I cared at one point, then I thought, you could put a million people in the face, but it ain't me. It ain't my soul. And it ain't my voice and my heart, and whatever comes through my heart comes through my hands. It comes through my music. And that is an impossibility to do with another person ... You could put Bozo the Clown up there. You could put Jimmy Page up there in Ace's face; it won't sound the same.
Q One more question about the breakup, and then I'll leave it alone. People come and go in bands all the time. But in KISS, whenever someone leaves, Gene Simmons belittles their abilities.
A Yes, I know.
Q Why do you think he feels the need to do that?
A I think because of jealousy. I'm gonna prove that. We always said, the best way to get ya is being successful. And I find that if you laid down and called it a day, he'd be the happiest camper on the planet. And that ain't the way it is. Again, I'm a fourth member who discovered that band, who made that band what it is today. I came in with blue-black hair, I came up with this character, I came up with the drumming behind the biggest albums they ever sold in their lives. There's no denying it; it's fact.
Y'know, talk is cheap. It's the walk. The Cat's still walkin' around. I've got a few more lives left. Granted, it's a sad thing to knock someone who made you so rich, who helped you buy that big mansion, that bought your new wife a Porsche. I would think those guys are the last guys you would want to call (expletive). It's the truth. To hear the insults bothers me, because I think it's sad that a man who's supposedly so intelligent (makes them).
Q You and Ace were both in street gangs when you were young. I'm surprised you didn't just kick Gene's (butt).
A (Laughs.) Well, I was very tempted to, but knowing Gene, I would have been sued!
Q Getting back to the new album, there's a song called "Space Ace" on it that you wrote for Ace Frehley. Are you still close to him?
A Yeah, I will always be close to him. We're inseparable no matter what; we're really soul mates ... I hope he likes it; I hope he thinks it's very cool that I did it. It ends the album; it goes into a really wild Latin jam. How that happened, I'll never know, but with Ace it's possible. So you can do anything you want about Ace, 'cause he's kinda like an alien. Or he is an alien. Sometimes, I think he is ...
"One for All" (the title track), that was about 9/11. That day, I was visiting church. And when I got home, my wife said a plane hit the (towers), and I went, "Yeah, one of those little planes probably." And then I saw the big plane do it, and it was so surreal, it was like I was watching a bad movie. I had this melody, and I went down and more and more the words came to me ... in my little way, it's a song about how friggin' bad war is, and it should stop. It's just kinda one guy opening his mouth about the system.
Q Do you think native New Yorkers have a different perspective on the tragedy than the rest of the country? Obviously, everyone was appalled worldwide, but this was your hometown.
A Yes, I do. I think it's personal. I get sick every time I go to the city ... I really, personally feel someone took something away from us. It was murder, and it was a big murder, and I'd never seen it before, and I hope to never again see anything like it. It's always there, and every time we go to the city, it's there. It's just there and never goes away. It hits me ... yeah, it was definitely personal.
Q One question I've always wanted to ask -- back in the '70s, you always said "Beth" was written for your then-wife, Lydia. But in the '90s, you said it was originally written for a girlfriend of one of your pre-KISS band members.
A It was. Now, we can say all these things ... I was in a band called Chelsea, (and) we had one album on Decca records. There was this guy named Mike, and his wife was Rebecca: Becky. And she would call up during rehearsal every five seconds. I wanted to kill this guy. So (longtime collaborator) Stan Penridge, rest his soul, wrote that for me. Wrote a joke about her -- "Beck, we hear ya callin', forget about it, he can't come home right now, but you keep callin'." So it was a joke ...
By the time it got to (KISS), it was a very serious ballad. I sang it for Gene in more of a rock vein; it was the only way I could get through to him. And I did. (Laughs.) Once I got to (producer Bob) Ezrin, I did it the right way, and Bobby loved it. He said, "We gotta get the orchestration, we gotta get the Philharmonic, this is a big ballad."
And they hated that, 'cause KISS doesn't do ballads was the word. They put (it) in the B-side so it wouldn't even get played, but thank God a DJ turned it over, and I got a hit.
Bob said, "I can't sing this name, Beck, it just doesn't sound romantic, Peter. We've gotta change this to Beth." And I said, "I love it," and he goes, "Fine," and that was it. Just the name was changed, and that was all it took.
Q So Gene taking credit for changing the name to Beth is just bunk?
A It's preposterous. That's not how it worked. Bob Ezrin came up with it. Gene can call me if he don't like it. You can give him my number, too! (Laughs.)
Q Are you going to tour behind this album?
A I don't know. Y'know, I'm kinda takin' it a step at a time, like a kid. Because I don't want to make a jerk out of myself and do something stupid ... I may do a couple of shows, but that's as far as it would go, and it would probably be in a pretty small venue.
Q Would you ever join the other three original members onstage again?
A If it was honest, yeah ... if we really all sat down like men in a room, like we used to, and get rid of all the leeches and whatever else that comes along in our crazy business, and we decided to do it in the frame of the way it should be done, and the respect the fans should get from it -- yes. It's something I started; I'd be a liar to say I'm not proud of it.
Q When it's all said and done, years from now, when people think of Peter Criss, what do you hope they think of?
A That they can't forget that crazy kid that went up with 4 tons of equipment and levitated 60 feet in the air, screamin' his (butt) off on "Black Diamond" with a million, gazillion bombs goin' off, and the last words they heard was, "Good night!" That's kinda how I'd like to close it out, with a dot.
Q: It doesn't sit right with you the way things ended with KISS.
Peter: No. It looks like… To me, we repeated history… 'kisstory.' It's like we had a great chance to make it right, I felt — to make everything right, to make it all right again, and to really walk away the right away. It didn't happen, and it really distraught me. I wish it would've.
Q: Is there a side of you or something inside of you that kind of says you wish there could be some sort of closure on this?
Peter: Absolutely. I would have loved to walk away hugging and kissing and really feeling like champions.
Q: Do you hope for a day that you can do that? The question I am asking is, would you go down that road one last time with all four of the guys if there was one chance — just one show — to really put a bow on it?
Peter: It would have to be fair baseball. It really would. For me, it would have to be really fair. And you know what I'm talking about. It would have to be fair — like really fair — and I would. And that's the only way it would have to be. One, two, three, four — fair. Everybody walks away fair. Nobody walks away with more than the others — that's not fair.
"Paul did the soundcheck and sounded great," Denander tells the Swedish newspaper Expressen. "He was joking and the band seemed on fire, but I noticed that the soundcheck was a litte short."
When Tommy Denander walked backstage he was met by KISS manager Doc McGhee who looked worried and told him that Stanley had a fever of 104 degrees Fahrenheit (40 degrees Celcius). An hour later, Paul was taken away in an ambulance and looked very pale and weak. When Paul was on the stretcher he apparently told the other guys in the band to play without him and not disappoint the fans."
KISS did the show without Paul Stanley, but the other members are concerned about his health and how it may affect his ability to perform in the future.
"I've talked to several of the band members since it happened and Paul is fine, but everyone's worried about the future," says Denander. "No one knows yet if his heart problem is easy to fix or not."
In the clip, the costumed crooners weigh in on the current state of "the connected life," which happens to be the theme of Cisco's new corporate positioning campaign.
"The connected life is finally happening right here, right now. What's happening is in the palm of your hand," Simmons muses. Stanley also marvels at technological advancement but "really shows his age when he complains that handheld screens are too small and hard to read," according to Tech Daily Dose.
KISS performed at Cisco's annual "Customer Appreciation Event" Wednesday night (July 25) in San Juan Capistrano, California.
The apparent tachycardia happened while the band was rehearsing for a performance at a casino in San Jacinto, California, about 90 miles east of Los Angeles.
"My heart spontaneously jumped to 190 plus beats per minute, where it stayed for over an hour necessitating paramedics to start an IV and give me a shot to momentarily stop my heart and get it into a normal pattern," Stanley, 55, wrote on his site (http://www.paulstanley.com)
A normal heart rate at rest is about 60 to 80 beats a minute, according to the American Heart Association.
Tachycardia, or rapid heart rate, can cause palpitations, shortness of breath, chest pain, dizziness, lightheadedness, fainting or near fainting, the group said on its Web site (http://www.americanheart.org).
Stanley said he was advised performing would be risky, and the show went on without him. Fellow principal Gene Simmons told fans the group would play as a trio, and turned the show into a tribute to his ailing bandmate.
A call to Kiss manager Doc McGhee for an update on Stanley's condition was not immediately returned late on Saturday.
Stanley, born Stanley Eisen, and Simmons co-founded Kiss in New York City in 1973. Adored by fans, despised by critics, the group made a name for itself performing in white face make-up and ghoulish costumes.
Hits during its heyday included such anthems of teen rebellion as "Rock and Roll All Nite" and "Shout It Out Loud." Stanley released a solo album last year.
I’m very proud of Gene, Tommy and Eric for carrying on without me. I apologize to anyone I disappointed and I’ll make it up to you when I see you again.- Paul.
Once it was determined by emergency medical staff that Paul could not perform, there was talk that the show would need to be canceled. It was Paul himself, who insisted that the band play the show without him. Paul was concerned that fans had traveled long distances and because of the band's individual schedules the show could not be rescheduled.
KISS Manager Doc McGhee then took the stage to announce to the crowd that Paul was sick and unable to perform but that Gene wanted to speak with the fans. Gene asked the audience if they wanted him, Tommy & Eric to perform. The crowd responded with a defeaning chant of yes, yes, yes. With that, Gene announced that the concert (If they could pull it off), was a tribute to “The Greatest Voice in Rock and Roll - Rock God Paul Stanley”.
With Paul en route to the hospital - Gene,Tommy and Eric played their hearts out in honor of their stricken leader! The set list evolved as the night progressed and KISS blasted their way into the hot night air - valiantly trying to hold it together minus the band’s heart & soul. In an emotionally charged moment, Gene told the crowd that he was an only child, but nevertheless had a brother – Paul Stanley! ‘Christine Sixteen' brought 11 invited fans onto the stage to help perform the song, and added a bit of lighthearted fun to the pensive night.
The trio went on to perform a full set including classics and rarities - ‘Watchin’ You’, ‘Goin’ Blind’, ‘Nothing to Lose’, ‘Black Diamond’, ‘Cold Gin’, ‘She’, and ‘Parasite’. The sold out arena was filled with dedicated fans who appreciated what a unique night this really was, despite its bittersweet nature, and rocked hard & loud. As the final chords of ‘Rock & Roll All Night’ were struck, and the last jets of flames and confetti shot into the night sky, everyone realized what they had just witnessed was simply great music performed by dedicated, extraordinary musicians who really gave it their all, and then some.
Another thing every KISS fan at the show last night realized - is just how lucky we are that our favorite band, led by the greatest front man in Rock N Roll PAUL STANLEY, cares so much for us fans!
01. Deuce
02. Cold Gin
03. Calling Dr. Love
04. (Long Pause) Christeen Sixteen
05. Nothin' to Lose (w/ Eric Singer on vocals)
06. I Love it Loud
07. Goin' Blind
08. Watchin' You
09. She
10. Parasite
11. God of Thunder
12. Let Me Go, Rock 'N Roll
13. Black Diamond (w/ Eric Singer on vocals)
14. Rock and Roll All Night
"Kiss the Season Goodbye" night — which falls, logically enough, during the last weekend of the season — will feature a number of KISS-themed activities, including a grown-up strain of face painting. Team management also promises that players will show up decked out in "KISS-inspired" uniforms.
On the reminiscent nature of his new solo album, "One for All": "As I have grown and become a real adult — kind of — it's an album of my life. It's an album of the phases that I have gone through, and the band and the fans have gone through with me. There are not many drummers that are singers and songwriters. On this particular piece of work I really dug deep down and pulled out the stuff that I felt. If you look at my background, even back to the four solo albums, I have been into more than just three guitars. I'm a major R&B, swing and jazz fan. I was very into horns and violins even since I was a kid."
On success, his pending autobiography, a big house and playing golf: "Sitting back on my laurels would be a wonderful thing. I have a wonderful house. I appreciate what I have. What I still have is my music. I can't help myself. I don't want to play golf. I don't want to sit on the porch. I haven't finished my book and I don't want to because when you're done with that it's time to go play golf. I'm just not ready, man."
On the KISS legacy — and garish makeup: "Now I'm proud of the MARILYN MANSONs and MÖTLEY CRÜEs, all the bands that followed us with makeup. I never expected what KISS did because I never went into it for that. I wanted to play music. … Maybe we would have some success, maybe I would eventually live comfortably. It has gone beyond my dreams could ever take me. We have been so emulated. No one had ever done it and nobody will ever do it the way we did it. I don't have any great expectations of my music going to Grammy-nominated places. But I still have an amazing following. You should see the heavy e-mails on my Web site."
On the KISS 1996-97 reunion tour: "I remember when we were doing the reunion sitting next to Gene and we were putting the makeup on. It was the scariest moment because it was so long ago. But it was wonderful. It was like I was 20 years old again. We went back to the '70s. It was an incredible ride again. History did repeat itself. I thank God for the second chances."
On the humanity of a Catman:
"The album is all about real moments that I jotted down in my little book. By the end of it all I had songs. It truly does come from the heart. It makes the Catman human. It's a nice feeling for me. When I'm the Catman it's a whole different ball game of rock 'n' roll. It's amazingly magical. When I do my own thing it's not so stressful as the band. I am alone and I am on my own and I like it. I am 61. I paid my dues. I'm a kid inside and the music keeps me young."
Stated the company in a press release: "We are looking for fresh new members that will complete the supergroup. This is a professional venture so there will be guarantees and contracts. The production company will be constructing new costumes and gear for the successful candidates." All submission should include photos, video clips/audio clips and a brief background on yourself.
E-mail your submission to: kissaudition@bigvegasproductions.com.
The Beaverton native and lead guitarist for the rock band KISS has no shortage of gigs on his electronic calendar.
Last week he was on stage in Sault Ste. Marie, Mich., performing in a concert during the four-show KISS Hit and Run Tour.
Sunday and Monday he’ll host the Pacific Legends Golf Classic, a star-studded fund-raiser at Pumpkin Ridge Golf Club in North Plains.
And on Sept. 15, Thayer will serve as grand marshal of the 50th anniversary Beaverton Celebration Parade in his hometown.
The parade’s theme, “Everything is Golden,” is an apt metaphor for Thayer’s life. He is, after all, a local boy who just may have been born – on Nov. 7, 1960 – to be wild.
“I grew up in Beaverton, listening to the Beatles from my older brother’s record player,” said Thayer, who had developed a raging passion for rock-and-roll by the time he entered Sunset High School.
After graduating in 1978, Thayer and some of his buddies were deep into the garage band scene, playing in Beaverton, Lake Oswego and Portland. They eventually put together a hard-rocking band called Black ’N Blue.
Inspired to pursue a life of music, Thayer took his long, flowing tresses and square-jawed good looks to Los Angeles in 1983.
“There were no major labels or management in Portland at that time, so we went to southern California to try to get discovered,” Thayer recalled.
While playing at an old high school in Hollywood, Black ’N Blue caught on. Geffen Records signed the band in 1983.
“Within six months we had a record deal,” Thayer said. “It was the stereotypical young American dream come true.”
In the mid-1980s, the band landed a gig touring with Gene Simmons and KISS, already famous for their raucous on-stage antics and heavy metal lyrics in songs such as “Cold Gin” and “Strutter.”
Simmons, the band’s bass guitarist and lead vocalist, produced Black ’N Blue’s third and fourth records.
“We’d run our course by 1990,” Thayer said, and when KISS managers asked him to come to work for them, he jumped at the chance.
“I was really interested in producing by then, so I did some of their DVDs and played guitar on some of their records,” noted Thayer.
In the wake of waning popularity, KISS members had taken their makeup off. The band put the black-and-white back on for its 1996 Alive Worldwide Reunion tour, and in 2002, Thayer donned the Spaceman persona for three KISS performances.
“I’d been a huge KISS fan when I was 14 or 15,” he said. “I even put makeup on at Halloween to look like them.
“Things really came full circle for me.”
So much so that in 2003, Thayer officially took over the coveted KISS lead guitar spot, replacing Ace Frehley.
“It was definitely a dream come true,” he said.
A strong market brand, KISS members have been immortalized on lunch boxes and as action figures. More than 30 years have passed since the band released its first album, but Thayer insists KISS is “bigger than ever.”
The group will launch another worldwide tour next spring, Thayer said, and plans to go on the road every other year.
“We still fill huge arenas, and it’s still fun, so why not?,” noted Thayer, who has been married to his wife, Amber, for one year.
While he admitted he got caught up in the fast life of a rocker early on – “I’ve been through all the kid-in-a-candy-store stuff,” he said – Thayer mostly lives a balanced existence these days.
Last March, he and Simmons visited Army, Navy, Marines and Air Force troops at various locations, including Camp Pendleton in California, to honor them with a rally and live performances.
He supports music programs at Oregon schools, organizing donations of instruments to kids who can’t afford them. Last year, he appeared at Neil Armstrong Middle School in Forest Grove, signing autographs for adolescent fans.
Hosting Monday’s golf tournament is a natural extension of Thayer’s service on the Pacific University Board of Trustees, which he joined in 2005.
“I was honored and flattered that they wanted me as a member, and it’s been a great experience,” he said. “It’s such a wonderful and diverse group of people.
“We get together and have great discussions – it’s really enlightening to hear the different points of view,” noted Thayer, who has worked on a number of Pacific projects, including the first phase of a health professions campus in Hillsboro, new residence halls on campus in Forest Grove and an expanded athletics complex.
The golf tournament, which he called “a world-class event,” will feature actor Dennis Quaid, former Chicago drummer Dennis Sephire, football All-American Eric Dickerson and baseball great Chuck Finley.
“We’ll go out there and have a lot of fun,” said Thayer.
He also hopes to raise lots of money for Pacific athletic programs during a pre-event auction and dinner on Sunday night.
“It’s going to be an event that Portland – and certainly not Forest Grove or North Plains – has seen before.”
01. Detroit Rock City
02. Deuce
03. Makin' Love
04. Calling Dr. Love
05. Lick It Up
06. I Love It Loud
07. Firehouse
08. Do You Love Me?
09. Got To Choose
10. Watchin' You
11. Shout It Out Loud
12. God Of Thunder
13. Love Gun
14. Black Diamond
15. Let Me Go, Rock 'N Roll
16. God Gave Rock 'N Roll To You
17. Rock And Roll All Nite
A Web site named No Good TV, http://www.ngtv.com, has entered the online video fray with clips advertising skin, raunchy humor and "uncensored" videos for mature audiences. The relatively tame universe of YouTube, with its cute cats and Mentos hijinks has recently been overrun by the popularity of videos posted by No Good TV.
The site boasts the slogan: "Putting the F-U back into FUN."
Though No Good TV opens with a notice saying you must be at least 18-years-old to enter, the site is a frequent contributor of videos to YouTube, which has no age limit unless videos are specifically restricted.
In the past week, NGTV videos have attracted millions of viewers on YouTube and accounted for four of the top eight most-viewed clips. Their popularity has been fueled by thumbnail photos of scantily clad women (including Jessica Alba and Jessica Biel), usually taken out of context from movie footage.
No Good TV and its site heavily advertise the "uncensored" quality of their videos — a word which has become so overused that it should be censored. It specializes in movie junket interviews where the curse words fly, from both the interviewer and movie stars. Recent stars seen on NGTV include Shia LaBeouf, Kal Penn and Eva Longoria.
Hosts for the Web site's videos slip in fart jokes or sex references whenever they can. A buxom blonde interviews celebrities like rapper Chingy while lying in bed. Bands such as Fall Out Boy discuss life on tour. Other clips include movie trailers and music videos.
NGTV, based in Beverly Hills, Calif., is led by Kourosh Taj, co-president and head of programming. Its chairman of the board is none other than Gene Simmons of Kiss.
The site launched earlier this month after a beta phase, promptly drawing an article from Hollywood Reporter questioning the complicity of Hollywood studios who supply NGTV with access to the stars of its films.
A spokesman for YouTube decline to comment specifically about No Good TV, but said: "Our policy prohibits inappropriate content on YouTube. Our community understands the rules and effectively polices the site for inappropriate content." (Material deemed unsuitable for all audiences is restricted to users who have a YouTube account and who confirm their age as 18 or older.)
On Tuesday, a rap video posted on YouTube by No Good TV climbed to fifth-most-viewed of the day. Calling itself the "dirty version" of the Diplomats' rap video for "Push It," it was advertised with a thumbnail photo of two practically naked women.
Unique facts about the Memphis Dec. 2, 1976 KISS recording:
* Only known recording of a 1976 "Rock And Roll Over" concert.
* Earliest live recording of "Beth", which was performed live for the sixth time ever at this show.
* "Makin' Love" is an encore!
* Earliest known live recordings of "Take Me", "I Want You", "Makin' Love", and "Ladies Room".
* This performance of "Ladies Room" is unique in that it features a different arrangement of the song, which includes a breakdown sing-a-long part on the final chorus, which was dropped shortly after this performance.
* This is the final time "Strutter" was performed live by the original band until 1996. The song was dropped from the set list right after Memphis and didn't return until the 1980 "Unmasked" tour with Eric Carr.
He's on his third marriage, and his third breakup from Kiss, the glam-rock legends he co-founded 34 years ago. Best known for crooning the ballad "Beth," about how the rock 'n' roll lifestyle ends a marriage, the drummer has made peace with his tamer life as another transplanted New Yorker who moved to the Jersey shore.
Now 61 and about to become a grandfather, the jungle cat has become more of a house pet, with a solo album full of heartfelt ballads, "One For All," coming out Tuesday.
Many of his songs deal with the pain of the breakups he's endured.
"I sing about the band, I sing about the good times, the bad times," Criss said in an interview. "I'm re-creating me to be comfortable with me again. This is about what I've really felt. I tore a lot out of my heart to get to this."
Much of the album is light-years away from what he recorded with Kiss, such as a cover of Stephen Sondheim's "Send In The Clowns." Criss got the idea soon after ending his final Kiss tour.
After quitting the band in 2000, Criss signed up for a summer tour in 2003 under the impression that his dearest friend, guitarist Ace Frehley, would be there as well. But talks with Frehley fell though and Kiss put road manager Tommy Thayer into Ace's makeup and had him play Ace's solos note-for-note each night — a move that still rankles many Kiss fans.
"Ace not being there was tough for me," Criss said. "So that last night, I just knew it was my last night with the band. I think they knew it, too. It just wasn't working without him. Putting other guys in our costumes and makeup is to make money. It's not the real deal. It's not The Lone Ranger, not Hopalong Cassidy, it's not Santa Claus."
Criss went home to his basement recording studio and started tinkering with the Sondheim classic.
"It's a really heavy breakup," he said. "It's kind of two people who both find out what they wanted is really what they don't want anymore, and they're totally now in different places, and I felt that's where we were as a band."
The title track deals with Criss's memories of the Sept. 11 terror attacks and the need for people to come together and support each other like they did in the aftermath.
It's all done in a subdued, laid-back style, with an able assist from Paul Shaffer, David Letterman's "Late Show" bandleader. But it's sure to knock Kiss fans raised on the likes of "Dirty Livin'" and "Strange Ways" for a loop.
"I miss being what I am, the real Peter Criss, the guy who loves R&B, the guy who loves jazz, the guy who loves Motown, the guy who loves to use a lot more pieces than three guitars," he said. "I have no one over my shoulder screaming, `I don't hear a hit!' or `This is too long for the radio!' or `This song is too schmaltzy!'"
That's exactly what his bandmates and producers said in 1976 when Criss submitted "Beth" during the sessions for what would become their defining studio album, "Destroyer."
"They hated it!" he said. "We had the New York Philharmonic on it, all these strings, a beautiful ballad. (They said) `This ain't Kiss. We're about leather and studs and ripping your head off and chasing around millions of women.' Well, it sure got us on the radio!"
"Beth" remains Kiss's biggest hit.
Criss says "One for All" was inspired by the how it felt in his hometown of New York City in the weeks after the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001. "The city was so close again, it seemed like New York really was in pain, and there was a lot of reaching out for everybody, everybody's reaching out for everybody, everybody seemed really, like it was Christmas, there was gonna be more actually wanting to care, and loving in New York," he said. "The city seemed kind of hurt."
Criss says he then made the jump to "One for All". "And I thought of the old slogan 'One for all, all for one,'" he said. "And it was like that famous slogan that the four musketeers would say. And I thought, you know, that's a great thing, 'All for one,'that's how we should be thinking now."
For over 30 years, Stanley has been the prancing and dancing lead singer of the self-proclaimed "hottest band in the land" -- KISS.
These days, the 50-something rock star is clearly more excited these days to establish himself as the "hottest brush in the land," by promoting a series of cross-country exhibits at the Wentworth Gallery chain, the exclusive retail outlet for his collection of original paintings.
"Fans need to know that while I love saying 'Hello' to them, this exhibit is not the place for them to be bringing out tour books, photos and albums," stressed Stanley as politely as possible. "This is not a rock concert, it is an art exhibit. I will NOT be signing anything at this appearance. I'm there for my paintings, not my music."
Music seemed quite far from Stanley's mind when he chatted with The Times as well.
"I started painting about seven years ago when I got divorced," Stanley said of what led to his new career as a painter of abstract art. "My friends got tired of me ranting and screaming, and one of them suggested I take up painting, so I did."
What began as a simple means of therapy, has evolved into a second career for the man whose only previous visual creations have been helping to design the classic cover graphics of KISS albums like "Rock & Roll Over," "Love Gun" and "Destroyer."
"Pretty much as soon as I put a painting up in the house, people kept asking? Who did that?' and ?Where can I get a painting like that?' so I knew I was on to something. It's pretty cool, because I really like that people now are getting to see another side of me, besides just the music," he said.
"When I first started out, I knew that I didn't want to paint a tea cup that looked like a tea cup," he continued. "I do a lot of abstract, because I want people to connect ... and, more importantly, ME to connect with the painting(s) emotionally rather than intellectually. I wanted them to say it made them feel a certain way, rather than say, 'Wow, that tree really looks like a tree.' That's not what I go for when I pick up a brush."
Although he sometimes paints on foam and Masonite boards, "most of the time it's canvas, and the reason I like working with acrylics, is because they dry quickly and you get good textures," Stanley said.
Stanley is a firm believer in the old adage that art is in the eye of the beholder.
"Many people get intimidated by the idea that they need to know a lot about art to know what 'good art' is," Stanley said.
"(That's) ... nonsense. ... Art is a very personal thing and if YOU like a piece of art, then it's 'good art' to YOU, plain and simple."
The paintings are of various sizes and range from several hundred dollars to tens of thousands of dollars.
"I don't know, you can find something there for $900 and you can find something for $60,000," Stanley said when asked to give ballpark figures on how deep a checkbook a person might need to own a Stanley original.
if you go: "The Paul Stanley Exhibit/Reception"
When: 3 to 6 p.m. today
Where: Wentworth Gallery, Woodfield Shopping Mall, Schaumburg, Ill.
Cost: No charge
FYI: (847) 995-1190
The Daily Star reported over the weekend that producers expected Simmons to spice up the jungle with his outrageous opinions and bad-boy antics.
It was rumored that Gene would be joined in Australia by former supermodel Janice Dickinson and TV psychic Sally Morgan when the show returns later this year.
However, in a posting on his official web site, Gene stated about the reports that he will take part in the "I'm A Celebrity" series: "Don't believe what you read. None of this is true."
Musicians featured on the album are as follows:
Frankie Banali - drums
Tony Franklin - bass (THE FIRM, BLUE MURDER)
Vocalists:
Bobby Kimball (TOTO)
Glenn Hughes (DEEP PURPLE, BLACK SABBATH)
Don Dokken (DOKKEN)
Kevin DuBrow (QUIET RIOT)
Jeff Scott Soto (YNGWIE MALMSTEEN)
Alex Ligertwood (SANTANA)
Robin McAuley (MSG)
Mark Boals (YNGWIE MALMSTEEN)
Paul Shortino (ROUGH CUTT, QUIET RIOT)
Chas West (BONHAM, LYNCH MOB)
Guitarists:
Doug Aldrich (WHITESNAKE)
Gilby Clarke (GUNS N' ROSES)
Bruce Kulick (KISS)
Reb Beach (WINGER)
Bill Leverty (FIREHOUSE)
Steve Fister (LITA FORD)
Additional Musicians:
Michael Lardie - Keyboards (NIGHT RANGER/GREAT WHITE)
Neil Citron - Additional Keyboards and Guitars
Frankie Banali - Drums and Percussion
Tony Franklin - Bass Guitars
Track listing:
01. The Wanton Song
Alex Ligertwood - Vocals
Doug Aldrich - Guitar
02. Four Sticks
Glenn Hughes - Vocals
Steve Fister - Guitar
Frankie Banali – Drums, Djembe, Doumbek
Neil Citron - Keyboards
03. Kashmir
Don Dokken - Vocals
Michael Lardie - Keyboards
Steve Fister - Guitar
04. Out On The Tiles
Robin McAuley - Vocals
Reb Beach - Guitar
05. Ramble On
Paul Shortino - Vocals
Steve Fister - Guitar
06. The Ocean
Mark Boals - Vocals
Bruce Kulick - Guitar
07. The Immigrant Song
Bobby Kimball - Vocals
Gilby Clarke - Guitar
08. Royal Orleans
Jeff Scott Soto - Vocals
Gilby Clarke - Guitar
09. Gallows Pole
Kevin DuBrow - Vocals
Steve Fister – Guitar, Mandolin, Banjo
10. Custard Pie
Chas West - Vocals
Bill Leverty - Guitar
11. When The Levee Breaks
The 24 - 7 Overture - Levee Guest Vocalist: Joan Fraley
12. (They Were) The Eye Of God
Frankie Banali – Drums, Hand Percussion
Neil Citron - Guitar – Bass, Keys, Stringed Instruments
For more information, click here.
01. Detroit Rock City
02. Deuce
03. Makin' Love
04. All American Man
05. Calling Dr. Love
06. Lick It Up
07. I Love It Loud
08. Firehouse
09. Do You Love Me?
10. C'mon And Love Me
11. Hotter Than Hell
12. Watchin' You
13. Shout It Out Loud
14. God Of Thunder
15. Got To Choose
16. Love Gun
17. Black Diamond
Encore:
18. Let Me Go Rock 'N' Roll
19. God Gave Rock And Roll To You
20. Rock And Roll All Nite
I made friends with Eric.
The flattering young security staff member was quick with conversation, jokes and offers to bounce anyone who got in our way.
And he brought us bottles of water.
I do believe Pete and I converted him into yet another loyal SooToday.com reader.
Since releasing their first record in 1973, KISS has been worshiped, emulated, mocked, spoofed and followed the world over.
Their influence is undeniable and an entire generation was born and raised listening to the driving beats and screaming guitars that launched them into a state of infamy of God-like proportions.
After the cancellation of a Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan appearance a couple of years ago, KISS made the Sault one of only three stops they're making this year.
Mayor Tony Bosbous felt this in addition to the band's devotion to the industry, their country and massive fan base just cause to award KISS with the Key to the City of Sault Ste. Marie.
"This may be the biggest event in the history of Sault Ste. Marie," Mayor Bosbous told the Soo Evening News.
Amid huge canisters of carbon dioxide (used for pyro), a long line of local media and a few lucky fans witnessed Commissioner Ray Bauer present the key to Paul Stanley, Gene Simmons, Eric Singer and Tommy Thayer.
I bet other media members Simmons would lick the key.
He didn't.
As the ceremony wrapped up and the sun set over the mighty stage, the 10,000 fans who ranged from two to 60 years of age, began chanting, "We want KISS!"
After waiting an hour in line to buy t-shirts and spending $110 for cases of Bud Light, the stage exploded with the familiar sound of Detroit Rock City.
Mayhem ensued.
"I know we're in Michigan because I can smell Detroit," said Stanley.
Professionals to the end, Simmons continuously engaged the fans in the front while Stanley played to the back row and everyone else in between.
From this performance, you'd never guess they're pushing 60.
Thayer's close working relationship with Ace Frehley in the mid-90's paid off as he stepped in to fill the mile-high space boots as lead guitarist.
Singer's experience playing with Lita Ford, Black Sabbath, Alice Cooper, Queen and KISS during the make-up free years make him a more than apt replacement for Peter Criss on drums.
The Sault asked for the best, and they got the best.
The hottest band in the world.
View Photo Gallery for this Story
01. Detroit Rock City
02. Deuce
03. Makin' Love
04. All American Man
05. Calling Dr. Love
06. Lick It Up
07. I Love It Loud
08. Firehouse
09. Do You Love Me?
10. C'mon And Love Me
11. Hotter Than Hell
12. Watchin' You
13. Shout It Out Loud
14. God Of Thunder
15. Got To Choose
16. Love Gun
17. Black Diamond
Encore:
18. Let Me Go Rock 'N' Roll
19. God Gave Rock And Roll To You
20. Rock And Roll All Nite
The Daily Star claims that producers expect the Kiss singer to spice up the jungle with his outrageous opinions and bad boy antics.
Simmons is no stranger to reality TV; he has previously starred in Channel 4's Rock School, which saw him turning a class of youngsters into a rock group.
It is rumoured that Gene will be joined in Australia by former supermodel Janice Dickinson and TV psychic Sally Morgan, when the show returns later this year.
"All Right Now"
"All American Man"
"Parasite"
"Detroit Rock City"
"Makin' Love"
"Two Timer" [part]
"Room Service" [part]
"Hotter Hell"
"Watchin' You"
"God Gave Rock N Roll To You"
"It's generally a two-hour process if I'm being leisurely," Stanley says about the amount of time it takes to transform himself into his rock star stage persona. "In a pinch, it's just a little over an hour. Remember, when I put on those boots I have to acclimate to a higher altitude, so a good amount of time is definitely required."
Painting on fabric canvas is not so cut and dried, the 55-year-old singer-songwriter-artist reveals.
"My two passions are music and art," he says. "I started doing art when I was very little. There's a high school in New York called the High School of Music and Art (the sister school to the High School for the Performing Arts), and I attended that school. But it's funny, when I was there, I didn't focus on my art very much because I would tell my teachers, 'I'm gonna be a rock star.'
"Then I get to KISS and it's such a visual band. So there you have it. I've designed sets, album covers, tour books. But the idea of painting for real didn't surface until about six years ago when I was going through a very difficult divorce, and my friend uttered the prophetic words, 'You need to paint.'
"Something resonated with me. I went out, bought a canvas and just started to paint in earnest again."
Unlike the vivacious glam rock personified by his musical side, Stanley's paintings, mostly oils, lean toward the seriously contemporary. Colors and abstracts are omnipresent.
"I wasn't interested in trying to make a teacup look like a teacup," he says about his style. "I wanted to use art to touch people emotionally as opposed to intellectually. It's really a stream of consciousness using texture and colors as opposed to words. It's all a journey for me. I'm not sure where I'm going, but I know that when I finish a painting it reveals to me everything I need to know."
Like umpteen musicians before him and since (John Lennon, Tony Bennett, Grace Slick), Stanley has faced the music about his artwork.
"There's no denying my fame gets my foot in the door when it comes to a gallery or exhibition, but that doesn't stop anybody from slamming the door -- and they have," he says. "What I do hear more and more from galleries is that people are drawn to the paintings without knowing who did them."
But some critics would easily say, the public's interest piqued simply because it's "that KISS guy's painting?"
"I'm of the school that you know it's good because you like it. Critics be damned. [Laughs] God knows there's never gonna be a shortage of people who criticize what you do. Criticism falls on my deaf ear. When people come to my house, I always remind them it's the house that bad reviews built. And you oughta see this house.
"Life is too short to deal with people who don't like you or like what you do. It's the same with art. Everybody should have art in their home, whether you have a trailer, an apartment or an estate. If you like something, if it says something to you, go for it. Let no one tell you your choice in art is bad."
When Stanley isn't on the road with the current KISS incarnation, he's enjoying a home life complete with new wife and a new 9-month-old son, Colin, along with big brother Evan, 13. And he's perfectly comfortable with that part of his life that is played out in public.
"There are perks that go with fame, and I appreciate them," he says. "I don't expect them, but I take them. I don't expect a great table at a restaurant, but I don't turn them down. Would you?"
ART PREVIEW: Paul Stanley will be making a gallery appearance from 3-6 p.m. Sunday at the Wentworth Gallery in the Woodfield Shopping Center in Schaumburg, (847) 995-1190. Original paintings and limited edition prints will be available for purchase in advance or day of event. Purchase is required to meet Stanley. Absolutely no memorabilia autographs will be allowed.
"Absolutely, positively not," said Bauer.
KISS will take to the stage tonight at Kewadin Casino in front of thousands of fans. But before they do, Bauer, a Sault Ste. Marie, Mich., city commissioner, will hand over the keys to the city to Gene Simmons, Paul Stanley and the rest of the band.
As a child of the 1970s, Bauer said he remembers well the days when the makeup-clad shock rockers "were considered to be very dangerous."
"I'm old enough that I've got a lot of KISS on vinyl," said Bauer, 42.
He recently came across a newspaper article he clipped as a child, which essentially proclaimed "how bad KISS is, how all their songs are about sex, very bad for the younger generation.
"That it's OK, 30 years later, for a rural northern Michigan city such as the Sault to proclaim today as 'KISS Day' is a testament to how the times have changed, Bauer noted.
"You've got to hand it to them, that they could write lyrics and sing about adult topics without actually coming out and using the F-word," said Bauer. "It seemed blatant at the time, but it was not 100 per cent completely blatant."
Restaurants, bars and hotels in the city of 14,000 people expect to be hit hard by "the people with the black and white faces," said Linda Hoath, executive director of the Sault Convention and Visitors Bureau. "They're preparing for it, you bet they are; we're all preparing for it. These concerts are huge for us."
Michelle Bouschor, Kewadin's public relations director, said 7,500 tickets had been sold by Thursday, putting the show within striking distance of the casino's reigning largest draw, but still far shy of the 10,000 tickets that were made available.
"Keith Urban (last year) was our biggest to date, and we sold around 8,000 (tickets), so it will be pretty close," said Bouschor.
If not bigger than last year's crowd of Urbanites, the KISS audience is expected to be at least a more international group. "We have people coming from Germany, France, Japan, for the concert," said Bouschor. "Definitely, the KISS Army are pretty die-hard."
City officials count on "a big economic benefit" from the concert, said Sault, Mich., Mayor Tony Bosbous. "I don't know if there's a (motel) room in the Sault left. I understand they're totally full for the first time in a while. "It's the biggest group to come to the area, maybe ever.".
KISS will make two other North American stops this month, in Cadott, Wisc., and San Jacinto, Calif.
"You talk about getting lucky, they're not even really on tour right now," said Bauer, who has heard fans from seven countries will attend the show. "We'd have KISS here every year if they would come back. I doubt that we could hope for that, but it would be nice."
TV Guide: To what do you credit this show's success?
Gene Simmons: On the surface, there's nothing particularly exciting. People like train wrecks, but as much as we'll try to be Bobby and Whitney, we can't. It's not who we are. I've never been high or drunk in my life.
TV Guide: Your family life is conventional, but your relationship with Shannon is anything but. Do you consider your relationship with her an open one?
Simmons: All relationships are open. Don't believe there's any difference between a monogamous and a polygamous relationship. Those are all just big words, like "gymnasium." Human beings will do whatever the hell they want to do. [But] they lie about it, because they think they have to answer to somebody. I want Shannon to stay with me only because she wants to, not because she has to.
TV Guide: Are you a fan of HBO's polygamist drama Big Love?
Simmons: I do like it. The only problem I have with it is, ironically enough, I'm a women's-rights guy. I want women to make as much money as men. I want women to literally rule every country in the world. Men are built to fight; women are not. They will talk your f---ing head off.
TV Guide: Would you like to see Shannon pose for Playboy again?
Simmons: Sure, if she wants to. It goes back to dominion, that you think you own somebody. You don't. At a certain point even your children will leave you.
TV Guide: Your son Nick has said he genuinely likes hanging out with his parents. That must make you proud.
Simmons: Very proud, but it's not the cornerstone. The cornerstone is never to negotiate with children. This permissive society has created monsters and they're called "kids." Nick and [daughter] Sophie behave and are charming and polite because they're not allowed not to be!
TV Guide: You have such an aversion to drugs and alcohol. I expect the kids have been duly warned.
Simmons: Oh, they know the rules. Ever see that movie Holes? If I catch them once, they'll find themselves in a camp out in the middle of the desert, digging holes.
TV Guide: Did that strict stance ultimately affect your relationship with original KISS members Ace Frehley and Peter Criss?
Simmons: Absolutely. They were thrown out of the band because they were drug addicts and alcoholics. Period. It's difficult enough to agree with someone who is straight, much less having to deal with Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. This whole culture is obsessed with drugs and alcohol and smoking, and I will have none of it.
TV Guide: Would you play with them again? Or is that era of KISS over?
Simmons: It's difficult to talk about that because... they're damaged. Even if you're straight, can you play your instrument well enough to get up there and physically go through it? You're talking about 30 years of abuse. Everybody cares about Ace and Peter. I love them to death. But I don't want them to die on tour.
TV Guide: You're a famed entrepreneur. Besides a third season of Family Jewels, what other projects do you have coming up?
Simmons: We have the Simmons-Abramson marketing firm, which does all the races for Indy Car. We also just took on an energy drink, and Turks & Caicos hired us to do all their marketing branding. And check out NGTV.com. We have 10,000 hours of the biggest stars in the world doing things you'd never believe they'd do. You'll be blown away.
TV Guide: Can you confirm this number for me from one of your episodes? "4,897." That's supposedly how many women you've slept with.
Simmons: A lot of them didn't get a lot of sleep, but that's a good guess.
TV Guide: So... any advice to help a single guy land a girlfriend?
Simmons: Never lie. Tell her the god's honest truth: "I find you devastatingly attractive, charming and wonderful, and I would be so honored if you shared my bed tonight — but I also find your sister and your mommy attractive, too." If she can get over that hump, you're in, babe!
TV Guide: It works?
Simmons: It does! Even with an ugly bastard like myself.
Through the years, I have been influenced by some great drummers — Gene Krupa, Buddy Rich, Rush's Neil Peart, former Journey-man Steve Smith, Led Zeppelin's late John Bonham, Metallica's Lars Ulrich, Lamb of God's Chris Adler, the late Styx drummer John Panozzo, Pantera/Damageplan/Hellyeah drummer Vinnie Paul Abbott, jazz greats Dave Weckl and Billy Cobham and, of course, my favorite drummer Tommy Aldridge, just to name a few.
There is also one drummer that I can consider my earliest influence — Kiss' Peter Criss.
I knew about Criss well before I was 12. Back in 1974, my cousin's favorite band was Kiss. Andthat's when I first heard the songs "Strutter" and "Firehouse," which were featured on Kiss' self-titled debut album.
I have seen Kiss in concert before, but I was able to actually interview Criss by phone last week. We chatted about his career in Kiss, his work-out regimen and his new solo album, "One For All," which will be released next Tuesday on Silvercat Records.
"One for All" is Criss' fourth solo album, if you count 1978's "Peter Criss," which was released the same time that the other members of Kiss — Gene Simmons, Paul Stanley and Ace Frehley — released their respective solo albums during the band's heyday.
"The idea from 'One for All' actually started when I got an idea to record my own version of 'Send in the Clowns,"' Criss said from his home in New Jersey. "But the album's title is a tribute to my fans. I mean, I wouldn't be where I am now without the fans. Kiss has the most dedicated, wild, psychotic, erotic and esoteric fans in the world. And 'One for All' is my gift back to them."
Criss said he got the idea to redo "Send in the Clowns" and sent it to a friend, Paul Shaffer (bandleader on "The Late Show With David Letterman.") "He immediately got back to me and told me how sick I was to attempt the song, and said he wanted in. He also brought along bassist Will Lee."
"One for All" took shape over two years, said Criss (who was born George Peter John Criscuola). "I had ideas for a long time, but when Kiss finished the 'Kiss Symphony' album and concert, I knew that I had to make another album on my own."
None of this is meant to disparage Kiss, however, Criss said. "I am grateful for being a part of Kiss, but I do know that I'm only one-fourth of the machine. While playing in the band is great, there is a lot of responsibility that comes with the part, and with the responsibility comes the politics and such. So when we finished the concert, I needed to do something for myself. And what better thing could I do was to make an album for my fans."
When 9/11 happened, two years before the "Kiss Symphony" gig, Criss, who was born and raised in New York, had a lot of emotions to sift through. "I'm a churchgoer and very serious about my beliefs. And I remember sitting in church after 9/11 and getting the idea for the song 'One for All.' I knew I had to write something. Whether or not I would record it, I just knew I had to write something."
While the title track can also be interpreted as a song by a musician playing for his fans, there are a couple of songs on the album that are more direct: "Faces in the Crowd" and "Memories." "I love our fans. And they deserve to be noticed. I don't do anything musically without them in mind."
In order for Criss to make the album, he financed it all himself. "I don't care if it doesn't make money. All I care about is having it out there so the fans can hear it. It's a piece of me. The songs are my thoughts and my thoughts alone.
"This is an extremely personal album for me. And while in the past I have been nervous about putting my heart out for all to see, this time it was the right thing to do. 'One for All' is a little piece of me."
"Did a brand new interview with Peter Criss [original KISS drummer] yesterday [Monday, July 16] for my new TV gig on MSG network. Peter talks about KISS, his new CD and much more. I will post air dates and times when I have them in the TV section of [EddieTrunk.com]. The interview will air inside the show MSG-NY. MSG network is only available in the New York/New Jersey/Connecticut tri-state area. You can only get it outside of the NYC area if you subscribe. It is a free channel, however, on all basic satellite and cable systems in the tri-state. Peter's new CD is not a hard rock album, but he did tell me he has an album in that style in the works!"
KISS will play only three shows this year. Dates are as follows:
July 20 - Sault St. Marie, MI - Kewadin
July 21 - Cadott, WI - Rock Fest 2007
July 27 - San Jacinto, CA - Soboba Casino Arena
Simmons and Stanley formed KISS in 1973 and hit it big within the next two years with their rock anthem, “Rock and Roll All Nite.”
The band is well known for its theatrical shows that has included fire-breathing and other outlandish acts.
“I think they’ll be quite a few others — a lot of lookalikes,” predicts Jim Buetow.
Buetow, marketing director for the group that puts on Rock Fest each July, is referring to the KISS Army that tends to follow the veteran rock band everywhere.
“They will be doing their full makeup thing,” Buetow said.
KISS is the 11 p.m. headliner Saturday, following Chicago and Collective Soul.
Chicago got its start in the late 1960s as the Chicago Transit Authority, and its sound was driven by both horns and guitars. They were simultaneously an album and a Top 40 band, and a constant presence on both AM and FM radio.
Saturday is one of two nights that caters to veteran rock acts. The other is Thursday’s kickoff, with all four acts having roots that go back at least to the 1980s, and some well before then.
Deep Purple, in the 11 p.m. cleanup spot, authored the classics “Smoke on the Water” and “Hush.”
The band is preceded by the New Cars, with two main members of the band being joined by Todd Rundgren, who has replaced former lead singer Ric Ocasek.
Rundgren, another ‘70s singer, was responsible for two big hits of the period (“Hello, It’s Me” and “I Saw the Light”) and later the novelty tune “Bang on the Drum All Day.”
Also playing Thursday are Dennis DeYoung, former lead singer of Styx, and World Classic Rockers, consisting of former members of Steppenwolf, Journey, Santana, Lynyrd Skynyrd and Toto.
The other half of Rock Fest is dominated by alternative rock bands, and Buetow said that is not by accident.
“Mike (Asher, who runs both Country Fest and Rock Fest) tries to match them as close as he can,” Buetow said.
Uncle Cracker and Grand Funk Railroad play Friday, with the final two acts of the day being Fuel and Godsmack.
The Boston-based alternative metal group Godsmack dates back to ‘97, and its popular tunes include “Whatever” and “Keep Away.”
Alternative rockers Fuel are no strangers to modern rock radio. The band got its start in ‘96, and its biggest hit is, “Hemorrhage (In My Hands),”
Then on Sunday, Third Eye Blind and 3 Doors Down close out the ‘07 Fest.
3 Doors Down, a Mississippi band, burst onto the scene in 2000 with the smash, “Kryptonite,”. “When I’m Gone” and “Here Without You” also broke into the top 5.
Camping changes
At Country Fest last month, Following last month’s death at Country Fest, Rock Fest has instituted some changes in response to the tragedy.
Tara Grant, 21, of Spring Valley, died in a tent from carbon monoxide poisoning. The source was electric generator fumes from the adjoining campsite.
Buetow said Rock Fest has opened a tent-only camping area across County S from the music site, and fest personnel will be notifying campers of the new feature.
Buetow said in the campground rules they recommend using a carbon monoxide detector with a generator, to help ensure it is working properly.
“We’re emphasizing campers pay attention to how you’re setting up,” he said.
VH1 Classic Records will release "Kissology: Volume Two 1978-1991", the second installment of the definitive three-part collection, on DVD on Tuesday, August 14, 2007.
"Kissology: Volume Two 1978-1991" is an expanded three-disc set boasting nearly seven hours of rare or never-before-seen footage featuring notorious television interviews and early KISS music videos. "Volume Two" follows KISS from the height of mid-'70s KISSteria through the departure of Peter Criss and Ace Frehley, the KISS unmasking and the Eric Carr years. Additionally, this DVD set will include the never-before-seen European theatrical version of the 1978 cult classic KISS film "Kiss in Attack of the Phantoms", complete with scenes not seen in the U.S. version.
C.C. Banana: You first became part of the KISS family by playing drums for Paul Stanley on his first solo tour in 1989. How did you get the gig and was there any talk at the time that you were being considered to fill the KISS drum slot?
Eric Singer: Well, at that time I was in New York, recording an album with BADLANDS. They had the same management as the guy who played bass on Paul's solo tour, Dennis St. James... whose real name is actually Dennis Feldman. Why do Jewish guys in the music business always try to Americanize their names? Anyway, Dennis mentioned to the management that Paul Stanley was planning a solo tour and was in need of a drummer. Since by then I had already finished recording my BADLANDS tracks, they sent me over to the KISS management office, which was literally around the corner from my hotel. There I met with Paul and gave him some of the CDs I'd played on. He actually ended up hiring me based solely on those credentials. Realistically, I had no reason to think I'd wind up drumming for KISS because Eric Carr was still in the band at the time. The next year, KISS did the "Hot in the Shade Tour" and it wasn't until the following year that Eric Carr became ill. That's when they had me play drums on "God Gave Rock 'N' Roll To You" for the "Bill & Ted's Bogus Journey" soundtrack. After that, they began considering me for the band and for their upcoming album, which ended up being "Revenge".
C.C. Banana: In 1995, it was you who suggested to Gene and Paul that they should let Peter Criss sit in with the band at one of the official KISS conventions. This set off a chain of events that ultimately led to a reunion of the original KISS lineup, causing you and Bruce Kulick to be fired from the group. Looking back, how badly did you want to kick your own ass for making that suggestion?
Eric Singer: Well, it was Gene and Paul who told me that Peter wanted to come down to the convention with his daughter. They wanted to know if I would be uncomfortable with that. I told them that not only would I not be uncomfortable, they should let Peter come up and play. That led to the taping of "MTV Unplugged", which eventually led to the full reunion. But they still had no idea how things were going to play out with Ace and Peter. So if the reunion ultimately didn't work or if the tour was a flop, they already had the "Carnival of Souls" album in the can and they still had Bruce and me on retainer. That's why they kept us on the payroll, so they could just pick up where they left off. We were sort of a "Plan B." That part wasn't so bad because we were still getting paid while they were out doing the reunion tour.
C.C. Banana: Were they actually paying you enough to make it worth your while to sit around and do nothing while KISS was on tour without you?
Eric Singer: Well, they were out there making millions while we were at home just collecting a paycheck! Until one day when I got a call from Gene... I think this was sometime in July 1996. He'd called to say that KISS would soon be coming to L.A. to play The Forum and that we should probably get together for a meeting. I knew right then, I was about to get fired! The next day, I listed my car for sale in the newspaper.
C.C. Banana: In 2001, you got the call to return to KISS at the tail end of the so-called "Farewell Tour", replacing Peter Criss for the Japanese and Australian dates. What was it like putting on the make-up and costume and performing with the classic KISS line-up for that very first show?
Eric Singer: Actually, the first time I wore the make-up was for the first photo session. Paul was the one who put it on me because I didn't know what the hell I was doing. Ever since then, I've done it myself and by now it's just like doing a paint-by-numbers! But yes, the first time I put on the make-up before a concert was kind of freaky. Our first shows were in Japan and we hadn't actually done any production rehearsals in make-up. I just remember looking out at the stage during the concert and thinking, "Wow, that's Gene Simmons... that's Ace Frehley... that's Paul Stanley... and they're all in make-up... and I'm playing drums!" It was kind of like a good acid trip.
C.C. Banana: Did they give you your own costume or did they make you wear Peter's smelly old one?
Eric Singer: No, they made me a new one. Peter and I are the same size but I'm built a little differently. The boots fit almost perfectly but Peter's costume is a little bigger in the middle because I'm a bit thinner. Although at the moment I'm a little chubby, so I don't think I'd fit into either one!
C.C. Banana: Do they let you hang onto the costume or do they make you leave a deposit and check it in at the end of the tour?
Eric Singer: No, I get to keep it! I'm smart, I made that part of my deal! I actually have two complete costumes — two different ones from the two tours I've done.
C.C. Banana: Do you ever put on the costume just for fun? Maybe for Halloween or entertaining dates on the weekends?
Eric Singer: Uh... no.
C.C. Banana: In 2003, you were kicked out of the band again when Peter Criss returned for the "World Domination Tour" with AEROSMITH and the recording of the "Kiss: Symphony" album. At the time you were so upset that you vowed never to work with KISS again... and yet, here you are. What got you to finally change your mind and do you feel like you're always getting sloppy seconds?
Eric Singer: Oh, I am always getting sloppy seconds! But you know what? Sloppy or not, at least I get to eat! As for why I went back... you know how Gene signs his autograph with a big dollar sign? That's why. Money talks and bullshit walks. Bottom line, I play drums for a living and whether I like it or not, it's still a business. Gene will tell you the same thing. It's not "music friends," it's "music business." So I have no regrets.
C.C. Banana: Speaking of Peter Criss, it was recently announced that he will soon be releasing his first solo album in 13 years. Will you be playing the role of Peter Criss on that, too?
Eric Singer: Hey, I'm open to it! You never know, I might get the call.
C.C. Banana: Have you ever been in the presence of Peter Criss while wearing the make-up of Peter Criss?
Eric Singer: Not yet. But there's still time.
C.C. Banana: Have you ever received a kiss from a member of KISS?
Eric Singer: Ace might have tried to kiss me at some point. I remember Paul telling me that once back in the old days, they were all sitting around the dressing room and for whatever reason, Peter just went over to Ace and put his dick on Ace's shoulder! Then Ace turned around and kissed it!
C.C. Banana: Note to self — don't put dick on Ace's shoulder.
Eric Singer: Ace has a giant schlong too, you know. One night before a KISS show, he actually took Viagra because he wanted his dick to be hard during the concert. When I asked him why, he said, "So people can see me get hard in the costume." He even tried snorting it once!
C.C. Banana: Ace Frehley snorted Viagra?
Eric Singer: Yep! He thought it would get into his system faster. So Ace snorted the Viagra... but do you know what happened? His nose swelled up instead! True story! When I tell this stuff to people, they think I'm lying or embellishing. But it's all absolutely true. Anyone who has ever worked with Ace will verify it. You'll never meet another person like him. Ace Frehley stories are the absolute best.
C.C. Banana: In that case, tell us another Ace Frehley story!
Eric Singer: Well, Ace was really mad at Gene and Paul while we were on tour in Australia. One night before a show, we were all in the dressing room, putting on our make-up... all of us but Ace. Apparently there had been some schism earlier in the day so when he finally did show up, he was really mad and really late. He came in without saying hi to anyone, put his bag down and went over to this big chalkboard that happened to be in the dressing room that night. He then proceeded to draw a huge pentagram on it, putting our initials on all 5 points — G for Gene, P for Paul, E for Eric, A for Ace and D for Doc, our manager. Then he came over to me and whispered in my ear, "Something bad is going to happen in the show tonight. I just put a hex on Gene and Paul." I swear to God, he actually said this! Apparently Ace had been hanging out with a magician the night before and the guy had taught him some black magic. Anyway, nothing happened that night but the next night we played the same place, so Ace came into the dressing room again and added even more symbols and stuff to the chalkboard.
C.C. Banana: Did anything bad happen that night?
Eric Singer: No, nothing happened that night, either.
C.C. Banana: I think I liked the penis story better.
The entire interview is available at this location.
Created by Hill Holiday of Boston, Massachusetts, the new multi-million-dollar campaign consists of national, regional and local television placements and will run through the end of the year.
Dunkin' Donuts' new light-hearted campaign uses the celebrities as "foils" to illuminate how Dunkin' Donuts understands and celebrates the everyday folks who make America run. Braff, who starred in, wrote and directed the critically acclaimed "Garden State", brought the campaign to life through his direction. In the spots, Campbell and Frehley are showcased attempting to do everyday tasks, juxtaposed with non-celebrity folks who upstage the celebrities and do a better job completing the tasks due to their unpretentious, down-to-earth attitude and a little help from Dunkin' Donuts products.
"By casting the celebrity in a role that pokes fun at their public persona, we are taking a unique approach with these ads," said Robert Rodriguez, Dunkin' Donuts brand president. "The celebrities have been great sports in allowing themselves to be portrayed this way, so therefore we can highlight the everyday women and men who keep this country running as celebrities in their own right."
Other celebrity spots will debut later in the year. Check it out a screen shot at this location. Watch the ad on You Tube here!
Then I caught a recent episode of Gene Simmons: Family Jewels as I was editing this piece. I began to see the subtext of Simmons' existence. It seems his partner of almost twenty-four years, Shannon Tweed, wears the pants in many respects. His two children Sophie and Nick also appear to have him wrapped around their young fingers. A kinder and gentler family man emerges, one who is very much committed to Tweed and their two teenage kids.
Our interview covers Simmons' menagerie of projects including Gene Simmons: Family Jewels, Simmons' hit reality show on the A&E network and his latest venture, a foray into the celebrity branded fashion arena with the Moneybag clothing and accessories line. The Moneybag line incorporates Simmons' own registered trademark of the famous "moneybag" image, which Simmons says he has owned for the past twenty-five years.
PR.com (Allison Kugel): I know where I want to go with the first part of the interview…
Gene Simmons: I know, but I know where I want to go…
PR.com: You tell me what you want to discuss first and foremost…
Gene Simmons: But I'm trying. That's why I can't get married, because the male of the species could never finish a sentence. You guys won't let us. And I mean that in the very nicest way.
PR .com: (Laughs) I'm sorry to interrupt you after what you just said, but I have to ask you a question based on that. What is the difference between living with a woman and marrying a woman? Don't you still have the same problems communicating?
Gene Simmons: Oh, we don't care about communication. We just care about the fact that if we decide to break up, that you don't take half of our money.
(This is interesting, because Gene has been in a domestic relationship with model Shannon Tweed for over twenty-three years, and seems not to be ending this union any time soon.)
PR.com: Ok, what's a typical day like for you?
Gene Simmons: Well it starts early usually, because east coast gets up early. Sometimes its 5:00 AM [when I get up], so that I can catch Europe before they go to sleep.
PR.com: What kind of business dealings do you have in Europe? Or what kind of business dealings do you have in general with the Kiss brand and the licensing? I notice that you've licensed your trademark to many different companies.
Gene Simmons: Well Kiss has close to three thousand licensed products: everything from Kiss condoms to Kiss caskets. We'll get you coming and we'll get you going.
PR.com. (Laughs).
Gene Simmons: But Kiss is only one part of it. We have the Gene Simmons brand which has Simmons Books, The Simmons Comics Group, and of course the TV show, the Gene Simmons: Family Jewels. So, I basically do a kind of a Clark Kent/Superman parallel universe, where I'm proud to be a member of Kiss and I work on that, and also brand Gene Simmons outside of that. The two don't usually cross. They have their own sort of integrity.
PR.com: Since you seem to be the ultimate entrepreneur, when you started Kiss, when you co-founded Kiss I should say, was it simply a means to an end for you?
Gene Simmons: It always is and always will be, because rock n' roll is home to people who would otherwise be asking the next person if they'd like some fries with that.
PR.com: Well, that's if you're successful at it…
Gene Simmons: What I meant was that if it wasn't for rock n' roll you'd be at McDonalds because the people who inhabit the world of popular music can't do anything. They have no skills, and we fall into this kind of business that reacts to charisma. We're not the best singers, and we're not the best dancers. Very few people… I mean, Prince is an exception, but … nobody can read or write music. We're all just self-taught and we do what we do, and that's sort of it.
PR.com: Did you have a passion for music?
Gene Simmons: No. I just wanted to get rich and famous… in that order.
PR.com: That's another thing that I was going to ask you… if you had a choice between rich or famous, which one do you think you would choose?
Gene Simmons: Rich every time! You can be famous and be poor. But if you're rich, who cares. And if money can't buy you happiness… well if you're going to be a miserable son of a bitch, it's still better to be a rich miserable son of a bitch.
PR.com: Well, someone I interviewed said to me recently, "I don't understand why people always say "money can't buy you happiness." Money was never meant to buy you happiness. It was meant to make you comfortable."
Gene Simmons: None of that is correct because if you're a mother and you have a child, your child needs things. And love is not the first thing it needs. The first thing it needs is food and shelter. If it has a cough or is sick, you take it to the doctor. Actually, money is the expression of love, whether it's presents or buying your girlfriend clothing or jewelry, you express your love with money.
PR.com: I want to talk about your background because I know your mother is a Holocaust survivor.
Gene Simmons: It's too easy to say "Holocaust." It's more accurate to say German Nazi.
PR.com: Right. Well, I'm Jewish myself.
Gene Simmons: Well, German Nazi Holocaust is different than the Turkish Armenian Holocaust.
PR.com: Ok.
Gene Simmons: You see what I mean?
PR.com: She was in a Nazi concentration camp, correct?
Gene Simmons: Correct.
PR.com: When did she end up in Israel, and then how did the family eventually come to emigrate to the United States?
Gene Simmons: I was born in 1949. My mother and my father were Hungarian Jews and it was not an easy time, certainly to be Jewish, and not an easy time for the entire planet. I was oblivious to all that. I was born, and as long as I had a piece of bread and jam, because we did not have meat or milk or eggs or any of that stuff… as long as I had a piece of bread and lots of jam on top of it I was deliriously happy. I didn't care about anything else. And to this day, that is my favorite dessert. Thick, thick corn bread or pumpernickel bread toasted with jam on it.
PR.com: You've said that what drives you is that, from when you were young, you have memories of being hungry.
Gene Simmons: Work is good. It's clear in your mind if you were once desperately poor. You appreciate [being rich] and you understand that nothing happens by itself, and that it is all hard work. What's interesting is that the richest guys in the world get up every day and go to work. Whether you're Arab Sheiks with your oil wells… they continue to make deals all the time. Most people think it's about a job that's just nine to five. Work involves doing something all the time, the love of labor.
PR.com: What do you teach your kids about the value of a dollar and how to earn money, and how to keep money?
Gene Simmons: Well they have never had an allowance. If you need money for clothing you get that. If you want to buy a toy, you have to tell me why. They do certainly understand the nature of stuff. When I want to buy them something really nice, both of them will say, "No, you really don't need to [buy] that dad." Have you ever seen our show (A&E's "Gene Simmons: Family Jewels")?
PR.com: I have seen it. I did not see it this past season but I saw the first season. I remember one episode when you were trying to teach your son about money because he made a comment about twenty-thousand dollars not being that difficult to make, or it kind of being dispensable.
Gene Simmons: Yeah, try making twenty-thousand!
PR.com: I know, believe me (laughs)! I know it's difficult.
Gene Simmons: I mean, it's not a lot for me, but the idea is that a penny is a lot, 'cause if you don't have a penny, that's not good.
PR.com: Well, it's not easy to generate money and it takes innovation. It takes a lot of thought. It starts in the mind. So, it's well known and well documented that you're highly against marriage and you never want to get married.
Gene Simmons: For me.
PR.com: Right. You're against it for you.
Gene Simmons: I don't believe man is designed to be married.
PR.com: Do you believe women are designed to be married?
Gene Simmons: Yes, you're biologically designed that way. You nest. You lay your eggs… I mean talking bird language… you lay your eggs and you build your nest. You want the white picked fence. Neither is good or bad. It's just what you're designed for. During the month, during a thirty day period, you drop one or two eggs. That's it! Every day we make hundreds of millions of sperm in the same time it takes you to make two eggs. We're tens of billions of sperm. Either that's a great cosmic joke by God, or it has something to do with the blueprint of what we do.
PR.com: Then what has kept you in your relationship (with model Shannon Tweed) for over twenty years?
Gene Simmons: My decisions, my rules. No marriage. That's no one to ask me "Where you are going?" Because I would immediately respond by, "Who wants to know?"
PR.com: Do you believe in fidelity?
Gene Simmons: I believe in nobody else having anything to say about your lifestyle. If you want to be [faithful] that should be a personal decision, not up to your girlfriend or your boyfriend. That's the problem with marriage. Somebody else has a right to say how you lead your life. Not even your mother has that right, and she gave you life itself. Why would you ever give anybody else that right?
PR.com: It's a valid point. I'll give you that.
Gene Simmons: You meet somebody as a grown up, and all of a sudden you have to answer to them?? What?!
PR.com: Well, there's two sides to that coin.
Gene Simmons: No there isn't. There is only one side, and that is that you're desperately trying to protect your one or two eggs. It's biological.
PR.com: No, no, I understand that, but do you care if your partner is being faithful?
Gene Simmons: Well, I think that has to do with ego. It doesn't have to do with this kind of desperate biological urge. For women it's desperate and biological. For men it's just about ego. And ego, you know, you get over that.
PR.com: What do you explain to your daughter about what you want for her?
Gene Simmons: Simple idea, don't define yourself by men, which is what all women do. Every woman's magazine is, "Ten ways to keep him interested," or "Ten things he's thinking about." There isn't a men's magazine that has anything to do with trying to figure out what women are thinking about, because we actually don't care what you're thinking about. We are too busy thinking our own thoughts. You spend all that time because you are desperate, because you have one or two eggs a month, and by the time you're in your middle years you go nuts. "Gotta get a man, gotta get a man, gotta get a man!"
(But also, every issue of a men's magazine that I've picked up has articles like "How to Please Her in Bed," "How to Attract a Hot Girl," or "Is Your Penis the Right Size and Shape?")
Gene Simmons: So the idea for Sophie is not to define herself by a man. Forget what he wants. What do you want?
PR.com: Do you want to see her get married?
Gene Simmons: Only if she wants to. Marriage means nothing to me. Happiness means everything. All I see in marriage is a lot of desperately unhappy people. That's why there are marriage jokes. By the way, there are no "single" jokes. Try one. I don't know of any. "Why do men die younger than their wives? Because they want to." Then everybody laughs. Here is a "single" joke: "I got up and I did whatever I wanted to do, whenever I wanted to do it, at any time, and without checking with anyone."
PR.com: But the rest of that sentence would be, "…but I'm lonely."
Gene Simmons: Well you're not because being single means you can keep swinging your bat until you hit one.
PR.com: At least your argument is well thought out.
Gene Simmons: I think it is called man.
PR.com: Does Shannon agree with all of your philosophies?
Gene Simmons: Absolutely not.
PR.com: Do you ever argue about it?
Gene Simmons: Never. No one has the right to argue with me. I can open the discussion but nobody can sit there and… there's no passing judgment. You accept the idea that you know people think in a certain way, because it's biology.
PR.com: But there was an episode in your show…
Gene Simmons: You can't argue with a lion about why it wants to eat meat. It just does…
Gene Simmons & Shannon Tweed with Children Nick & Sophie
PR.com: There was an episode in your show, where she was trying to coerce you into getting married.
Gene Simmons: Surprise! All women do that (laughs).
PR.com: Even twenty-three years into the relationship, she still wants to get married?
Gene Simmons: Women never give up.
PR.com: I am interested in your thoughts on the war in Iraq.
Gene Simmons: Well, I think everybody in America is on crack, and believes that you can go on your summer vacation, you fight a war and you come back. This war will continue for generations, and it has nothing to do with tanks and guns. It has to do with winning the minds and hearts of young Muslim people so that they don't choose 9/11 kind of behavior. It's the dark ages, this idea that you can go there for a few years and come home. We have been in Korea for decades and we should continue to be there until a new generation comes in and just finally gives up. You've got to fight the war like The Cold War; be there as long as it takes, and finally Russia lays down its arms.
PR.com: Do you think this all goes back to the United Nations giving the Jewish people the state of Israel?
Gene Simmons: Well, let's not go there. It's too political. The problem is not Israel or anything else. People hate each other and have for centuries. Actually, ever since we started walking the earth. One cave did not like the other cave. They were taller or shorter or fatter or darker or lighter. Human beings can barely get along.
PR.com: Why do you think?
Gene Simmons: I think it's survival and competition, whether its sports or jousting knights in shining armor, or beauty pageants for women… or you look at animals. You see rams ramming each other, and there is always the pecking order. Who is going to be top dog?
PR.com: What do you think about celebrities speaking out about their opinions on the war?
Gene Simmons: Pathetic and they're not qualified to talk about it. I think everybody means well, but whether you are far left or far right, Al-Qaeda does not care what you are or what your beliefs are. They don't care if you want to withdraw and go home. They want you to die. There is no difference [to] an extremist Muslim. They're not interested if you are for the war or against the war. You're just all Americans to them.
PR.com: Let's talk about the Moneybag clothing line…
Gene Simmons: You mind me asking how old you are?
PR.com: Thirty-two. Why do you ask?
Gene Simmons: You sound nineteen.
PR.com: Really?
Gene Simmons: Yeah
PR.com: Well, I kind of take that as a compliment.
Gene Simmons: Well, with women you never know, you can't win.
PR.com: I'm proud of my age.
Gene Simmons: You're missing the point. You ignored what I said. What I said was if there's a twenty year old girl and she say's, "How old do you think I am?" and the guy says, "Nineteen," she says, "Oh, I look that young?" "Ok, twenty-one." "Oh, I look that old?" "Ok, that must mean you're twenty." "Oh, you mean I look my age?" You can't win.
PR.com: Well, you could win with me. I have no problem being my age and I have no problem sounding younger than my age.
Gene Simmons: We are just chatting away. Men don't chat. We just want to get to it.
PR.com: You went off on that tangent.
Gene Simmons: Ok.
PR.com: Ok, so we digress. Let's talk about the Moneybag clothing line.
Gene Simmons: A guy named Jason Dussault… I was contacted by a guy named Terry Fitzgerald who does work with the McFarlane people (Todd McFarlane's Comics). They are the people I made a deal with for the Kiss Psycho Circus comics. One thing led to the other. I met Jason and he was fascinated to learn that I own the "moneybag" logo and have for over twenty-five years, and have used it sparingly in my record company, Simmons Records and my book imprint, Simmons Books. I tried the Moneybag clothing line a while back with another entity that didn't satisfy me, just in terms of the business structure. Jason was starting his own [company], Dussault Custom Ink. He wanted to license the "moneybag" logo, and I said, "Well here is a better idea. We can do a joint venture. I'll provide sweat equity and all this kind of stuff, and you manufacture and distribute." So we joined forces. It will officially debut in August at The Magic Show in Las Vegas, although there are already thousands of orders from stores all across the country.
PR.com: Is everything going to feature the "moneybag" logo on it?
Gene Simmons: Yes
PR.com: Is most of the merchandise going to be t-shirts?
Gene Simmons: And wallets, leather goods, carry-on cases in airports… that kind of stuff. There is going to be jewelry and charm bracelets.
PR.com: The actual picture of the bag with the dollar sign on it? You own that trademark?
Gene Simmons: I do. I trademarked that twenty-five years ago when I started signing my name with two slashes through the "S." Then that was trademarked because it was an application of the dollar sign. Then I wondered if anybody actually owned the "moneybag," the dollar sign with the bag around it, and found that nobody did.
PR.com: I'm shocked about that, because I have seen it in cartoons and all over the place.
Gene Simmons: That doesn't mean they own it. People use all kinds of thing they don't own.
PR.com: How involved are you? Do you get involved in design and production?
Gene Simmons: No, that is Jason. But we have a conversation before, during and after. He says, "What you think about this?" I go, "No that's not good. How about this? How about that?" We talk about, you know, marketing and how and where.
PR.com: Where is the product manufactured?
Gene Simmons: I don't know… if you make a record with a record company, where is the record manufactured? Where is the CD done? I don't know.
PR.com: Ok. Tell me about My Dad the Rock Star.
Gene Simmons: That's a cartoon show that has been on the air around the world for years, actually; about four years. I created that show sort of as… when our son Nick was younger, around twelve, I wondered what it was like from his point of view with a famous mom and a famous dad. So, My Dad the Rock Star, even the title, is from the little boy's point of view. But it's semi-autobiographical. I mean Rock Zilla (the animated father) kind of looks like me, but it's not Kiss.
PR.com: With Gene Simmons: Family Jewels, when is the next season starting?
Gene Simmons: Well they are supposed to start filming in August. Although you missed season two.
PR.com: You're right about that, but I did see season one. How long does filming take?
Gene Simmons: No rhyme or reason, you know, sometimes it's two days per episode or it could take a week. Depends on what you do.
PR.com: Are you guys scripted and set up by producers to say or do certain things?
Gene Simmons: No, but there's got to be some format. I don't memorize any lines and nobody writes anything down for me, but there is a format. If I am going to an Indy car race for instance, I'll tell the crew and they will just see what the activities are, and they'll try to make sense of it.
For more information about Gene Simmons' "Moneybag" clothing line, visit www.genesimmonsmoneybag.com or www.genesimmons.com.
* "Happily Unmarried"
* "Next Generation Rock Star"
* "The Demon Lives"
* "Driving Me Crazy"
* "A Bun in the Oven"
* "Nice Day for a Facelift"
* "Face Off"
* "Master Gene Theater"
DVD extras include a bonus episode "Under the Knife" and Cast Biographies.
From the birth of rock to metal to alternative rock — there is a genre for every music fan — some that have stood the test of time and others that have not. This exclusive series will delve into what made each of these genres of music resonate with fans across the world.
Each of the seven episodes will take a deeper look into the individual ages of rock by evaluating the music itself -- breaking down key tracks, getting behind the songs and composing ideas, as well as looking into the social influences of the time and the social context that influenced the progression of the music. Throughout each episode viewers will hear from some of rock music's biggest icons, including Keith Richards, David Bowie, Roger Waters, Lou Reed, Ozzy Osbourne, James Hetfield, Deborah Harry, Gene Simmons, Roger Taylor, Stewart Copeland, Bruce Springsteen, Steven Van Zandt, Michael Stipe, Henry Rollins, Dave Grohl, Frank Black, Noel Gallagher and many more.
Here's a breakdown of each night:
* Episode 1: The Birth of Rock - Rock music emerges in the late 60's as a fresh branch of rock 'n' roll. Becoming popular through artists like THE WHO, CREAM, and THE ROLLING STONES, rock groups exemplified this era of protest through a tone of seriousness in their music.
* Episode 2: Art/Prog Rock - As rock music made a name for itself, upcoming rock artists began to experiment with their sound. Groups including THE VELVET UNDERGROUND, DAVID BOWIE, PINK FLOYD and GENESIS were all a part of this innovative and varied sound.
* Episode 3: Heavy Metal - A new sound that emerged from the UK, heavy metal conveyed an intense and powerful resonance. Artists like BLACK SABBATH and LED ZEPPELIN paved the way by establishing the heavy sound while artists like METALLICA and MÖTLEY CRÜE added their own rock 'n' roll twist.
* Episode 4: Punk - Continuing with the evolution of the sound of rock, a genre of music emerged in the 1970s that can best be described as anti-establishment. Demonstrated by bands including THE SEX PISTOLS, THE CLASH and TELEVISION, these artists created music that went hand-in-hand with the rebellion of youth at the time, often containing lyrics that incorporated political outrage and a "do-it-yourself" attitude.
* Episode 5: Stadium Rock - Rock music became more dominant in mainstream pop culture in the 80s allowing artists such as QUEEN, THE POLICE, BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN, and U2 to sell out stadium-sized venues.
* Episode 6: Alternative/Grunge - Influenced by punk, bands including NIRVANA, REM, SONIC YOUTH, and PEARL JAM shunned the traditions of the music industry and signed with independent record labels. Despite their deviance from traditional mainstream success, many alternative bands were commercially successful.
* Episode 7: UK Indie - Growing out of the UK punk scene, bands such as THE SMITHS, OASIS, and the STONE ROSES possessed an independent spirit that embraced their artistic power and financial control. These groups created music that provided a strong and sometimes arrogant counterpoint to the pop sounds dominating the charts.
"Seven Ages of Rock", a VH1 Classic co-production with the BBC is executive-produced by Michael Poole for the BBC and Michele M. Dix and Ben Zurier for VH1. William Naylor serves as the series producer for the BBC.
"KISS wanted you to vote on which rarely performed song they should play this summer and you responded in a big way! Over 12,000 KISS fans from around the globe voted for their song of choice and the winner is.... 'All American Man'.
"'All American Man' was clearly the fan favorite, receiving over one quarter of all the votes!"
Here are the complete voting results:
"All American Man" - 26%
"Mr. Speed" - 17%
"Rock Bottom" - 10%
"Almost Human" - 9%
"Magic Touch" - 8%
"Sweet Pain" - 8%
"Million To One" -7%
"Ladies Room" - 6%
"Strange Ways" - 5%
"Let Me Know" - 4%
KISS will perform "All American Man" at the following shows this month:
July 20 - Kewadin Casinos - Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan
July 21 - Rock Fest 2007 - Cadott, Wisconsin
July 27 - Soboba Casino Arena - San Jacinto, California
10. Gene Simmons on the death of rock stardom:
"No, there's not a single rock star left. All the rock stars and the biggest ticket sellers in the world are from days gone by. There's not a new band in the world that even comes close. Paris Hilton is a bigger rock star than anybody ... she just doesn't play guitar.
9 ... on his type of woman:
"I don't want to read a book with a girl, I'm sorry. It's not politically correct, but I really don't. I want her to be sexy, I want her to buy stiletto heels, and I want makeup and perfume."
8. ... on originality:
"Creativity is highly overrated. If I want to succeed and I want to open a restaurant, I'm going to go where the most popular restaurant is and rip it off."
7. ... on the crisis in the Middle East:
"I want those people stopped now. I want regime change and I want regime change all over the world, even if it means breaking international law."
6. ... on the "drugs" part of "sex & drugs & rock & roll":
"Getting high was considered the lowest of the low. And then, of course, Hollywood made it socially acceptable. And rock stars, of course, who were qualified to do nothing except shine your shoes, took it even further and made it into a kind of lifestyle."
5. ... on how Americans don't know how good they have it:
"When people come as an immigrant -- [as I did] myself -- we're shocked at how pampered and spoiled everybody is, which is really to say you live in the land of milk and honey and you don't realize that the rest of the world isn't a nice place."
4. ... on why rappers are more rock & roll than rock & rollers:
"So if the white boys ... all want to look like Kurt Cobain, then the public goes to rap stars, who sing about getting laid all the time. None of them sing about getting married, 'cause the male of the species doesn't want to."
3. ... on his disdain for anti-war protesters:
"What we did to our veterans of Vietnam was just the lowest form, and America should be ashamed of itself -- and every crackhead who tried to burn the flag, I wish I could get them in my sights in front of a baseball bat."
2. ... on why it doesn't make sense for Jews to be pacifists:
"You can take a humanistic point of view: You don't have the right to take a human life. That's fine, but then you can't complain when your whole family is wiped out at Auschwitz. And my family almost was. And for Jews, especially in America, to be pacifists is astonishing.
1. ... on his own greatness:
"While all the rock stars, the few that are remaining, they're in bands, I'm the only brand, baby. No matter how big Mick Jagger or U2 is, there are no Rolling Stones or U2 comic books or Visa cards."
Suzy Michelson, Wagner's business partner, has issued the following update: "I just saw Dick at the hospital and he is now entirely alert — his great mind is intact, his humor is intact. His heart and body are recovering, and he will soon be back to 100%. He is entirely off all life support systems, and his prognosis is excellent. WOW!!!!!! Dick is one of my dearest friends in the entire world, and I am so relieved to share this great news with you."
When Dick is fit again, he will be recording some new music with Steve Hunter and Fred Mandel (of the "Welcome to My Nightmare" band) for the upcoming Wagner/Hunter documentary, which also features Alice.
Wagner was Alice Cooper's right-hand man on the albums "Welcome to My Nightmare", "Goes To Hell", "Lace And Whiskey", "From The Inside" and "DaDa", helping in songwriting, composing, production and playing lead guitar.
"He had just finished getting his plastic surgery and tummy tuck," recalls Daussaltt. "So when we showed up to his house, hes had on black sunglasses and a baseball cap. His eyes were black and his face was all puffy. His whole body was bandaged up like a mummy. But that's Gene Simmons - you can't keep him down for long. Because he just wants to get up and start doing business. He's just a machine."
Of course. Dussault is no stranger to celebrity interactions. People like Rob Zombie, Nicole Richie and Prevail of Swollen Members have been ordering tattoo-inspired, embroidered hoodies and Ts from Dussault's own label, Deuce/Dussault, since last summer.
And now with this spring's launch of one-of-a-kind Dussault jewelry, for which he works very closely with traditional Haida artist James Adkins, there doesn't seem to be any stopping Dussault.
"I feel like everything is happening for a reason," he says. "That's not to say there haven't been some down days or hard days. But overall there's been a lot of very exciting experiences. What can I say? I'm very fortunate."
Said Castro: "It's my second childhood. I get to relive the glory of BALANCE from a more relaxed perspective.", Katsaros added: "To me it feels much more relaxed, we can simply make cool music, without the concerns normally associated with making a record — we are all at such a high plateau in our current situations, I actually think it allows us to be more at ease, less stressed, and the music reflects that."
Kulick commented: "After the demise/breakup of the band in 1983, I toured the world as a lead guitarist with various artists (MEAT LOAF, PAUL STANLEY) and everywhere I'd go I'd get great comments from fans and press alike, saying how they dug BALANCE and its music.. It always amazed me. I can't wait for those fanatics to be satiated at last by our new CD."
Castro continued: "We have a very healthy attitude. The music breathes and we've been able to connect very well with each other. The great thing is that we are all such productive people. So there will be an abundance of material and we will edit our selves down to the best of the bunch and that will be the record."
Recording of the as-yet-untitled new album has commenced in Los Angeles and New York.
"Anyone who is or was ever a fan will not be disappointed; in fact, there may finally be an international hit amongst the tunes on this new outing," stated Katsaros. "We have all matured, and what's coming out is simply fantastic! Like the best of both of our earlier records. After all nobody sings better than Peppy, nobody rocks better than Bob, and who better in America to toss around some fat synth patches than me?"
"One for All" will be released on Silvercat Records, distributed by Sony/RED. The CD is said to be an autobiographical collection featuring Criss' self-penned tunes, in addition to several cover songs and tribute songs to his fans, that reflect his outlook on life at this point in his long-standing career. In addition to arranging and writing the lyrics and melodies for most of the material on the CD, "One for All" is the first fully self-produced CD by Criss. He was also joined by longtime friends and acclaimed musicians — bandleader Paul Shaffer and bassist Will Lee, as well as guitarist Mike McLaughlin.
In dedication to his fans, Criss personally autographed a limited amount of CDs of the "special edition" package, which will be marked with a "gold" sticker on the CD, and will be available in the U.S. at the retail chain Best Buy.
Simmons was in Richmond over the weekend because the IndyCar Series was in town. His company, Simmons Abramson Marketing, promotes IndyCar racing. The SunTrust Indy Challenge ran Saturday night at Richmond International Raceway.
In an apparent terrorist attack Saturday, a blazing Jeep Cherokee crashed into the airport terminal in Glasgow, Scotland, just yards from passengers at check-in counters. Police said they think that attack is linked to two car bombs discovered in London on Friday.
"I had no concern at all [about flying] because of Homeland Security," Simmons said between rounds of posing for photos with fans.
U.S. airports have been at the "orange" threat level, the second-highest on the government's five-level scale, since August 2006, when police in the United Kingdom said they foiled a plot to blow up aircraft bound for the U.S.
Simmons said he does not complain about extra security measures imposed on airport travelers -- even travelers who fly in private or corporate jets. He sidestepped saying whether he was flying commercial from Richmond International Airport yesterday.
He said the war on terrorism is a war of ideas that will last decades, and that it will not end with the death or capture of Osama bin Laden.
"This is a worldwide fight for the minds of Muslim youth," he said.
"I'm a big proponent of the idea that in time of war some individual rights have to be curtailed, and this is a time of war," Simmons said. "I was born in Israel, although I consider America my home. When you come from a small country like that where you're surrounded by people who bear you ill will," you understand drastic measures sometimes must be taken.
Another airport passenger, Donna Crawford, an English professor at Virginia State University, said she did not think about changing her plan to fly to Portland, Ore., yesterday after she heard about the events in London and Glasgow.
"It crossed my mind, but it's kind of in the realm of tornadoes, earthquakes -- things you can't control," Crawford said.
Flying is an act of faith for her anyway, she said with a smile. She understands the physical principles of flight, but it still seems unlikely to her that a big airplane will get off the ground.
Crawford, 52, was on her way to visit her 92-year-old father. "I am so grateful to be able to fly and go see him," she said.
Tim Leach, 28, of Harrisonburg sat in the waiting area with his 14-month-old daughter, Chloe,on his lap. They were waiting for Leach's mother to arrive on a flight from Texas.
Leach said he takes comfort in the idea that security measures are made more stringent after events like those in London and Glasgow.
"I think it's safer to fly today than it was yesterday," Leach said.
Cindy Kyzer, 36, was headed home to New Hampshire yesterday after bringing her daughter to Virginia to attend Liberty University. Did the Glasgow incident worry her?
"Not really, no. I just took it in stride," Kyzer said. "I would think if something like that happens somewhere else that the security is going to be tighter here, so you're even safer."
Besides, she added, "I figure if God wants me he's going to get me."
Hearing about terrorist attacks always bothers Yvette Lee, 40, of Brooklyn, N.Y.
Headed for South Carolina, he was waiting at the Amtrak station on Staples Mill Road yesterday after stepping off his original train for a cigarette and getting left behind. But he doesn't let worrying about terrorism interfere with his life.
"It bothers me a little bit because I was in New York when the World Trade Center got blown up," Lee said. "I actually saw it fall down with my own eyes. You never know what's going to happen or where."
Gail Casselton of Richmond was waiting at the Amtrak station for her daughter, Colleen, who'd been to New York to visit her college roommate.
"We take the trains all the time," she said. "You just do what you've got to do. You can't live scared."
01. BLUE ÖYSTER CULT – "Don't Fear The Reaper"
02. NAZARETH - "Love Hurts"
03. PETER FRAMPTON - "Baby, I Love Your Way"
04. RUSH - "Tom Sawyer"
05. BACHMAN-TURNER OVERDRIVE - "Let It Ride"
06. KISS - "God Of Thunder"
07. THE SWEET - "Love Is Like Oxygen"
08. ALICE COOPER - "Only Women Bleed"
09. MISFITS - "Halloween 2"
10. TYLER BATES - "Halloween Theme"
11. TYLER BATES - "Michael stalks Laurie"
12. MR. SANDMAN - "Nan Vernon"
The soundtrack will also feature "cool clips" from the movie in between the music.
The full score by Tyler Bates will be available as a separate CD.
Rob Zombie recently commented on the reports that he has quietly gone about shooting new material for his upcoming remake of "Halloween", including a brand new ending for the film. According to Bloody-Disgusting.com, Zombie spent a week shooting additional scenes of "violence, gore and bloodshed," including six new death sequences and the new finale, which was described as "quite gruesome." Sources told Launch that the additional scenes were shot as a result of audience response to a test screening of the film's initial cut that was held last month.
Said Zombie: "Dimension [Films] let me go film a couple new things that I thought the film needed and that's what I did. This is a good thing, so don't go worrying that something has gone wrong. The film still opens August 31 and kicks total ass. 'Nuff said."
"Halloween" is Zombie's third effort as a screenwriter and feature director.
Zombie was rumored to be touring this fall as special guest of BLACK SABBATH offshoot HEAVEN AND HELL, but that slot has been taken by ALICE COOPER.
Zombie is preparing a live album for release in August and is also said to be working on a box set from his previous band, WHITE ZOMBIE.
If it were up to Paul Stanley, the former lead singer and songwriter for Kiss would rock 'n' roll all night and paint every day. The rocker turned painter has switched from painting his face to painting canvas and will be the focus of an art exhibition July 6 and 7 at the Wentworth Gallery in Orlando.
Stanley talked recently about his upbringing, art, the future of Kiss and, of course, Gene Simmons' tongue.
You were an art major and a graduate of the High School of Music & Art in New York City. How did that shape you?
You know the great thing about specialized high school is that they allow for full academics plus a very intensive curriculum in music and art. For me it was great because I was a freak. In public school, I was the outcast, the freak. There, I was a freak in a school of freaks.
What got you in to painting?
About seven years ago, I went through a divorce. You really get tired of screaming in a room by yourself. A friend of my said to me, "You need to paint." So I did. I wanted to be more about connecting emotionally than intellectually. Interestingly, once I started putting my own pieces up in my house among others I had owned, I started getting a lot of good feedback from them and at the time they weren't signed. I was still a little too self-conscious about them. But I realized that I really enjoyed it and if I could please myself, chances are I could please someone else.
Do you think your acceptance in the art world has anything to do with your musical fame?
No doubt my celebrity got my foot in the door. But in the end, it's just my foot. It could still get slammed shut on. People may like me for my music but that doesn't mean they'll by my art. Mindless adulation is a rare commodity.
Who would you consider to be some of your influences?
I really enjoy all art. There are thousands of artists who will never be viewed. I really enjoy Mark Rothko. I think he was fascinating because it was so deceptively simple. It pretty much chronicled his deterioration. But there's just so much out there. I'm a big believer that everyone should own art in some way, shape or form. It doesn't matter if you live in a one bedroom trailer or a penthouse. You should own something, even if it's just a print.
What do you make of all the success you have had with your paintings?
I think I've really pleased myself. It's futile to please others as a first step. I'd rather fail on my own terms that try to create something I think others would like and then fail. It goes back to the whole idea of pleasing yourself. Then the flip side of that is that if I succeed, I don't share the credit.
What has been your favorite of all your paintings?
That's like asking who my favorite child is. No one displays things they don't like so chances are if I'm displaying it, I like it.
How is painting different from songwriting?
I think art is more intimate and more personal because it has less restriction. With music, you have to write the music, then find a melody and then write the lyrics that rhyme and go with it all. Art is more a fluid activity.
With all of your new successes, do you feel you've left "Star Child" behind?
I take everything with me. Everything I am is a result of where I've been and what I've done.
If you had to pick between painting a ground breaking piece of art or writing a number one song, being that you've done both, where would your allegiances lie?
What makes art interesting to me is that I am writing the history as I go. With music, you are up against your past. At some point you realize you are living in your own shadow.
Is there any more life left in Kiss?
Yeah, I think so. But life doesn't necessarily mean another album. When you go to a concert, you want to hear the hits. You tolerate the new stuff. Everyone says they want new music but when it comes down to it you say, "That's great. Now play 'Love Gun.' "
Any other plans while you're in Orlando?
I'm a big kid. I'll be on Tower of Terror. I'll be at Disney and Universal. I'm just gonna have fun.
Lastly, is the tongue in God of Thunder, your Gene Simmons portrait, drawn to scale?
Let's just say I'm a good friend.
If You Go
WHAT: special appearance by former Kiss rocker Paul Stanley at an exhibit of his paintings
WHEN: 6-9 p.m. Friday and Saturday; gallery showing 10 a.m.-9 p.m. Friday and noon-7 p.m. Saturday
WHERE: Wentworth Gallery: The Mall at Millenia, 4200 Conroy Road (off Interstate 4), Orlando
ADMISSION: free
INFORMATION: (407) 903-9055
* Capital Centre – Largo, MD – 7/7/79 (Dynasty Tour) [track listing forthcoming, though ALL four solo albums songs will be included]
* Budokan Hall – Tokyo Japan – 4/21/88 (Crazy Nights Tour)
* The Ritz – New York City – 8/13/88 (Crazy Nights Tour) featuring:
"Deuce"
"Love Gun"
"Fits Like A Glove"
"Heaven's On Fire"
"Cold Gin"
"Black Diamond"
"Firehouse"
"Crazy Crazy Nights"
"Calling Dr. Love"
"War Machine"
"Tears Are Falling"
"Kissology: Volume Two, 1978-1991" will be released on August 14. It is the follow-up to KISS' DVD box set, "Kissology: Volume One, 1974-1977".
When IDW released a satirical trading-card set titled "George W. Bush and the Weapons of Mass Distraction" last week, it didn't know what to expect.
"We had some reservations in the planning process but knew it was all in fun and hoped that was the way it was perceived," said Chris Ryall, publisher and editor-in-chief of the San Diego-based company.
Vice president Dick Cheney and former British Prime Minister Tony Blair are among the political figures lampooned in a new set of trading cards from IDW.
The illustrated card set takes jabs at influential leaders, including President Bush, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, Sen. Joe Lieberman of Connecticut, former Secretary of State Colin Powell, former British Prime Minister Tony Blair, Osama Bin Laden and Saddam Hussein.
In some cases, it's more a direct hit than a jab. For instance, first lady Laura Bush's card boldly states, "The Woman Behind the Idiot."
Conservative media titan Rupert Murdoch's card reads, "Throw another liberal on the Barbie" while Vice President Dick Cheney's card spoofs his 2006 shooting incident where he wounded a friend. Cheney is dressed like Elmer Fudd, Bugs Bunny's nemesis, and his card reads, "Hunting Wabbits."
"Things said and done during the Bush administration was ripe for parody," said Ryall, who admits at times the company thought it should change a word or two in order to soften the effect. Humor won out, and Ryall likens his product to the tone found in Mad magazine.
"Our cards are funny and a tad harsh, but not mean-spirited," Ryall said.
The 36-card boxed set can be purchased at www.idwpublishing.com for $14.99.
Looking to breathe new life into the comic book genre, IDW has partnered with Gene Simmons to form a new imprint, Simmons Comic Group.
Simmons, a longtime comic book fan, is hands-on with the venture that will yield several titles, including a soon-to-be released book by Simmons' son, Nick, which he both wrote and illustrated.
Wanting to resurrect some of the Marvel KISS comics from earlier years, IDW approached the rock legend about a joint venture. The company walked away impressed by Simmons' knowledge of the comic book industry and his interesting techniques for selling different titles. First up will be "Gene Simmons House of Horrors," which debuts July 18.
"Simmons' love for comic books was apparent and he really wanted to be a part of the process," said Ryall.
Simmons wrote the introduction and epilogue for the 64-page book. The Simmons group's following release is set for August -- "Dominatrix," which Ryall describes as a T&A meets the CIA.
IDW Publishing is a division of the graphic design company Idea and Design Works, LLC., which was founded in 1999, offering creative services. In 2001, IDW released its first comic book, "30 Days of Night," which debuts as a movie in October.
Today, the company is making fast comic book tracks in the horror genre. IDW has some sci-fi, Western and movie tie-ins in the works, but horror seems to be its mainstay.
Upcoming projects include a deluxe package of Chester Gould's "Dick Tracy" comics. Original works will be cleaned and retouched.
"IDW is happy where it's at," said Ryall. "We have a lot cool projects, and with Gene Simmons we are positioned to reach a wider base and expose more people to the world of comic books."
"It's fantastic that 'Volume One' of 'Kissology' has done huge numbers, but does it surprise me? No, not at all," Kiss guitarist Tommy Thayer tells Billboard.com. "This is Kiss in its early raw form, four guys with the hunger and fire, aspiring to take on the world. All this great footage is finally available and it's exciting."
"Volume Two" will be comprised of three DVDs and a fourth disc that will vary by retailer. The first disc will feature a news special on the band from 1978 and an infamous 1979 interview with Tom Snyder, with other elements still pending, according to Kiss' Web site.
The second disc shows Kiss in transition, as it features the last promo video to with original drummer Peter Criss ("Shandi"). His replacement, Eric Carr, is behind the kit for a complete November 1980 concert at Australi's Sydney Showground. Also included are the only live renditions of material from the strangest studio album to bear the Kiss logo, "(Music From) The Elder," taped on the late-night show "Fridays" in 1982.
Disc three chronicles Kiss' comeback via a mammoth outdoor gig in Rio de Janeiro from June 1983, one of its last in makeup. Also included is Kiss' infamous "unmasking" on MTV from later that year, a handful of performances from the Lick It Up and Crazy Nights tours and a full 1990 show from Detroit.
Asked why "Volume 2" doesn't include any complete shows from the Lick It Up or Asylum tours, Thayer explains, "We chose the best songs from those concerts. Remember, the 'Volume Two' DVD is over seven hours long and from tour to tour, many of the same songs are played, so you have to pick the choice songs and moments without being too repetitive. When you create a DVD package there are time considerations -- you can only physically put so much on a DVD disc, and each volume of 'Kissology' is designed in advance to be a three-disc set."
In dedication to his fans, Criss personally autographed a limited amount of CDs of the "special edition" package, which will be marked with a "gold" sticker on the CD, and will be available in the U.S. at the retail chain Best Buy.
"One for All" on Silvercat Records, distributed by Sony/RED, is an autobiographical collection featuring Criss' self-penned tunes, in addition to several cover songs and tribute songs to his fans, that reflect his outlook on life at this point in his long-standing career. In addition to arranging and writing the lyrics and melodies for most of the material on the CD, "One for All" is the first fully self-produced CD by Criss. He was also joined by longtime friends and acclaimed musicians — bandleader Paul Shaffer and bassist Will Lee, as well as guitarist Mike McLaughlin.
The pair served as bodyguards for the rocker, who is currently the star of the A&E reality series "Simmons' Family Jewels". They spent the entire day with Simmons and his entourage as personal crowd control.
Simmons attended the race to promote IndyCar racing. He is part of the "I am Indy" Simmons-Abramson marketing campaign. Throughout the day, he signed autographs and took pictures with fans, while also meeting with drivers.
"We had the best job in all of Iowa on Sunday, "Henry said. "We had an all-access pass to a major sporting event with the greatest rock star of all time. It was as wild and fun as you would expect. Mr. Simmons took time for every single fan for five straight hours."
Henry, a Newton native, and Hafner were allowed the opportunity because Henry's father works security for the Iowa Speedway.
"My dad pulled a few strings and Coach Hafner and I thank him so much," Henry added.
And in case that wasn't enough stir, he would talk.
"Women spend all this time putting on makeup and perfume to look like this. The least we can do is pay them attention," Simmons said as he strolled toward the pit areas, signing autographs and talking with fans as he moved.
"It's like flowers on the table. Why wouldn't you want to have more flowers than just one?"
Simmons, star of the cable TV show "Gene Simmons Family Jewels", was without Shannon Tweed - his live-in companion, an actress and a former Playboy model.
"Shannon is back with the kids," said Simmons, framed with a knowing grin. "As you know, I'm not married and there are many beautiful women in the world - and you should be nice to everybody."
Simmons is promoting the "I Am Indy" campaign to elevate exposure to IndyCar racing.
Track designer Rusty Wallace and Simmons passed each other between infield interviews on ABC's pre-race show.
"I love your show," Wallace said.
"Great day for a race," Simmons said.
Simmons, with predictable celebrity polish, said he loves Iowa.
"We were on tour about a year and a half ago - and I'm sure I have a few children running around somewhere," he said. "I think Iowa gets a bum rap. Whether it's the water or the corn out here, you make beautiful women - and there's nothing wrong with that. God comes here, too."
As Simmons walked into the pits, a reporter told him to enjoy the day.
"You know I will," he said.
Pell is referring to tracks such as the PHIL COLLINS megahit "In The Air Tonight", his own version sounding tailor-made for the ARP band. "Of course we rearranged some of the songs to suit our style 100%," the maestro explains. "'In The Air Tonight' features an extra drums and percussions part, plus added speed towards the end. And I don't suppose I have to mention that the guitar solo is longer than on the original." Equally surprising, although certainly logical in this context, is the extremely catchy U2 number "Beautiful Day" ("a timeless classic, absolutely wicked, an ingenious melody and a great chorus"), and the CHRIS REA song "Stone", which Pell discovered in a rather roundabout way. "It wasn't Chris Rea's original that convinced me but the cover version by THE LAW, a project initiated by FREE/BAD COMPANY/QUEEN vocalist Paul Rodgers and ex-THE WHO drummer Kenny Jones, from their 1991 debut album." Talking of FREE and THE WHO: the ARP version of "Won't Get Fooled Again" sounds extremely classy and fast-paced, and "Heartbreaker" sees Pell present a classic by a band that has had a lasting influence on him. "FREE inspired me to learn to play the guitar," he said. "Their guitarist Paul Kossoff had this extremely singing, melancholy blues sound that set him apart from thousands of other guitarists."
"Diamonds Unlocked" was recorded by the tried-and-tested lineup consisting of Axel Rudi Pell, vocalist Johnny Gioeli, keyboardist Ferdy Doernberg, bassist Volker Krawczak and drummer Mike Terrana. Pell produced the album single-handedly, and Charlie Bauerfeind took care of the mix.
"Diamonds Unlocked" track listing:
01. The Diamond Overture
02. Warrior (RIOT)
03. Beautiful Day (U2)
04. Stone (CHRIS REA/THE LAW)
05. Love Gun (KISS)
06. Fools Game (MICHAEL BOLTON)
07. Heartbreaker (FREE)
08. Rock The Nation (MONTROSE)
09. In The Air Tonight (PHIL COLLINS)
10. Like A Child Again (THE MISSION)
11. Won't Get Fooled Again (THE WHO)
Beaverton is Portland's largest suburban area and home of Nike world headquarters.
This advertisement will adorn the side of Tri-Met buses in the Portland metropolitan area from mid-August through September to promote the event.
"Kissology: Volume One 1974-1977" originally shipped double platinum and has since been certified sextuple platinum by the RIAA (Recording Industry Association of America).
"Kissology: Volume 2 1978-1992" will include seven hours of live KISS on three DVDs. A bonus fourth DVD will be made available via exclusive distribution outlets.
Check out Fontana Distribution's new release book cover for August 14 releases. Fontana is the distributor of the "Kissology" DVD series. Only about 2,300 of these sales books are printed and sent out to buyers.
For more information, click here.
The "Kissology Volume 2" DVD set will encompass 1978 - 1992, and include seven hours of live KISS on three DVDs. A bonus fourth DVD will be made available via exclusive distribution outlets.
The DVD track listings are as follows:
Disc One:
* Land Of Hype And Glory with Edwin Newman - (1/10/78)
* The Tomorrow Show With Tom Snyder - (10/31/79)
Additional material pending
Disc Two:
* "Shandi" (music video) - (1980)
* CNN Interview with Peter Criss - (9/24/80)
* Countdown - (9/21/80)
* Rockpop - (9/13/80)
"She's So European"
"Talk To Me"
* KISS Invades Australia - (11/80) Documentary
* Sydney Showground: Sydney, Australia - (11/22/80)
"Detroit Rock City"
"Cold Gin"
"Strutter"
"Shandi"
"Calling Dr. Love"
"Firehouse"
"Talk To Me"
"Is That You"
"2000 Man"
"I Was Made For Lovin' You"
"New York Groove"
"Love Gun"
"God Of Thunder"
"Rock And Roll All Nite"
"Shout It Out Loud"
"King Of The Night Time World"
"Black Diamond"
* Fridays - (1/15/82)
"The Oath"
"A World Without Heroes"
"I"
* Top Pop - (11/82)
"I Love It Loud"
Disc Three:
* Maracana Stadium: Rio De Janeiro, Brazil -(6/18/83)
"Creatures Of The Night"
"Cold Gin"
"Calling Dr. Love"
"Firehouse"
"I Love It Loud"
"War Machine"
"Black Diamond"
"Rock And Roll All Nite"
* MTV Special: KISS Unmasking -(9/18/83)
* Cascais Hall: Lisbon, Portugal - (10/11/83)
"Creatures Of The Night"
"Detroit Rock City"
* The Spectrum: Philadelphia, PA - (12/18/87)
"Love Gun"
"Bang Bang You"
"No, No, No"
"Crazy Crazy Nights"
"Reason To Live"
* The Palace At Auburn Hills: Detroit, MI - (10/14/90)
"I Stole Your Love"
"Deuce"
"Heaven's On Fire"
"Crazy Crazy Nights"
"Black Diamond"
"Shout It Out Loud"
"Strutter"
"Calling Dr. Love"
"I Was Made For Lovin' You"
"Fits Like A Glove"
"Hide Your Heart"
"Lick It Up"
"God Of Thunder"
"Forever"
"Cold Gin"
"Tears Are Falling"
"I Love It Loud"
"Love Gun"
"Detroit Rock City"
"I Want You"
"Rock And Roll All Nite"
* Music Video - (1991):
"God Gave Rock ‘N' Roll To You II"
* Day In Rock - (11/25/91): MTV News excerpt
Bonus Fourth Disc:
"The Crazy Nights Tour" (4/21/88) – Tokyo, Japan – Budokan Hall
"Love Gun"
"Cold Gin"
"Crazy Crazy Nights"
"Heaven’s On Fire"
"War Machine"
"I Love It Loud"
"Lick It Up"
"I Was Made For Lovin' You"
"Detroit Rock City"
Simmons, the star of "Gene Simmons Family Jewels", a reality TV show on A&E, has helped promote the Indy Racing League since 2006.
The Iowa Corn Indy 250 is noon Sunday and will be carried live on ABC.
Gene Simmons will release a new book, titled "Gene Simmons' The Art of War", this fall via Phoenix Books.
Simmons is the author of two New York Times best-selling books, "Kiss and Makeup" (Crown) and "Sex Money Kiss" (Simmons Books/Phoenix Books). He is the founder and publisher of two magazines: Gene Simmons Tongue and Gene Simmons Game. He is president of his own record label, Simmons Records. He is the star of two reality shows, "Gene Simmons Rock School" on VH1 and "Gene Simmons Family Jewels" on A&E; he also created/executive-produced the cartoon hit "My Dad the Rock Star" (Nickelodeon) and created "Mr. Romance" for Oxygen. He co-founded Simmons Abramson Marking, which took over worldwide marketing and branding for the Indy Racing League.
On Monday, July 9, Eric Singer will host an event at The Gershwin Room at the Espy in Melbourne, Australia. Eric will conduct a question-and-answer session with the fans, sign autographs and be available for photos as well as jamming on a set of '70s rock classics with some members of the ALICE COOPER band, including Alice's daughter Calico. The night will also feature Melbourne's famed KISS tribute act DYNISSTY and merchandise for sale.
Tickets are on sale from The Gershwin Room at the Faster Louder web site online at www.fasterlouder.com.au au or at the door, if available.
Doro: Gene came down the last time we were on tour here (the States). It was a long time ago. There is still a friendship there, even when we don't see each other for a long time. It was a dream come true when he was working with us in 1990. Gene always showed me when you start a new record you start from zero again. I was always a big fan of him and became a big fan of the person after working with him. So intelligent. I love that! It's was so great to watch him working with all the musicians. He was a great motivator, fantastic! Every time before I went into the studio, I was driving my car like maybe 20 minutes and I was very happy. Right before I went into the studio, my knees were shaking. "Not again!" (laughs) He made me very happy in so many ways he really tried his best. I remember one song the mix wasn't coming out right. I was totally bummed out. I was really nervous. Gene said, "Just go to your room and wait there!" I was in L.A. At 9 o'clock in the morning the receptionist called me and said there was a gentleman here and let the tape for you. I couldn't believe it was nine o'clock, and I said "Okay." I listened to it and Gene makes the call. It was the song "Mirage" and it was so good. It moved me to tears when I wrote it. It came out so good. He definitely made sure the mix was perfect. He was there for us in so many ways. I think he was the best producer we ever had!
Wentworth Gallery is offering KISS fans and art lovers alike the chance to see Stanley's works during exhibitions tomorrow and Saturday at the gallery's locations in Bethesda, Md., and McLean. Stanley will be present at both events.
"I saw his art and it sort of struck me as being very, very good," Wentworth owner Michael O'Mahony told The Free Lance-Star this week. "Besides the fact that obviously he's a very well-known rock star, his art is good enough to stand on its own."
The 30 to 35 pieces that will be on display include originals, prints and a sort of "embellished" print that Stanley has painted over by hand, O'Mahony said. The works range from $1,500 to $70,000.
Stanley does paint portraits, but his abstracts are what stand out to O'Mahony.
"They're very emotional paintings, so different people see different things in abstracts," he said. "An abstract is sort of a look at the inner soul of the artist."
Time constraints will not allow Stanley to talk with everyone who shows up at the exhibits, but he will be able to chat with those who buy his art, take pictures with them and write personal dedications to go with each piece. KISS fans should leave their band memorabilia at home, O'Mahony said.
"It's a celebration of Paul's artwork more than his music career," he said.
Stanley has always been artistic--he had a role in designing album covers and stage layouts for KISS, for example--but a friend encouraged him to paint as he was going through a divorce several years ago, Stanley told a radio station in Charlotte, N.C., last month. The interview is available on YouTube.
"It's been real interesting, because I came from this background where my art was very detailed and very realistic," Stanley said in the interview, " and I found that this was more about, almost like purging or discovering, you know, what's going on inside me."
Said MR. SPEED's Rich Kosak (a.k.a. Paul Stanley): "I wish that I could express for you just how incredible I feel today. It's the kind of feeling that I wish for all of you to experience at some point in your life.
"Last night I was given the opportunity to jam with Ace Frehley!
"So as the notes of our performance rang out, Ace approached the stage to address and thank the crowd that had waited patiently to meet him. I could feel all of my senses really coming to the surface and my emotions were definitely on overload. It seemed as if time stood still as my memory conjured up years of trips to record stores and poster shops. The thousands of times that I've watched KISS videos and read interviews from Grooves, Hit Parader and Metal Edge magazine.
"Ace emerged from behind our backline wearing Joe's Les Paul and the years of dedication to this band that I love came stumbling toward me. Here I was on stage with Ace in Myrtle Beach [South Carolina] but in my head it was Largo, Anaheim, Cobo and Tiger Stadium all rolled into one. We didn't know what song he would want to play and as he thanked everyone for coming out he turned and shouted 'Shock Me'! We were backing up Ace on a KISS classic that had everyone there singing along. The feeling was incredible and the fans faces were priceless. This is why I'm a KISS fan.
"To be fortunate enough to have been involved with this event and have it conclude like this is something that no one can take away.
"As the song ended and the crowd exploded with applause I didn't want it to end. Ace began to exit the stage only to turn around and embrace me with a hug that seemed surreal and sincere at the same time. I thanked him for this special moment in my life and he told me that 'everything's going to be OK.'
"To everyone that was there, thanks for helping to make it special. To Brian and Skip from the Coffeehouse and Keith at KissOnline — what can I say? Words are not enough. From the bottom of my heart...thank you!"
Iconic guitarist Ace Frehley touched down Saturday at Broadway at the Beach for KISS Coffee House's first anniversary.
Hundreds of fans with KISS paraphernalia, make-up and tattoos waited in line to see the '70s group's guitarist.
Some traveled from across the country and paid $150 to share a moment with Frehley, who signed autographs and hugged his fans.
"I never thought [KISS] would be that big. It was just something we threw together," said Frehley, who designed the band's famous insignia. "It's a phenomenon."
Jennifer Wood drove from Pensacola, Fla., and paid for a meeting and album-signing with her favorite guitarist.
"He's mysterious. You don't see him very often," said Wood, who kept watch of the coffee house Web site and bought her VIP pass the day the tickets went on sale.
It was Frehley's first visit to the one-year-old coffee house, which is adorned with KISS memorabilia and concert video.
After a year and a winter overhaul, the shop is doing brisk business, said owner Brian Galvin.
"Merchandise is a much bigger piece of our business than we anticipated," he said.
Despite the long line of fans waiting to get in Saturday, most of the shop's patrons aren't diehard KISS fans and come in first for the coffee, Galvin said.
But the shop has gotten a boost from KISS bandmates Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley, who have both made appearances and also drew big crowds of fans over the past year.
Frehley, who will release a new album this fall, said it's not his first trip to Myrtle Beach. He came to the beach as a child with family.
"I used to go crabbing here as a kid with my uncle," he said.
The image of Ace Frehley crabbing is a world apart from how many of his fans see him - a spaceman persona with silver stars for eyes and massive platform boots moving through a cloud of stage fog.
"Ace Frehley to me is the greatest guitar player that's been put on this planet from another planet," said Ben Katzman, who traveled 12 hours from his home in Miami Beach, Fla.
For his part, Frehley said he is perplexed by the adoration.
"I'm the luckiest guy in the world. I thank God every day," Frehley said.
Prior to his performance, Ace greeted over 2,000 fans at the Kiss Coffeehouse. He signed tattoos, clothing, gold albums, photos and just about every collectible imaginable. Paul Stanley called from Hawaii to wish Ace well, and the two of them spent 15 minutes catching up before Ace continued signing autographs. Ace was in great spirits throughout the five hours he spent at the Coffeehouse and seemed genuinely excited to meet with the fans.
Check out video at You Tube.
Check out photos at KissOnline.com and SpaceAce Online.
"You can't buy class -- it's something your born with -- you either have it, or you don't."
UNION reunited in late 2005 to play two concerts in Japan — the first time the band performed together in about three years. Brent Fitz was unable to attend so Bruce Kulick's former bandmate and friend Eric Singer (KISS, BLACK SABBATH, ALICE COOPER) filled in. Also in 2005, Kulick oversaw the release of a UNION DVD "Do Your Own Thing Live", containing two full-length live shows plus bonus material.
"Finally have some time to get recording again. As you may know, I did drums back in December and January. Brent Fitz (UNION, VINCE NEIL, THEORY OF A DEADMAN, ALICE COOPER) did 10 tracks in December and then Eric Singer came in with his crazy schedule to do one song for me in January. Sadly I have not done any more work since. Touring Brazil and Argentina, counseling at the U.K. [Rock 'n' Roll] Fantasy Camp and GRAND FUNK shows now in full swing have made it hard to find time to book a session, but I hope to get a day or two a week now that I am home. Well it was finally one of those days that I could book, and all I can say is AWESOME! Got Brian Virtue (AUDIOSLAVE, KORN) to engineer this session and that is great as his schedule is tight. We worked at his studio where I have recorded for Thomas Ian Nicolas before."
Read more at Kulick.net.
Stanley married longtime girlfriend Erin Sutton on November 19, 2005 at The Ritz-Carlton, Huntington in Pasadena, California. They welcomed their first child, Colin Michael Stanley, on September 6, 2006. The rocker has another son, Evan Shane Stanley, from his previous marriage to Pamela Bowen.
Tickets are on sale from The Gershwin Room at the Faster Louder web site online at www.fasterlouder.com.au au or at the door, if available.
Unlike YouTube and along the lines of the hyped online TV service Joost, NGTV aims to have the look and feel of professionally produced television, but totally uncensored and with interactive and animated components.
“Quality programming is our thing, unlike all the user-generated content sites that are out there. We are trying to give MTV and HBO a run for its money”, says Kourosh Taj, Co-President and Head of Programming.
While the comparison to HBO seems a little far-fetched, NGTV certainly looks better than most original web TV networks I have seen out there. Like HBO, NGTV embraces the fact that they can use the work “fuck”, but takes it too a whole other level. You'll see what I mean.
The channel promotes itself as “the world’s largest producer of uncensored celebrity news and entertainment programming”. The on-air hosts Carrie Keagan and Shark Firestone are joined by CG animated NGTV mascots, including Cock Tolstoy, a rooster with an attitude problem and Beaver Brown, a furry, fun loving beaver. The cock and the beaver – NGTV prides itself on being sophomoric:
“We are all about having fun, but never cross the line of being aggressive or angry. We are not a gossip rag. We want celebrities to come here and feel welcome. This is a place where it is appropriate to let loose”, says Kourosh Taj.
The freedom that the Internet as a platform provides, has also allowed NGTV to dig into libraries of content not appropriate for many regular TV-channels.
“For example, I think that we have the largest library of R-rated music videos and we keep on adding over 10,000 hours of original content a month”, says Kourosh Taj.
In order to start promoting the site for its official launch this summer, NGTV have started uploading a few clips from their shows to YouTube.
“The response on YouTube has been amazing. Some days we have had the most viewed clips on all of YouTube”, says Kourosh Taj.
Unlike many of the traditional TV-channels, NGTV fully embraces social media and they totally believe in its power to drive traffic back to their site.
“We are absolutely fans of putting our stuff everywhere. We think its great when people hi-jack our stuff and put it on their sites. It is the greatest compliment we can get and it still has our branding all over it”, says Kourosh Taj.
But how can you monetize this new viral would if people “steal” your stuff?
“We don’t want consumers to have to pay for our content, that’s why we like the ad-supported model. We have also seen that the traffic flow that we have been getting back to our site from the stuff we have put on YouTube has been great. As many as 3 our of 4 people that view our stuff on YouTube end up checking out our site and staying as long as 10-15 minutes on an average”, says Kourosh Taj.
Other plans for monetizing NGTV includes sponsored content and licencing. The beta site is the first phase of a multi-platform launch that encompasses television, mobile and broadband distribution along with a next generation social-networking site set for release later this year.
“I can see our shows being licensed to regular cable TV channels. It’ll be fun, like The Osbournes, where they have to bleep out every other word, but the effect of that can be kind of cool, which that show proved”, says Kourosh Taj.
“Artists need a platform to express themselves freely. It’s the reason artists become artists in the first place and the reason fans become fans. We have created an appropriate place that allows self-expression without of censorship and humiliation. This is a first of its kind experience,” said Kourosh Taj.
The NGTV team is backed by several entertainment industry veterans, including Gene Simmons, entrepreneur and rock legend, Al Cafaro, music industry veteran and former Chairman and CEO of A&M Records, and Jay Vir, who serves as the Co-President. Simmons also serves as Chairman of the Board of NGTV. In Canada, NGTV’s marketing partner is Intertainment Media, Inc.
Headquartered in a 24,000 square foot production facility in Beverly Hills, NGTV boasts a umber of major technology partners, including Akamai, Brightcove, DoubleClick, Avid, Sun Microsystems, Digidesign, IBM and StorageTek. Each has supported the company in the development and implementation of its infrastructure, programming and distribution platforms.
The result – take a look and judge for yourself: NGTV.com
Upcoming KISS shows:
July 20 - Kewadin Casinos - Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan
July 21 - Rock Fest 2007 - Cadott, Wisconsin
July 27 - Soboba Casino Arena - San Jacinto, California
Vinnie Vincent (ex-KISS) - Guitar
Mark Slaughter - Vocals
Bobby Rock - Drums
Dana Strum - Bass
The group's setlist was as follows:
01. Burn
02. Naughty Naughty
03. Ashes To Ashes
04. Let Freedom Rock
05. Back On The Streets
06. Blues Jam
07. Shoot U Full Of Love
08. Vinnie Vincent Solo
09. Boyz Are Gonna Rock
10. Bobby Rock Solo
11. Twisted
------------------
12. Animal
13. Lick It Up
Says director/producer Sebastian Barfield: "Stadium rock is not a genre — it exists somewhere far above the ebb and flow of genre and fashion, and is a term used to describe the music played by bands and artists as musically diverse as LED ZEPPELIN, QUEEN, THE POLICE or U2 — acts who can regularly perform to upwards of 50,000 people."
"In a strictly musical sense, there is little that connects these bands — the hopped up glam riffs of KISS are far removed from the futuristic sonics of Bono and Edge. Rather, the link is in the outlook and actions of the musicians themselves. To start with, all these bands share a similar sense of ambition — a desire to use their music to connect with as many as they can. Showmanship is clearly a shared common element — all have figured out how to make a large stage work for them." And he adds: "Gene Simmons charmed us with some of the most outrageous things committed to tape."
The episode airs next Saturday (June 16) at 22.10 (U.K. time) on BBC 2, and will re-run the next night on BBC 1.
"Seven Ages of Rock" is a seven-episode documentary on the emergence of rock music as a global force, told through the musicians who have shaped the enduring genre.
To purchase tickets for KISS (starting Monday, June 11), click here or call the Soboba box office at 951-665-1311.
The exhibit will feature items pulled from the Petersen Automotive Museum, Hard Rock Café, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum, Inc., Experience Music Project and several other private lenders. Detroit Muscle will also be on hand with some of its custom-built hot rods, not to mention the wealth of exhibits already at the Henry Ford Museum.
Some of the hottest rides in the exhibit include:
* The 1932 Ford Hi-Boy Phaeton hot rod used by VAN HALEN and featured in the music video "Hot for Teacher".
* Iconic vehicles seen on tour and in the videos of METALLICA ("I Dissapear" video), U2 (a Trabant from Zoo TV), KISS (custom "Psycho Circus" paint) and many others.
Some of the significant guitars in the exhibit include:
* The black 1987 ESP custom guitar, nicknamed "Skully," played by Kirk Hammett. An iconic guitar from METALLICA's heyday.
* The custom-made five neck Hamer played by guitar icon Rick Nielsen of CHEAP TRICK
Rock Stars' Cars & Guitars at Henry Ford Museum will run until September 30, 2007.
The Henry Ford Museum is open every days, 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Admission is $14 for adults, $13 for seniors and $10 for youth; members and children four and under are free.
For more information, visit www.TheHenryFord.org.
As a modern stategist of today's entertainment wars, Gene Simmons has few equals. Over his nearly-forty-year career in show business Gene Simmons has fought countless battles, avoided even more and emerged victorious nearly every time.
Now, Gene has updated one of the most famous manuals on tactics ever written, interpreted it for a contemporary audience, and added his novel observations. "Gene Simmons' The Art of War" will take its place as the essential guide book for the 21st century warrior, no matter what the kind of battles being fought are.
Friday, September 7, 6-9 PM and Saturday, September 8, 2007, 6-9 PM
Wentworth Gallery Prospect Square
1025 Prospect Street
La Jolla, CA
For details on the VIP reception with Paul, call 858-551-7071 or 800-732-6140.
According to Variety, the decision was an easy one: "Jewels" is A&E's second-highest-rated series ever in the 18-to-49 and 25-to-54 adult demographics, behind only "Dog the Bounty Hunter." "Jewels" did even better in its second season than in its first, leaping by 15 percent in total viewers to a 1.5 million average and climbing by 11 percent in adults 18 to 49 and by 8 percent in adults 25 to 54.
A&E's relationship with Mr. Simmons started with a one-shot "Biography" hour of the rock legend and Kiss frontman. That "Biography" episode scored so well in the Nielsens that A&E negotiated with Mr. Simmons and "Jewels' " executive producer Leslie Grief to create a 13-episode weekly half-hour series that would delve into the rock star's life with his common-law partner, former Playboy Playmate Shannon Tweed, and their teenage son and daughter.
Unlike the stars of MTV's "The Osbournes," the model for reality shows built around a dysfunctional rock performer and his family, Mr. Simmons and his household "are highly functional, intelligent and witty," says Rob Sharenow, senior vice president of nonfiction and alternative programming for A&E and a co-executive producer of "Jewels." "They're in constant motion, and Gene is always working on dozens of projects. It's more like a scripted series than a reality show," Mr. Sharenow told Variety.
While reruns of "CSI Miami" and "The Sopranos" are harvesting lots of viewers for A&E, "Jewels" is one of the weekly first-run series that have propelled A&E into the ranks of the 10 highest-rated cable networks. The others are "Dog the Bounty Hunter," "The First 48," "Intervention" and "Criss Angel: Mindfreak." During the first quarter, A&E shot up by 54 percent in total viewers and more than 40 percent in the three key adult demos (18 to 49, 25 to 54 and 18 to 34), Variety said.
Family approved
The upcoming prime-time dramas "Chuck" and "The Bionic Woman" on NBC and "Life Is Wild" on the CW have earned the seal of approval from the Family Friendly Programming Forum, which is marking two milestones in the fall, Hollywood Reporter notes.
The 2007-08 season will mark the first time ever that the FFPF -- a coalition of blue-chip advertisers that helps fund the development of family-oriented programming for the broadcast networks -- has secured at least one family-friendly programming option in prime time each night of the week.
In addition, the upcoming season will feature more shows funded through the FFPF's Script Development Fund than in any season since the coalition was founded in 1998. Eight FFPF-supported series will be on the broadcast networks' schedules next season -- three more than the previous high of five. They include five returning shows: ABC's "Ugly Betty," "Brothers & Sisters" and "Notes From the Underbelly"; NBC's "Friday Night Lights" and the CW's "Everybody Hates Chris."
The FFPF's mission is to support and promote the development and scheduling of family-friendly movies, dramas, comedies and informational programs that are aired during key prime-time hours when adults and children in a household are most likely to watch television together (8 to 10 p.m.). The organization defines family-friendly programming as shows that are appropriate in theme, content and language for adults and children and also have cross-generational appeal, depict real life and resolve issues responsibly.
"Classic School of Rock" track listing:
Disc 1:
01. Crazy Crazy Nights - KISS
02. Poison - ALICE COOPER
03. Girls Girls Girls - MÖTLEY CRÜE
04. Cherry Pie - WARRANT
05. Waiting For An Alibi - THIN LIZZY
06. California Girls - DAVID LEE ROTH
07. Wind Of Change - SCORPIONS
08. We're Not Gonna Take It - TWISTED SISTER
09. Spirit Of Radio - RUSH
10. Nowhere - THERAPY?
11. Word Up - GUN
12. Bitch School - SPINAL TAP
13. Gypsy Road - CINDERELLA
14. Beat The Bullet - VAIN
15. Sex Action - L.A. GUNS
16. I Alone - LIVE
17. Everything About You - UGLY KID JOE
18. Final Countdown - EUROPE
Disc 2:
01. Won't Get Fooled Again - WHO
02. Down Down - STATUS QUO
03. You Ain't Seen Nothing Yet - BACHMAN-TURNER OVERDRIVE
04. Sweet Home Alabama - LYNYRD SKYNYRD
05. Born To Be Wild - STEPPENWOLF
06. Gimme All Your Lovin' - ZZ TOP
07. Ace Of Spades - MOTÖRHEAD
08. Paranoid - BLACK SABBATH
09. Love Song - TESLA
10. Since You've Been Gone - RAINBOW
11. Get It On - KINGDOM COME
12. More Than Words - EXTREME
13. Rising Force - YNGWIE MALMSTEEN
14. Stand Up And Shout - DIO
15. Free 'n' Easy - THE ALMIGHTY
16. Kickin' Up Dust - LITTLE ANGELS
17. Start Talking Love - MAGNUM
18. Rocky Mountain Way - JOE WALSH JOE
19. All Right Now - FREE
For more information, click here.
01. Introduction
02. Creatures Of The Night
03. Detroit Rock City
04. Cold Gin
05. Fits Like A Glove
06. Firehouse
07. Gimme More
08. War Machine
09. Bass Solo
10. I Love It Loud
11. I Still Love You
12. Drum Solo
13. Young And Wasted
14. Love Gun
15. All Hell's Breakin' Loose
16. Black Diamond
17. Lick It Up
19. Rock And Roll All Nite
KISS' lineup for this concert was as follows:
Eric Carr - Drums
Gene Simmons - Vocals, Bass
Paul Stanley - Vocals, Guitar
Vinnie Vincent - Guitar
For more information, contact Ponier Music at 770-422-7766 or 770-514-5700.
The "Guitars from Hell" demo sessions took place between 1989 and 1991 and produced the following tracks:
01. Genesis (instrumental - 1989) (2:26)
02. Wild Child (1989 - 1991) (6:13)
03. Rocks On Fire # 1 (1989 - 1990) (5:45)
04. Rocks On Fire # 2 (1989 - 1991) (5:37)
05. Euphoria (1989 - 1991) (4:31)
06. Get The Led Out (1989) (5:32)
07. Nuke It (1989 - 1990) (4:47)
08. Shocker (1990) (4:42)
09. Invincible (1989 - 1990) (6:28)
10. Full Shredd (4:58)
11. Truth (4:42)
"Shocker" was intended for inclusion on Vinnie's third full-length album, "Guitarmageddon", which has still not seen release.
"Stopped by and visited my old friend Ace Frehley last night [Thursday, May 24] at the [New York City] studio where he is now mixing his upcoming CD. Ace is doing so well, is totally healthy and just in a great place now. I am very proud of him. Ace has recorded 10 new songs so far and is completing three to use as a demo for now. I can tell you there is some strong label interest so he will no doubt have several options to release it. I heard two of the three new songs that are being finalized and I must say I was really impressed with them. It is classic-sounding Ace singing and playing. One track had a vocal from Ace that almost had a BEATLES-type vibe, but still rockin'. You will also be happy to know that Ace plays all guitar and sings all vocals. The recordings were made with a trio of Ace, Anton Fig on drums and new bassist Anthony Esposito (LYNCH MOB). The touring band will be Ace, Anthony and other players [to be announced]. Ace also told me he wrote all the songs just before going into the studio, so this is all fresh stuff. I'm really excited by the two songs I heard. It is by far the most 'KISS-like' music from any past or present member of the band's respective solo albums. We hung out for a couple hours, talked about the old days and had some Japanese food. Really fun night and was great to see him as always."
LICKER LICENSE Gene Simmons has never been shy about expressing himself with his most valuable assetGene Simmons is the kind of guy who does and says whatever he wants, whenever he wants. Schedule an interview with him on Monday afternoon, and he'll call you at 10 p.m. on Sunday. And when the legendary KISS front man is ready to go, you'd better have your recorder handy, because he's always got something incendiary to say.
The "king of all beasts" (his words) cannot be tamed—at least not by anyone other than longtime girlfriend, former Playmate Shannon Tweed, and their two children, Sophie, 14, and Nick, 18. Their efforts are chronicled in the A&E reality series Gene Simmons Family Jewels, currently in its second season. In honor of Memorial Day, Simmons recently taped a special one-hour episode in which he and daughter Sophie get a taste for basic training at Camp Pendleton in San Diego, then visit wounded soldiers at a veterans hospital in Long Beach. The experience inspired him to put on a subsequent concert for troops about to ship off to Iraq.
On the phone to Radar from L.A., Simmons exercised his oversize tongue on a range of issues, including the Iraq war, the need for racial profiling, and the "enemy of Western civilization," Sean Penn.
RADAR: You seemed to have a deep respect for the soldiers you met at Camp Pendleton. What did you come away with?
GENE SIMMONS: It is embarrassing what's happening to America nowadays. I'm embarrassed. The same thing happened in Vietnam, and I lived through that era. It was unbelievable. The answer seems to be, from some political experts, just get up and leave and the bad guys will decide, "Hey let's disarm and everything's going to be okay." I'm so fucking sick and tired of such idiotic behavior.
"As an Israeli, I want you to look at me first. I want you to search my anal cavity and look at my tax records. I want you to look at me first, and then at every guy named Muhammad"
I'm guessing you're not in favor of the Iraq troop withdrawal bills being proposed right now in Congress.
It's not the policies and the bills; it's how we treat our military. It's how we treat our young men or women who go out there, at 18 years old, and risk their lives. There's no fame, they're certainly not getting rich, and a lot of them are dying, simply for something they believe. By the way, it's a volunteer army, all volunteer. The fact that anybody would have a fucking thing to say about that is astonishing. And the VA hospital that Sophie and I went to, it's about an hour and a half down the road from Malibu. These morons can't get up off their asses and out of their $10 million homes, get into their SUVs, and drive down to the VA hospital just to say, "Hey, what you do matters." Doesn't matter what they think of President Bush. It matters that 18-year-olds are getting out there and risking their lives. I didn't see a single person there. That's the most embarrassing thing. I'm furious at Hollywood.
No visitors at all?
No. Of course, if it means getting on a jet and going to Washington, D.C., to get in front of media, they're all there. But they won't get into a car where there's no media and just go and shake the hand of a vet. And we met, as you know, Vietnam vets and Korean vets and Iraqi vets, and it just breaks your heart.
Do you think the troops in Iraq don't get the respect they deserve?
I think it's worse than ever. Because it's never talked about. It's just never talked about. We used to have a dialogue. I mean, there were peace marches, and people forget this, but the Vietnam vets that came back were spat at. Now, it's just apathy.
But it seems like these people are protesting the war, not protesting the troops.
I don't see the difference. Aid and comfort to the enemy is when you do it through media and there are big headlines like "We've Lost the War" and things like that. What makes you think that any graduate of any madrassa in the Middle East doesn't blow that up? In other words, make a big copy of it and show it to everybody.
So someone like Sean Penn for instance ... you don't support what he's doing?
Oh, I think he's the enemy of Western civilization. I think he's a terrific actor, but a political knucklehead. By the way, the difference between the Warren Beattys and Sean Penns and perhaps the Hannitys in the salons of the world is very little. The people who hate you don't care what political side you're on. They make no distinction between far left and far right. They just hate you. It's so stupid. And the biggest problem, of course, is that media, no matter what you say, is skewed a certain way.
Given your Israeli background, are you more sensitive to what's going on in the Middle East?
No, actually, I'm an earthling more than that. I'm completely in favor of a Palestinian state, and I'm completely against any other country in the Middle East having nuclear weapons. I believe that, if allowed, it would be the beginning of the end. Because once a graduate of any madrassa in the Middle East straps on bombs that can take out cities, you're done.
Sean Penn and I are exactly alike, we just see danger in different degrees of distance. It's a distance philosophy, and it goes something like this: If there's a guy with a gun a mile away, I think it's the same thing as if that gun is pointed right at my head. We don't want to die by some madman's hand. The difference is, I'm very proactive and want to take that guy out before he becomes a menace. In other words, I do think there's a military option with Iran.
I didn't know you were so political.
Oh I'm not shy. And by the way, I voted for Bill Clinton. But I also voted for George Bush.
I believe that most people are like me, which is why sometimes Republicans get in and sometimes Democrats. Very few people are either like Hannity or Sean Penn. Most people are centrists, and by the way, I get along with Hannity just fine. On political issues, foreign policy specifically, O'Reilly and I get along just fine—we agree on foreign policy. I think the war's been handled poorly, but there's no choice. You gotta get there. The Second World War was handled terribly until D-day.
In terms of this Republican administration, some views about stem cell research, gay rights, separation of church and state, and on and on—I don't agree with any of them. But you can worry about the trees and the environment and gas emissions later. Right now there's a bigger problem, and it's a guy who doesn't care if you're a Republican or a Democrat; he wants to blow himself up and take you out. That's the problem. I think racially profiling anybody from the Middle East ... the Swiss have been good this year, and as an Israeli, I want you to look at me first. I want you to search my anal cavity and look at my tax records. I want you to look at me first, and then at every guy named Muhammad.
So you have no problem with profiling? If you were at the airport, you wouldn't mind being searched?
I'm volunteering. I'm volunteering to have less rights. This whole notion that you can have all the rights in the world while there's an emergency is nonsense. That's why there are emergency hours that are given to law enforcement during times of war. And if the cop tells you to move and you don't move, he'll bat you over the head. That's the way it should be.
What do you tell people who make fun of all the KISS-branded merchandise, like the KISS coffin?
Oh, they're the people who cut my lawn and pick up my garbage. It's easy to sit in the peanut gallery and point fingers. People think that KISS is different from any other band. We're exactly the same as REM and U2 and every other band. They sell T-shirts, too. It's just that we can do things no other band can do. There ain't no Rolling Stones comic books. No matter how much I think Mick Jagger's an icon and has outlived everybody in rock to this day, I don't want to see him in a cave flying through the air.
Have you stopped calling your tours "reunion" or "farewell" tours?
Who cares? Isn't it true, no matter what you say, when you get offstage and everybody's clapping, you come back on, and that's called an encore? Didn't you actually say "goodnight" to the people and leave? What makes you think life is any different? Life is all about supply and demand. This is going to be the last tour. That's it. Streisand, everybody says the same thing. And by the way, when you're saying it, you mean it. And then when the demand gets to be too much to bear, you go, "Okay, they want us."
"There should be asshole police with bats. As soon as you start misbehaving, you should get the shit beaten out of you. Put me in charge. I'm telling you, I'd fix all that"
I've been watching some older episodes of Family Jewels, and certain scenes seemed to have been partially scripted or re-shot. Is it staged?
We don't have very much to do with that. The camera crews have to plan where you're gonna go and what you're gonna do. Nobody's told what to say, but in some ways, as soon as you turn on the camera, reality is a version of reality. People are aware there are cameras there, and they change their behavior. Including the bozos. And I wish I had a bat for every one of those guys who jumps up and down behind a newscaster on the street doing a story about a fire. There's some moron jumping up and down. There should be asshole police with bats. As soon as you start misbehaving, you should get the shit beaten out of you. Put me in charge. I'm telling you, I'd fix all that.
Were Shannon and the kids happy you started the show?
They didn't really like it. We did a 10-part thing with Extra—they did 10 five-minute bits and called it The Simmons, kind of like an Osbournes thing. Except it wasn't a train wreck. People were shocked to find out [we] were the most charming, polite, responsible people they'd ever met. The ratings were big, and they were sort of shocked. They were fascinated by people who actually behaved well. Whereas everybody else on TV, whether it's Paris, God bless her—I think she's an American institution, by the way—or the idiots of Hollywood ... [In the background, Shannon shouts "Losers!" Gene chuckles.] That was Shannon ... she's shy.... When you watch any reality show, it's a train wreck. You're watching dysfunctional people.
Had you watched The Osbournes and thought, Oh, I don't want to get into this ... I don't want to be portrayed this way?
We were fearless about it. We are who we are, and we can't be anybody else. And Ozzy's been a friend for 30 years. I think he's a sweetheart. But neither you nor I can speak about his family. That's his family and that's what he does.
My favorite part of the show is your kids, Sophie and Nick. They seem to be naturals in front of the camera and don't mind giving you a hard time.
That's no different than when the king of all beasts goes back to his den. He allows—that's with a capital A—his little cubs to come and bite his tail. Then, when he gets back up, something's gonna die. The cubs biting the king's tail doesn't dilute that he's the king of all beasts.
How long have you and Shannon been together?
We've been happily unmarried, this August, 24 years.
And you have no intention of ever getting married?
No. Not interested. If you look at the statistics, it's a disaster. It's like jumping out of a plane and going, well, [the chute] will open most of the time. I'm sorry, what did you just say? It'll open most of the time? You can't even say that about marriage. Most of the time, it won't open.
So you don't like marriage because you think most of them fail?
Well, you don't have any flexibility. The problem with marriage is somebody other than the mother who gave you birth is who you have to answer to. Where are you going, where have you been, stuff like that. That's not gonna fly.
You don't do that with Shannon?
No. In fact, out of both of us, I'm the one who calls her all the time, and she's the one who doesn't want to chat. She's like, "Look, I don't want to talk now, I gotta go do my nails," or something. Well, I just called to see how you are. I'm just a fly around her.
When you were on The Howard Stern Show a few weeks ago, you let it slip that you can still sleep with other women if you want to. Is that true?
All men are the same. I don't care what you say. I don't care how you spin it. You're not going to be able to avoid the blueprint that is within your genetic makeup. You know how many sperm you make daily? Not 100 or 1,000 or 1,000,000. It's hundreds of millions every day. So talk all you want; science doesn't lie.
You did two episodes on the show about getting a face-lift. You've always seemed to have a pretty healthy image of yourself. Why submit to plastic surgery?
Well, I didn't think about it much. I'm a Type A personality. Once I decide to do something, I do it all the way.
If there wasn't a show, would you have still done it?
I wouldn't have done a thing. I was stunning, come on.
Are you satisfied with the results?
I'm more beautiful than ever. And in some ways, it's good for God because the world deserves more beautiful things. And that's me.
Camp Highlights:
* Write and record your own original song at Sirius Satellite Studios
* Perform live on stage at the legendary BB King's in the heart of Times Square, alongside Paul Stanley of KISS and the horn section of the "Late Show with David Letterman"
* Rock out with Paul Stanley of KISS, Mark Farner formerly of GRAND FUNK RAILROAD, Ted Nugent, Bruce Kulick of KISS, Max Weinberg of THE E STREET BAND, Leslie West of MOUNTAIN and Tom "Bones" Malone of the "Late Show"
* Counselors include Scott Ian (ANTHRAX), Kip Winger (WINGER), Jane Wiedlin (THE GO-GO'S), Alan White (YES), Glenn Hughes (DEEP PURPLE), Sandy Genarro (CINDY LAUPER), Corky Laing (MOUNTAIN), Skunk Baxter (STEELY DAN) and Gary Burr (RINGO STARR)
* You will be recorded for an audio CD and filmed for your own personal DVD
* Attend daily master classes taught by our rock 'n roll talent
* Rehearse with top-of-the-line equipment including: Gibson guitars, Marshall amps, Korg keyboards, Peavey bass amps, DW drums and Zildjian cymbals
Keeping With The Rock 'N Roll Fantasy Camp Tradition:
* Write and record your own original song
* Receive 10+ hours of daily jam sessions with rock 'n roll counselors
* Daily meals and internal transportation are included
* Dine with the stars
* Take a ride on the legendary Gibson Tour Bus
* Record with expert audio engineers
* Plenty of photo and autograph opportunities
For more information, click here.
Speaking to Blender magazine, Sharon sums up her feelings towards the KISS bassist: "[Simmons] said that our kids are on drugs and that his aren't messed up like that. He'll always be C-list, and his wife's snatch has been rubbed on every pole in L.A. I'll fucking tear his head off and stick it up his wife's cunt!"
Gene's reality-TV program "Gene Simmons Family Jewels" has been described as an "Osbournes"-style reality show about the Simmons family, with camera crews tracking their every move as they perform both remarkable and mundane everyday tasks.
When asked in a 2004 interview what he thought about the trend of celebrities sharing their lives through reality TV, Gene said, "It was bound to happen, and every show is only as good as the celebrity that's involved. Ozzy's is still magnificent, because Ozzy's not a faker, Ozzy is what he is. Everybody sees it as a comedy, but I see it as very sad. I've known Ozzy for twenty-five or thirty years. The one thing nobody ever says at the beginning of a show is, 'Please don’t use drugs, otherwise you'll end up like me.' Because all the shaking and the stuttering and all that — Ozzy's come clean on that — it's because he's done that to himself. And it's sad, because when the cameras go away, the same person is a real human being, it's not just a TV show. And yet, every day of the week, there are new fifteen-year-old kids saying, 'Let's get in the car and get high.' And I'm thinking, 'Another idiot is born.'"
ALICE COOPER - School's Out
BEASTIE BOYS - Sabotage
FOGHAT - Slow Ride
HEART - Barracuda
KISS - Rock And Roll All Nite
LIVING COLOUR - Cult of Personality
MUSE - Knights of Cydonia
SMASHING PUMPKINS - Cherub Rock
TENACIOUS D - The Metal
THE ROLLING STONES - Paint It Black
WEEZER - My Name is Jonas
Dusty Welch, head of publishing at Activision's RedOctane operation said "many of the top bands and songs we've tried to get in the past are now on board, and we've definitely got some giant aces in the hole to say the least."
Welch said the "new line of Gibson wireless guitars for each platform is going to truly add to the authentic rock star experience like no other."
The game itself keeps the features you know and love, adding a multiplayer battle mode, authentic venues and even more downloadable content. Price, rating and even the official title have yet to be announced.
After selling Kiss condoms and coffins to devotees, the supergroup are now offering their Kiss Army a new 'Rock And Roll Over' dinner table via their official website.
In a posting on the site, the band writes, "This Kiss Rock And Roll Over dinner table is constructed from a very durable laminate material that is used for the top and is applied to a center-core and a backer plate, then is sprayed with a urethane edge."
Friday, August 17, 6-9 PM and Saturday, August 18, 6-9 PM
Wentworth Gallery - Westfield Shopping Center
53 West County Center
Des Peres, MO
On the Camp Pendleton visit, Simmons said, "My daughter wrote a term paper for the school. She's 14, by the way. And you know, I had some issues with books. Books take you so far. Camp Pendleton is just about an hour and a half, two hours outside of L.A. So I took my daughter and we went to the V.A. hospital there. There are vets of Korea, Vietnam and the Iraqi conflict. We met real live living heroes. I was so moved. It's going to be a one-hour special on A&E Sunday nights. My daughter and I went through basic training, just two days' worth. Let me tell you something... It is brutal. You have to respect — forget about the fact that our troops, men and women alike, aren't paid money. They don't get famous. I mean, this is something that really touched me personally. I don't care what side of the spectrum you're on. Everybody agrees these are the finest young people on the face of the planet."
Simmons is still high on the IndyCar Series, and you can catch him wearing his "I Am Indy" baseball cap in the "Gene Simmons Family Jewels" show that airs on A&E. That program recently gave viewers an up-close-and-personal view of Simmons' face-lift.
Apparently, Simmons' partner, Shannon Tweed, and their kids, Nick and Sophie, are not making the trip to Indianapolis.
Simmons and Abramson plan to be involved in business meetings during their stay, but there will be some time for fun. The KISS bassist is planning to ride in the IPL 500 Festival Parade, show up at the Regions Bank 500 Festival Snakepit Ball on Saturday night and attend the race.
The Black Tooth Bash — named after the "Black Tooth Grin" cocktail late PANTERA/DAMAGEPLAN guitarist "Dimebag" Darrell Abbott created — was preceded by Six String Masterpieces: The "Dimebag" Darrell Art Tribute, with all proceeds going to the Little Kids Rock foundation.
One of the nation's premier parades, the 500 Festival Parade will pass nearly 300,000 spectators along its two-mile route and will be televised nationally on ESPN2. The 50-year tradition includes nationally known celebrities, costumed characters, marching bands, patriotic units, specialty units, spectacular floats and giant helium balloons, filling the streets to celebrate the world's largest single-day sporting event, the Indianapolis 500.
For more information, click here.
The eBay item description for the Ace Frehley guitar reads as follows: "Ace Frehley, former guitarist for KISS, is recognized as the single most influential musician to inspire the career of Dimebag Darrell Abbott. Ace was definitely one of the first guitar heroes and was a major influence to many of the other musicians in this exhibit. This extremely valuable addition to the collection features a highly psychedelic, fractalized space theme that has a great photo of Dime and Ace integrated into the spiraling design. The design was created by Ace and then printed on thick photo paper that was template cut to the shape of the guitar and applied to the body. The backside of the guitar includes a heartfelt note and an actual print of the photo that Ace integrated into the front side design, as well as it is signed by the Spaceman himself in silver paint pen. One May 3 the hardware was applied, electronics installed and the lot photos were updated. This is a one-of-a-kind full playable and displayable Instrument of Art. Complete with electronics, pick-ups, strings and hardware installed at Dean USA. It is hand-painted or otherwise decorated by the artist whose name is associated with the guitar."
The Six-String Masterpieces project was produced and curated by Curse Mackey.
The Little Kids Rock project makes free music instruments and instruction available to public school students.
Six-String Masterpieces: The Dimebag Darrell Art Tribute auction results are currently available on eBay.com.
The CD has been pressed at 600 copies this time around. The project, just like last year, is still a non-profit venture to encourage teenagers to experiment a style of music that they are not usually familiar with. It also gives them the chance to go to professional recording studio and experiment some media frenzy.
The disc features kid sensation drummer Angelo Coppola, who "rocks" on three tracks on the new CD, according to producer Patrice Beaudette.
"Christine Sixteen 2: Another High School Tribute to Kiss" track listing:
01. Jungle (Cassandra Goudreau)
02. Baby Driver (Jessica Scalabrini)
03. Love For Sale (Cassandra Markey)
04. War Machine (Jessica Scalabrini) *
05. Shock Me (Cassandra Markey) *
06. Deuce (Nadia Goudreau) *
07. God Of Thunder (Jessica Scalabrini)
08. Watchin' You (Jessica Dionne)
09. Master & Slave (Jessika Groleau)
10. Creatures Of The Night (Cassandra Goudreau)
11. Larger Than Life (Carolyne Bédard and Nadia Goudreau)
12. 100,000 Years (Cassandra Markey)
13. Dirty Livin' (Jessica Scalabrini)
14. Charisma (Jessica Dionne)
15. Into The Night (Nicolas Maurais)
16. Black Diamond (Cassandra Goudreau)
17. Gene Simmons Interview (1980)
* featuring Angelo Coppola on drums
For more information, visit www.highschooltributes.com.
"One for All": audio
"Doesn't Get Better Than This": audio
"Last Night": audio
"Faces in the Crowd": audio
"One for All" is scheduled for release on July 24 on Silvercat Records, distributed by Sony/RED. The CD will be distributed day-and-date to fans across the globe.
ALICE COOPER dates featuring Brent Fitz:
July 18 - Wollongong, Australia - WIN Ent Centre
July 19 - Canberra, Australia - AIS Arena
July 21 - Launceston, Australia – Silverdome
Sunday, July 22, 2007 - 3-6 p.m.
Wentworth Gallery - Woodfield Shopping Center
5 Woodfield Shopping Center
Schaumburg, Illinois 60173
Billboard.com recently reported that Alice Cooper has put off recording his next album, a conceptual piece about a serial killer called "Along Came a Spider", until 2008 but says it could turn into a two-CD set.
"That would be great; I've never done one," Cooper said. "We wrote 20 songs thinking we were going to get this album recorded before this tour. We just ran out of time. But since we have five months on the road we'll probably write another 10 songs. I'd like to put out 30 brand new songs on one album."
To see low-quality clips of KISS' appearance on "The Paul Lynde Halloween Special", go to YouTube.
"Unholy": Video
UNION jam: Video
Wentworth Gallery will present two art exhibitions by Paul Stanley on Friday, July 6, 2007 and on Saturday, July 7, 2007.
Paul Stanley's Orlando, Florida Wentworth Gallery appearances:
Friday, July 6 and Saturday, July 7, 2007: 6-9 p.m.
Wentworth Gallery
The Mall at Millenia
4200 Conroy Road
Orlando, FL
Paul Stanley's Orlando, Florida Wentworth Gallery appearances:
Friday, July 6 and Saturday, July 7, 2007: 6-9 p.m.
Wentworth Gallery
The Mall at Millenia
4200 Conroy Road
Orlando, FL
For more than thirty years, Paul Stanley has reigned supreme as one of the single-most recognizable front men in the history of rock and roll. He's the principal songwriter, driving force and unwavering voice of KISS. A visionary and trend-setter since the early 1970s, Paul Stanley's passion for both the musical and visual arts has perhaps been the key to the astonishing ongoing world phenomenon known as KISS. His artistic and visual input has been seen in his designs of KISS album covers, stages and apparel. As an art major and graduate of the prestigious high school of Music and Art in NYC, Paul has returned to his passion for painting to share with you the deep emotions his art conveys. Paul Stanley creates portraits and abstracts that are emotionally charged compositions. He aims to maximize the direct physical impact of his paintings through scale, texture, color and simplicity of images.
As one of the nation's fine art galleries, Wentworth Gallery features a wide selection of originals, limited edition prints and sculptures from the world's most acclaimed artists. Wentworth Gallery is responsible for bringing the works of many prominent contemporary and international fine artists to the New Jersey area such as Alexandra Nechita, as well as some of the world's most collected and heralded masters such as Picasso, Chagall, and Miro, among others. Stop by any one of Wentworth Gallery's 20 retail locations or visit www.wentworthgallery.com for information on featured artists, upcoming exhibits, online orders and directions to a Wentworth Gallery near you.
Jenny McCarthy, the actress and 1994 Playboy Playmate of the Year, said it was her first Kentucky Derby appearance, and she hoped to meet another Derby visitor — Queen Elizabeth II.
"I'm scared of what to say to her, though. There are so many rules," McCarthy said. "Yo! Wassup. That probably isn't appropriate.
Melissa Joan Hart, of "Sabrina, the Teenage Witch" fame, said she's been studying how to approach royalty.
Gene Simmons, formerly of the rock band Kiss, had money down on a horse, but it was his girlfriend, former Playmate of the Year Shannon Tweed, who placed the bet.
"I'm what's called a sucker," Simmons bellowed. "This one (Tweed) bet $100,000 of my money on a horse."
Neither Simmons nor Tweed would say which horse they were backing, but Tweed said she picked the horse based on how the jockey's silks looked.
Q: Have you always been a visual artist as well as a musician?
Paul: From the time I was very little, according to others, I was fairly gifted in art. I wound up in New York City going to the (Fiorella H. LaGuardia) High School of Music & Art, which was the sister school to the school that "Fame" was about. I went there for art but was drawn to music.
Q: When did you start painting?
Paul: About six years ago, I was going through a divorce. My best friend said, "You need to paint." I had never spent any time painting. I went out and bought canvases and paints, and went to work. It became a really powerful emotional journey. It allowed me to delve into parts of myself that were more easily painted than spoken. I purposely put aside the idea of trying to depict anything in a lifelike way. The idea of making something overly realistic for me takes away the (painting's) emotional power.
Q: So why the KISS portraits?
Paul: The portraits of the band, I did because the KISS fans would enjoy it. I wouldn't want to make a large time commitment to doing more of that. That was really something I did as a tip of the hat.
Q: Do you find collectors don't necessarily know that you're Paul Stanley from KISS?
Paul: Many of the people who acquired my art had no idea who it was when they first saw it. That's a big compliment to me.
Q: How do you keep a gallery appearance from becoming a fan fest?
Paul: It's important to let everybody know up front that this isn't an autograph session. There is a time and place for that, and an art gallery isn't it. Obviously, fans will show up. I think it's a great way to introduce people to art who wouldn't necessarily be exposed to it.
Q: Do you collect art?
Paul: I used to collect a lot of Art Nouveau, Tiffany lamps, and art of that period. Right now, there's nothing of any of the greats in my house. I've had opportunities that passed by, and I scratch my head and wonder why I didn't buy a Picasso.
Q: Have you been pleased with the response to your work?
Paul: I've been incredibly gratified and thankful. I tend to do things — whether music or art — that avoids snobbery, and goes for the appeal of people who don't look over their shoulder to see whether someone else approves. That being said, people are not opposed to spending quite a bit of money.
Q: You recently released a solo album. Do you have KISS projects in the works, too?
Paul: I couldn't stop KISS if I wanted to. We're actually doing a few shows this summer to flex our muscles. It's not a tour. For KISS to tour is like launching an aircraft carrier.
Paul Stanley will appear today (Saturday, May 5) at the Wentworth Gallery, SouthPark mall (4400 Sharon Road), in Charlotte, North Carolina between 6:00 p.m. and 9:00 p.m.
(Were you at the concert? Then write your own review below.) Stripped of make-up and pyrotechnics but armed with a bunch of killer rock anthems and soaring ballads from his new album - and a bunch of old gems that KISS somehow forgot to ever play on stage – Stanley delivered a reinvigorated, knockout set.
From the bone-crunching, anthemic title track of his new CD “Live To Win’’, through big singalongs from his first, 1978 solo effort like “Move On’’, “Wouldn’t You Like To Know Me’’ and “Tonight You Belong To Me,’’ to the KISS concert essentials “Love Gun” and “Detroit Rock City’’, the setlist was a fanboy’s dream.
Other new material, such as the radio-worthy power ballad “Everytime I See You Around’’ and “Bulletproof’’ sat seamlessly alongside such 30-year-old classics as “Strutter’’ and “Do You Love Me?’
But wait – there’s more. Between the scheduled tracks, Stanley playfully accommodated the Adelaide audience’s requests, throwing in a few bars of everything from obscurities like “The Oath’’ to verses of “Mr Speed”, “Forever” and even “All American Man’’.
Better still were full-blown renditions of KISS album tracks like “A Million To One’’ and “Magic Touch’’ - getting their first concert tour airings - not to mention the Australian chart favourites “Shandi’’ and “I Was Made For Lovin’ You’’.
Prancing, leaping and dancing endlessly while his vocals scaled to often stratospheric heights, Stanley belied his 55 years to deliver a performance worthy of someone half his age. He was backed by phenomenally tight playing and inspired soloing from his band, borrowed from the TV reality show “Rock Star’’, led by blazing lead guitar licks from Rafael Moreira, and supplemented by Australian guitarist Brett Garsed.
When he bid farewell with the appropriately title “Goodbye”, the audience was left hoping that Stanley, like the song’s lyric says, will be coming back soon.
An autobiographical collection of songs that Criss produced and recorded over the course of two years, "One for All" also includes several cover tunes that reflect his outlook on life at this point in his long-standing career.
The lead vocalist and co-writer of what to this day remains KISS' biggest Billboard hit, "Beth", which also went on to win a People's Choice Award, Criss goes back to his songwriting roots with this new CD. Says Criss: "The most important thing is that my fans and other people will get a whole new outlook on me with this CD. I'm reinventing myself at my own pace, and for me, it's now, more than ever, about being true.”
"One for All" is the first fully self-produced CD that Criss has recorded — in addition to arranging and writing the lyrics and melodies for most of the material on the CD.
Joined by longtime friends and acclaimed musicians — Grammy award-winning bandleader Paul Shaffer and bassist Will Lee, as well as guitarist Mike McLaughlin — "One for All" is a variously styled project, profoundly rich in ballads that touches on all aspects of Criss' life, and draws on his love of rock and R&B. The title track, recorded with the Church of Transfiguration Boys Choir, was written in the wake of 9/11 and sets the tone for the CD. Other songs include: "Doesn't Get Better Than This", "Last Night", "Faces in the Crowd", "Heart Behind the Hands", "Send in The Clowns", and even a tribute song to his longtime bandmate and friend Ace Frehley, titled "Space Ace".
As the flagship title for the newly-formed IDW Publishing imprint, Simmons Comics Group , GENE SIMMONS HOUSE OF HORRORS promises to bring readers the best in horror, fantasy and science fiction over all 64 full-color pages.
The anthology will feature intro and outro pages illustrated by Matt Busch and written by The Demon himself, as well as a short prose story by Nick Simmons —Gene's son, budding co-star on Gene Simmons Family Jewels , the top-rated A&E reality show, and the creator of the upcoming IDW comic Skullduggery . Top that off with five short horror stories by some of the hottest new talent in comics today and wrap it in the terrifying cover image by Todd McFarlane and Greg Capullo , and you've got all the makings of a deliciously scary treat.
“I had always loved the Twilight Zone . I never missed an episode,” says Gene Simmons. “I read Amazing Stories and Analog . In short, I loved the anthology horror/sci-fi canvas and wanted to re-introduce the format into comic books. [ Gene Simmons House of Horrors ] is a chance to showcase the best in professional talent, and to introduce new talent, as well. Each story will be written and drawn independently, with wraparound commentaries by myself. The fact that I'm powerful and attractive will only add to the stunning effect of the stories.”
Stories featured in the debut issue of GENE SIMMONS HOUSE OF HORRORS include:
“Into The Woods,” written by Leah Moore & John Reppion ( Raise the Dead ) and illustrated by Jeff Zornow ( American Werewolf ).
“Into The Woods” is somewhere between Midwitch Cuckoos and Grimm's Fairytales . A teenage pyromaniac with mismatched eyes who destroys her village but doesn't know why. We follow the girl as she seemingly condemns herself and her neighbors to a gruesome death. We see wild animals and the forest itself turn on the hapless peasants as they fight for their lives. This is what might happen if Hansel and Gretel stumbled into The Evil Dead … they might need more than breadcrumbs this time.
“Circle Seven,” written by Chris Ryall ( Zombies Vs. Robots ) and illustrated by Steph Stamb ( Angel: Masks )
Dack is a new recruit to the Eternal Punishment Border Patrol, but he's got too much to prove to let simple inexperience slow him down. So he's set to be the Neil Armstrong of his generation, only instead of going up, he's headed down—into the newly discovered gateway to Hell. He's sent there alone, because you can't trust a partner once you enter the Stygian depths. There have been doomsday cries of big plans being made in the worst area of Hell, Circle Seven, and Dack's job is to see if a human being can successfully enter—and exit—Hell, and, most importantly, stop Hell from spilling into the real world.
“Crude, ” written by Tom Waltz ( Children of the Grave ) and illustrated by Esteve Polls ( Mega-City Noir )
In 1991, Desert Storm rages in the Kuwaiti Desert. Iraqi forces, in a desperate attempt to delay the overwhelming Coalition onslaught and turn world opinion against the campaign for liberation, ignite many of Kuwait's oil wells, creating an unprecedented environmental catastrophe in the region. As the Coalition attack surges forward, pushing the Iraqi defenders back into their own country, an elite Delta Force team is sent in to investigate the damage done to the oil wells by the blazing, pollution spewing fires. The team goes in with six men, but only one man returns. Something massacred the Delta Force soldiers during the recon mission, and it wasn't enemy soldiers. No, it was something far more sinister, vicious and inhuman. It was something straight out of the depths of the earth itself.
“The Basement,” by Dwight L. MacPherson ( Dead Men Tell No Tales ) and illustrated by Grant Bond ( Revere )
When Agnes Beecham's 9-year-old daughter Rosa began telling fantastic stories about a visitor from another planet living in the basement, she dismissed them as childhood oneirism. One day, however, Rosa's father Michael decided to step into the basement to investigate and returned a vegetable. The doctors told Agnes her husband had suffered a stroke, but Rosa knew it was the man in the basement who made her father a helpless invalid. In the days that followed the incident, Rosa began drawing pictures of strange flying objects and telling her mother the man in the basement wished to take her to his home -- and then she mentioned the name Aleister Crowley.
“Nymph,” by Sean Taylor ( Fishnet Angel ) and illustrated by Jon Alderink ( City of Fire )
Jane is an eco-happy entymologist married to Dave, a commercial contractor who builds strip malls and parking decks. While celebrating their seventh wedding anniversary on a picnic in the mountains, Dave goes missing after an argument about his work. Jane looks for him, only to find him already consumed by the trees and herself the prey of a blood-thirsty tree nymph.
Gene Simmons House of Horrors #1 will be available in July and is available for pre-order now. Diamond Order code MAY07 3563.
With today's launch, the site offers a catalog of VH1 Classic videos from artists ranging from LED ZEPPELIN and THE SEX PISTOLS, to MADONNA, MICHAEL JACKSON and NIRVANA. The video library also includes interview segments with artists like KISS and JOHN MELLENCAMP from VH1 Classic's "Hanging With" series and performances from past VH1 events including "VH1 Rock Honors" and "VH1 Hip Hop Honors". The site also includes classic-themed elements like, the VH1 Classic Arcade with old-school gaming favorites like Spy Hunter and Defender and exclusive VH1 Classic ringtones for mobile phones.
Additional site features focused on user-interaction and online community building will roll out in the coming months. Tools included in future site rollouts will allow users to rate, comment on, review and submit content. These features will give fans a way to interact with others and will allow them to build communities around similar interests and tastes in music. Additional original video programming will be added throughout the year as well.
"We know that VH1 Classic fans are passionate about their music and our programming around that music. We've also seen that they are inclined to participate in online discussions and interactive programming in a significant and meaningful way," said Tom Calderone, Executive Vice President and General Manager, VH1. "Because of this, we have been expanding Classic's online presence over the last year — first with a dedicated broadband video channel and now with a new site that will evolve over the next few months to include not only our extensive catalog of music, but elements that will give fans the means to develop a strong online community around the music they love."
A feature of the initial site release launching today offers extensive programmed video playlists that highlight various sub-genres of VH1 Classic's library. Sample playlists include:
* "The Alternative (The '80s)" with videos by artists like, DEPECHE MODE and THE CURE;
* "I Love The '90s" with videos by artists like NIRVANA and PEARL JAM;
* "Metal Mania" with videos by artists like METALLICA and MÖTLEY CRÜE;
* "Rock Fest" with videos by artists like CREAM, THE WHO and DIRE STRAITS;
* "Pop Show" with videos by artists like CYNDI LAUPER, WHITNEY HOUSTON and CULTURE CLUB.
This Peter Criss "Phantom" vest (auction page) originally came from the Vinnie Gonzales collection in the early '90s. Gonzales reportedly had a massive KISS collection containing many KISS costume items, stage items and other memorabilia that you can only get if you know the band members personally.
This Peter Criss "Phantom" robe (auction page) was originally purchased along with the other three "Phantom" robes from the KISS auction that was held at Paramount Studios Theater, Hollywood, California on June 24, 2000.
Edward Przydzial of Beverly Hills states in a press release, "Mr. Simmons has stolen and used/abused my copyrights as far back as 1997 when they returned to the classic make-up era of the '70s... He has used my images on merchandise magazines, books, 'Kisstory', Metal Edge magazine KISS specials and more. He has made no attempt to pay me or request usage in the proper protocol."
Przydzial claims that Simmons knows full well he's violating copyrights and has been in contact with Przydzial through Bill Randolph's office in New York. Przydzial also alleges that during his last dealings with Mr. Simmons, Gene made it clear that he would continue to use any photographs he chooses, as long as they are images of KISS or of any member of KISS (this despite the fact is that copyright laws say it takes 75 years before a copyright runs out).
Przydzial photographed the band from the years 1975 to 1983. He claims a loss value of more then a million dollars in black-and-white images and color slides. Przydzial also claims his photos have been published copyrighted under the "Kiss Company" without his permission. He states that Fin Costello's name was put on one of his photos in the book "Behind the Mask" published by Warner Books. He also claims the transcripts for that book were confiscated from "The Kiss Museum News" fan club that Edward ran edited and published. He alleges a man named Curt Gooch used an image of his in the "Kiss Touring History" book and Mr. Gooch put his own name on it instead of Edward's.
Hardcore fans lined up at the front of the stage hoping to see a glimpse of their favorite star including two boys who were no more than 15 years old who took their spots at 6:30 a.m.The youngest told stories of how he went to his first KISS concert when he was three years old.
As the contest started, everyone was already in a rockin' mood and the first contestant hit the stage running. Daniel Serna, Kelly Law-Yone, J.W. McNay, Matt Nowak, and Felicia Williams all strummed hard to their songs. All the contestants did a great job, especially since it was the first time in front of an audience for some of them.
J.W. rocked the house when it came to his turn. Nobody could match his insane score and he took home a special edition Guitar Hero II guitar as well as having the chance to play along with Gene.
A true rock star, Gene made his grand entrance by coming down an escalator from the floor above. He flashed the rock sign, slapped fans' hands, and made his way through the crowd in style. On the stage, he picked up his axe and with the assistance of J.W. on his Guitar Hero II controller, they belted out "Strutter". It was a great show and both the normally shy J.W. and Gene were rock stars in that moment.
Check out video footage at YouTube: Clip#1, Clip#2.
The Briton and the bassist for KISS joined other "A List" celebrities for the soiree at the LA club Sugar. The party honored Us Weekly's Style Icon of the Year Jennifer Lopez, who lived up to the award in a white Ralph Lauren pantsuit and Versace shoes.
"There obviously were a lot of beautiful women there," said Wheldon, who declined to provide a top 10 list.
Past winners of the magazine's annual style award have included Jessica Alba and Jessica Simpson. In addition to handing out a top prize, the magazine also singled out seven men and women for their fashion sense, dubbing them the "Hot 7 in '07."
Wheldon was interviewed for "Extra," "Entertainment Tonight," and "Access Hollywood" among other syndicated shows and periodicals.
Wheldon, who was scheduled to fly to Kansas City early April 27 for the start of his race weekend in the No. 10 Target Chip Ganassi Racing car, had to leave the club before the party really got rolling. There was time to mingle and hang out with ("American Idol" host) Ryan Seacrest, ("Sopranos" star) Jamie Lynn Siegler and Simmons.
"For anybody who thinks Gene Simmons is not an advocate of the IndyCar Series, I witnessed it first-hand," said Wheldon, the championship points leader heading into the Kansas Lottery Indy 300 on April 29. "He was absolutely amazing.
"The event was a lot of fun. Everybody was there."
But, I have to wonder, is it cool if you go to a concert driving a car previously owned by a member of the band you're about to hear?
It's a question I suspect will be answered only by someone willing to spend $19,975 to determine the answer.
If that amount sounds like chump change in the quest for sociological advancement, go to Mark Juhl Auto Sports right now and hand over the 20 stacks needed to drive away in a 1988 Porsche 928 S4 previously owned by Kiss frontman Paul Stanley.
At this point in the conversation, there are two more questions worth asking: Was this black ride really owned by the Paul Stanley? And, if so, why is it sitting in a car lot showroom on the north side of Sioux Falls?
Fortunately, Mark Juhl doesn't mind answering such questions.
The car salesman proves the Starchild owned this Porsche by freely sharing the car's title - which curiously is in Paul Stanley's name, not his birth name of Stanley Eisen - and providing a document that shows the car was insured by the Kiss company. And just in case there's any further doubt, the title is paired with a Paul Stanley trading card.
As for its journey to Sioux Falls, Juhl says the car landed in Iowa after Stanley ditched it. The Porsche subsequently was traded in to Billion Automotive and sold to a fellow who sold it Juhl. Voil1/3.
So, how powerful is the pull of this rock star sports car to Kiss fans?
Juhl says he regularly is e-mailed by curious Kiss fans who found the listing online. And at least one woman who claimed to "know" Stanley had her picture taken with the car because, well, she "knows" Stanley.
Diehard Stanley or Kiss fans probably remember this car was up for auction on eBay last year - I'm not sure if it sold. And that Stanley drove a very similar Porsche in the video for Kiss' "Reason to Live."
Naturally, Stanley's attachment to the car's history amps up the vehicle's intrigue.
But Juhl says Stanley doesn't have enough pull to boost the Porsche's price.
"It would have to be somebody more famous than him, like Elvis Presley ... then it would increase the value," Juhl says. "Paul Stanley is very famous. But it would only increase the value to a Kiss fan."
Which is why it makes sense that Juhl says a Kiss fan in Omaha is trying to buy the car that can go from 0 to 60 miles per hour in 5.7 seconds - or, about the time it takes Gene Simmons to roll out the full extent of his tongue.
Sitting in the same leather seat that held Stanley, it only took three seconds to realize why this car is worth more than the annual earnings of my first professional job offer.
The Porsche's seats are softer than a Paul Stanley love ballad and could hold you comfortably through an entire concert of material from Kiss' torturous makeup-free era.
The car's back seats are so dainty, only children or Ronnie James Dio could fit without squeezing inside. And though its showroom position wouldn't allow me to test its torque, just sitting in the driver's seat made it easy to believe this car would burn past Prince's "Little Red Corvette" or impress Tracy Chapman enough for her to ask you to take her anywhere.
Basically, it's a rock star ride that - despite its dated JVC tape deck - could make bozos like me appear to be cool, as long as I don't drive the car to a Kiss concert. That's just trying too hard.
The auctioned VIP dinner drew over 200,000 unique visitors during the duration of the online auction. The winning bid of $75,100 was placed by Richard Craven of the U.K., who will enjoy a weekend of rock star treatment with three guests in Los Angeles. The package includes round trip air fare, two nights stay in deluxe accommodations, and the main attraction — an exclusive dinner with Gene and Shannon.
"We were blown away with the success of the auction," said Simmons. "I want to thank all the fans that visited the auction over the last couple of weeks. The Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS Foundation is a great cause that we're happy to support."
"We are very pleased to support The Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS Foundation," said Andrew Wise, Vice President, Consumer Products, A&E Television Networks. "We are really thrilled with the auction results and I want to thank Gene and Shannon for donating their time in support of this important cause."
Net proceeds from the Gene Simmons Family Jewels eBay Giving Works auction will be donated to the Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS Foundation, whose mission is to create a future of hope for children and families worldwide by eradicating pediatric AIDS and providing care and treatment to people with HIV/AIDS.
Was it annoying having the cameras up your ass during the recovery process?
No, I like things up my ass. Usually farm animals, but that's another story [laughs]. I don't mind having the cameras there at all. In fact, I invite them into situations that they don't want to go into. Neither Shannon nor the kids are too thrilled with having cameras around them; but I'm an only child, so I crave attention.
What do you think sets your show apart from similar shows like The Osbournes?
I think they're all the same. Most reality shows are exactly the same. If you like ours better it's because you like the people better. But originality is highly overrated. At the end of the day, I don't care if something is original, I just care if I like it or not.
After doing Gene Simmons' Rock School and now Jewels, are you more comfortable as "TV Gene"?
People are throwing projects left and right at me, but by and large I say no. But I don't mind doing this stuff. I'm self-absorbed. I like me. I'm in the Gene Simmons business. I'm totally comfortable talking about myself, and I love the sound of my own voice. But I'm not really in the television business. I do other stuff.
So the rocker is still inside?
Well, that made everything possible. Therein lies the beat of the heart. There is nothing like getting up onstage and putting on taller heels than you wear and going out there and being the dream and living it. So this summer, KISS will be doing three shows for tens of thousands of people.
Do you have any idea when you'll be putting on that makeup for the last time?
No. When I was growing up, there was a phrase, never trust anyone over 30. But only white people did that. You never heard black people say that about B.B. King, you know? They don't say, "He's 80, he should hang up his shoes." They look at him with reverence. But white people look at Mick Jagger and say, "Oh, he's too old." It's such a bizarre thing, when the truth is, the biggest guy in the world is also the oldest guy in the world.
So do you want to keep going until you croak?
I hope we don't do it a day longer than we want to do it. And I don't think the age thing matters. The biggest bands in the world are the oldest bands in the world.
What are your thoughts on the popularity of games like Guitar Hero?
It's fantastic. You can either do it my way, which is to scratch and claw your way to the top year after year and hopefully finally make it, or you can strap one of those babies around your neck and actually get the feeling. It's interesting to watch them play, because they assume the position, if you'd pardon my French. It's that kind of cocky rock star thing. It works for guys and girls.
With the game coming to Xbox 360, do you think it might breed the next generation of fire-breathing rock stars?
No, I don't think anything like that will happen. But what it will do is make a few people a lot happier, because this stuff, in a very real way, is cathartic. It gets you out of your skin. People by and large are uptight and feel awkward getting up in front of other people. But when there's a screen there and a ready-made audience there for you, it's even less intimidating than karaoke bars. You don't have to face an audience, because it's right there on the screen. It's a great way to get out of your shell.
Is there anything that people could still be shocked to know about you?
I have never been high or drunk or smoked cigarettes in my life, and I've never been married. Most everybody has, and I don't know why. I couldn't think of a good reason to do any of those. The problem with marriage and the problem with most relationships is someone else has a say in who and what you are. And that's totally unacceptable. How did anybody get the right, or earn it, to do that. You can earn the right if you buy it. If you buy somebody's companionship. A husband, if he's paying all the bills he can, but he bought that companionship. But the guys are wimping out. That's why they die before their wives. Why do men die first? Because they want to [laughs].
What are you more proud of, having your face on a stamp or being a character on Family Guy?
The stamp is pretty cool. That money goes to charity, so that's cool. But as an immigrant coming to America, I'm amazed by the fact that they'd let me become a superhero for 30 years much less have my face stuck on a stamp of all people. It just shows the wonder of America. But Family Guy is huge. We did two or three of those. The one I liked is "Saving Santa Clause." Of course, the other one was pretty cool, too, because I think at a certain point in the past I mounted Lois.
Speaking of your past conquests, has Shannon ever been threatened by your history with women?
No, the very first thing I did with Shannon, with anybody really, is "Meet the Real Gene Simmons." I bring out the folios of thousands of naked girls and go, "Here's who I am." And I still got laid that night, rather violently, as I recall. What girl would want to be with a guy that other girls don't want?
Your Web site has almost as many photo galleries of girls as ours. Are you trying to put us out of business?
Of course not, but I wouldn't mind setting up a meeting to discuss with you guys the possibility of Gene Simmons' Tongue magazine. With these girls, I don't know who they are. They send in their photos and want to be "Ladies in Waiting." And it's great. That's just life. The world is a better place with beautiful women.
We couldn't agree more.
"Downloading is one of the tragedies of the 21st century," Stanley said yesterday.
"Under the guise of technology and fancy jargon, people have legalised stealing.
"When you say you're sharing files . . . you can't share what you don't own.
"I can't share your car. Sharing something with one person is one thing, sharing with tens of thousands of people is a crime. It's robbery."
Stanley rejected claims rock bands such as Kiss and Metallica had made enough money to not worry about downloading.
"I don't owe anyone any justification for wanting to get paid," he said. "For anybody else to decide when I have enough money is bollocks.
"I feel angry about it happening to me, but it will kill new artists.
"New bands depend upon that money to carry on. They desperately need that money and, on principle, I want it."
Stanley is in Melbourne for a solo tour to promote his album Live to Win.
The album is a creative outlet for Stanley, with Kiss canny enough to know their fans only want to hear greatest hits, not new material.
But fans attending Stanley's solo shows at the Palais tonight and tomorrow won't miss out on Kiss favourites such as I Was Made For Lovin' You, Detroit Rock City and Shandi.
"I don't think anybody should . . . force an audience to hear a whole new album," he said. "That's not what they came for.
"Whether it's the Stones or (Sir Paul) McCartney, if you went to their show and they played their whole new album you'd want to hang yourself.
"So I'm mixing in Kiss songs with some solo songs: it's a pretty healthy night of me."
While Stanley, 55, remains a private rock star, his Kiss bandmate Gene Simmons has opened his life to TV cameras for reality show Family Jewels.
The second series of the program opened this year with Simmons filming himself having a facelift and liposuction.
While Stanley has had hips and knees replaced, he said a brief flirtation with Botox five years ago was misguided.
"There's footage on YouTube of (me on) The Chris Isaak Show.
"It's the best advertisement for not putting Botox into your face.
"I couldn't move my forehead yet my eyebrows were going up.
"There's nothing wrong with vanity, with wanting to hold on to your youth.
"But lipo will never take the place of dieting, plastic surgery will never take the place of quitting smoking or not doing drugs."
Check out the video at this location.
ERIC SINGER PROJECT, KISS drummer Eric Singer's just-for-fun band which also features Bruce Kulick, John Corabi (ex-MÖTLEY CRÜE; vocals) and Chuck Garric (ALICE COOPER; bass), recently released the "Live in Japan" CD. A DVD set filmed in Sydney, Australia, entitled "Live at the Marquee", will be available soon. The group performs classic songs by their favorite artists, including ALICE COOPER, LED ZEPPELIN, BLACK SABBATH and KISS.
"The response to the Kiss Coffeehouse has been overwhelming and it's time to celebrate our success," explains longtime KISS fan and store owner Brian Galvin. "Having Ace Frehley at the first anniversary party will bring KISS fans from all over the country to Myrtle Beach. This is a rare opportunity to meet one of rock music's most acclaimed and influential guitar players."
Through a deal brokered by Signatures Network, Inc., KISS's exclusive merchandising company, the Kiss Coffeehouse in Myrtle Beach, SC is the first licensed coffeehouse by the band known for their incredible stage show, face paint and full throttle rock and roll.
The Kiss Coffeehouse opened to huge crowds last summer and features Signature Kiss Coffees, including Kiss Army Blend and French Kiss Vanilla, the Kiss Frozen Rockuccino, cookies, brownies and other sinful sweets.
To add to the festivities, KISS tribute band, MR. SPEED, will be performing on the Celebrity Square Stage at Broadway at the Beach from 8:00 to 10:00 p.m.
The Expo will take place on Sunday June 24 from 1:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. (12:00 p.m. for VIP holders) at the Holiday Inn Southwest & Viking Conference Center 10709 Watson Rd. in St. Louis, MO. KISS Army founder Bill Starkey is also scheduled to appear at the event. Look for additional guests to be added in the coming weeks. KISS merchandise and collectibles will be on sale throughout the day. KissOnline.com will be attending the Expo and selling exclusive KissOnline.com merchandise.
For more information or to buy tickets for the St. Louis KISS Fan Expo, click here.
After KISS officially appeared without make up for the first time ever on September 18, 1983 live on MTV to coincide with the release of the then brandnew album "Lick It Up", the band did many more interviews without the mak up. One of the first filmed interviews took place in Madrid, Spain in October of 1983 and has now surfaced online and credited as being Armed Forces Network material.
Watch the footage at YouTube.
A posting on the site reads: "Paul's vivid memories of driving through the neon filled districts of downtown Tokyo are captured in his latest piece which he completed just prior to leaving for Australia on the continuation of his solo tour.
"Limited-edition prints from this painting may be released in the future. No decision will be made until Paul returns from Australia."
While his passion for chiropractic has its roots in his college years, Joffe began collecting KISS memorabilia when he was just a toddler, after his teenage brother introduced him to the band. “At that age, usually little kids are either deathly afraid of KISS or think they’re like superheroes,” Joffe recalls. “I was definitely the latter. At that age, I got things like the original KISS dolls and the original KISS lunchbox for Christmas and birthdays. I used to take the lunchbox to nursery school and kindergarten. As I got older, I started to get into not only collecting the albums, but different pictures, posters and KISS videos. I used to go to KISS conventions and collect stuff like that. My room at my parents’ house used to look like a KISS shrine; once I ran out of wall space, I started putting stuff up on the ceiling.”
Over the years, Joffe has had several items autographed by members of the band, including books, albums and his childhood lunchbox. And not only has he been to over 20 concerts at which he’s caught several guitar pics, he attended the funeral when KISS’s second drummer died.
Though Joffe plans to create a KISS-themed guitar room once he moves into a larger home, for now, he stores his collection in Tupperware totes in his townhome’s basement. After all, his wife isn’t quite as into KISS as he is. “That’s partially why it’s in the basement,” Joffe notes. “She’s starting to get used to my KISS obsession. My birthday was a couple weeks ago, so she bought me a collector’s edition KISS picture that has a gold single of theirs, and actually, she let me hang it up on a wall that leads down to our basement. Whatever house is going to accommodate it, I’m definitely going to have a KISS music room so I can put all of my KISS stuff back on display.”
"Between make-up and hair spray, I'm sure the hair spray alone is responsible for the hole in the ozone layer,'' confesses the rock demigod. "Between spraying it and holding my breath, it was quite a feat, but you gotta look good that's what it's all about."
Stanley minus make-up, but almost certainly still with hair spray, is touring his album Live to Win, his first solo effort since all Kiss's members released individual self-titled records way back in 1978. Curiously, the fact he's waited until this particular juncture has a lot to do with being a homebody.
"People in the band [Kiss] have always tended to go off and do other projects, and I always felt that somebody had to stay home and mind the store," says the man whose efforts in raising international awareness of spandex, chest hair and platform shoes will probably never be equalled. "But at this point it felt like everything with the band is steady and I owed it to myself to kind of do something totally without any sense of either compromise or concessions for other people."
When Stanley talks about his new album a marked deviation from the glam-oriented approach for which he's usually worshipped it's in the type of vernacular that wouldn't be out of place in a pre-game dressing room pep talk or overpriced self-help seminar.
"The whole idea of 'live to win' means that you take on challenges and you go after your goals without any regard for the people who tell you that you can't or try to stop you," he says. "That way, even if you fail, you win, because if you fail on your own terms, as far as I'm concerned, you're a winner."
If Stanley plans on taking another 29 years to release another solo album, the irrefutable laws of mathematics and quantum physics tell us he'll need to wait until sometime in 2036. It's a stark reality that begs the obvious question: would he consider being cryogenically frozen in a vat of liquid nitrogen and brought back to life in 500 years with the view to continue rocking well into the future?
"Um ... interesting question," he says. "You know, I'm not so sure that we ever really check out of this hotel. Maybe we just come back as a different guest. I don't know. I'm not so sure. Does anyone really want to live forever? I don't."
That's not to say he wouldn't be partial to the odd touch of bionic enhancement, however.
"It's funny, as parts wear out you just replace them," he says. "I tore my rotator cuff. I had that repaired. I've torn both my knees up. I had those repaired. I wore out bone in one of my hips. I had the hip replaced. I love what I'm doing and my body's not going to stop me. I'm for anything that keeps me at the level I'm at."
Body-part replacement issues aside, Stanley says he can't wait to get down under again.
"We've had an amazing time and I didn't want it to end after the United States," he says. "For me, the next place had to be Australia. That is, to me, a second home."
And it seems there's no doubt about what his adoring public can expect.
"It's very clearly me. It's a night of me. It's a night of Kiss songs and my solo songs. It would be silly if I wasn't playing Love Gun, if I wasn't playing Lick It Up, playing classic [Kiss] songs. I wrote them.''
Paul Stanley: "Mark tried his best to become the guitar player that KISS and our fans needed, so that we could continue moving forward. I enjoyed and am proud of our work together on 'Animalize' and know how much he wanted to take that leap to the stage to play with us live. He was gracious in his acceptance that it wouldn't happen and was supportive of Bruce [Kulick] and a gentleman when it was clear that his ailment would end his time with us."
Gene Simmons: "Mark was a great guitarist and a good man. He will be missed."
Eric Singer: "I would like to express my thoughts on the loss of Mark St. John. He was a talented guitarist that has his place in KISStory. I met Mark many years ago when he was looking for a drummer for WHITE TIGER. I was flattered that he contacted me about the drum chair but I had other commitments at that time. I wish his family all my prayers in this tough time."
The former Playboy Playmate-turned-reality TV star has allegedly used pictures taken by top photographer Dimitri Halkidis in her book "Kiss and Tell" without clearing them with the snapper.
Halkidis is now considering filing a copyright infringement suit against Tweed.
He claims the photographs were taken in 2002 and he spotted them while leafing through Tweed's 2006 book recently.
Halkidis says, "I considered Shannon Tweed a friend and now I feel used. I feel I should be compensated and credited like other photographers were in the book.
"Shame on Shannon, she should know the rules of the game by now. This is copyright infringement and she won't be getting away with it.
"I am shocked she never had the decency to pick up the phone and just ask me for clearance, or if she was busy why didn't the publisher call and take it through the correct channels?"
Nothing, Stanley says, turns him off more than celebrities who release tell-all autobiographies.
Fellow KISS band mate Gene Simmons penned the ultimate backstage pass for fans in a book laced with details of his sex, drugs and rock'n'roll lifestyle.
But his sidekick is adamant he won't be setting tongues wagging with his own expose.
The 55-year-old rocker, who is in Australia on his first solo tour outside of America and to promote his second solo album, Live To Win, believes such novels are egotistical.
"The autobiography is the most outrageous form of fiction, just by nature an autobiography is going to be a little warped," Stanley said in Sydney today.
"Show me anyone who writes about themselves and doesn't find themselves in the centre of the universe? I have seen other people's autobiographies and I had some questions about those.
"Tooting my own horn is of no interest to me ... it takes you away from real life. It's a waste and I don't find a need to sing my own praises."
Almost three decades after the make-up laden, leather clad, go-go boot wearing rocker debuted his self-titled album Stanley, the energetic performer yearned to explore a new musical direction and went about writing his latest offering.
Stanley says the new material has been well received. He played his first solo gig on the Gold Coast on April 11 and will perform in Newcastle tomorrow (EDS: Saturday) before heading to Sydney, Melbourne, and Perth and wrapping up his tour in Adelaide on April 26.
Fans will delight in Stanley's performances of I Was Made For Lovin' You and Rock and Roll All Nite, but he says they shouldn't expect an extravagant stage show complete with fireworks and Stanley decked out in his glam-metal inspired outfits.
"I love KISS, but there is something great about being out there dressed like this," he says pointing attention to his unmade-up face and casual clothing.
"You have a more personal kind of one-on-one with a very intense audience. This has reconnected for me why I started doing this in the first place. When I was younger and saw Led Zeppelin playing to less than 2,000 people and the communication is powerful. That's what it's all about."
Having sold more than 100 million albums with KISS, Stanley says life is perfect and six months ago it got better when his wife Erin Sutton gave birth to the couple's first child Colin, a younger brother for Evan, 12, from a previous relationship.
"It's great to do it again, it's one of the things in life I love most, being a dad and we are working on having a girl," Stanley says, smiling.
"Life is great. When you're watching people dropping like flies you realise what can happen ... you are interviewing me today not Jimi Hendrix, not Jim Morrison, not Janis Joplin, I didn't get into this to become a dead legend, I got into this to have a great life and that's what I got."
Hardcore fans lined up at the front of the stage hoping to see a glimpse of their favorite star including two boys who were no more than 15 years old who took their spots at 6:30 a.m.The youngest told stories of how he went to his first KISS concert when he was three years old.
As the contest started, everyone was already in a rockin' mood and the first contestant hit the stage running. Daniel Serna, Kelly Law-Yone, J.W. McNay, Matt Nowak, and Felicia Williams all strummed hard to their songs. All the contestants did a great job, especially since it was the first time in front of an audience for some of them.
J.W. rocked the house when it came to his turn. Nobody could match his insane score and he took home a special edition Guitar Hero II guitar as well as having the chance to play along with Gene.
A true rock star, Gene made his grand entrance by coming down an escalator from the floor above. He flashed the rock sign, slapped fans' hands, and made his way through the crowd in style. On the stage, he picked up his axe and with the assistance of J.W. on his Guitar Hero II controller, they belted out "Strutter". It was a great show and both the normally shy J.W. and Gene were rock stars in that moment.
Read more at KissOnline.com.
01. Live To Win
02. Hide Your Heart
03. A Million To One
04. Got To Choose
05. Move On
06. Bulletproof
07. Tonight You Belong To Me
08. Lick It Up
09. Wouldn't You Like To Know Me
10. Magic Touch
11. I Still Love You
12. Strutter
13. Every Time I See You Around
14. Do You Love Me
15. I Want You
16. Love Gun
17. I Was Made For Loving You
18. Shandi
19. Detroit Rock City
20. Goodbye
Check out live photos from tonight's concert at PaulStanley.com.
Thayer, a member of Pacific University's Board of Trustees, is actively involved in the organization and recruitment of celebrity participants. "I'm very excited about the Legends Golf Classic and that I can be so involved in its inaugural offering," said Thayer. "This is a great opportunity to have a fun event and to raise funds for Pacific's athletics program and showcase the University."
A host of celebrities are lined up for the event. Those confirmed thus far include Thayer, 2003 PGA Championship winner Shaun Micheel and Schonely, the legendary longtime radio voice of the Portland Trail Blazers. Additional golf and entertainment celebrities, as well as a renowned musical group for an exclusive Sunday concert, will be announced soon.
Sunday night, July 29, participants will be treated to a dinner and auction. Attendees will bid on a variety of items, including sports and musical memorabilia, and even on the celebrities themselves — buying the chance to add them to their foursome.
Monday's events will begin with driving range practice, a putting contest, and a pre-tournament clinic hosted by Micheel. The tournament itself will begin at 1 p.m., with a banquet and awards ceremony to follow. The tournament field is limited to a total of 120 golfers.
Proceeds from the Pacific University Legends Golf Classic will help raise funds to support the University's 20-sport NCAA Division III athletics program, supporting student-athletes, sports teams and capital projects.
Paul Stanley's Maryland and Virginia Wentworth Gallery appearances:
Friday June 22, 2007 6-9 PM
Wentworth Gallery - White Flint
11301 Rockville Pike
North Bethesda, MD 20895
Saturday June 23, 2007 6-9 PM
Wentworth Gallery - Tysons Galleria
1731 M International Drive
McLean, VA 22102
For more than thirty years, Paul Stanley has reigned supreme as one of the single-most recognizable front men in the history of rock and roll. He's the principal songwriter, driving force and unwavering voice of KISS. A visionary and trend-setter since the early 1970s, Paul Stanley's passion for both the musical and visual arts has perhaps been the key to the astonishing ongoing world phenomenon known as KISS. His artistic and visual input has been seen in his designs of KISS album covers, stages and apparel. As an art major and graduate of the prestigious high school of Music and Art in NYC, Paul has returned to his passion for painting to share with you the deep emotions his art conveys. Paul Stanley creates portraits and abstracts that are emotionally charged compositions. He aims to maximize the direct physical impact of his paintings through scale, texture, color and simplicity of images.
As one of the nation's fine art galleries, Wentworth Gallery features a wide selection of originals, limited edition prints and sculptures from the world's most acclaimed artists. Wentworth Gallery is responsible for bringing the works of many prominent contemporary and international fine artists to the New Jersey area such as Alexandra Nechita, as well as some of the world's most collected and heralded masters such as Picasso, Chagall, and Miro, among others. Stop by any one of Wentworth Gallery's 20 retail locations or visit www.wentworthgallery.com for information on featured artists, upcoming exhibits, online orders and directions to a Wentworth Gallery near you.
Many people know about the Gene Simmons who has toured the world with one of the most influential rock bands off all time, KISS, but most don’t know about the businessman behind the makeup.
Simmons sat down with Equities to discuss his involvement in business ventures ranging from coffee houses to clothing lines to his new reality show "Gene Simmons Family Jewels" and shared insight into what lies ahead for the rock enigma.
The interview with Gene Simmons in the April 2007 edition of Equities magazine is on newsstands now.
Simmons and his unconventional family star in an all-new season of the hit real-life series "Gene Simmons Family Jewels", which premiered with back-to-back episodes on A&E on March 25.
"Gene Simmons Family Jewels" follows Simmons and his family — Shannon Tweed (the woman he's been "happily unmarried" to for 23 years), and their children, Nick and Sophie.
Born Mark Norton in Hollywood, St. John was Kiss' third official guitarist, having replaced Vinnie Vincent -- the substitute for Ace Frehley -- in 1984.
By this point, Kiss had done away with its trademark makeup and costumes, but the group was enjoying a career renaissance. The lone Kiss album on which St. John appeared, "Animalize," re-established the group as one of the world's top arena metal bands. The album spawned the popular MTV video, "Heaven's on Fire" (the only Kiss video to feature St. John).
St. John's flashy playing reflected the era's Van Halen-influenced rock guitarists, but it certainly helped spark the material on "Animalize," which many fans consider one of Kiss' strongest non-makeup releases. However, right around the time Kiss was to launch a worldwide tour in support of the album, St. John was diagnosed with a form of arthritis called Reiter's Syndrome, which caused his hands and arms to swell, and prevented him from playing guitar.
Guitarist Bruce Kulick filled in (St. John did manage to play one full show with the group, and portions of a few others) and eventually replaced St. John as Kiss' permanent guitarist.
His medical condition improved after leaving Kiss, and St. John launched a pop/metal outfit, White Tiger, with ex-Black Sabbath singer David Donato. St. John briefly teamed up with original Kiss drummer Peter Criss in a group that didn't release any recordings, and appeared as a guest speaker at Kiss conventions. In 2001, he released an all-instrumental album, "Magic Bullet Theory."
"I wish to express my sympathy to Mark St. John's family and friends," Kulick said in a statement. "Though Mark was the guitarist I replaced, I respected his talent and contribution to Kiss. May he rest in peace."
From his place at the front of a rapidly growing line, 18-year-old Dalton MacFarlane of Desbarats, Ontario was rather chipper this morning despite being camped at this location since 4 p.m. Wednesday.
“I want to watch the show,” he said of his strong desire to get tickets. “I've never seen KISS.”
MacFarlane was accompanied by his 18-year-old cousin, Cody Hatten. The pair planned to buy somewhere around 14 tickets to take back to Desbarats for friends and family.
Despite his relative youth, MacFarlane has already taken in a lot of good rock shows - including the Black Sabbath and Megadeath concert just last month at the Steelback Centre and other legendary acts such as Motley Crue, Aerosmith, Ratt and Skid Row.
The wait for both of the teens had been a long one.
“We mostly try to sleep,” said Hatten of the best way to pass the time.
Playing cards, it turns out, is forbidden outside of the formal gaming areas - a lesson MacFarlane and Hatten fortunately were not forced to learn the hard way.
“We almost got kicked out,” said MacFarlane with a nervous laugh. “You can't have outside games.”
The third person in line was no newcomer to The Kiss Army having served, by his own account, since 1987.
“This is like a dream come true,” said 31-year-old Paul Berlingieri, of Sault Ste. Marie, Ont. “We have a chance at such great tickets.”
Berlingieri has put a lot of miles on over the years to see Paul Stanley, Gene Simmons and the boys with three trips to Detroit and a pair to Grand Rapids for concerts over the last decade. He had just missed being the first person in line by two short hours, joining the Desbarats Duo at 6 p.m. Wednesday.
While the trio was not friends before they began waiting in line, Berlingieri indicated the many hours in line had changed that status.
“We are now,” he said.
There were dozens of people in line early this morning, more than 24 hours before tickets officially were scheduled to go on sale.
Production Assistant Nick Louricas predicted the line would grow fast and large in the coming hours.
“The boss (Entertainment Manager Russell McKerchie) says he is thinking probably 1,200,” said Louricas of the anticipated line-up before the ticket window opens at 9 a.m. Saturday.
Approximately 10,000 tickets will be sold for the July 20 KISS concert with opening acts Clownsack and Mink also tentatively scheduled to appear.
Acccording to KissFAQ.com, Mark St. John was born Mark Norton, in Hollywood, California, on February 7, 1956. His parents moved in the early 1960s to Garden Grove, CA where Mark was initially more interested in sports than music. In an interview with KISS Strike, Mark recalled, "I played all sports, in fact I played sports before I got into music. Especially basketball, I mean I tried all sports but basketball is what I excelled in. And when I got into high school we started playing CIF with other teams from L.A. and they were all black and I felt that I wasn't a very good basketball player. I mean they just slip and slide all over you, they jump higher and they run faster and you felt belittled after the first five minutes and I gave it up after that."
Growing up in Southern California, Mark didn't start playing guitar until he was a sophomore in highschool in 1972 when he also started to grow his hair longer, undoubtedly part of that age-group's rebellion from their parents and society. Initially guitar playing started as a hobby, but within a year Mark had become quite serious about it.
As to why he started plaing guitar, Mark recalled, "I guess because the guitar was the new thing happening — it was the sound. I'm from a generation that went through a whole different thing in music, like a culture-type thing. It was the voice of the people. It was a source of rebellion and the guitar was one of the biggest things. I remember watching television and seeing THE BEATLES and THE ROLLING STONES on the 'Ed Sullivan Show'. They didn't have tubas, they had guitars and everyone was going crazy and that put a spark in my mind... The guitar is rock 'n roll. That's what it's all about. From the '50s on, the emphasis was on the guitar sound. Everyone was trying to make the guitar sound like other instruments, but it's not so easy to make other instruments sound like the guitar. The guitar is what's happening"
Mark has a brother, Michael (born 1964), who plays bass. The two would be in bands together following Mark's tenure in KISS. They also have one sister (born 1960).
It was 10 weeks after the surgery that "Entertainment Tonight" caught up with Gene and Shannon at New York's Jean Georges Restaurant, where Shannon reassured "ET", "It is not as painful as it looks. [There were] a lot of painkillers going on. You get to sit in your bed, read magazines and have the children bring you food. [I took] sleeping pills because you have to sleep sitting up for three weeks. That is really hard. Gene only took painkillers two or three times. He didn't feel pain at all."
And was it worth it?
"I am more in love with myself than ever before," Gene said. "I have been delusional about my looks since I was a kid. There is no hope for me now. I am staying with me forever."
Date: Wednesday, April 11, 2007
Time: 12:30 P.M. – 2:30 P.M.
Location: Virgin Megastore
1540 Broadway (between 45th and 46th)
New York, New York 10036
212-921-1020
May 28 - Santiago, Chile @ Teatro Caupolican
May 30 - Cordoba, Argentina @ Estadio Juniors
June 01 - Buenos Aires, Argentina @ Estadio Pepsi Music
June 02 - Sao Paulo, Brazil @ CrediCard Hall
June 04 - Belo Horizonte, Brazil @ Chevrolet Hall
June 05 - Rio De Janeiro, Brazil @ Citibank Hall
June 06 - Curitiba, Brazil @ Master Hall
June 07 - Porto Alegre, Brazil @ Bourbon Hall
ALICE COOPER has set "Along Came a Spider" as the title of his new studio album, tentatively later in the year.
ALICE COOPER's last studio set, "Dirty Diamonds", hit stores in 2005.
Cooper's backing band currently features guitarists Keri Kelli and Damon Johnson (BROTHER CANE), bassist Chuck Garric and drummer Eric Singer (KISS).
Featuring POISON's original members, Bret Michaels (vocals), C.C. DeVille (guitar), Rikki Rockett (drums) and Bobby Dall (bass), "Poison'd" presents the band's first new studio recordings since 2002's "Hollyweird". Produced by Don Was at Hensen Recording Studios in Hollywood, "Poison'd" packs 13 explosive tracks, including new recordings of DAVID BOWIE's "Suffragette City", THE CARS' "You're Just What I Needed", THE ROMANTICS' "What I Like About You", SWEET's "Little Willy", THE MARSHALL TUCKER BAND's "Can't You See" and THE ROLLING STONES' "Dead Flowers". Some of POISON's best previously recorded covers are also featured on "Poison'd", including KISS' "Rock and Roll All Nite", GRAND FUNK RAILROAD's "We're An American Band" and LOGGINS AND MESSINA's "Your Mama Don't Dance".
"POISON is one of the greatest rock 'n roll bands in the world and, after 20 years, they can slam better than ever," says "Poison'd" producer Don Was. "They're powerful musicians and very cool guys. We had a lot of fun making this album and I think you can hear it in the grooves — it's got the jive and is truly alive! I urge everyone to listen to it!"
Following the release of "Poison'd", POISON will hit the road again on June 12 for a major North American summer concert tour. Tour dates and details will be announced and posted to the band's official website as they are confirmed.
In July, VH1 will premiere a new reality show, "Rock of Love with Bret Michaels". VH1's description of the show has "the hard-rockin' POISON front man looking for a woman who can truly keep up with his rock-n-roll lifestyle and not become jealous of his one true passion — performing, which has been the reason for and destruction of most of his relationships."
"Poison'd" (CD and Digital Album) (not final sequence) track listing:
01. Little Willy (SWEET)
02. Suffragette City (DAVID BOWIE)
03. I Never Cry (ALICE COOPER)
04. I Need to Know (TOM PETTY & THE HEARTBREAKERS)
05. Can't You See (THE MARSHALL TUCKER BAND)
06. What I Like About You (THE ROMANTICS)
07. Dead Flowers (THE ROLLING STONES)
08. Just What I Needed (THE CARS)
09. Rock and Roll All Nite (KISS)
10. Squeeze Box (THE WHO)
11. Your Mama Don't Dance (LOGGINS AND MESSINA)
12. You Don't Mess Around With Jim (JIM CROCE)
13. We're An American Band (GRAND FUNK RAILROAD)
Tracks 1-8: produced by Don Was - 2007 (new recordings)
Track 9: produced by Rick Rubin, "Less Than Zero" soundtrack - 1987
Track 10: produced by Thom Panunzio, "Hollyweird" - 2002
Track 11: produced by Tom Werman, "Open Up and Say ... Ahh!" - 1988
Track 12: produced by Ric Browdie - 1987; bonus track on "Look What The Cat Dragged In" reissue (2006)
Track 13: produced by Don Was, "The Best Of Poison: 20 Years Of Rock" - 2006
For those who are unable to attend the event but would like to participate, the full catalog will be available online prior to the auction at this location, where bidders can leave absentee bids beginning April 10, as well as bid live as the House of Blues benefit concert is taking place.
Tickets for the auction and concert will be available beginning April 4 for $18 at www.hob.com.
Among the artists who have never topped the Billboard album chart:
KISS: As the commanders of the Kiss Army — and the sheer purchasing power contained therein — it's rather shocking to learn that Gene Simmons and company have never made it to #1. Thanks to the crossover appeal of "Christine Sixteen", 1977's "Love Gun" got to #4 on the chart, and it wasn't until 1998's "Psycho Circus" that they made it higher: That album topped out at #3.
OZZY OSBOURNE: Whether running solo or as a member of seminal metal act BLACK SABBATH, the Ozzman never managed to battle his way to the top of the Billboard albums chart. SABBATH's "Master of Reality" made it to #8, and a host of Osbourne's solo albums landed in the top 10 (most notably 1995's "Ozzmosis", and his 2001 follow-up, "Down to Earth", both of which debuted at #4).
MOTÖRHEAD: OK, while this one doesn't exactly fall into the "shocking" category, we'd like to state for the record that it's a crime of monumental proportions that Lemmy and his mates have not had a #1 album on the Billboard chart (though 1991's 1916 did reach #142). In fact, Mr. Kilminster's biggest chart success came in 2001, when "WWF: The Music, Vol. 5" — featuring MOTÖRHEAD's "The Game", which wrestler Triple H used as his entrance music — sold 176,000 copies and debuted at #2, proving once again that you should never doubt the broad cross-market appeal of Hunter Hearst Helmsley.
Read the entire report at MTV.com.
Brodsky died March 1 in Stamford of a heart attack, his daughter, Jill Holt, said Saturday. He had moved to Connecticut about five years ago from New York City.
The "Kiss" album cover showed the group positioned against a black background in a pose visually reminiscent of THE BEATLES' "With the Beatles" album (drummer Peter Criss stated that this was the visual effect the band was looking for). Three of the four band members applied their own makeup for the album cover photo, as they usually did; but Peter Criss's makeup was applied by a professional whose work came out looking quite a bit different from the look Criss had established, and to which he would return immediately afterward.
According to Criss, photographer Joel Brodsky thought KISS were literally clowns, and wanted to place balloons behind the group for the shoot. Brodsky, however, has denied this, chalking it up to imagination.
For more information on Joel Brodsky, click here.
"I realized that for me, there is not such a thing as a finished painting, the work is only terminated by practicality," says Paul. "One day I found myself looking at a print of 'Infinite Solitude' hanging in my studio, and felt the urge to give it a new breath of life. I was interested in seeing where solitude might lead. I began painting over the printed canvas to create a sense of dense deep colors, giving way to light, energy, and a new reality. That is why I chose to call it 'After Solitude One'. I am planning to explore and redefine all of my prints. The possibilities are limitless."
Check out the "After Solitude One" 40"x40" artwork at this location (original on pre-printed canvas).
For more than thirty years, Paul Stanley has reigned supreme as one of the single-most recognizable front men in the history of rock and roll. He's the principal songwriter, driving force and unwavering voice of KISS. A visionary and trend-setter since the early 1970s, Paul Stanley's passion for both the musical and visual arts has perhaps been the key to the astonishing ongoing world phenomenon known as KISS. His artistic and visual input has been seen in his designs of KISS album covers, stages and apparel. As an art major and graduate of the prestigious high school of Music and Art in New York City, Paul has returned to his passion for painting to share with you the deep emotions his art conveys. Paul Stanley creates portraits and abstracts that are emotionally charged compositions. He aims to maximize the direct physical impact of his paintings through scale, texture, color and simplicity of images.
For more of Paul's art, click here.
As for Paul, there happened to be a spelling mistake in the advertisement for Paul's solo album "Live to Win" in Classic Rock a few issues ago that some readers found very amusing. Instead of "Bulletproof", one of the the album tracks was misspelled "Bulletpoof". Says Gene, "That's okay. Are you saying Paul pitches for the other side? It happens not to be the case, but I don't think there'd be any problems if he did. Some of your biggest heroes are on the other side. Halford and Freddie and Elton, for example. You English make more of that than any country in the world. In fact, the preconceived notion of the English male is gay. You know that. It's based on the public schoolboy system. Sir Richard Branson told me all about it. The bullying often turns sexual. It's rampant."
Gene also talks about the possibility of the original band getting back together again. 'I personally don't want to," he says. "I love Ace and Peter, always have, and because of my tough love thing I've never been shy about saying they've been drug addicts and alcoholics, and they've destroyed themselves."
Is KISS now more of a heritage center than an actual band? "You can ask the STONES or Elton or anybody who's been around for 30 years or more the same question," Gene replies. "It's valid to say it is; it's valid to say it isn't. You want to know when we're going to do a new KISS record? The answer is: when we feel like it. And by the way, no matter what I said earlier, I reserve the right to change my mind about Ace and Peter any time I choose. 'Never say never' is true. How much did you say you want to pay is to get back together? How many hundreds of millions? People say you can't be bought. Fucking-A right you can. Even God passes the hat around at the end of the sermon."
This once-in-a-lifetime star treatment begins when you and your guests board a plane from anywhere in the continental United States and fly to Los Angeles, where you'll enjoy a two-night stay in deluxe accommodations. Then travel like rock stars in a limousine bound for the restaurant where you'll join Gene and Shannon for dinner. Ask Gene and Shannon what it's like to live in the spotlight, or star in their own real life series on A&E, "Gene Simmons Family Jewels"... and everything else you've been dying to ask.
Finally, you'll take home a rare "Gene Simmons Family Jewels" collector's edition DVD set signed by the entire Simmons family to remember the night you partied with a rock legend!
100% of the net proceeds will benefit the Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS Foundation.
For more information on this unique opportunity, click here.
On the impact KISS still has on the world:
"Well actually KISS is bigger now than it's ever been. We're in 2,000 department stores with KISS fragrances and hair products. We have the KISS coffeehouse franchise in Myrtle Beach coming to New York and Chicago, the KISS CGI movie is already in the works with one of the studios. That will be a $210 million motion picture."
On the things KISS wouldn't be affiliated with:
"Crack, that's not a good one. Cigarettes, nothing to do with cigarettes. As far as I'm concerned, the rest should be a KISS world, and you should all be paying for the privilege of living here."
On KISS' former partnership with NASCAR:
"NASCAR came to KISS to brand one of their cars, actually, a few of them. We had a terrific three-, four-year relationship, but I am happy and proud to say that the Simmons Abramson marketing venture works with the Indy Racing League. Indy cars, they're the fastest cars on earth and in the nicest way with a tip of the hat to NASCAR, they'll leave them in the dust."
On the fact that it's been 10 years since they played in Orlando:
"We've all been busy, although this summer, KISS will be performing three outdoor shows of 50,000 in Wisconsin or places like that just because we want to. There's nothing left to prove to anybody and to be quite frank, we're not playing the game — we do what we want to do and when we're ready, we'll go back out on a full tour. There will be more tours."
On his "unmarried" partner of 23 years, Shannon Tweed:
"She should be teaching all the rest of you women how to stop torturing your guys," he said. 'Get out of the way when he's watching TV, don’t step in front of the TV set when he's dipping chips and watching the ball game. At this moment, all the millions of people, especially the guys who are listening go, 'Yeah, that's right!' None of us go shopping with you and get in the way, when you see a sale.'"
Watch WESH.com's video interview with Gene Simmons at this location.
Check out a photo of Tommy Thayer at Neil Armstrong Middle School at this location.
Kewadin Casinos in Sault Ste. Marie Michigan made the announcement official today, one year after the band was supposed to play at the casino.
Last year Kewadin announced booking the band only having to cancel the engagement when the band decided to tour Japan instead.
1,875 $100 reserved and 8,125 $75 general admission tickets will be sold starting April 2.
The outdoor concert will be staged on July 20.
Purchases can be made via the Internet at www.kewadin.com and phone at 1-800-KEWADIN starting starting in April.
KISS recently partnered with comic-book production company Platinum Studios to create a new comic-book entertainment company called the Kiss Comics Group.
The co-venture aims to be more than a publisher; it plans to expand the comic-book characters' images onto multimedia platforms including print, mobile, online, film, television and licensed merchandise.
First up from the KCG is "Kiss 4K", the story of Simmons, Stanley and other bandmembers' transformation from rock stars to world-protecting warrior spirits. "4K" is being released as a three-foot comic priced at $50, with an intent to make it the largest comic book ever published. It will be followed by merchandise including apparel, video games and comic strips for cell phones.
WHEN:
Thursday, March 22, 2007
12:00pm – 2:00pm
WHERE:
Hard Rock Café New York
1501 Broadway (Corner of 43rd)
Times Square
New York, NY
Gene and the models will be at Hard Rock from 12:00 to 12:45. From there, they will be hitting various spots around NYC.
Gene Simmons and his unconventional family are back and better than ever for an all-new season of the hit real life series "Gene Simmons Family Jewels", premiering with back-to-back episodes on A&E Sunday, March 25 at 9:00 p.m. ET/PT.
."I'd thought about it before," Simmons, 57, the eel-tongued, kabuki-faced guitarist from KISS, tells PEOPLE. "I was aware I had jowls."
"Like Jabba the Hutt!" teases Tweed, 50, Playboy's 1982 Playmate of the Year.
And though she was all for the surgery, "I didn't want him to look younger than me," she says. So in November, the couple, who have been together for 24 years and have two kids together, were ready for new faces.
It's a growing trend among couples, but few are recording their procedures for posterity. In this case, nearly every pre-through-post-op moment was taped for the couple's A&E reality program, Gene Simmons Family Jewels, which begins its second season on March 25.
The show does take some creative license, making it appear that Tweed tricks Simmons into doing it: He acts surprised when he finds himself in the Beverly Hills offices of Dr. Frank Ryan – and hears that the procedures will run over $40,000 each. (Actually, Dr. Ryan hints that the surgery was gratis.)
But there was nothing phony about the scalpels. Simmons was on the table for 11 hours as Dr. Ryan and his team hoisted his jowls, tweaked his eyelids and liposuctioned around his pecs. The next day, Tweed got a facelift and lower lid adjustment.
Tweed says she can't look at the video, but Simmons did. "I saw Dr. Ryan reach under my skin and massage the muscles of my face," he reports. "It was like my face was peeled off and slung over my shoulder."
Wisecracks aside, the couple's two kids, Nick, 18, and Sophie, 14, were genuinely concerned. "I was terrified for my mom," says Nick. "I was afraid they would pull a Joan Crawford, and she would look like she was running in high wind."
Adds Sophie, "My parents have looked the same my whole life. I was afraid they wouldn't look like my parents anymore."
Simmons came home several days later, his head bandaged and his face so swollen Nick said with evident horror, "You look like that guy from the Karate Kid ... Pat Morita." "Thanks, Nick," retorted Simmons. "He's dead."
Sophie simply left the room in tears. "He looked like he had been in a bad car accident," she says.
Tweed remained hospitalized for a few more days with extreme pain following her procedures. "I got a throat infection," she says. "But it took my mind off the face lift."
Ever since Mrs. Lanz's body was found on February 2 in a burned-out minivan that had been set on fire in Nashville, Mr. Petrocelli could not stop thinking about some way to help her daughters. Henry Lanz, the estranged husband of the Scott Township woman found shot to death, has been charged with homicide and conspiracy, local police report. Members of Paula (Lockhart) Lanz's family said the two little girls, ages 5 and 2, have been temporarily placed with a local couple until a final hearing on placement next month.
Mrs. Lanz's high school graduating class has established a trust fund for the girls at PNC Bank. Mr. Petrocelli, a former drummer from Pittsburgh who meets musicians nationwide through his Pro-Mark position, saw an opportunity to raise more money using his industry connections. Pro-Mark Corporation, the world's largest manufacturer of drumsticks, mallets and percussion accessories, exports products to over 100 countries.
"Being a member of the musical community, I called upon some friends that I knew would step up to the plate and help with our cause," he relates. "From this point on, let them be known as musical missionaries. This charity auction for these precious girls is just one example of how people can donate to their future care."
Donations can also be made at any branch or sent to: Lanz Children Fund, c/o PNC Bank, U.S. Steel Tower, 600 Grant St., Pittsburgh 15219.
The auction will take place on eBay on March 16, 2007 and will run through March 26, 2007. The auction can be located by logging onto eBay.com, clicking the advance search button and typing in SMPMUSIC04 to the "find by seller" field.
The charity auction packages also include memorabilia from current and former members of STYX, KISS, DAVID LEE ROTH, MEGADETH, LENNY KRAVITZ, PUDDLE OF MUDD, THE VANDALS, Neil Peart (RUSH), ZZ TOP, BON JOVI, VAN HALEN, ALAN JACKSON, and many more.
Mrs. Lanz's high school class of 1986, who just celebrated their 20th high school reunion with her in attendance in November, has been mourning their classmate through a web site they organized. The group has tried to make sense of a tragedy that has left two young casualties behind, mourning the loss of their beloved mother. The fund was started by former classmate and friend, Kristin (Zappa) Minneci, who had known Mrs. Lanz since elementary school. When she learned of the murder, Mrs. Minneci was stunned and in complete disbelief.
"I couldn't believe she was gone, especially in the manner that it happened," she relates. "Memories of things we did as kids came flooding back. We had recently reconnected after 20 years and I was looking forward to getting to know her again."
Mrs. Minneci spearheaded the fund drive for the daughters "who were now left motherless and fatherless as well." Her classmates were in agreement that something should be done to help them later in life. And, she felt it was the least she could do for a close friend who everyone still describes as a wonderful, energetic person with a great sense of humor.
"It breaks my heart that her daughters will not get to know Paula and how amazing she was, as they are so young," says Mrs. Minneci. "I hope they come to know that Paula touched a lot of people's lives and that the fund is a testament to that. Hopefully the fund will be able to help the girls later in life, in a manner Paula would want, like going towards their college education. With our classmates and community coming together, we can do something for those little girls that Paula can't."
The following links are for information about this tragic event: Article#1, Article#2.
* "Gene Simmons House Of Horrors" — A quarterly horror anthology debuting in July with a special cover by the inimitable creator of Spawn, Todd McFarlane. The comic will also feature and featuring intros and outros written by the book's host, Gene Simmons himself. Issue 1 will feature stories written by Chris Ryall, Tom Waltz, Dwight MacPherson, Sean Taylor, and two talented progeny, Alan Moore's daughter Leah Moore (with John Reppion), and Nick Simmons, too.
* "Zipper" — A stranger in a strange land tale like no other, created by Gene Simmons and scripted by Tom Waltz
* "Dominatrix" — T & A meets CIA in a conspiracy and cleavage-laden series created by Gene Simmons written by Sean Taylor
* "Indy— Race Of The Galaxies" — A contest of racing champions that takes place in deep space, on alien worlds, and features a cast of millions in a tale that appeals to young and old alike, also created by Gene Simmons and written by Tom Waltz.
In addition to writing his dialogue on "Gene Simmons House Of Horrors", Gene will also contribute an editorial page, "Speaking in Tongues," in these issues as well. More detailed information on all the Simmons Comics Group titles will be forthcoming.
In addition to writing and drawing a title of his own under the IDW banner, "Nick Simmons' Skullduggery", Nick Simmons, Gene Simmons' 17-year-old son and a star in his own right, thanks to the smash-hit "Gene Simmons Family Jewels" on the A&E network, will debut his short prose story, "The Child," in the back of IDW's comic books, and other stories of his will also be featured in the "Gene Simmons House Of Horrors" quarterly anthology.
Nick and Gene both will be appearing at the WizardWorld Los Angeles comic convention on March 17 to launch Simmons Comics Group, discuss these projects, and do signings with fans. Father and son will be appearing at IDW Publishing's panel on Saturday, March 17 at 11 AM (room #511, the Martin Nodell Room). Immediately following the panel, Gene and Nick will be appearing in the IDW Publishing booth (space # 715) and signing large posters of their exciting new titles, "Gene Simmons House Of Horrors" (featuring Todd McFarlane's art), "Dominatrix" (art by Alex Garner), and "Skullduggery" (art by Nick Simmons).
"I am a child of comic books. My entire life has been shaped and influenced by the panel graphic artform — and an art form, it is," said Gene Simmons. "I lived, breathed and dreamed comics. Our Marvel KISS Comics in the '70s were the biggest sellers of the day. I was proud to actually BE a superhero in those books. I'm proud to say our Simmons Comics Group is the realization of a dream: And, to partner with IDW, a publishing entity that produces quality comic books and graphic novels of the highest order, is a privilege. We intend on producing grade A material by the best writers and artists. And, we will keep the door open for new talent. Onward!"
"There's an easy tendency to compare this venture to Gene's past and present Kiss Comics ventures, but this is a completely different beast (or Demon)," said IDW's Publisher/Editor-in-Chief Chris Ryall. "Both imprints spring from Gene's fertile, always-spinning mind, but to be in business with Gene in the creation of some all-new comics properties is a the part of this that really excites me. Gene's made no secret of his decades-long love of comics, and he's tapped into that love to create some really solid properties here. He came to us with fully fleshed-out worlds, and we're going to take what he's done and work together to produce some damned good comics that should outlive either one of us. Which is saying something, since I'm pretty sure Gene's immortal."
The Simmons Comics Group will be launching in spring 2007.
For more information, visit Comic Book Resources.
Autism is a complex neurobiological disorder that is the fastest growing developmental disability in the United States, affecting one in every 150 children born today. The cause of autism is still unknown and a cure does not exist.
"Autism is such a devastating disorder for so many families, and its rate of prevalence is increasing at an alarming rate," said Tom Calderone, Executive Vice President and General Manager, VH1. "VH1 Classic has dedicated itself to making an impact on autism because many of our viewers are parents who are now dealing with this issue. We've also found over the years that this disorder has touched the lives of many of the artists and musicians that we work with at VH1 Classic."
"Rock Autism" will use the influence of VH1 Classic and its connections with classic rock artists to make a measurable impact in this field by bringing awareness to the facts about autism, and by raising funds for autism organizations.
The campaign will feature both on and off-air components, including public service announcements, VH1 Classic news breaks, and on-air fundraising stunts. The April launch will also include "Pay to Play," a fundraiser where viewers can go online and make a donation in exchange for VH1 Classic playing their favorite classic video. Proceeds from this element will go to The Cure Autism Now Foundation. VH1 Classic previously used "Pay to Play" as a fundraiser after Hurricane Katrina to raise funds for Mercy Corps, an international humanitarian relief organization. This partnership with Mercy Corps was VH1 Classic's first public affairs effort and successfully raised over $150,000 for hurricane relief.
In addition, a website will be created at www.rockautism.vh1classic.com where viewers can access information on autism, link to autism organizations, and learn about upcoming fundraising events and auctions in conjunction with the initiative.
He succumbed to an apparent heart attack at his home in Stamford, Conn., on March 1.
Brodsky shot more than 400 album covers throughout his career, including Van Morrison's "Astral Weeks," Isaac Hayes' "Black Moses" and Kiss' self-titled 1974 debut. His images of the Doors graced the group's first two albums, 1967's "The Doors" and "Strange Days," as well as 1969's "The Soft Parade."
Brodsky, born October 7, 1939, in Brooklyn, N.Y., followed his graduation from Syracuse University with service in the U.S. Army in the early 1960s.
In 1966, he opened a photo studio in New York, where he would soon take the famous photographs of Morrison. Images from this session are among the most widely circulated photos of the Doors and have been used on a plethora of releases including 1985's "The Best of the Doors."
In a 1981 interview, Brodsky said of that first encounter with the Doors: "I always thought it was sort of funny that the pictures of Morrison from that session were the most used. Jim was totally plastered."
The shoot was later re-created by director Oliver Stone for "The Doors," though the photographer character was based on Sixteen magazine editor Gloria Stavers.
Other artists that sat for Brodsky's camera include Joan Baez, James Brown, Harry Chapin, Judy Collins, Aretha Franklin, Buddy Guy, John Lee Hooker, Iggy Pop and the Stooges, the MC5 and Tom Waits.
Later in his career, Brodsky photographed advertisements for Avon, Revlon, Bloomingdale's and Paul Stuart. He also directed TV commercials for Revlon.
Brodsky is survived by his wife Valerie, three daughters, a sister and three granddaughters.
"Rap better figure out something new, because the next group of guys who say 'Wassup' is not gonna be original enough. Very soon that clock will stop ticking, and it's gonna have to move to that next step, or something else will come and push it out of the way as well. Also I'd like to hear a rapper who can really speak English exceedingly well, somebody who can pronounce every single word, doesn't make up his own language and just is a breath of fresh air. Someone who comes in with a suit and tie and really comes off as well dressed [and] well educated just to be different."
In other KISS-related news, a 50-minute video of legendary photographer Bob Gruen talking about his career — including his work with KISS, JOHN LENNON, IGGY POP, THE WHO, ROLLING STONES and NEW YORK DOLLS — has been posted online at this location (Windows Media).
Paul Stanley's Charlotte Wentworth Gallery appearances:
Friday May 4, 2007 6-9 PM & Saturday May 5, 2007 6-9 PM
Wentworth Gallery - South Park Mall
4400 Sharon Road
Charlotte, NC
For details, call (704) 365-2733.
For more than thirty years, Paul Stanley has reigned supreme as one of the single-most recognizable front men in the history of rock and roll. He's the principal songwriter, driving force and unwavering voice of KISS. A visionary and trend-setter since the early 1970s, Paul Stanley's passion for both the musical and visual arts has perhaps been the key to the astonishing ongoing world phenomenon known as KISS. His artistic and visual input has been seen in his designs of KISS album covers, stages and apparel. As an art major and graduate of the prestigious high school of Music and Art in NYC, Paul has returned to his passion for painting to share with you the deep emotions his art conveys. Paul Stanley creates portraits and abstracts that are emotionally charged compositions. He aims to maximize the direct physical impact of his paintings through scale, texture, color and simplicity of images.
As one of the nation's fine art galleries, Wentworth Gallery features a wide selection of originals, limited edition prints and sculptures from the world's most acclaimed artists. Wentworth Gallery is responsible for bringing the works of many prominent contemporary and international fine artists to the New Jersey area such as Alexandra Nechita, as well as some of the world's most collected and heralded masters such as Picasso, Chagall, and Miro, among others. Stop by any one of Wentworth Gallery's 20 retail locations or visit www.wentworthgallery.com for information on featured artists, upcoming exhibits, online orders and directions to a Wentworth Gallery near you.
For more information on Moneybag, click here.
"Gene [Simmons, KISS bassist/vocalist] recently asked Tommy to join him to perform at a rally for the U.S. Armed Forces at Camp Pendleton on Friday, March 9th. The ensuing concert performance will be filmed for an upcoming 'Gene Simmons Family Jewels' television special airing Memorial Day Weekend in May on A&E.
"After visiting the Marines at Camp Pendleton recently, Gene had the idea that he'd like to give back to the troops and perform at a rally for the Army, Navy, Air Force and Marines. Tommy and Gene devised a medley of the famed Army, Navy, Air Force and Marine anthems à la rock & roll style, which they will perform together onstage with the Camp Pendleton Marine band."
So what if he's nicknamed the Demon? In new episodes of this oddly endearing family show, the happily unmarried Kiss front man discusses having another child and welcomes chances to prove that rock gods make good parents, too.
For more information, click here.
For more than thirty years, Paul Stanley has reigned supreme as one of the single-most recognizable front men in the history of rock and roll. He's the principal songwriter, driving force and unwavering voice of KISS. A visionary and trend-setter since the early 1970s, Paul Stanley's passion for both the musical and visual arts has perhaps been the key to the astonishing ongoing world phenomenon known as KISS. His artistic and visual input has been seen in his designs of KISS album covers, stages and apparel. As an art major and graduate of the prestigious high school of Music and Art in NYC, Paul has returned to his passion for painting to share with you the deep emotions his art conveys. Paul Stanley creates portraits and abstracts that are emotionally charged compositions. He aims to maximize the direct physical impact of his paintings through scale, texture, color and simplicity of images.
Thursday, July 19:
04:30 DENNIS DEYOUNG
06:30 THE MICK FLEETWOOD BAND
08:45 DEEP PURPLE
11:00 BOSTON
Friday, July 20:
02:15 SALIVA
04:15 UNCLE KRACKER
06:30 GRAND FUNK RAILROAD
08:45 TBA
11:00 GODSMACK
Saturday, July 21:
02:15 CROSS CANADIAN RAGWEED
04:15 TRAGICALLY HIP
06:30 COLLECTIVE SOUL
08:45 CHICAGO
11:00 KISS
Sunday, July 22:
01:45 COREY STEVENS
03:45 GOV'T MULE
06:00 TBA
08:15 TBA
10:30 3 DOORS DOWN
So why did the Kiss frontman and former Playboy Playmate of the Year decide to go for dual face lifts on two episodes airing April 1?
"Honest to God, it just sort of happened," says Simmons, 57, who had a face lift and liposuction, to be featured on two April 1 episodes.
What you'll see, according to Simmons, is "like a biology class … more fascinating than gory."
Tweed, who turns 50 March 10, had her face lift done by the same Beverly Hills surgeon. "Plastic surgery was Gene's idea. But I wasn't going to let him look younger than me," she says.
Family Jewels averaged 1.3 million viewers last season, A&E's highest-rated original series since 2004's Dog the Bounty Hunter. That led to this new 20-episode season.
"They are an incredibly functional, loving family," says Robert Sharenow, A&E's chief of non-fiction programming. "It's surprising and unexpected."
"Prophecy - A Tribute to Eric Carr" is a tribute album honoring late KISS drummer, Eric Carr. The album features songs written and performed by singer/songwriter Ralph E. Carle, as well as special appearances by Eric Carr himself. Opening with a rare radio I.D. recorded by Eric Carr, "Prophecy" shows a wide range of musical style and instrumentation. In addition, the album includes two different versions of "Your Turn to Cry", a pre-KISS song written and performed by Eric Carr (with early band THE CELLARMEN) and also covered by Ralph E. Carle. "Prophecy" made its debut at the New York City KISS Expo on April 30, 2000, and has become a widely recognized addition to many KISS collections.
"Prophecy" was the very first offering of TributeAlbuma.com. Since its release, TributeAlbums.com has released other popular tribute albums, including "Chinese Hypocrisy" (GUNS N' ROSES), "KISS Cover to Cover" (KISS), and "Complete Balanced Breakfast" (cartoon theme songs).
The lead singer of Lisa & the Street Survivors is not talking. Two guitarists are missing. And the drummer doesn't want to be here. Yet Paul Stanley of KISS is waiting to sing with them. Dickey Betts of the Allman Brothers has his guitar plugged in. And former Lynyrd Skynyrd drummer Artimus Pyle has agreed to play congas – all with a band that's been together less than four days!
If you ever thirsted for the rock-star lifestyle, this is your place to quench it: the annual Rock 'N' Roll Fantasy Camp in Hollywood.
"This morning I woke up at 4:30 with the realization of what was happening and I started bawling," says the band's namesake, Lisa Moreno, 44, of Seal Beach, who slept a total of four hours her first three nights in camp. "I realized I've got to hold it together."
Her week's been a whirlwind. On Thursday, she was assigned a band. On Friday, they began to gel. On Saturday, they nearly broke up. And on Sunday, they jammed with Brian Wilson of the Beach Boys.
"My first time singing," says guitarist Gary Hofstetter, 52, of Boston, "and I'm six feet away from a guy who's like the Beatles to me!"
But now it's five minutes till showtime and something is amiss.
"My first two camps, I had a blast," says drummer Alan Jenkins, 47, of Huntsville, Ala., standing off to the side. "This time, I'm just looking forward to it being over with. I've never wanted anything to be so over."
Welcome to the world of rock 'n' roll.
TRYOUTS
This is how rock stardom begins: You go to the bathroom – several times. You can't eat – you're too nervous. You don't know anyone, and you hope you can just remember the words or the chords or the beat.
Camper #35 fidgets, awaiting her turn.
"Wow, this is really, really it," she says. "I feel like I'm going on 'American Idol.'
It is audition day for 85 campers – an assortment of doctors, software engineers and real estate executives, many of whom last played in bands when The Captain & Tennille topped the charts in the '70s.
All that's required is $9,500 and five days of your time. No experience necessary. Campers have flown in from Detroit, Long Island, Chattanooga, you name it.
"I've never done this before," says Jim Broussalian of San Diego, whose wife bought his ticket as a 50th birthday present. "I've never been in a working band in the studio or on stage. Even the idea of rehearsing is very exciting to me."
Wait till he starts jamming with Jeff "Skunk" Baxter of the Doobie Brothers, Jane Wiedlin of the Go-Go's or Clem Burke of Blondie – three of the 13 counselors whose job it is to whip bands into shape for Monday's Battle of the Bands.
Today's audition will determine who plays in which band, so #35 is anxious. She wants to do well. One last spray of citric mist for her throat, and her number is called. Lisa Moreno takes the stage.
Her backup band includes Bad Company drummer Simon Kirke, Night Ranger lead singer Kelly Keagy and Guns N' Roses keyboardist Teddy Andreadis. When they launch into the Beatles' "Help," her rock 'n' roll fantasy begins.
Except she forgets some words. And the band forgets some changes. And two guitarists are missing. They run up to the stage as the song ends.
"I'm disappointed," Moreno says later, admitting she wants to win the Battle of the Bands. "I just want to get in a band, first, that's talented and, second, that all gets along."
She's not sure she'll get either.
STAR POWER
The lead singer of Poison is here! Campers scurry for cameras, Sharpie pens, guitar cases and phones. Phones? Moreno quickly rings her girlfriend in Kansas.
"Angie, I might have an opportunity for you to talk to Bret Michaels," she says to the voice mail. "You better be available when I call back."
It's Day 2 of Rock 'N' Roll Fantasy Camp and Moreno is now an old hand at this. She landed in a seven-piece band that will be a strong contender in the Battle of the Bands.
Their counselor is a long-haired Yosemite Sam character tucked under a cowboy hat: Artimus Pyle, who crawled from the wreckage of a 1977 plane crash that killed several members of Lynyrd Skynyrd.
Each day, as they practice in their own studio, visiting rock dignitaries pop in to listen, jam, pose for pictures and sign autographs.
Rock 'N' Roll Fantasy Camp can be many things: A chance to learn, to shine or mingle. But the engine that drives this machine is the constant presence of rock stars.
Where else could Fullerton pulmonologist Jim Pearle trade guitar licks with Steely Dan virtuoso "Skunk" Baxter, Allman Brothers legend Dickey Betts and heavy metal hero Mark Slaughter all on the same weekend?
"My one dubious claim to fame was when Cream played at our college, and they borrowed my amp." says Pearle, 58, a self-described mediocre player. "I'm scared to death, but they're just a bunch of nice guys having a fun time."
One camper – a drummer – brings a guitar just for autographs. Another brings a four-foot portrait of Steve Vai for the guest guitarist to sign. One man pulls a guitar body – he removed the neck at home – from a laptop case.
"Easier to carry," he says.
Moreno seeks no autographs, just a few seconds of Michaels' time to talk with her friend in Kansas, now on the phone.
"Hello, beautiful girl in Kansas named Angie," he says, repeating Moreno's introduction.
They chat, and he offers Angie backstage passes to his next concert in Kansas. Just like that.
"She was cool and had a sexy voice," Michaels says on the way out, "so it was a win-win!"
KISS AND MAKE UP
Rock 'N' Roll Fantasy Camp offers more than fantasy, however. It offers reality – like getting seven people to agree on anything, especially with egos on the line, money at stake and varying tastes and talents. Friday's love fest turns into today's gut test.
Drummer Alan Jenkins, back for his third camp, wants the Street Survivors to play harder rock, but feels he has no say.
"At other camps, I went home relaxed," says the Tennessee office-park developer. "I felt like a kid again. This time it's just weird."
Pyle holds a band meeting to quiet the tension. Everyone gets a say, but there is another wrinkle. No one has ever heard the KISS song "I Want You" that they're supposed to play with Paul Stanley. The band asks to play an original song instead. Again, Pyle steers them back on course.
"If we don't do a KISS song, it would insult Paul," says the gracious Southern rocker who was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame last year. "I used to think it was not my cup of tea, too. But these guys, man, they rock, honest to God, and I changed my opinion."
By the time Stanley enters the studio to jam, Pyle has the band blasting away. Stanley steps on stage and trades vocals with Moreno.
"I was so nervous," she says later. "He came face-to-face with me and I realized, 'This is Paul Stanley of KISS! They're an empire!'"
Stanley concedes they picked a tough KISS song. When told they picked it from a hat, he jokes, "I think you picked out of the wrong hat."
He then offers some final advice to Moreno.
"At the end of the song, try to get everyone singing with you," he says. "And you know what else works? Smoke bombs. And lasers."
FANS TO FRIENDS
Something strange is happening here – and we're not talking about the younger campers who perform shirtless or the older campers whose shirts can't hide midriff bulge. It's this: Campers arrive as fans but slowly become friends with their idols.
It happens every year.
Lisa & the Street Survivors' guitarist Hofstetter tells how he still e-mails his first counselor, Elliot Easton of the Cars. Bass player David Held, 51, of San Diego tells how he befriended Cheap Trick bass player Tom Petersson after sitting in with the band last year.
The friendships, the feedback and the all-day practices are paying dividends for the Street Survivors. They've cleared some hurdles, tightened their songs and are starting to sound like a cohesive band.
"I'm singing a Beach Boys song for Brian Wilson," Moreno says Sunday. "I'm fronting a band at the House of Blues. And people like Bret Michaels told me my vocals were really good. How do you put in words what is happening here? It's fulfilling a dream."
All that's left is the Battle of the Bands.
"FILLS YOU UP"
Stevie Wonder plays here. And Jewel. The Strokes and Elvis Costello. These are the bands that play at the House of Blues on the Sunset Strip.
Tonight it will showcase 13 unknown bands. One features a singer who's never sung in public. One features a man happy to play tambourine. And one features Jim Broussalian, who just started a pomegranate juice company in Newport Beach, and is thrilled merely to be chunking chords on his Fender guitar.
"I just don't want to let my nerves or fears take away from the night," he says, taking in the scene of 85 campers, friends and families, many posing in front of the stage with guitars.
Five minutes before showtime, Lisa and the Street Survivors are looking for two guitarists lost in the crowd. The drummer is vowing to break as many drumheads as he can. And Moreno's refusing to talk.
Asked what's going on, she takes a reporter's notebook and scribbles: "A little nervous, but Mark Slaughter helped me with a vocal exercise and he said not to talk."
Mark Slaughter – her new pal. Like Artimus Pyle, who's given everyone in the band his home phone number and asked them to keep in touch.
Somehow, the guitarists are found, the band hits the stage and for 10 minutes they are rock stars playing with Paul Stanley and Dickey Betts. Even their drummer is smiling.
"That was fun! That was fun," he says coming off stage, hugging his band mates.
"Pure adrenaline," Moreno says. "Like when you're so happy it just fills you up."
It is late when the Street Survivors finally learn their fate, four days after meeting like kindergartners on the first day of school. No awards. But already they are talking about staying in touch, seeing Artimus Pyle on his next tour and returning next year – to see old friends.
It has been erroneously reported on various web sites and wire services that the legendary guitarist had committed suicide.
Not so!
"I don't know how this ridiculous rumor got started," smiles Ace, as he eats his daily allotment of wheat germ, preparing to jump back on his treadmill.
In a January 2006 interview with Guitar World magazine, Frehley had the following to say regarding his current projects: "I've been working on a solo album and a few film projects. I'd love to do an instructional video, but I want it to be comedic. [Laughs] I don't want it to be just another boring how-to-play video. I may not be the world's greatest guitarist, but at least I'm never boring."
Q: Lydia, you have appeared at a few conventions to promote your book. What has the response been like from the fans at these conventions?
Lydia: I have attended only two KISS Expos where I promoted my book "Sealed With A Kiss". At the first one in Allentown, Pennsylvania I didn't even have the book for sale. I only had my copy of the book, so I let the fans look through it. Some fans didn't even want to look at it, they wanted to be surprised when they bought it and digest it all by themselves. The other Expo in Chicago, Illinois, was great. All the fans were so nice and everyone loved the book.
Q: Did you approach all the big publishing companies before you went ahead with the book and have any mainstream publishing houses approached you about taking on your book since then and if not, would you be open to the idea if the chance happened to come along somewhere down the line?
Lydia: In 2003 I signed a one-year contract with a literary agent group. I really don't know just how hard they shopped my book, but I do know that I only received three rejections and they were from some of the big publishing houses. They are listed in the front of my book, and one of them actually said the reason they didn't want to do a book on KISS was because Gene Simmons had flooded the market with KISS books. No publishing houses have approached me, because my book is not in the stores and they don't have access to it. I am always open to ideas.
Q: In every publication I've read on KISS it's obvious that you supported Peter in a huge way in the early years and it must have been very tough in those formative years. After your split with Peter he was quoted as saying that you weren't "growing with him and you were holding him back." Just how hurtful was that knowing that you'd been there for him all that time?
Lydia: I know the interview that you are talking about and believe me that is probably the one comment from Peter that hurt me the most. As far as growing, Peter had nothing else to say. He was cheating on me and he had to put the blame on me to make himself look good. Yeah, I wasn't growing, I wasn't growing into a drug addict like he was. It is obvious that I have grown, or I would not have been able to take on such a huge project as this book was. I knew nothing about the book or publishing industry in the summer of 2005 when I started this project. I learned as I went along and I did this book with the help of five guys that live all around the USA. I think that this book says enough to prove that I have grown. What has Peter done in the past five years?
Q: Have you heard any feedback or comment from Gene, Paul, Ace or Peter on your great book?
Lydia: No, I have not heard any comments directly from any of them. I have heard (from a friend) that Ace loves it, Paul had something negative to say about it, but that was before he bought it. Peter saw it briefly (a fan showed it to him) at a Chiller Convention in October, 2006. I heard he said it looked really nice from the little he saw, and I really don't know if Gene has seen it. Tommy Thayer bought it, e-mailed me and said I did a fantastic job. I guess that answers my doubts whether Gene has seen it or not. Ha! Ha!
Read the entire question-and-answer session at www.thekissarmy.com.
Apr. 18 - London, UK
Apr. 21 - Nottingham, UK
Apr. 22 - Sheffield, UK
Apr. 23 - Bradford, UK
Apr. 27 - Barcelona, Spain
Apr. 28 - Bilbao, Spain
Apr. 29 - Madrid, Spain
May 03 - Munich, Germany
May 04 - Lichtenfels, Germany
For more information, visit www.myspace.com/shamelessonline.
"These tracks are classic demos and live rockers that I have salvaged and re-mastered from my original cassette recordings to be enjoyed today," says BLACK 'N BLUE frontman Jaime St. James (currently also in WARRANT). "I have also thown in my 2002 'Hell Yeah' demos to round out a very rare BNB rock 'n' roll blast from the past."
BLACK 'N BLUE formed in 1981 out of Portland, Oregon and released its self-titled debut album on Geffen Records in 1984. The group went on to release four albums, including its self-titled debut, which featured the hit "Hold On To 18". The band would later hook up with Gene Simmons from KISS, who produced the albums "Nasty Nasty" and "In Heat".
The group was formed by Jaime St. James alongside current KISS guitarist Tommy Thayer (guitar), Jeff Warner (guitar), Patrick Young (bass) and Pete Holmes (drums).
"Rarities" track listing:
01. Violent Kid (1982) (Thayer, St. James)
02. Sign In Blood (1983) (Thayer, St. James)
03. Wicked Bitch (1983) (St. James)
04. Cold Heart (1983) (Thayer, St. James)
05. Hold On To 18 (1983) (Thayer, St. James)
06. Lickety Split (1986) (Thayer, St. James)
07. Serious Drag (2002) (St. James)
08. So Long (2002) (St. James)
09. Hell Yeah (2002) (St. James)
10. Autoblast (1984) Live (Thayer, St. James, Warner)
11. I'm The King (1984) Live (Thayer, St. James, Warner, Young, Holmes)
The cost of the five-day retreat, which took place Feb. 15-19 in Hollywood, is $9,499. Other musicians that participated in the Camp include Bret Michaels (POISON), Scott Ian (ANTHRAX), Sully Erna (GODSMACK), Bruce Kulick (ex-KISS) and Mark Slaughter (SLAUGHTER).
The cost of the five-day retreat, which will take place Feb. 15-19 in Hollywood, is $9,499, according to organizers. The camp culminates in a Battle of the Bands blowout at the House of Blues on Sunset in Hollywood, California. Other musicians that are participating include Bret Michaels (POISON), Scott Ian (ANTHRAX), Sully Erna (GODSMACK), and Mark Slaughter (SLAUGHTER).
Check out the entire interview with Rafael, who has his own CD out ("Acid Guitar"), in issue 58 of Kiss Kollector magazine. Issue 59 of the magazine will include an interview with Paul's other guitarist, Jim McGorman. He'll be talking about the U.S. leg of Paul's solo tour since Jim won't be able to join Paul and the band on the Australian leg of the tour because he's got a commitment to Avril Lavigne's upcoming tour.
The company, based in Beverly Hills, California, had planned to raise the money to fund the launch of music- and celebrity-driven programs whose profanity and nudity would bump against Federal Communications Commission decency regulations if aired on broadcast or cable TV, according to a government filing.
The company’s web site, NGTV.com, had a slick animated film promoting the channel's launch Feb. 24. Calls to the company co-president, Kourosh Taj, and one of the IPO's underwriters, S.W. Bach & Co., by RedHerring.com were not immediately returned and it was unclear how Thursday's (Feb. 15) IPO withdrawal would affect the programming rollout.
Read more at RedHerring.com.
Like RUSH and DONNA SUMMER (two other artists excluded from the Hall), KISS' sales heyday came long before 1991, when SoundScan began tabulating record sales. They sold (and their label pressed) a ton of records in the '70s; these SoundScan-era numbers will represent just a fraction of those older titles' totals. Still, it's always intriguing to see what's continuing to sell and what's mired in the doledrums.
The long list follows.
Year of release Title: Sales
1974 "Kiss": 174,000
1974 "Hotter Than Hell": 153,000
1975 "Dressed to Kill": 166,000
1975 "Alive": 258,000
1976 "Destroyer": 580,000
1976 "Rock and Roll Over": 183,000
1977 "Love Gun": 193,000
1977 "Alive II": 295,000
1978 "Double Platinum": 510,000
1978 "Peter Criss": 23,000
1978 "Ace Frehley": 46,000
1978 "Gene Simmons": 31,000
1978 "Paul Stanley": 33,000
1979 "Dynasty": 157,000
1980 "Unmasked": 171,000
1981 "Music From The Elder": 110,000
1982 "Creatures of the Night": 148,000
1983 "Lick It Up": 92,000
1984 "Animalize": 93,000
1985 "Asylum": 81,000
1987 "Crazy Nights": 104,000
1988 "Smashes, Thrashes & Hits": 810,000
1989 "Hot in the Shade": 112,000
1990 "First Kiss": 786 (hmm..., what is this, anyway?)
1992 "Revenge": 596,000
1993 "Alive III": 552,000
1996 "MTV Unplugged": 300,000
1996 "You Wanted the Best, You Got the Best!!": 329,000
1997 "Greatest Kiss": 394,000
1997 "Carnival of Souls - The Final Sessions": 175,000
1998 "Psycho Circus": 479,000
2001 "Box Set": 141,000
2002 "Very Best": 433,000
2003 "The Millennium Collection": 311,000
2003 "Symphony: Alive IV": 134,000
2005 "Gold" ('74-'82): 105,000
Total: 8.6 million
Barnes writes: "So what can we conclude about latter-day KISS fans from all this? They like hits collections: 'Smashes, Thrashes' is the band's best-selling album of the SoundScan era, and other, largely redundant collections have solid sales.
"The live albums score well, especially 'III', which actually came out during the SoundScan era.
"'Destroyer' is by far the best seller of the early studio albums. Hard to argue with this esthetically, considering the metafictional pinnacle that is 'Detroit Rock City' is on this album.
"There are about 90,000-100,000 fans out there that have to have everything in CD form. Except the four simultaneously released solo albums from 1978. And Ace is still winning that battle (of course, he had the only hit from the releases, his cover of HELLO's 'New York Groove')."
Wentworth will hold another Paul Stanley art exhibition today (Saturday, February 10) at their Short Hills, NJ location. Paul will appear at the gallery from 4:00 p.m. until 7:00 p.m.
Wentworth Gallery, one of the nation's leading fine art retailers, will present two art exhibitions by Paul Stanley. He will make two special appearances at the Wentworth Galleries on Friday, February 9 in Hackensack and on Saturday, February 10 in Short Hills. Both appearances are open to the public and free of charge.
Paul Stanley's New Jersey Wentworth Gallery appearances:
Friday February 9, 2007
6-9 PM
Wentworth Gallery
Riverside Square Mall 171 Riverside Square
Hackensack, NJ
Saturday, February 10, 2007
4-7 PM
Wentworth Gallery
Short Hills Mall
1200 Morris Turnpike
Short Hills, NJ
For more than thirty years, Paul Stanley has reigned supreme as one of the single-most recognizable front men in the history of rock and roll. He's the principal songwriter, driving force and unwavering voice of KISS. A visionary and trend-setter since the early 1970s, Paul Stanley's passion for both the musical and visual arts has perhaps been the key to the astonishing ongoing world phenomenon known as KISS. His artistic and visual input has been seen in his designs of KISS album covers, stages and apparel. As an art major and graduate of the prestigious high school of Music and Art in NYC, Paul has returned to his passion for painting to share with you the deep emotions his art conveys. Paul Stanley creates portraits and abstracts that are emotionally charged compositions. He aims to maximize the direct physical impact of his paintings through scale, texture, color and simplicity of images.
As one of the nation's fine art galleries, Wentworth Gallery features a wide selection of originals, limited edition prints and sculptures from the world's most acclaimed artists. Wentworth Gallery is responsible for bringing the works of many prominent contemporary and international fine artists to the New Jersey area such as Alexandra Nechita, as well as some of the world's most collected and heralded masters such as Picasso, Chagall, and Miro, among others. Stop by any one of Wentworth Gallery's 20 retail locations or visit www.wentworthgallery.com for information on featured artists, upcoming exhibits, online orders and directions to a Wentworth Gallery near you.
The Plain Dealer: Tell us about your Cleveland roots.
Eric Singer: I graduated from Euclid High School in 1976 and moved out to California in 1983 or 1984. Cleveland was such a good music scene and produced a lot of good players, but at some point you've got to go where things are happening. All the Cleveland musicians I know went to New York or L.A.; L.A. has warmer weather so I headed out there.
The Plain Dealer: KISS is notorious for calling it quits, then reuniting for yet another farewell tour. Any plans for this year?
Eric Singer: Not that I'm aware of. We played some shows last year in Japan and a few on the West Coast. I have begun work on a new album for ALICE COOPER and I think we'll tour in support of that later this year.
The Plain Dealer: To what do you attribute the longevity of KISS?
Eric Singer: Whether we like it or not, KISS is a part of Americana. They're like Coca-Cola or Chevrolet.
The Plain Dealer: How do you feel about KISS tribute bands, like MR. SPEED, which will be playing at tomorrow's [KISS] expo [from 1 to 8 p.m. Saturday at the Holiday Inn Cleveland Airport, 4181 West 150th St.]?
Eric Singer: If anything is done well, then it's cool.
The Plain Dealer: What's Alice Cooper like in person?
Eric Singer: Just the nicest guy in the world. He has an incredible amount of energy for a guy his age. He works so hard he puts me to shame. When he comes onstage, he'll whack me with his riding crop and ask me how I'm doing.
The Plain Dealer: Do you enjoy expos like the one you'll be attending tomorrow?
Eric Singer: I do. A lot of times on tour you don't get the chance to meet many of the fans. You're always on the move. This is nice because you get a chance to answer questions and mingle with the people.
MINIKISS last year traveled to Sweden to shoot a video for their single "I Was Made For Loving You" with director Patric Ullaeus (LACUNA COIL, WITHIN TEMPTATION, IN FLAMES, DIMMU BORGIR) of Sweden's Revolver Film Company.
MINIKISS signed a record deal with Universal Music Europe last spring.
On his interest in painting:
"There's two kinds of music and only two kinds of art, good and bad. And you can find both in any style."
On first taking up brushes six years ago:
"When you try to tell people when you're 6 years old that you want to be a rock star, they pat you on the head and say, 'Go play cowboys and Indians.' I pursued more art. It seemed more practical. Ultimately, I figured that my calling was really music."
On the first piece Stanley had the temerity to hang on his wall, "Green Planet", which had friends requesting the name of the artist:
"It was the kind of sign I wanted that I couldn't have hoped for. To have people drawn to a work of art on the wall, asking who the artist was."
On whether his name makes it easier to persuade galleries to show his work:
"Sure, I have an advantage over someone else. But ultimately I have to stand or fall on my own merit."
"I didn't become famous to cut myself off from the people who made me famous. It's another avenue, another vehicle to connect to people that matter to me. I enjoy it, too. Obviously I enjoy painting and drawing and creating for myself, but I would be a liar if [I] didn't say [I] ultimately want approval from others."
On whether there will be another KISS tour:
"The great thing about KISS is we can always go out. The offers are always there. Really at this point I have to say taking my band out is like driving a sports car, and taking KISS out is like trying to launch an aircraft carrier. A lot more goes into it. A lot more is at stake. The finances are staggering."
Check out the cover artwork at this location.
GNRFansAroundTheWorld: Is there a place in the world that you are dying to do a show there?
Bumblefoot: One of the places I was dying to play was the Madison Square Garden in New York City. Grew up in NYC, first band I saw was KISS at MSG, dream was to play there some day...happened in November. Same for Frank. We played a tribute to KISS that night, Ace Frehley's solo from the KISS "Alive!" album — what a great feeling to play that at the Garden. A lot of places I was working on touring with the solo band, but didn't get to play and hope to some day — Japan, South America, Israel, Australia, Iceland... would love to go back to Russia — played in Moscow in 2004 and 2005 (it's where I got that black furry hat I wear, haha...) And yes, even Montreal, if they'd have me.
You're touring your first solo album in 28 years, Live to Win. How is it playing without wearing make-up and no special effects?
Surprisingly for some, there's arguably more power than some of the arena shows we do with Kiss. There's nothing there to confuse anyone as to what the source of the power is. It's deadly good fun. This whole tour has reconnected for me why I got into music in the first place. I remember going to concerts as a kid, seeing Jimi Hendrix or Led Zeppelin playing for a couple of thousand people. It wasn't about big-stage presentations, it was about big belief in music.
The setlist contains a handful of solo songs and many Kiss songs.
There's so many great songs to play it'd be foolish to deny myself or the fans all the great tunes I've written that Kiss does. You hear all those songs the way they were supposed to sound. I wasn't interested in changing Love Gun into a reggae tune.
You're refreshingly honest about Kiss fans not wanting to hear new material when you play. How have they reacted to hearing new Paul Stanley songs on this tour?
It's gone down tremendously. People come knowing they are going to get a night of me. I believe this is a very intimate, but very potent evening. I don't know who's smiling more, us on stage or the audience.
The setlist features a few more obscure Kiss songs...
The show is about me doing my favourite songs. It was really that simple. By chance or circumstance, some of my favourite songs are songs Kiss hasn't played or has rarely played. This is about specifically doing something that is catering to me, my likes, and it's nice to not have to compromise or dilute them.
The Rolling Stones struggle to get radio play for their new material. Have you had the same problem with Live to Win?
That's why I've been reluctant to record new material with Kiss. The Stones do it, they're well aware radio doesn't take to it. Quite honestly, when you see the Stones live most people tolerate the new stuff to hear the hits. I've tried to avoid that. My new album, if I said the record company did a pathetic job that would be saying they did anything. They really have done nothing. It's really about me doing what I love doing.
Your record company is happy reissuing old Kiss material.
It pays quite well I have to say. Though it's not instigated, for the most part, by me and the band, the truth is a record label that owns an album or albums has the right to do that. Likewise, you have the right not to buy it. They wouldn't come out with product unless people were buying it.
You released a Kissology DVD compilation in the US last year.
That's five-times platinum in the US. We're already working on Volume 3.
The Kiss vaults must be huge.
Yeah, and we own it all, which is quite brilliant. We only have to go into our own archives to get the material for these. When we were doing Kissology it took me back to the roots of how this started, which was as a band that believed in taking no prisoners, going out there to rock.
Your solo band is the house band from the two series of Rock Star. Is that the closest you'll ever get to doing a reality-TV show?
Oh God, I'd rather take a bullet in my head. You can either have reality or you can have TV, the two cannot co-exist. I have no desire to have my life played out to the public. I'm very happy to have my life for myself and also have my life on stage. They both make each other possible.
Have you seen Gene Simmons' reality show Family Jewels?
Honestly, I haven't. People say it's very good. He's happy. That's part of his personality and not mine.
You've said you believe the number of things Gene does outside Kiss lessens Kiss's impact.
I think so. But he has every right to do them. I think some of his choices are questionable, but so what? God knows we've earned the right to go and do what satisfies us.
What's the status of Kiss?
We turned down a summer tour - for some reason it just wasn't that appealing. Truth be told I wouldn't mind going out and continuing with my solo band. But Kiss absolutely will be out on tour again. It's inevitable.
Gene came to your solo show. What did he think?
He was blown away. From what I heard, he posted something to that effect on his website. It's undeniable. It's as good as anything out there and better than most.
What did you think of Gene's solo record Asshole?
It's not the album I would have made. It's not the album I would have hoped he made, but I'm only accountable for what I do.
You turned 55 in January. How did you celebrate?
I have a four-month-old son (Colin), that kind of precludes making it too crazy or late a night. My wife and I went out for dinner.
You've also had hip-replacement surgery. How's the new hip?
All I can say is I've been scoring knockouts every night.
Is it true you spent the last few years of Kiss tours in pain before the operation?
I'm a firm believer that when people pay for tickets they don't need a disclaimer from anyone on stage about their health or limitations. If you have to do that, you'd be better off giving everyone their money back. People don't come for excuses or to hear about your circumstances. I was in pain for years, it reached a point where it was literally difficult to get up the stairs to the stage. There was not much choice to become a little bionic.
Live to Win (Universal) out now. Paul Stanley, Palais, April 20, on sale Feb 12 from Ticketmaster, venue 9537 2444.
"Well, another NAMM convention has come and gone yet again. It was great to see familiar faces and old friends again. It seemed like it was only a few months ago since the previous NAMM. What happens to time? I guess it is like a drummer always speeding up.
"Anyway, I saw a lot of kool new drums and stuff over at Pearl and Zildjian and stopped by Universal Percussion to say hey to the Attack drumhead guys too.
"In case people wondered what happened department: I was scheduled to jam at the Dimebag Darrell tribute show on Saturday [Jan. 20] at the Hilton with Lemmy (MOTÖRHEAD) and Keri Kelli (ALICE COOPER) but was unable to play drums for awhile due to minor surgery a few weeks ago. I am on the road to a speedy recovery and should be back hitting things very soon!
"I wanna thank everyone who took the time to stop by the Pearl, Zildjian, Sure or Musicstar booths I appeared at. It was great to see fans from all over the world and you all treat me so nice and make me feel special. For this I thank you!"
CBR News spoke this afternoon with KISS members Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley as well as Platinum Studios founder/chairman Scott Rosenberg about the band's affinity for comics and their involvement with "Kiss 4K". A couple of excerpts from the interview follow:
CBR News: It's been about three years since KISS was last published as a comic series. Why is now the right time to make a return to the comics medium?
Paul Stanley: I think the missing factor for a while was a new team. Sometimes new blood is what's necessary. I think between Scott Rosenberg and the whole Platinum crew, we have the makings of a team that can not only win the World Series, but become one of the best teams ever. KISS obviously is a band that has a dual identity in that we're musicians, but we're also super heroes and we've certainly found ways to market that before. I think this venture, just the fact that the first comic coming out will be the largest in history and certified by the Guinness Book of World Records, says that we're all on the same page. The truth is that games are won by teams and wars are won by armies and we've amassed a great bunch of people.
Gene Simmons: It's important — because we're speaking basically to the converted — that the fanboys out there understand and realize that we're not outsiders. We grew up and lived, breathed and dreamed comic books. Not just Marvel, but the classic stuff from Gardner Fox, Denny O'Neil, etc., we know this stuff. For fucks sake, I grew up with Marv Wolfman! We were going to do a fanzine together as kids!
All the way back to the '70s when our first comic books came out through Marvel and broke sales records, we valued that relationship. We had a terrific time with Todd McFarlane who we've stayed friends with and continue to do business with and speak very highly of. Mike Richardson has been terrific with the Dark Horse stuff. It's just that every once in a while players switch teams, you get traded off and get reinvigorated. I gotta tell you, this team we have is small like a commando team, we talk directly to each other, not with assistants and secretary's who may mean well, but they don't know this stuff. We live, breathe and eat comic books and the fans out there need to understand we don't just arch our eyebrows and say, "Liefeld? Who's that?" We know our stuff.
CBR News: Gene, you brought up the history of KISS comics publishing. As KISS has been featured in a variety of comics over the years, how does this new ongoing KISS series, "Kiss 4K", compare to what's come before? As you're involved in the day-to-day operations of the book, does it better represent your vision for what a KISS comic should be?
Simmons: It's not really fair to say it's my vision or Paul's. This is really, as Paul said, a team. It started off with a conversation just starting with a joint venture — let's do something big, let's try to do something that doesn't just appeal to the fanboys out there. Whatever happened to those million plus people who used to buy comic books? What the fuck has happened to this thing that we love, this American-born invention called comic books and specifically super heroes, which is purely an American art form? And art form is the correct way to describe it. Comic books have long stayed in the shadows and the reason we're all very excited about doing the biggest comic book of all time, period, is simply because we're proud of the content, but we also understand we have to grab media by the scruff of its neck and say, "Pay attention, comics aren't just kids stuff." That's what we're aiming to do together with Platinum.
Stanley: It's very easy for us to sing the praises of this relationship. We've got great writers and artists. I remember when I would go to newsstands and see anything Frazetta did. There was a time where I would pick up comics on the newsstands and it was different at least for me, maybe because I was younger, but I doubt it. I think it was because there was more complexity to them. What we're doing now is so multi-layered that you really have to have a bible to keep all this on track. Its heady stuff and we've really got a great team. I'm excited by it. I'm sitting here with Scott and he's sitting here stroking his chin in excitement, which I guess is better than stroking something else. [laughs]
Read the entire interview at www.comicbookresources.com.
This is not the first time there have been comics featuring the members of the band, but it will be the first time that Kiss -- under the banner of Kiss Catalog Ltd., run by original members Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley -- will produce its own comic-book-based characters.
The co-venture aims to be more than a publisher; it plans to expand the comic-book characters' images onto multimedia platforms including print, mobile, online, film, television and licensed merchandise.
First up from the KCG will be "Kiss 4K," the story of Simmons, Stanley and other band members' transformation from rock stars to world-protecting warrior spirits. "4K" will be released in March as a 3-foot comic priced at $50, with an intent to make it the largest comic book ever published. It will be followed by merchandise including apparel, video games and comic strips for cell phones.
Platinum, which has projects such as "Cowboys and Aliens" set up at Sony Pictures, is counting on Kiss' multigenerational, international fan base as well as more than 4,000 fan sites from around the globe and will launch simultaneously in the U.S., France, Germany, Italy and Spain.
The band members said they will be involved in all day-to-day decisions.
"The Kiss comics that have come out were licenses; they weren't truly part of the mythology," Platinum chairman Scott Mitchell Rosenberg said. "This is all of us working together. (Simmons and Stanley) care about every panel of every comic and how an image looks on a shirt."
"Kiss 4K", the story of the transformation of Gene Simmons, Paul Stanley and the other KISS band members from rock stars to world-protecting warrior spirits, is the first branded property released by Kiss Comics Group. "Kiss 4K" will debut as the world's largest comic book priced at $50. Limited-edition preview book, character merchandise and mobile comic art are available now online at www.KissComicsGroup.com. This is the first comic book-based property to simultaneously launch all of its merchandise in the United States, France, Germany, Italy and Spain.
"We have been talking with Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley about doing something together for years and when Gene approached me with the idea of creating the Kiss Comics Group co-venture, we knew we could build something massive," said Scott Mitchell Rosenberg, Platinum Studios' founder and chairman. "Platinum Studios has been working with independent comic book creators for years creating record breaking box office numbers and comic book sales. With more than 4,000 KISS fan sites worldwide supported by cross generations of fans, we have a built-in global audience for the Kiss Comics Group."
"We've had licensed KISS comic books before but never our own imprint and never with the wide reach across so many multi-media platforms," said Gene Simmons, a founding member of KISS. "Paul Stanley and I are personally involved in all day-to-day decisions and we are looking forward to extending the KISS legacy, images and sound to our fans around the world."
"As the iconic KISS characters have continued to evolve far beyond our beginning in rock music, we have always looked for the ideal situation for a KISS comic book outlet that was as far reaching as we originally conceived and intended. Platinum fills that slot perfectly," said KISS co-founder Paul Stanley.
Signatures Network and Dell Furano will be handling worldwide licensing for Kiss Comics Group and for "Kiss 4K" on behalf of the co-venture. Characters from Platinum Studios library of more than 3,800 will appear in the KISS books.
Commented Stanley: "The U.S. shows were incredible and reconnected me to the reasons I loved live music growing up. Between all the KISS classics, songs we've never played and songs from my two solo albums, it's an ultimate night that's as good or better than anything else around. I want to continue this sweat-fest as long as I can and my first questions was, 'Can I get to Australia?' Night after night, the fans across the U.S. were blown away. I can't wait."
"Christine Sixteen 2: Another High School Tribute to KISS" (check out the cover artwork at this location) track listing:
01. Creatures Of The Night
02. Baby Driver
03. Charisma
04. Master & Slave
05. Got Love For Sale
06. War Machine
07. Shock Me
08. Deuce
09. God Of Thunder
10. Watchin' You
11. Jungle
12. Larger Than Life
13. 100,000 Years
14. Dirty Livin'
15. Into The Night
16. Black Diamond
17. Kissin' Time
To keep up to date with the project, visit www.highschooltributes.com.
“Paul gave me a lot of encouragement,” recalled Antonelli. “He looked at me and said ‘promise me that you’re going to be the best that you can be.’”
Antonelli drew inspiraton from his encounter with the musician, and as KISS grew into international icons, Antonelli became a professional filmmaker, directing features, commercials and music videos for artists including the Ramones and Metallica.
Thirty-two years later Antonelli has come full circle with the production of “Paul Stanley – Live To Win Live!”, a feature-length concert film documenting Stanley’s second solo tour that culminated in a November performance at House of Blues Chicago.
Over the years Antonelli had become friends with KISS drummer Eric Singer, who introduced him to Keith Leroux, who runs KISS Online and Signatures Network, and who helped set up the project through Stanley’s management company Doc McGhee Entertainment.
“It’s been one of my dreams to direct a KISS concert in IMAX,” Antonelli said. “KISS management said ‘see what you can do with this, and we’ll go from there.’”
The 12-camera DV-cam shoot of the House of Blues show is the heart of “Live to Win Live!”, book-ended by black and white film that Antonelli shot in New York telling Stanley’s life story.
Antonelli is director, producer and editor of “Live to Win Live!” His company is Quadrama Films.
Chris Sheppard of Chicago Recording Company engineered the concert on a mobile 48-track recorder. McGhee is executive producer. Scott Wanner and co-editor Lester Cohn are co-producers.
DP Carlson of Foetus Films, who was a camera operator at the concert, is also directing a behind-the-scenes documentary on the production of the concert film.
Antonelli is presenting a cut of the film to Stanley and McGhee in mid-January to discuss plans for a prospective DVD release. Stanley’s solo album “Live to Win” was released by Universal Music.
Among various projects, Antonelli is also developing a documentary called “Lost in Brooklyn,” “a history of the 20th century told through the eyes of a little boy who died on Ellis Island in 1920, and how his family refound him 80 years later,” he said.
"Sealed With A Kiss" has a huge amount of rare and unpublished photos Lydia's personal archives, including many from when the band first formed.
The book is available at the official LydiaCriss.com website, where you can also have her personalize it by signing it almost any way you can imagine.
NAMM, the trade association of the international music products industry, has announced final registration and exhibitor numbers for the 2007 NAMM show. At show close, NAMM reported a four percent increase in overall registration for a grand total of 84,695 registrants.
The association previously announced breaking the all-time record of exhibitors with 1,535 companies displaying products at this year's NAMM show. International attendance showed an eight percent increase for a total of 9,889 registrants from more than 100 countries.
During the four-day event, buyers and sellers of musical instruments and products held meetings, wrote orders and shared opinions about the year ahead. In addition to the great business opportunities, as many regular show attendees know, there were also plenty of "only at a NAMM show" moments to meet and interact with some of the greatest artists in the world who regularly attend.
"We were gratified to see the industry come together during these challenging times to work together in order to seize the many opportunities ahead of us in the coming year," said Joe Lamond, president and CEO, NAMM. "NAMM is pleased to serve its members by producing the NAMM show which fuels our 'circle of benefits,' where show revenues are reinvested back into the industry through market-building programs, partnerships and initiatives that drive more interest in making music."
Commented the manufacturer: "We worked on the development of this prototype. Our project will consist in creating this 12" figure as an official limited edition of 150 pieces with a certificate of authenticity numbered. It's a 12-inch figure, fully articulated (30 points of articulation). The costume is in real fabric, some fur on the platform boots and the collar, and near 900 strass are need to respect with care the original costume of Eric Carr. The box is covered with imitation leather."
Check out photos of the figure at this location.
Eric Carr died on November 24, 1991 of complications from cancer at the age of 41. As a tribute, KISS' 1992 release "Revenge" featured what is said to be the only drum solo Carr ever recorded with the band, which was titled "Carr Jam 1981".
"Celebrity Big Brother" has created controversy in both Britain and India over allegations Bollywood beauty Shilpa Shetty has been subjected to a torrent of racial abuse since entering the program's sealed compound earlier this month.
But Simmons, who stars in his own reality show "Gene Simmons Family Jewels", says, "What's the big deal? Some people are racist and some are not. Either you show reality, or you don't."
"One thing we quickly learned about Paul is that he is an incredibly hard worker. When we first started to play, Paul Mirkovich (keyboards, vocals) said, 'Paul, you don't need to sing with us every time. We know all the singing is in a really high register.' Paul Stanley said, 'This is what I do. If you play it, I'm gonna sing it.' During rehearsals, he was the first one there and the last one to leave. You rarely see that in a singer, especially one that has had the success that he has. It was really great to see someone that I admire live up to all the expectations and surpass them.
"Having a front man like Paul Stanley gives you a lot of confidence. This guy has been killing it for 30 years and you know that he won't be the one to mess up. It was also very different for us because there were no cameras rolling. For the past two years, working on 'Rock Star', every time we played a song, we knew it was being filmed and recorded. Every little note and nuance is picked up. That can be stressful. Working with Paul was a return to the live roots that most of us are used to. That made it fun.
"Speaking of fun, one of the best things about working with Paul is watching how he commands an audience. He literally has them eating out of the palm of his hand. Most nights, people in the crowd will yell out song names for him to play. Sometimes he will acquiesce, but we usually stick to the set. It is a set that he created to have a flow, and it works. However, one night in Portland (or was it Seattle? I'm not really sure) there was a woman who would not stop yelling out the title of a song that we don't normally play. After repeated requests, Paul said, 'How much did you pay for your ticket?' She replied '$45,' and he said, 'You've gotta pay at least $50 for requests.' She then outstretched her arm with five dollars in it. He went over to her, took the five dollars and started to play the song she asked for. With no accompaniment from the band (as we hadn't rehearsed it), he played almost the whole song. When he finished and the crowd calmed their cheers, he said, 'I'm keeping the five bucks!' The place exploded with laughter and we went on to the next song."
To read the entire article, visit www.paulstanley.com.
The winter NAMM show, which opened on Thursday, wraps today.
To view the photos, click here.
Also on the KISS-related front, KissOnline.com has posted this specal birthday wish to Paul from KISS bassist/vocalist Gene Simmons:
"Once upon a time, the Lord created one of his wonders: The Starchild...and it was good. And so it went, until one day, the Starchild got up and rocked, with the guitar heard 'round the world. So it was written, so it shall be. A happy birthday to my good-lookin' partner, Paul Stanley."
Paul Stanley (real name Stanley Harvey Eisen) was born January 20, 1952 in New York City.
The Expo's special guests are Eric Singer and Bruce Kulick. Eric and Bruce will take part in a question-and-answer session and will also be available for autographs and photos. KISS merchandise will be on sale throughout the event. Eric, Bruce, John Corabi (MÖTLEY CRÜE) and Chuck Garric (ALICE COOPER) will end the evening with a full concert beginning at 22:00.
For more information or to buy tickets, visit the club's web site at this location.
He blasted: "My family is more structured and they behave properly. My kids don't take drugs, they're well mannered and properly disciplined and I don't go letting dogs poop on the carpet. I'm not a drug addict — in fact I have never been drunk, I don't smoke or have ever taken drugs and never will."
Gene's reality-TV show "Gene Simmons Family Jewels" follows Gene, his long-term girlfriend Shannon Tweed and kids Nick and Sophie.
Just don't ask the sexist star why he has never proposed to his former Playmate lover.
He says: "Shannon and I have been happily unmarried for 23 years. I lead my life my way. I am the Alpha male and what I say goes. The idea of marriage is out of the question."
When he's not touring in support of his new solo disc, Live to Win, he's at his Tuscan-style villa with wife Erin, their 4-month-old son, Colin, and 12-year-old Evan, his son from his first marriage.
"We enjoy entertaining, but we don't go out, we don't go to clubs," says Stanley, 54. "There's no Viper Room. For us, it's the diaper room."
"We're homebodies," says Erin, 34. "Paul has very traditional values. That may surprise people, but it's what I was most taken with when I met him."
The 9,000-square-foot home, built for Stanley in 1996, is perched high in the hills. The Italian-inspired design, with outdoor fountains and a column-lined loggia that looks west toward the Pacific, was dictated by the landscape. "We have all these mountains and unobstructed views to the ocean," he says. "It looks so much like Europe that you'd be fighting what's natural in the terrain to build something else."
The old-world feeling permeates the interior as well, with its arched doorways and vaulted ceilings. Hand-painted frescoes abound, including one in the dining room depicting celestial gods and goddesses amid the clouds. Stanley calls it a "conglomeration of many of the works of Tiepolo," an 18th-century Italian decorative painter.
What the couple wanted was "a casual, worn elegance," he says. "There's something comfortable about being in a place that has a soul."
To make the spacious rooms feel cozier, they emphasized comfort over formality, combining dark carved woods with soft, inviting fabrics. "There's nothing worse than being in a house where you're afraid to sit or put your drink down," says Erin, an attorney taking time off to be a full-time mom.
For the expansive family room, they chose sofas upholstered in sumptuous crimson velvet and clustered them together for conversation. "We've had 25 people in this room waiting for dinner," Stanley says. "Everybody can find their own little place to hang out."
A retractable screen descends from the ceiling for viewing parties. The room is decked with photos of family and Stanley with other celebrities, including Paul McCartney. When asked if the two are friends, Stanley looks vaguely astonished. "No! He's Paul McCartney, for crying out loud. He's the guy I saw up on stage and said, 'I want to be like him.' " He laughs. "Except with high heels and makeup."
There's an abstract painting by Stanley, who was an art student before he became a musician. He returned to painting about six years ago and now shows and sells his work in galleries. Abstracts "appeal more to the visceral and the emotional without having to intellectualize so much. It can be very cathartic. You can find parts of yourself you're not quite in touch with by going to the canvas."
He also poured his creativity into designing some of the handcrafted furnishings, including the ornately carved bed in the master bedroom with a 10-foot-tall headboard. "I wanted a bed for royalty. But none showed up, so we got to keep it."
With the arrival of their own little prince, Stanley's art studio has been bumped to the 2,000-square-foot guest house. His old space is now a bright nursery for Colin, outfitted with a round crib and Disney characters on the walls. Although the cheery yellow and blue palette may seem a contrast to Stanley's guitar-smashing persona, he just laughs. "C'mon, it's a baby's room, we want it to be happy!"
In fact, the only evidence of Kiss is in Evan's bedroom, which has all manner of band paraphernalia, from Kiss posters to bobbleheads. ("He says he wants to be a musician. I'd like to take credit, but he's already playing Hendrix," Stanley says. "I could never have dreamed of doing that when I was his age.")
Stanley is still friendly with the rest of the band, including Gene Simmons, who lives minutes away. He says Kiss will tour again. "We're all members of this great club. It's got a life of its own."
One prized possession in the music room reminds Stanley of his beginnings. It's a Tiffany lamp he bought in 1978 after his first taste of success. "I had just bought my first apartment in New York. I literally had no furniture, but I had that lamp, and I thought I was the luckiest guy in the world."
Stanley says he still feels lucky, with his growing family and an upcoming international solo tour that will take him, plus wife and baby, to Japan and Australia.
He points to the phrase "Fedelta, Compassione, Integrita," painted in Italian above an arched doorway leading to the family room.
"Be faithful, have compassion and have integrity," he translates. "Good words to live by."
THE MAN HAS ART -- BUT NO WARHOL
Paul Stanley is a man with few regrets, but he does acknowledge one involving Andy Warhol. "On many occasions, he told me to come down to the Factory and he'd do my portrait. I always thought 'maybe next week' or 'next month.' But I never did it."
Although his home is filled with paintings and frescoes, Stanley doesn't consider himself a major collector, and he doesn't own any of Warhol's work. "My house is not a museum of art," he says.
But the wish list of artists he'd love to have in his collection includes Pablo Picasso, Mark Rothko and Jackson Pollock, known for his technique of pouring and dripping paint onto canvas.
"People look at his work and they think they could do it, and that makes me love it even more," Stanley says. "When anyone says something looks simple, the two words I have for them are: Try it."
When RRFC comes to Hollywood, there will be events galor to make rock dreams come true:
* GRATEFUL DEAD Night (Feb. 17) — Featuring the GRATEFUL DEAD's drummer Mickey Hart leading a jam with each band.
* BEACH BOYS Night (Feb. 18) — BEACH BOYS co-founder Brian Wilson serves as judge as the bands compete in a play-off featuring BEACH BOYS songs.
* Original Song Contest (Feb. 18) — Each band will perform its original song — which will be judged, mixed, recorded, and put on CD and on iTunes!
* House of Blues Battle of the Bands (Feb. 19) — Paul Stanley (lead singer, guitarist and songwriter of KISS) will perform a KISS song on stage live with every band at the House of Blues Battle of the Bands. Dickey Betts of THE ALLMAN BROTHERS will join each band for some Southern rock.
The RRFC dawn-to-midnight schedule includes master classes, private sessions, dinners with the stars, late night jams with renowned studio musicians and special guests. Offering pointers throughout are some of rock's royalty, who help the bands come together, collaborate and create. Campers get the opportunity to rock with their idols on top-notch instruments and stay at the glamorous Hollywood Renaissance Hotel.
The RRFC frenzy doesn't stop in Hollywood. Coming up is RRFC London (May 24-29, Memorial Day Weekend), where campers — joined by English rockers including Jack Bruce (CREAM) and Gary Brooker (PROCOL HARUM) — will have the incredibly rare chance to record at London's Abbey Road Studios and perform at the legendary Cavern Club in Liverpool, where THE BEATLES got their start.
For more information, visit www.rocknrollfantasycamp.com.
Ron Keel came to prominence with his band STEELER, which featured Yngwie Malmsteen, Rik Fox and Mark Edwards. The group became one of Los Angeles' hottest acts, but could not withstand the test of time. Yngwie was the first to leave, opting to play with the band ALCATRAZZ, featuring Graham Bonnet. However, STEELER was able to record one self-titled album, released in 1984 on Shrapnel Records.
After the demise of STEELER, Ron formed a new band and simply called it KEEL. The band quickly secured a major record deal with Gold Mountain/A&M Records.
KISS bassist/vocalist Gene Simmons produced two KEEL albums, including "The Right to Rock" and "The Final Frontier".
Saviours of Rock: Is [MÖTLEY CRÜE frontman] Vince Neil ever redeemable in your book [Vince Neil caused the tragic car accident in 1984 that killed his passenger, HANOI ROCKS drummer Nicholas "Razzle" Dingley]?
Michael Monroe: I do not know what you mean. Who am I to say who's redeemable and who's not? I have nothing ugly to say about him — I never even met him. I mean, c'mon, it's not like the guy went out to intentionally murder somebody! He just made a very big mistakefor which I'm sure he has suffered emotionally at least as much as the rest of us affected by the tragedy. I think all of us would really like to just put it all behind us already it was over 20 years ago!
Saviours of Rock: I mean, how was it losing one your closest friends, right when you guys were about to break big?
Michael Monroe: What do you think? It sucked big-time, of course. It pretty much destroyed our lives back then and consequently led to HANOI's early demise in 1985.
Saviours of Rock: The only reason i asked is because I've seen members of HANOI ROCKS slam Vince in the past.
Michael Monroe: Well, never mind. BUT while on the subject: A few years ago in a kinda "dirt-digging" interview/questionnaire I made some unflattering comments about Nikki Sixx, which was really childish and stupid of me. I just took it a bit personally when they [MÖTLEY CRÜE] called their album at the time "Music to Crash Your Car To". I thought it was inappropriate since it came across as if they were making fun of the accident, which I'm sure was not their intention. I've gotten over it long ago and I would actually like to take the opportunity here to apologize to Mr. Sixx for my ignorant statement back then. I know he's really a nice guy, if you know him. On his last visit to Finland he made a funny comment that made me laugh. He said, quote, "Yeah, I'm willing to bury the hatchet — into Andy McCoy's head!" Now THAT shows great sense of humor. Another mistake I'd like to own up to on that same interview was foolishly insulting Mr. Gene Simmons [of KISS]. I was totally out of order saying what I did about him and apologize for being such a jackass jerk. I had only been fooled by his "sleazy chauvinist" image and I'm personally against the "rock-and-porn" movement he was spearheading at the time. I think it's just defamatory to rockers — one doesn't have to be a "sleazeball" to be a rock 'n' roller and I don't like to be conceived as one. You see, I'm happily married with one woman and I never cheat. Even in my years alone, I was never into "groupies." But neither is probably Gene Simmons. I hear has been married some 15-20 years and that's something to respect. I saw the final episode of his reality TV show called "Rock School" and he really came across as a cool guy. I loved the way he whipped those kids into shape when they got carried away with themselves in L.A. It a lmost reminded me a bit of some moments when Bob Ezrin was producing HANOI back in 1984. Couple of times when we were being real brats, he'd come in and lay down the law. I also thought it was very cool what he gave to those kids a chance for a new life and at least an amazing unforgettable experience. It was very heartwarming and cute. And that makes me feel like even more of a schmuck for my former defamatory statement. Besides, in an interview I read he was even cool enough to take most of what I said as a compliment! Not that I'd expect him to give a shit about who I even am. So right here and now: My sincere apologies to Mr. Simmons, it was uncalled for. Let's face it — talking shit about people makes you feel like shit. That's why nowadays I try to stick to the rule "If you've nothing good to say about someone, don't say anything." Instead, I'll concentrate on looking for the positive qualities in people, because we all do have them!
Saviours of Rock: Have you heard the cover L.A. GUNS did of "Until I Get You"?
Michael Monroe: No, I have not, but I'm sure they did it justice. Any kind of recognition is always flattering. And while on the subject, Tracii from L.A. GUNS was bandmates with Nikki Sixx at the time of my aforementioned statement. He then got mad too and started lashing out at me. That only shows good band spirit, y'know, "stickin' up for yer bro." So here I also want to apologize to Tracii for offending his bandmate. Y'see, the few times that I've met Tracii I remember liking him quite a lot and thinking that he was a cool guy. However, unlike he claimed at the time, as far as I know he had nothing much to do with me getting signed to Polygram Records back in 1987. I was signed by the New York A&R man Jim Lewis (not "Phil") with the help of my lawyer Michael Guido and my first solo LP, "Nights Are So Long", with all due respect.
Read the entire interview at www.savioursofrock.com.
As previously reported, the "Kiss Alive! 1975 – 2000" box set sold just over 9,000 copies in the United States in its first week of release to land at position No. 167 on The Billboard 200 chart.
"Kiss Alive! 1975-2000" comes with the first three "Alive" albums from 1975, 1977, and 1993, as well as the December 31, 1999 Millennium show from Vancouver, British Columbia, which was supposed to be "Alive IV" but was never released.
The first "Alive!" album was a landmark for the band, becoming their first gold record, but singer-bassist Gene Simmons told Launch that their label wasn't in favor of the idea. "We were on our last legs, Casablanca was gonna go belly-up," he said. "We didn't get paid for the album — in fact, when we told the record company we were gonna do a live record, they didn't want to do that, because live records didn't work. In those days, a live album was a liability. You did that after your career was over."
In related news, the Beverly Hills, California-based entertainment company NGTV (No Good TV), for which Gene Simmons serves as the Chairman of the Board, has entered into an advertising sales representation agreement with Savers Plus International Inc.
The agreement provides Savers with the rights to insert advertising and marketing initiatives into the NGTV broadband platform for Canadian users for up to three (3) years, rights to solicit and market wireless use of NGTV content to wireless providers in Canada and certain other rights of first refusal for the U.K. and Europe through mid-2007.
"This is an exciting time for NGTV and Savers," said Simmons in a statement. "Consumer demand for original broadband video content has exploded, and NGTV's entertainment platform is an exciting development for the global online community."
Visit Music Star Productions at Booth #5004 for appearance schedule times.
"We've recorded the drums in Hamburg at Vox Klangstudio, where we recorded the drums of EDGUY's 'Hellfire Club' too," says Sammet. "Great room, great equipment!
"Eric is a killer drummer and a cool guy to work with. It is really exciting to hear his interpretation of European-style metal. It definitely adds something fresh and unique to the sound, mainly because he's got a different approach to that kind of music. And although he doesn't do it with ALICE COOPER, KISS and SPONGEBOB SQUAREPANTS' solo band: There IS fast double-bass shit on AVANTASIA, and Eric did a great job!!! You'll hear it, it's fantastic.
"Anyway, listening to the material so far I can really say that even though the new AVANTASIA will be a different conceptual story, the ambition remains the same: To create something epic and big! Or how Eric put it, 'Let's make some kewl music!' No doubt, the spirit of AVANTASIA is there — in every note."
Check out a picture of Singer and Sammet in the recording studio at this location.
For more information on AVANTASIA, visit www.avantasia.net.
Robert Hernandez is a world-renowned tattoo artist working in his shop called Vittamin Tattoo in Madrid, Spain.
Apr. 11 - Twin Towns, Coolangatta
Apr. 13 - WIN Entertainment Centre, Wollongong
Apr. 14 - Civic Theatre, Newcastle
Apr. 17 - Enmore Theatre, Sydney
Apr. 18 - Enmore Theatre, Sydney
Apr. 20 - Palais Theatre, Melbourne
Apr. 21 - Palais Theatre, Melbourne
Apr. 24 - Burswood Theatre, Perth
Apr. 26 - Thebarton Theatre, Adelaide
Tickets are AUD $95.00 and will go on sale approximately six weeks prior to the shows.
As was the case on Stanley's recent U.S. tour, the backing band for Paul's Australian trek will be the house band from the CBS-TV show "Rock Star". The group, comprised of Paul Mirkovich (keyboards), Jim McGorman (guitar), Rafael Moreira (lead guitar), Nate Morton (drums) and Sasha Krivstov (bass), appeared on the first season of the show, "Rock Star: INXS", as well as this year's "Rock Star: Supernova".
Paul Stanley's solo concert at the House of Blues in Chicago on November 6 was filmed for possible DVD release, according to a posting on Stanley's web site.
All of the tracks have been previously released.
The full track listing for "Mullets Rock! Too!: Mullets In Love!" includes:
Side Psyched:
01. "Wang Dang Sweet Poontang" - TED NUGENT
02. "Do Ya" - ACE FREHLEY
03. "More Than A Feeling" - BOSTON
04. "I Just Want To Make Love To You" - Foghat
05. "Baby Hold On" - EDDIE MONEY
06. "Jane" - JEFFERSON STARSHIP
07. "Fantasy" - ALDO NOVA
08. "Burnin'for You" - BLUE ÖYSTER CULT
09. "I Hate Myself For Loving You" - JOAN JETT & THE BLACKHEARTS
10. "Love Stinks" - J. GEILS BAND
Side Bummed:
01. "Love Hurts" - NAZARETH
02. "The Flame" - CHEAP TRICK
03. "Take It On The Run" - REO SPEEDWAGON
04. "Sister Christian" - NIGHT RANGER
05. "Total Eclipse Of The Heart" - BONNIE TYLER
06. "Don't Know What You Got ('Till It's Gone)" - CINDERELLA
07. "Tuesday's Gone" - LYNYRD SKYNYRD
08. "Dust In The Wind" - KANSAS
"Vinnie Vincent Invasion" was produced and arranged by Vinnie Vincent and Dana Strum at Baby 'O Recorders in Hollywood, CA between January and March 1986 and was mixed at Cherokee Recording Studios in Hollywood, CA in April 1986.
The second song is previously unreleased. "Rain Keeps Fallin'" is a song Gene demoed with members of SILENT RAGE around 1991. Several different lyrical versions of the song exist. Most interesting, perhaps, the riff at the start of this song can also be heard in a studio jam session with Dutch rockers SLEEZE BEEZE from around 1990/1 where Gene was working with the band on using his "Daily Planet" riff. They'd come up with the song "Jealous Woman" from the efforts, though the band didn't use it. "Rain Keeps Fallin'" was being developed during the "Carnival of Souls" sessions, with one September 1993 re-write being known with interesting lyrics such as "Burning crosses in my own back yard" and "My name’s on a cool headstone with a pretty rose."
"There's a lot of paperwork flying around and it looks like a legitimate multi-year deal with a solid sponsor," said Tom Anderson, the co-owner of Fernandez Racing. "I'd say right now it's about 75-25 it's going to happen."
Because of longtime sponsor Delphi's uncertainty, Scott Sharp taking his new sponsor to Bobby Rahal and Kosuke Matsuura moving the Panasonic money to Panther Racing, Fernandez was forced to lay off 25 employees and shut down the Indy-car operation two months ago. The team had a Honda ALMS deal for 2007 but no plans for Indy cars until recently.
"Actually, Gene Simmons and Richard Abramson brought the deal to the IRL in conjunction with Just Marketing and, because of the demographics of the sponsor, they decided P.J. Chesson was their man," said Anderson.
"They were kind enough to contact us and we're hoping to get this thing finalized. We've still got all our cars and equipment and I've been talking on the phone with some of the guys we had to let go and told them 'It's getting closer.'"
Chesson, the only bona-fide American short-track sprint driver in last year's Indianapolis 500 besides Ed Carpenter, competed in the first four IRL shows of '06 before Hemelgarn Racing closed its doors when a supposed sponsorship deal with NBA star Carmelo Anthony dissolved.
That deal was also brokered by rock & roll icon Simmons, the official spokesman for the IRL whose marketing company has partnered with Tony George's series to try and develop sponsorships.
"We had a great talk," says Tommy, about the surprising similarities of touring professional golfers and rock's top touring acts." Michael first saw KISS during the band's first trip to Auckland in 1980 and has been a fan ever since.
Check out a photo of Tommy and Michael at this location.
Tommy attended the Tiger Woods Target World Challenge at Sherwood CC in Thousand Oaks, CA Saturday and Sunday to watch the world's top golfers compete in the huge $5.75 million event.
Ozzy Osbourne
Ace Frehley (KISS)
Al Jourgensen (MINISTRY)
Dean Karr (award-winning video director, photographer)
Paul Raven (MINISTRY, KILLING JOKE, PRONG)
Jim Root (SLIPKNOT, STONE SOUR)
Cristina Scabbia (LACUNA COIL)
Alex Grey (legendary psychedelic artist)
Billy Gibbons (ZZ TOP)
Leslie West (MOUNTAIN)
Jamie Jasta (HATEBREED)
Aaron Lewis (STAIND)
There will be a small collection of the art guitars going to winter NAMM and then to Guitar Center Hollywood in January. More details will be made available soon.
"Six-String Masterpieces: The Dimebag Darrell Art Tribute" was on display at most of the recent Ozzfest dates. This phenomenal exhibit features original artwork, painted on a guitar, by Rob Zombie, Marilyn Manson, METALLICA, MUDVAYNE, Zakk Wylde, Kerry King, Paul Booth, GODSMACK, DEFTONES, OTEP and many other leading musicians and artists. All guitars will be auctioned off to support a music and art education foundation in the name of Dimebag Darrell Abbott.
"I mean, there's something definitely weird about a little kid walking around singing "Put your hand in my pocket and grab onto my rocket..."
Sawatzky was four years old in 1977, the year his older sister brought home a copy of Alive II by storied rock band KISS. Sharon, Lois and Bram never stood a chance. By the time Sawatzky reached grade school, the Elmwood youth was spending his entire allowance on records, T-shirts, bubble gum cards: anything he could turn up featuring the group's trademark image.
Tracking down stuff wasn't difficult. By 1978, officially sanctioned KISS merchandise had become a major source of revenue for the much-decorated outfit.
Products released under the watchful eye of then-manager Bill Aucoin included comic books, dolls, makeup kits and Halloween masks. In 1979 alone, worshippers scooped up an estimated $100 million worth of KISS belt buckles, Zippo lighters and (blush) condoms, among much, much more.
That same year, membership in the band's fan club, the KISS Army, topped 100,000. (On a related note, all 100,000-plus agreed that the band's 1978 TV movie -- KISS Meets the Phantom of the Park -- sucked.) Fast forward almost 30 years. Sawatzky now has a wife, two cats and a basement that can only be described as a shrine to his still-favourite band. The room's blood-red walls are laden with shelves packed with action figures from every phase of the foursome's career.
Still-sealed puzzles, games and lunchboxes are in full supply. So, too, are dozens upon dozens of KISS records, CDs, 8-tracks and cassettes. In one corner, Sawatzky even has an unopened bottle of KISS This wine. In another rests a line of body fragrances: "KISS Him" for guys, "KISS Her" for gals. ("After the bath, the rockin' begins with this lightly scented splash" boast the labels on both.)
Aside from a few holdovers from his youth, the majority of Sawatzky's collection has been purchased in the last decade or so.
"It started in earnest when I got a real job," he says, noting that he works at Le Chateau when he isn't busy counting his KISS coins or folding his KISS towels. "When I started having extra cash I told myself, 'It's now time to buy back a piece of my youth.'"
Sawatzky's showcase collectible is a fully functioning Bally pinball machine, circa 1978. He picked it up on eBay a couple of years ago and fetched it from Dryden, Ont.
"There's no end to it, really; new stuff comes out every year," he says when asked what could possibly remain on his want-list. One piece of merchandise Sawatzky is taking a pass on for now is the KISS Kasket. That's right -- true die-hards can now purchase an actual coffin decorated with KISS logos and snapshots of the band. Upon its release in 2001, bassist Gene Simmons quipped, "I love livin', but this makes the alternative look pretty damn good." As an added bonus, the Kasket is guaranteed waterproof in the event consumers want to use it as a fancy-dancy beer-cooler in the, uh, meantime.
Since 2001, Sawatzky has taken his passion for all things KISS one step further. When he isn't touring with Winnipeg rock band the Harlots, Sawatzky is the drummer for local KISS tribute act the Paul Stanleys.
"We play in the band because we're all huge KISS fans," Sawatzky says. "That's different from a lot of KISS tribute bands where one of the guys is on stage simply because he can breathe fire." Although the Paul Stanleys offer up note-for-note renditions of KISS's greatest hits, the band members' tongues are planted firmly in their cheeks when they're rock and rolling all night and/or partying every day.
"Hell, KISS make fun of themselves all the time," Sawatzky says.
(On Dec. 16, the Paul Stanleys will stage their annual Merry Kiss-mas show at the Zoo in Osborne Village. Tickets are $5 at the door.)
It turns out that the most cherished pieces in Sawatzky's collection are among the least expensive.
"I would have to say it's the magazines my mom used to bring home for me," he says, noting that his mother has since passed on. "Here was this nice lady trying to do the family thing, but at the same time walking into what amounted to 1970s head shops to buy her son a KISS magazine. Those are the types of things I consider really special."
For more information on KISS collectibles, visit either the European fan site www.kisskollector.com or Frank Cariglio's ultra-informative Frank's KISS Collectibles and Merchandise at www.frankkiss.com.
Paul Stanley's New Jersey Wentworth Gallery appearances:
Friday February 9, 2007
6-9 PM
Wentworth Gallery
Riverside Square Mall 171 Riverside Square
Hackensack, NJ
Saturday, February 10, 2007
4-7 PM
Wentworth Gallery
Short Hills Mall
1200 Morris Turnpike
Short Hills, NJ
For more than thirty years, Paul Stanley has reigned supreme as one of the single-most recognizable front men in the history of rock and roll. He's the principal songwriter, driving force and unwavering voice of KISS. A visionary and trend-setter since the early 1970s, Paul Stanley's passion for both the musical and visual arts has perhaps been the key to the astonishing ongoing world phenomenon known as KISS. His artistic and visual input has been seen in his designs of KISS album covers, stages and apparel. As an art major and graduate of the prestigious high school of Music and Art in NYC, Paul has returned to his passion for painting to share with you the deep emotions his art conveys. Paul Stanley creates portraits and abstracts that are emotionally charged compositions. He aims to maximize the direct physical impact of his paintings through scale, texture, color and simplicity of images.
As one of the nation's fine art galleries, Wentworth Gallery features a wide selection of originals, limited edition prints and sculptures from the world's most acclaimed artists. Wentworth Gallery is responsible for bringing the works of many prominent contemporary and international fine artists to the New Jersey area such as Alexandra Nechita, as well as some of the world's most collected and heralded masters such as Picasso, Chagall, and Miro, among others. Stop by any one of Wentworth Gallery's 20 retail locations or visit www.wentworthgallery.com for information on featured artists, upcoming exhibits, online orders and directions to a Wentworth Gallery near you.
"To receive the free replacement disc, bring your receipt into a Best Buy store on or after December 9. If your purchase was made on Bestbuy.com, there will be instructions there as well, next week.
"Best Buy will have plenty of replacement discs after the holidays too, for fans that receive the CD for Christmas.
"Thank you for your patience while this solution was being worked out and implemented."
Told from her unique perspective, the epic endeavor weighs almost five pounds, measures 10x12 and contains over 1,500 unpublished-until-now photos. "Because I have always been a pack-rat and saved everything, I wanted to share it with all the fans, which meant putting in everything but the kitchen sink, although I think that is in there too!" says Criss, "I never would have thought when I first met Peter that my life would end up being documented in a book, which turned out to be the hardest project I have ever undertaken."
The book covers three distinct eras: Peter and Lydia's life prior to KISS, from their initial meeting to their marriage and Peter's early struggles through over 500 grueling club gigs; Peter's entry into KISS and their skyrocket into superstardom; and finally, Lydia's separation and eventual divorce from Peter, and her life in the decades that followed as a successful entertainment photographer (VAN HALEN, CHEAP TRICK, ROD STEWART and THE WHO are among the main acts she has lensed). Accompanying the 125,000-word manuscript, "Sealed with a Kiss" is permeated with live photos from the band's early club days to sold-out Madison Square Garden shows, not to mention hundreds of exclusive behind-the-scenes shots and obscure mementos which Lydia has assiduously collected along the way.
Such is the case with his latest release, "Live to Win," his first solo album since the eponymous KISS solo efforts were issued in 1978. Absent is the bombast, pomp and pageantry that marks his full-time band. Present are the sweeping choruses and lavish songwriting that marked the band's more memorable late-'80s and early-'90s moments, as well as Stanley's signature vocal tone and unmistakable style.
Why "Live to Win," and why now? Paul Stanley sat down with LiveDaily to delve deeper into the new release.
LiveDaily: This is your first solo record in nearly three decades. Does the material span that time period?
Paul Stanley: Everything I wrote on this album was written for the album. I've never believed in recording old material, it's kind of like giving people old news, you know? I've always believed that, when you give somebody an album, it should be like a fresh newspaper, where you get ink on your fingers. It's today's news. So, for me, it's where I'm at now, things in my life, my perspective on my music as an individual.
You've got a core base of musicians on the album, but the lineup changes slightly, from song-to-song.
When I thought about doing the album, I wanted to approach it, partially, as the director of a film. Producing an album, for me, meant casting each song. As opposed to writing songs for a specific group of musicians, it was bringing in the right musicians to play on the songs. I had a core group that was really awesome and connected really well with me, and there was no reason to change the menu on every song. So the core remained the same, but it's a lot easier to stay true to form when you don't have to consider anyone else's opinion. I was very interested in what everybody had to say but, quickly and ultimately, it was about what I wanted to do, and my vision. What was really cool for me was that everybody who worked on the album not only understood the vision, but was fired up by the songs and what was coming out of the speakers. It was a labor of passion, and something where I was only concerned with turning out the album I heard in my head, without regard for having glitz and star power from other sources. It was purely about making the album I wanted to make. This was purely a labor of love.
Judging from a lot of the songs, it sounds like it was literally a labor of love, as well.
Well, you know, live and learn! [Laughing] I sing about what I know, what I experience. I try not to get too introspective and deep, but I think most of the things I sing about have always been fairly universal. Without making any effort, what I wanted to do on this album was purely sing about my life. My life is not that different than anybody else's. When you cut away all the trappings on the outside, life is life and it's ultimately what you make of it.
There seems to come a point in everyone's life where they strive to get back to the basics. Does this album reflect that?
Of course. In spite of all the folly of fashion, we ultimately find ourselves wearing our old blue jeans. What is there in life, and what is the core of life? It's relationships. Whether they're sexual, emotional, whatever the category, relationships are what make this world go 'round, and it's also what I think is most rewarding in life, the product of relationships.
With the overblown largeness of KISS, and the "Star Child" character, does it feel good to be able to express yourself outside those parameters?
Well, KISS is a facet of who I am, but it's not all of it. There is undoubtedly more freedom in doing something under my name and without either the politics or the dynamics and personalities of a band.
After decades of compromise in the band setting, did this album become a necessity?
Nobody should confuse being in KISS with compromise. It's a different format and calls for a different type of participation. It's not compromise at all. I wanted the freedom to explore my own abilities and boundaries, or break any boundaries I had and basically do what I wanted without any of the advantages or burdens of the history of the band. This was about me being free to not consider other people, not consider a balance of material from a band, not consider any type of equality, not to consider feelings of other people, just to make music. That's something you can only do under your own banner. This isn't about taking KISS fans someplace they haven't been, although everyone's invited along. This is really about me doing an album for me. First and foremost I had to please myself. I'd like to believe that, if I please myself, I'm going to please some other people. If you try and second guess the public or your fans, and you fail, you're filled with the sense of, "Why didn't I follow my heart?" I'd rather do things without any compromise, and if I fail, I still have that comfort.
A lot of the songs on "Live to Win" sound like they could have been on "Crazy Nights." There's a lush, melodic tone throughout the album.
I'm a product of a school of crafting songs. What's made KISS last, beyond the bombast and the iconic imagery, is songs that you can sing; that's what I'm comfortable doing, crafting a song. There's a certain comfort in hearing a chorus and knowing that the next time it comes around, you'll be able to sing it. Anybody can write a song, but that doesn't make you a songwriter. I know people that think because they've written a song, they're actually songwriters. Hate to break that disillusionment, but this is something I've worked my [entire] life on. I wasn't aiming for any kind of balance of material or type of material, but when I would write, I knew what I didn't want to hear.
"Live to Win," the song, has a "Rocky" or "Visionquest" soundtrack feel to it.
That's what I hear, that's what people are saying, we'll see .... Why's that the title of the album? My philosophy has always been to live with the philosophy that no one can get in the way or stop you from succeeding. You are either your best friend or your greatest obstacle. I'm living proof of living to win. One might say I'm lucky, but I tell you, the harder you work, the luckier you get. In life, you can either be a victim and bitch about the adverse experiences in your life, or you can take a deep breath and charge forward. If I had knuckled under to people telling me what was impossible and what I was capable of and incapable of, we wouldn't be having this conversation, there wouldn't be a KISS, and there wouldn't be a "Live to Win." Again, it's about believing in yourself, deciding what boundaries you have, and what life and goals you're going to strive for. My life has always been about, "You can go with me, or you can go behind me, but if you stand in front of me, you're going to be pretty sore." Obstacles are what you see when you lose sight of your goals.
Are the obstacles less, with the level of success you've achieved?
People ask me what I get from success and fame--I get freedom. I get freedom to do things my way. I've always done it my way, and that's what led to my success. At this point, my freedom is that much greater because what I have access to is that much greater. The ability to be able to go into a studio and go in and record without anybody telling you what you should do, or any direction or any feedback, man, that was worth the price of admission. And that's all it's about. In that way, that's what we all owe ourselves, to take care of ourselves. Be good to yourself, do what you can, do everything you want to do, because we don't get a second chance. This is the only life I think I'm going to know.
A&E had ordered a 13-episode first season.
"Family Jewels" delivered an average 1.3 million viewers per episode. Show also improved its Monday-at-10 timeslot by 56% among adults 18-49 (766,000) and 45% among adults 25-54 (742,000) vs. the previous year.
Second-season antics — which will continue to revolve around Simmons, longtime girlfriend Shannon Tweed and their two kids — are sure to shock, Simmons told Daily Variety.
"People's jaws will drop," he said. Show's appeal is strong because "everyone wishes they had this family. Every guy wishes he was me. It shows how you can be happy."
The first 13-episode season of "Gene Simmons Family Jewels" will be released on double-DVD just in time for Christmas.
Simmons announced on his web site that "Gene Simmons Family Jewels"' first episode was the most-watched series premiere of any A&E show since the launch of "Dog the Bounty Hunter" in August of 2004. There have been 12 new prime-time series since that date.
Other bands have fan clubs but KISS has a loyal army of fans. This DVD shows the dedication of three such fans. Originally filmed back in 1999, three die-hard KISS fans set themselves on a six-month pre-"KISS"toric journey to visit as many places as possible in New York City that had to do with the band's old stomping grounds, includes interviews and more. They travel through New York City visiting such locations as Paul Stanley's childhood home, the loft on 23rd street and Electric Lady studios. Over 15 locations are on the DVD. They were also able to get inside some places, one of which, "The Daisy" (considered one of the key starting places for KISS in the early '70s), was burned down approximately two months after the filming back in 1999. To our knowledge nobody else has footage of the legendary location. The DVD contains interviews with fans that saw KISS back in the early '70s, along with collections of original KISS merchandise. There's even an interview with a lady that knew Paul before they made it big.
One of the key features of this DVD is the first KISS tour guide of New York. A simply designed tour guide within the DVD that is based on all of the locations that the three KISS fans went. The guide supplies the addresses of all the locations, so that you yourself can go ahead and set up your own kiss tour of New York.
The company has even released a promo video for the DVD. A move not usually done by new independent companies. You can find the promo on YouTube.com. Just search Before Kiss Promo.
The DVD will cost $14.99 plus shipping and will be exclusively available on Amazon.com for purchase starting on December 1. You can go to Amazon.com and search "Before KISS" DVD.
MusiCares provides a safety net of critical assistance for music people in times of need. MusiCares' services and resources cover a wide range of financial, medical and personal emergencies, and each case is treated with integrity and confidentiality. MusiCares also focuses the resources and attention of the music industry on human service issues that directly impact the health and welfare of the music community.
About The Banner:
* Size: 46" X 60"
* Material: Silkscreen on canvas
* Color: Full-color
* Presentation: Unframed
* Numbered: Limited-edition; number 2 of 25
* Condition: New/excellent
* Signatures Include: Gene Simmons, Paul Stanley, Eric Singer and Tommy Thayer on front in silver
The idea is to have KISS fans everywhere write down and email, in a few lines, what KISS has meant to them over the years. Brunson will use this input to compose and record a tribute song for the band. "This was one of several ideas I'd mentioned to Gene during the taping of 'Family Jewels', and something I feel is extremely appropriate for a band that has meant so much to its fans for such a long time now, including me!" said Brunson.
In addition, Brunson is actively seeking/soliciting several well-known Hollywood producers to help with the arrangement and production of the song. "Given where KISS is in its career, as well as Gene's promotional savvy, I want to really maximize the visibility and credibility of the project, positioning it for inclusion in 'Family Jewels' Season 2, and/or Gene's forthcoming box set/greatest hits!" said Brunson.
Brunson hopes to have this project in full swing before the holiday season, and to be in the studio by first quarter 2007. Bob has just launched his own web site, which is also serving as home base for this promotion.
"To my knowledge this has never been done. What better way to celebrate three decades of fans by embracing and utilizing their accolades. It's really a win-win situation," said Brunson.
Brunson is a 20-plus-year veteran in the marketing and advertising arena. In addition to appearing on A&E's "Gene Simmons Family Jewels", he has scripted and appeared in several TV and radio commercials and recorded a commercial soundtrack for cable TV. Additionally, he is an accomplished singer/songwriter/guitarist who has fronted several groups, penned numerous songs and books, as well as scripted/pitched several TV shows. Brunson currently works for an advertising agency in Orange County, California, where he resides with his wife and three children.
"Right before we were to go on, Clark came into our dressing room," continues Simmons. "He put his arm around our shoulders and said, 'Anything you want, just ask me.' He was kind enough to us in the beginning when no one else gave a squat. Dick Clark was, is, and continues to be a gentleman of the highest order."
Sammy Bubley is a sophomore at Hemet High School. He likes rock and roll music and has a group of friends that share his love of rock band KISS.
Five of the teens met band member Gene Simmons last month in Riverside. About 3,000 people swarmed the Gottschalks fragrance counter at Riverside Plaza when Simmons made an in-store appearance promoting his new men's cologne.
Rosie Bubley, Sammy's mother, drove five of the teens to Riverside and said she was impressed with the attention that Simmons paid them.
"It was such a great experience," she said.
While waiting in line for the 3-hour autograph session by their idol, the boys sang "Rock and Roll All Nite" — probably the most recognized KISS song.
Cameramen for Simmons' reality show "Family Jewels" filmed the boys.
"We were the only people actually singing," said Sammy, 15.
"I love their music and their face paint," he said.
Read the rest of the report (and view pictures) at www.pe.com.
DEF LEPPARD has been touring with JOURNEY since late June, and the tour has been extended a few times because of demand from fans. DEF LEPPARD guitarist Phil Collen told Launch that he and his bandmates never get tired of playing their songs live, since the audience loves the music so much. "Every night when someone's singing along — especially when there's a lot of young kids there, 16-year-olds and that — it is fresh, actually makes you feel really good when there's a whole new breed of people just singing away to songs that you've done. It doesn't really matter whether it's a new song or an old song, it's still our song, so it's a huge compliment. It really is, it's the best thing in the world."
The DEF LEPPARD / JOURNEY tour finally wrapped up on Sunday (November 19) in San Juan, Puerto Rico.
DEF LEPPARD has also had a big year as far as records go, with two releases — their covers album called "Yeah!", and the 20th anniversary reissue of "Hysteria".
Program title: The Dick Clark Auction
Premiere date: Saturday, November 25
Premiere time: 1:00 p.m. Eastern
Will appear on Dish Network Channel 9473 - Treasure HD/Voom
(program will repeat throughout the week - check listings for times)
The "Dick Clark Auction" will air live on the same channel on Wednesday, December 6 starting at 12:30 p.m. Eastern. A live online auction will be available on TreasureHD.com.
Though not directly involved with Universal's Best Buy store promotion, Paul and Gene were made aware of the bonus track problem and have chosen to help rectify the situation for the fans. Several solutions are currently being discussed by Universal Music and we expect to post more information in the next day or two.
Bottom line - Paul and Gene appreciate your support and any fan who bought the CD at Best Buy expecting these two tracks will receive them.
The first "Alive!" album was a landmark for the band, becoming their first gold record, but singer-bassist Gene Simmons told Launch that their label wasn't in favor of the idea. "We were on our last legs, Casablanca was gonna go belly-up," he said. "We didn't get paid for the album — in fact, when we told the record company we were gonna do a live record, they didn't want to do that, because live records didn't work. In those days, a live album was a liability. You did that after your career was over."
For more Expo information, contact the promoter, Jim Frangella, at 815-729-3113 or e-mail kissarmylll@sbcglobal.net.
"We hope it's going to be a 10-volume set," Simmons tells Billboard.com. "Volume 2 is being worked on right now. I'm not allowed to talk too much about it, but [it will be released] in the next six months to eight months. We don't want to wait. This is a lot of fun. People are enjoying this. We're actually proud of it."
The first "Kissology" features vintage concerts from San Francisco, Detroit, Tokyo, Houston and New York along with TV appearances, promotional videos and a documentary about Kiss Day in 1975 in Cadillac, Mich.
"Some of the stuff that tugs at my heart is the really, really early days," Simmons notes, "the sort of innocence of it when you're exuberant and happy to be alive. You don't realize that the same band and the same guys would become dysfunctional, and that drugs and alcohol and egos and the rest of that would happen later on."
Simmons says he and partner Paul Stanley have "jealously guarded hundreds and hundreds of hours of material -- concerts, music videos, tapes, all kinds of background footage -- that nobody's ever seen" until the right opportunity to release it came along. "Kissology" is the result of a synergistic agreement with the new VH1 Classic Records imprint.
"Essentially they're in the infomercial business," Simmons explains, "because what they're doing by putting product up there, videos and so on, is promoting material that people go out and buy. So we get a partner that's in the broadcast business every day, and they get new programming on the air -- and get to participate all the way down the line when the material is bought. It's win-win."
Besides the continuing "Kissology" series, Simmons and Kiss have a number of other projects on tap. A "Kiss Alive! 1975-2000" box set -- featuring the group's first three live albums and its unreleased Millennium concert -- is due Nov. 21, and "Kiss: Lick It Up," a box set from Kiss' non-makeup years (1983-96), is coming in 2007. Details of a new Kiss Comics Group will be announced soon.
Simmons is also gearing up for the DVD release of the first season of his A&E reality show "Gene Simmons Family Jewels," whose extras will include a pair of songs from "Monster," a 150-song boxed set of solo demos and unreleased material -- including collaborations with Bob Dylan, Aerosmith's Joe Perry and a fledgling Van Halen -- due next year.
"I have literally hundreds of songs that have never been recorded by Kiss, but I've demoed them all," Simmons says. "Some of the stuff is on four-track, where I played all the parts. Some are on 16, some are on 24, some are straight ahead into the boom box, with acoustic guitar. It'll come out when the time feels right"
The Pop Culture Addict: You were saying that you're not in KISS anymore but anytime you can get involved that you still do. Now with Gene [Simmons] and Paul [Stanley] and the rest of the guys in the band, do you consider yourselves to be friends or just band mates? Is it a more professional relationship or is it something different?
Bruce: Well, it's more of a professional relationship. I mean, Gene's not the kind of guy that has friends in the way that you may have friends. Gene is all business. C'mon. He's a cool guy and he's funny and I have a lot of fond memories of having fun with him. Especially during the days that I was in the band but, y'know, when I say part of the family, to them that means everybody that they feel comfortable working with or everybody that they respect and that's great. I mean, how many people can say that they can call up Gene Simmons and get a real response. Paul, of course, is a little easier to get closer to in some ways. I've been doing these fantasy camp things as well, these Rock and Roll Fantasy Camps and Paul is scheduled to be a guest in February and as soon as I finished the August one, which was a lot of fun, I actually called Paul up just to make sure he knew that. [I said,] "Look, this is going to be a lot of fun," and I'm not sure what he knew or didn't know, [but I said,] "they'll make it as fun for you as possible too, because I'm involved." Those things I really do enjoy. They're hard work but they're very rewarding.
The Pop Culture Addict: Now correct me if I'm wrong, but it seems like up until "Carnival of Souls", you really didn't get to sing and write a lot of KISS stuff. Is that true?
Bruce: Well, right. Well writing, I tried to do the most I could but each album was always a competitive thing between Gene and Paul. Sometimes Gene would be very open to writing with me. Sometime Paul would be. Sometimes they wouldn't be. Y'know, it was always a struggle that way. Like I got four co-writes on "Crazy Nights". It always depended on what was going on. Singing I never really asked about. The only reason I ended up singing "I Walk Alone" which I co-wrote was because, first of all, I had a great point of view about that song and at times it was doomed and we could never figure out what to do with certain sections to make it cohesive and I just never let go of it and I would present it to Gene and show him and go, "no, no, no, look, here's a new demo of it. What do you think?" And for reference I would sing it, and so the co-producer, Toby Wright, actually heard that and said, "y'know, Bruce should sing this," and I think Gene already knew that this might be my last hurrah in the band so... "I Walk Alone". So there you go.
The Pop Culture Addict: Do you ever feel that being in KISS at the time never let you grow or write as a singer?
Bruce: Oh no. I knew my role. It's like George Harrison understood. He was a brilliant song writer. He wrote "Something" and some other amazing songs but when you're in a band called THE BEATLES with McCartney and Lennon there may not be a lot of room for you. I'm not trying to compare KISS exactly with THE BEATLES but it's a loose analogy to give you an idea. I know I'm very creative and I can write songs and that why I've been so thorough with my solo albums. Look, I always wrote songs when I was in bands with Michael Bolton, BLACKJACK, and, in fact, one of their songs just got covered by Kanye West, the rap star. So I know what it's like to write songs, but my role in KISS was to be the lead guitarist and if I can contribute a few riffs and present a song, great, but if it doesn't fly and they're going to do it themselves I can't be kicking and screaming. I don't own the band. It wasn't my creation. Obviously, UNION, everything in UNION was almost all co-written by me with John [Corabi] and all the producers, and my solo records I'm writing all the material. So it's just the nature of that situation. That's all.
The Pop Culture Addict: Now in the case of Ace's [Frehley] makeup, did KISS ever ask you to put it on before Tommy Thayer?
Bruce: No. Y'know, it's a good question. Of course, fans always want to know if Eric Singer is in Peter's makeup then how come I'm not in Ace's makeup. Y'know, you got to remember the dynamics of how things were running with the band. You got Ace Frehley, who was so important to the history of the band, back in the band and back to being Ace. I mean he's going to have some problems. He's going to be maybe a little unreliable. One time Tommy had to suit up and be ready because Tommy was being the tour manager and helping out and working for the band. Tommy Thayer is a good guitarist. He taught Ace to help him get back in shape before the tour. He was in a tribute band. I mean, of course he had BLACK N' BLUE and it was a fine tribute band for that kind of style of music that was popular then, but he used to be in a tribute band called COLD GIN which I saw once and Jamie St. James, who was the singer in WARRANT, he played Peter Criss. And BLACK N' BLUE were a really terrific KISS tribute band and they actually went to Japan and toured a little bit. I had a friend who booked them in some places. So Tommy knew exactly what it was to be Ace Frehley. He did. And then one time, I know for sure, they made him get in the outfit because Ace missed his flight and it looked like he was going to miss the gig and they were not going to not play that gig. The manager made an announcement that Ace wasn't there and that Tommy was playing guitar.
The Pop Culture Addict: They did that with Peter.
Bruce: Yeah. They did that once and replace him with the roadie. Exactly. In the end, what I'm saying, is that Ace was stringing along with things and they think they have their guitarist and then they don't and it's like, y'know, it was easy for Tommy just to walk right into that situation. I mean, I had a great gig with GRAND FUNK. I mean if they approached me and I turned my back on my twelve years of being Bruce to suddenly be Ace Frehley it doesn't feel that great to me. On top of it is just as soon as Ace wants the gig back he just walks right into the gig and I'm losing all my GRAND FUNK gigs. So I'm kind of glad I wasn't asked. It would have been awkward. I would need some real security for the gig and I don't think that would be something they'd be ready to do — and Tommy, if he didn't end up being on stage with them he'd still be working for them.
Read the entire interview at www.popcultureaddict.com.
"Gene Simmons Family Jewels" features the rocker, 57, at home with his partner ex-Playboy centerfold Shannon Tweed, 49, and their kids Nick, 17, and Sophie, 14.
The family show will be in sharp contrast to his image as a hell-raising rock star who claims to have slept with more than 4,600 women.
The 13-episode series, which will be shown on the digital channel in early 2007, has strong echoes of MTV's hit show "The Osbournes" which revitalized the careers of rocker Ozzy and wife/manager Sharon.
The U.K.'s Channel 4 showed Gene's last series "Rock School" earlier this year.
Music lovers, music makers weigh in on KISS phenomenon
Paul Stanley, KISS guitarist, vocalist and cofounder, has put to rest any notions that current solo ventures by him and musical partner Gene Simmons mean his globally famous group have called it a day.
"The beast is just resting and getting its strength up to once again stalk the land," Stanley said.
A random e-mail survey of local music fans and music makers shows many in the region believe KISS was an important chapter in rock 'n' roll history. Some think band members are still relevant today, at least for their staying power.
A selection of responses follows:
* "KISS made a statement in rock that wasn't necessarily as original as it was emphatic, following in the footsteps of artists like Alice Copper and the glitter movement to combine music, theater and promotion into a complete package.
"I still remember seeing KISS for the first time on the Flip Wilson show.
"They're still selling out shows today, and that makes them relevant and important. It's as simple as that."
-- Scott Rosenberg, program director X-Rock 103.9 (Valparaiso)
* "I am not a KISS fan, yet I believe they are very important to R&R; they have collectible dolls!!! R&R is a business and a livelihood if you can make it so. They showed many others how to do it, including me.
"You can be 60 years old and still generate fans and followers as young as 12 years old if you to study the KISS phenomenon. Not many bands can do that."
-- Joel Justin, professional musician (Portage)
* "KISS wasn't important to rock 'n' roll ... KISS WAS rock 'n' roll! Like Alice Cooper and David Bowie, KISS weren't just musicians, they were performers. They are THE music icons of 1970s."
-- Nick Kutzko, owner of Music Lab Inc. (Lansing)
* "KISS were the first band to make you hear with your eyes and ears. Superheroes never die! You always remember your first rock 'n' roll band and your first hero. KISS are both. They connected with their image as well as with their songs. I thank Gene and Paul for keeping it going. We still need heroes and something to believe in and KISS gives us that."
-- Tattoo Frank Spears, counselor and KISS fan since 1977 (Blue Island, Ill.)
* "What made KISS one of the seminal bands of the '70s ... was their remarkable ability to stir the imagination and blend so many aspects of pop culture. They were not only rock musicians, but also superheroes, ethereal rebel-warriors, dark knights and pseudo demi-gods. KISS remains relevant in 2006 because true creative genius (Rembrandt, Brahms, Poe) does not diminish in significance as years pass."
-- Adrian "Zuke" Zakula, freelance artist (Miller Beach)
* "They brought the fun back to rock 'n' roll, which was missing for a while. They were extravagant and wild. KISS will always be that perfect example of success that comes with taking chances and thinking outside the box."
-- Robby Celestin, singer and songwriter (Chicago)
* "KISS was important to rock 'n' roll, because they set the tone for every rock band to follow them. They influenced just about every important rock icon today including country guys like Garth Brooks. KISS is still important, because they proved to be marketing and merchandising geniuses. Future rockers can see by the KISS example, that with hard work and great marketing a band can last forever regardless of time change.",P>-- Steve Lopez, lead vocalist of Evenflow band (Lakes of The Four Seasons)
* "At a time when bands were shedding the peace and love of the '60s, Kiss brought out a little of 'the dark side' and bridged the gap between fantasy and reality with their over-the-top characters. Their relevance holds today in that we have Marilyn Manson, Slipknot, Rob Zombie and numerous other bands that have tossed their 'mild-mannered' personas for the more theatrical."
-- Colin Peterson, guitar instructor (Highland)
* "KISS established four easily-recognized personas within the band reminiscent of the early Beatles; used those personas to launch a huge marketing push also rivaling the Beatles; gave an elaborate stage show to complement their identities, gaining an abundance of platinum-selling albums without much radio exposure.
"Probably the most long-term accomplishment of KISS was to catch the eyes and ears of very young people, children even, and spark a generation-wide interest in playing musical instruments. The amount of musicians from the '80s to the present, who cite KISS as a huge early influence on their decisions to take up music cannot be dismissed easily.
"KISS is currently relevant only to a dwindling but still-devoted fan base. While their overall legacy remains intact, the impact of their original magic has been diluted."
-- Steven Sime, tour manager of The Steepwater Band (Chicago)
* "To me, any band or artist that can create an unrivaled legacy is important in the entertainment industry. Longevity is another key factor. The fact that KISS has been able to reinvent itself, continue to tour and set unmatched standards for almost four decades is testimony to that.
"The one thing many musicians fail to learn is that the term music business means just that -- BUSINESS. The fact that Paul Stanley and Gene Simmons learned that early on in their careers is really what has made KISS one of the most profitable bands in the history of rock 'n' roll. It sets an example to follow and learn from."
-- Randy Diehl, sound engineer and businessman (Miller Beach)
"I'm a big fan. Who isn't?" Stanley says. "In my mind, there's Paul McCartney and there's everybody else. For me to be able to sing his praises? I'm there in a heartbeat."
Stanley and the "Rock Star" house band will shoot their performance at the House Of Blues in Chicago tonight (Monday, November 6) for a DVD.
In addition to being on tour, Stanley's also been doing a lot of interviews for his solo album "Live To Win" and for the new "Kissology" DVD set. All that work led to some problems, and Stanley was ordered by doctors to rest his voice, so he had to cancel his gig at The Rave & Eagles Club in Milwaukee on Friday (November 3). There's been no word on if it will be rescheduled.
Due on November 15, "Metal Addiction" (cover) will contain the following track listing:
01. It's My Life (BON JOVI) - NICOTINE
02. I Was Made For Loving You (KISS) - NICOTINE
03. Future World (HELLOWEEN) - NICOTINE
04. I Remember You (SKID ROW) - NICOTINE
05. Valhalla (BLIND GUARDIAN) - NICOTINE
06. The Final Countdown (EUROPE) - NICOTINE
07. Rain (THE CULT) - SUN EATS HOURS
08. Enter Sandman (METALLICA) - SUN EATS HOURS
09. Kickstart My Heart (MÖTLEY CRÜE) - SUN EATS HOURS
10. Digging The Grave (FAITH NO MORE) - SUN EATS HOURS
11. Ace Of Spades (MOTÖRHEAD) - SUN EATS HOURS
12. You Shook Me All Night Long (AC/DC) - SUN EATS HOURS
Audio samples of all 12 tracks are available at this location.
Due out in early 2007, the CD is expected to feature the following cuts (among others): "Bohemia", "Cat Nap", "Crossroads", "Doesn't Get Better (Than This)" , "Faces In The Crowd", "Fallin' All Over Again", "Hope", "Last Night", "Reason For Living", "What Does It Take", "Whisper", "Space Ace".
In addition to the solo album, Peter is said to be currently working on an autobiography, a swing music CD and a children's book.
* Two (2) tickets to see Paul Stanley perform on Tuesday, November 14, 2006 at House of Blues in Los Angeles
* Meet-and-greet for you and a guest with Paul Stanley
* Dinner for two at Chameau restaurant in Los Angeles. For more information, please visit: www.chameaurestaurant.com
* Two signed copies of "Live to Win"
Bid now at this location. Auction ends November 9 at 10:04 a.m. PST.
Q How does it feel playing without makeup once again?
A It's awesome. I love being a member of Kiss. But I have to say that going out and doing these shows, it points out to people where the power of this music really is, and where the heart and soul is. It's not in makeup or pyrotechnics.
Q This album shows a serious side -- or at least there are no songs like "Let's Put the X in Sex." Was that intentional?
A I hear the word "serious," and I equate it with "not fun." That's not the case here. I think I'm having more fun in my life than I've ever had. It's just a different kind of fun.
Q Do you care if this CD competes with Kiss commercially?
A Whether it sells 500 or 5 million copies, it doesn't change my life any. There's no pressure on me that way. The bills are all paid, folks. So for me, it was more important making the album I wanted to make.
Q Do you at least hope it tops Gene Simmons' last album?
A I can't comment on that.
Q Do you watch Gene's new reality show ["Gene Simmons' Family Jewels" on A&E], or have you seen him up-close and personal enough?
A Gene was at this tour's opening night in Atlanta. He's my brother and I love him. But he still does a whole lot of things that I scratch my head about.
Q What's next: another solo album or a Kiss tour?
A Both. There will definitely be another Kiss tour. We're sorting that out. But there will be another solo album, too.
Q Any Kiss songs on this tour?
A Yeah, they're my songs. I wrote 'em. And a lot of the ones I wrote, I also arranged.
Q Any standout memories from playing the Twin Cities?
A Did you say "mammaries" or "memories"? [Laughs.] That's why they call them the Twin Cities, isn't it?
Q The Kiss Koffeehouse is the band's latest branding gimmick. Are there no limits?
A What can I say? People come to us with great ideas. The fact that you can't base a coffeehouse on any other rock band is the other rock bands' problem, not mine. You know, credibility is someone else's idea of what I should be doing. But you'd also be surprised how many ideas we have turned down over the years.
Q Speaking of merchandising, when I was 7 or 8 I sent off for a keychain from the Kiss Army, even though I didn't have any keys. It never came. Any chance you can hook me up now?
A Sure, you got it.
Paul Stanley's new solo album, "Live To Win", came out on October 24 and sold just under 17,000 copies in the United States during its first week of release to land at position No. 53 of The Billboard 200 chart.
Paul Stanley's new solo album, "Live To Win", came out on October 24 and sold just under 17,000 copies in the United States during its first week of release to land at position No. 53 of The Billboard 200 chart. It has registered the following first-week chart positions so far:
Australia: #71
Canada: #87
Germany: #49
Norway: #36
U.S.: #53
"Live To Win" came out on October 24, and it sold just under 17,000 copies in the United States during its first week of release to land at position No. 53 of The Billboard 200 chart.
Stanley hits the Palace Theatre in Greensburg, Pennsylvania tonight.
Stanley is also promoting the release on DVD this week of "Kissology: Volume One 1974-1977", which has rare and unreleased live footage from the band's early days.
Said Fontana SVP Sales & Marketing Ken Gullic: "Heritage and classic acts have legions of fans who are passionate about attending shows and visiting record stores. The artists know precisely who they are, and their fans know what they want. VH1 Classic Records clearly has no intention of diluting any of these projects through a modern filter. That we get to launch this with KISS and the monumental 'Kissology' project is a stunning but awesome turn of events. As a card-carrying member of the KISS Army, and with our pals at VH1 Classic Records, everyone's making sure that this is a return to the glory days when KISS' packaging and content were equally exciting. KISS actually broke through on Casablanca Records as an independent label, when no one else would have them, so this is really a natural fit. We get it, and we'll honor this!"
The following are notable heavy metal/hard rock U.S. sales debuts for the week ending October 29, 2006, as reported by Nielsen SoundScan (all CD figures are rounded to the nearest thousand, except numbers under 4,000, which are rounded to the nearest hundred; The Billboard 200 chart position included, where applicable):
PAUL STANLEY – "Live to Win": 17,000 (#53)
CONVERGE – "No Heroes": 6,000 (#151)
DEF LEPPARD – "Hysteria" (Deluxe Edition): 2,100
CHILDREN OF BODOM – "Chaos Ridden Years" (2-CD): 2,100
ANGRA – "Aurora Consurgens": 400
KROKUS – "Hellraiser": 200
Stanley and Simmons will be at the Virgin Megastore in Times Square tonight to sign copies of "Kissology: Volume One 1974-1977". The autograph session begins at 11 p.m., but only those who bought a copy of "Kissology" at the Times Square location earlier today got a wristband allowing them into the meet-and-greet.
It won't be the only time Stanley has donned the face paint on Oct. 31. One of the most memorable Halloweens for him in recent years happened in 1998, when KISS made their way back to their Los Angeles hotel by foot and unpestered, despite being fully attired.
"We had just finished the opening night of our 'Psycho Circus' tour at Dodger Stadium. The traffic was so bad, and we literally had just come offstage and wanted to get to the hotel," Stanley recounted. "It was the perfect night for us to get out and walk to the hotel. People were just looking at us going, 'Yeah! Great costumes.'"
Calling themselves KISS, they experimented with makeup and costumes until each developed a distinctive stage persona. Drummer Peter Criss became The Cat, lead guitarist Ace Frehley was The Spaceman, bassist Gene Simmons was The Demon, and lead singer Paul Stanley was The Star Child.
Initially playing New York's small clubs and bars, their shows mixed music and pyrotechnic displays while Simmons breathed fire and drooled blood. Three years and four albums later, they were one of the best-known acts in the world.
Stanley wrote songs including "Firehouse" and "Black Diamond" and co-wrote one of the band's signature hits, "Rock and Roll All Nite" with Simmons. In the 30 years since they became superstars, KISS has broken up, gotten back together, toured without the makeup and dabbled in movie and TV projects.
Stanley, playing Friday at The Rave in support of his new solo album, "Live to Win," talked about his legacy with the band.
Q.How did KISS avoid the pitfalls of success?
A. We didn't all sidestep them. Certainly the troubles that some members of the band had are well-documented to one degree or another, the poisons and vices of success. But I never got into drugs. Very early on when they talked about sex, drugs and rock 'n' roll, I said, "You keep the drugs, give me the rest."
Q.Is that advice easy to follow even when people all around you want to give stuff to you?
A. Common sense will tell you if drugs and that lifestyle were so great, you'd be interviewing Janis Joplin, John Belushi, Jimi Hendrix, Jim Morrison and Kurt Cobain right now. There's nothing cool about being a martyr. There's nothing cool about being dead and not getting to enjoy your success.
Q. You made your own costumes in the very beginning. How?
A. To put it simply, desire. I believe there's nothing you can't do if you try. You never sewed before? Well, put a piece of fabric under a sewing machine and see what happens. You never played guitar before? Pick one up and give it a try. That's all it takes. Limitations are all self-imposed.
Q.Did the makeup afford you some anonymity once the band became famous?
A. To a point. But look, I'm 6-feet-plus. I had long blue-black hair below my shoulders. If you couldn't figure out I was in KISS when you saw me on the street, you certainly didn't think I was a neurosurgeon. I definitely got my daily dose of being stared at.
And really, anonymity is a choice. You can choose how much you want to be exposed, and celebrities have different levels of what they want.
Q. Who influenced you musically?
A. Elvis. Specifically the early Elvis. He was electrifying. He was carnal, exciting, rebellious and dangerous. Later it was the Stones, the Beatles, the Who.
Q. At what point did you know you were going to make a living with KISS?
A. When I peeked out from the curtains during the KISS "Alive" tour (in 1975). I did it night after night and realized that all the shows were selling out. That's when I knew the battle plan was working and we were on the verge of becoming the phenomenon that we always envisioned.
Q.Obviously you don't have any financial worries these days, but do you remember your first paycheck?
A. Oh, yeah, sure I do. In 1973 we were put on salary. We got $60 a week each. I thought we were rich!
Q.What do you do offstage?
A. I like being home. I like being with my family. I enjoy a good dinner, some good wine, hanging out with friends. Good books.
Q. Recommend a book.
A. "Into Thin Air," because it's a great glimpse of human folly and the sense of self-importance. And maybe "Tuesdays With Morrie."
Q.How about your favorite movie?
A. "The Shawshank Redemption." It's about somebody who keeps going because he has a purpose and a dream, and that's what we all need.
New York's Village Halloween Parade is the nation's largest public Halloween celebration, attended by over two million people and seen by over four million on TV! See the parade live on NY1 television and nationally on in-demand hi-def TV.
Gene Simmons of KISS called the "Mark and Mercedes in the Morning" show on Mix 94.1 in Las Vegas on Friday (October 27) to talk about his "Gene Simmons Family Jewels" reality-TV show and his appearance at Dillard's in Vegas today. Download and listen to the interview at this location.
The point is, Stanley was working on a solo album -- his first since 1978 -- and casting around for the right band to help him play the new songs live. "And when I saw these guys a year or more ago on that 'Rock Star' show, I went -- as does everybody else -- 'This band is a killer,'" said Stanley.
So he hired them for a tour in support of the just-released "Live to Win" (New Door/Universal). In a recent interview, Stanley sounded pleased with the decision. "They're amazing," he said. "We sound like a band that's been together a long time, and that's what I wanted."
"For better or worse I have always seen myself as the caretaker of Kiss," he said. "Everybody loves to run off and do side projects and indulge themselves. But if everybody is doing that in a band, there may be no band to come back to."
Stanley said that over the years Kiss has had "pretty serious problems" -- an understatement, given the band's colorful history of firings, rehirings and fortunes lost and remade. "Someone had to be there to either plot a course or bail water, and I kind of saw that as my responsibility," he said. "I did it because I wanted to. At this point, though, Kiss is something that is very solid and stable in its own insane way, and I thought it was really important for me to indulge, purge -- use whatever word you like.
More video footage has been posted online from KISS guitarist/vocalist Paul Stanley's solo performance on Tuesday (October 24) at the Hard Rock Live in Orlando, Florida. Check out the clips at YouTube.com:
"Got To Choose" (video)
"Move On" (video)
"Bulletproof" (video)
"Do You Love Me?" (video)
For the past two decades, Eric Singer has remained at the top of the list for "First Call" Rock drummers. In "All Access To Drumming", Eric shares his experience, techniques and many other aspects that are essential to survive as a professional drummer in today's world.
From his dad's society band to LITA FORD, GARY MOORE, BLACK SABBATH, BADLANDS, ALICE COOPER, BRIAN MAY and KISS, Eric has mastered the playing techniques and tricks to persevere in the real world of rock drumming.
Music Star Productions, producers of the spring 2006 "KISS Forever" instructional DVD featuring Bruce and Bob Kulick, are also offering the "Union: do Your Own Thing Live" featuring Bruce Kulick, John Corabi, Brent Fitz and Jamie Hunting.
For more information, visit www.livetojam.com.
A 10-minute audio interview with Stanley, conducted recently by "Elliot in the Morning", has been made available for download at this location (MP3, 4.7 MB).
These days, however, Stanley, 54, is hitting the road sans his signature face paint and seven-inch platform boots for a 17-city club tour in support of his just-released solo album, Live To Win.
Stanley, who plays at Rams Head Live tonight, spoke with The Sun last week from his home in Los Angeles to discuss his new project as well as several Kiss-related topics.
Live To Win is your second solo album, but your first since 1978. Why did you choose to do another one at this time?
I've always seen myself as the caretaker for the band in the sense that, if everybody was running off doing side projects throughout the years, then we might all come back to an empty dock where there was once the Good Ship Kiss. There were times when somebody needed to be bailing water, and I volunteered. It has reached a point where the band has achieved kind of an iconic status, and it's pretty solid. And there comes a time when you just have to say, "It's my turn."
Were there things musically that you wanted to do on this album that wouldn't have fit into the Kiss sound?
I really never thought of it like that. When I write for a Kiss album, I write for the strengths and weaknesses of the band and the musicians. When I do a solo album, I write the songs and then bring in the musicians that are best suited to play the songs. I think there are certain things that perhaps wouldn't be appropriate for Kiss. But I don't think this album is that much of a stretch in terms of songs as much as it is maybe sonically. The sound of it certainly is much bigger and broader than something that Kiss would do.
Will Kiss tour and record again?
Kiss will tour. Even if I wanted to destroy Kiss, I couldn't. It has a life of its own. We're very fortunate that people still want to see us. Will we record? That's a question that I'm not really sure about, mainly because Kiss songs at this point are much bigger than music. They're snapshots of a time in a person's life. No matter what I write today for Kiss, no matter how good it is, people will hear it and go, "That's really great. Now play 'Detroit Rock City.'" And I understand it. ... I don't know that I really want to put so much effort into something to know that it probably will fall short in terms of acceptance.
Last August, a couple hundred Kiss fans protested outside the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum in Cleveland because the band has yet to be inducted. What are your thoughts on the snub?
Honestly, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame is a joke, and it always has been. I think they should be ashamed and embarrassed by some of the people that they've inducted. It's a popularity contest for a small group of judges or whatever they want to call themselves. They induct bands that they like that have sold less albums in their careers than I've sold in a week, and that have influenced a handful compared to what Kiss has done. Kiss is a virus that has infected music from rock to country and back. So if they choose not to induct us, I'm not sure it's a club I want to be a member of.
What is the significance of your album title, Live To Win?
"Live To Win" is a motto or a mantra that I have lived by. I think you owe it to yourself to set goals and things that you want to attain and not allow anyone to get in the way. In that way, you always win, even if you don't succeed. You can fail and still win as long as you fail on your own terms. That's what I've lived by and it's gotten me to where I am. I don't allow people to derail my dreams.
Are you planning to record more solo albums?
The next one will not be in 28 years. If this one is Live to Win, that one would be Hope to Live. I had a great time doing this album. As I said, I've already won. How well the album does is immaterial to me. I made the album I wanted to make. And I will make another. Certainly, the luxury of knowing that no matter what happens, it really doesn't change my life any, takes a lot of pressure off it.
The band that you are playing with on your solo tour is the house band from the television show Rock Star. How did that come about?
That show has been called Rock Star: INXS and Rock Star: Supernova, but for my money it should be called Rock Star: House Band, because arguably the reason to watch that show is the house band. From the first time I saw them about a year and a half ago, I was real clear that when I hit the road, those were the guys I wanted to be with. Between the six of us, it's pretty heavy stuff. The rehearsals have been phenomenal. It's great to see a bunch of guys sweating their butts off, smiling while we're doing it.
Kiss is used to playing large arenas and stadiums. Is it a difficult transition for you to play clubs?
It's not an adjustment. It just means the intensity gets captured in a smaller environment. If anything, it should be more powerful. When I see how fast the tickets have gone, it only makes me raise the bar that much more. I don't think it's that I have a lot to prove, but I have a lot to thank people for. And I want to make sure that they walk out of there with something they're going to remember for a long time. I'm pretty confident that this "thank you" is going to be big and loud.
What can you reveal about the set list?
It celebrates my songs, whether it's the first solo album, or Live To Win or all the songs I've written for Kiss. It would be crazy to be out there and not be playing "Love Gun" and a whole lot of great tunes that I've written for Kiss, but there's also other songs that either Kiss has never played live or that kind of got lost in the shuffle. So in a sense, I look at them all as my unruly kids and I'm bringing them all.
You had two hip surgeries in 2004, including a hip replacement. How are you doing physically?
I'm fine, other than setting off metal detectors worldwide. I have to say that when Kiss did our last shows [this past July], it really struck me how much more I could move than I had on previous tours. I was in tremendous pain during the last three or four tours. Toward the end I could barely get up to the stage from the stairs. But when you hit the stage and people have paid for tickets, they don't need a disclaimer at the front of the show. If you can't do what people paid to see than you shouldn't be there. So you bite the bullet. But everything's fine. Is it perfect? No. But believe me, I was working on far less.
You played the lead in Phantom of the Opera during part of the show's run in Toronto in 1999. Do you plan on doing more theater in the future?
Time is precious, and you can only be in one place at one time. I tend to choose very carefully where I am, because it also means where I'm not. I'd love to do more theater. I'd love to go back and do Phantom on Broadway. It's just a matter of time and everybody being in agreement. I came in at the end of a 10-year run of Phantom [in Toronto]. Firstly, I had to go audition in New York, because they don't need to take a billion-dollar musical and have Bozo ruin it. They asked me to come and audition, and you have to be signed off on in New York no matter where you do it. So I went up to Toronto and we had million dollar box office weeks and I did eight shows a week to standing ovations. So, would I like to do Broadway? Absolutely. Quite honestly, the show continues to do very well, and they have told me very much so that when the time is right, there will be a phone call.
How would you describe your relationship with Kiss co-founder Gene Simmons? From the fans' standpoint, there seems to be two schools of thought. One is that you two are as close as brothers, and the other is that your relationship at this point is strictly business.
I think that when you saw Beatles movies or even The Monkees, I think that was kind of a parody or satire, the idea that they were all in this house together. It may be fun for people to imagine that you spend all your time with your bandmates, but I think it's insane. I think that the best relationships last the longest because you don't expect anything of the relationship that it doesn't have to offer. Gene and I are like family. Regardless of how much time we spend together, we have a mutual respect, although I would not say that I'm a big fan of a lot of [projects] that he does on his own. That's really his choice. It's unfortunate when some of it can impact the band, but he's certainly earned the right to do what he feels he wants to.
Have you watched his reality show? Would you ever consider doing one?
No, I haven't watched it, and I wouldn't do one if I had a gun to my head. You have a choice of two things: You can have reality or television, but you can't have them both. I've always been somebody who's kept my private life private. Whether it's an imagined private life or a real private life, I'm not interested in sharing it.
Do you think all the different types of merchandise that Kiss puts out has hurt the band's credibility with critics?
I think that credibility is an issue that other people deal with. Credibility is your idea of what someone should or shouldn't be doing. My issue isn't with the merchandising, because you would be insane to put something out that people don't want. The fact that other bands are not as interesting or people don't want merchandise with their name on it, I can understand. But don't kid yourself for a minute. If they actually could, they probably would. So the merchandising for me isn't the issue. I sometimes think that the way it's rubbed in people faces isn't very flattering, but that doesn't always come from critics, that comes from within the band.Is it possible that Kiss could continue with new members after you and the current members call it quits? Could Kiss become an act like the Blue Man Group, in the sense that there really isn't just one Blue Man Group, but there are several and they appear all over the world simultaneously?
That's very funny, because I saw Blue Man Group when they used to play the Astor Place Theatre in New York. Then, all of a sudden, Blue Man Group was in Chicago, but they were still in New York. It was like, "Wait a minute, what's going on here?" Is it possible that Kiss could continue? I would like to believe it can and would want it to. I think Kiss have become iconic figures that transcend the people behind them. I think you could show a photo of Kiss to anyone around the world and they could tell you it's Kiss, but I don't know that they could tell you all the names of the members. I think that Kiss is a point of view and a philosophy for delivering a spectacle that puts the audience first. I would hate to see that end.
A two-and-a-half-minute video clip of KISS guitarist/vocalist Paul Stanley performing the KISS classic "Do You Love Me?" on Tuesday (October 24) at the Hard Rock Live in Orlando, Florida has been posted online at YouTube.com.
"The idea of KISS fragrances initially was not just limited to fragrances, it was for everything head to toe," said Gene Simmons.
The collection includes "underarm deodorant, shampoo, fragrances, body oils for him and for her," he said. "It's a full line and we have special Merry Kiss-mas boxes where you can stick one or more of everything in there and get it all and giveaway gift baskets and blah, blah, blah."
"What I did was listen to women," Simmons explained. "Women would come over, and there's lots of them, thank you. You ask them what they like. We must have had 15 different fragrances on the table and they all veered to one or two of them and we finally decided on one.
"The only thing I did was basically say I like it, I don't like it, which ultimately is what it's all about because no matter how much (research and development) you go through, at the end of the day it's got to be of the people, for the people, by the people. You better have them like it or you're out of business."
"You're talking to men, we're Neanderthals. All we know is when the scent works with a woman, we get aroused and once we get aroused — that's what women are here for.
"That's why you wear makeup and perfume, it's for men," Simmons said. "Don't let any other woman kid you otherwise."
"The other biggest thumbs up is I have a 14-year-old daughter named Sophie (Tweed-Simmons), on 'Gene Simmons Family Jewels' TV show. The fact that she, and I swear to you, uses KISS fragrances every day when she goes to school, to the shark-infested waters of 14- and 15-year-old boys, tells me this is the real thing."
"This is turning into a KISS world actually because we already have the Kiss Coffeehouse, the first in a new franchise, that's already opened in Myrtle Beach, that's a massive hit," Simmons said. "We intend on doing 100 coffeehouses in the next two years."
Visit www.radio.jimmydreamz.com for more info or to listen to the show. Weekly broadcast schedule: Monday 1pm; Wednesday 9am; Thursday 4.
Several photos from the opening show of KISS guitarist Paul Stanley's solo tour — which took place Saturday night (Oct. 21) at the Tabernacle in Atlanta, Georgia — have been posted online at KissOnline.com.
01. Live To Win
02. Hide Your Heart
03. A Million To One
04. Got To Choose
05. Move On
06. Bulletproof
07. Tonight
08. Lick It Up
09. Wouldn't You Like To Know Me?
10. Magic Touch
11. I Still Love You
12. Strutter
13. Every Time I See You Around
14. Do You Love Me
15. I Want You
16. Love Gun
Encore:
17. Lift
18. Detroit Rock City
19. Goodbye
Q: It's been 28 years since your first solo album.
A: Hopefully, it won't be another 28 years. If this one's called "Live to Win," that one will be called "Pray to Live."
Q: Why is it so short?
A: Why is it so short?
Q: Yeah. Didn't you have more to say after 28 years?
A: It's funny. I made the album that I thought is what it should be. Would it be better if I made the solos twice as long?
Q: Duh. I guess half an hour is better than nothing.
A: Hopefully, if something is great then you feel really satisfied. I've heard some albums that are just eternal. Just because you have 45 minutes of music doesn't mean people don't want you to stop after 25.
Q: Yes, but you haven't got to express yourself for almost three decades.
A: Well, I always got to express myself through Kiss. The only difference is when I write for a band you know ahead of time the strengths and weaknesses, so you tailor it for that. But for a solo album it's kind of like I get to be a casting agent for a film. We've got a script, we've got the songs, then we cast each one and I get to direct it. It's much more free. It means I don't have to dilute what I'm doing.
Q: So how are you going to fill your shows?
A: I'm going to play the songs really slow.
Q: Are you going to have to pull stuff in from your Broadway repertoire?
A: The beauty of doing this tour is that I've got a first solo album, I've got "Live to Win" and I've written some pretty cool songs for a band called Kiss.
Q: Wait a minute. Have you cleared that with Gene Simmons?
A: I didn't give it much thought.
Q: He's going to take all your royalties.
A: I doubt that. "God of Thunder" was written by me.
Q: And you think you can do it without the makeup?
A: Yeah, the show's going to be all the songs I feel like playing. There are going to be some great Kiss classics and then there are going to be some songs that either didn't get the attention or have never been played live. I think people can expect a pretty cool evening.
Q: Plus, you're touring with the CBS "Rock Star" house band.
A: They're a great band. Arguably, they might be the sole reason to watch that show.
Q: This could easily be a four-hour show.
A: Well, not if I can help it.
Q: That's right. You have a new baby at home. What's your bedtime?
A: Um, I'll let you know. It's not bad. Then again, it's my wife that has to get up and feed him.
Q: How likely is someone to see "The Starchild" on the street with a Baby Bjorn strapped to his chest, pushing a buggy?
A: Well, you know, I tell people, "You won't see me at the Viper Room, you'll see me at the diaper room."
Q: That's funny -- and gross!
A: Yeah. Life goes on. It's rockin'. My life is everything I could imagine it to be.
Q: Will you ever wear the makeup again?
A: Which makeup?
Q: I guess you've worn a lot. The makeup!
A: Of course. I'm sure Kiss will go back on tour within the next year. There's too many people who want us.
So it's a little surprising when his publicist prefaces my interview with a stern admonition that I'm not to ask any questions about Kiss.
Well, um, OK.
I'm sure that Stanley has other stuff to talk about: His Tuesday concert at Hard Rock Live, showcasing material off his new Live to Win or maybe the baby boy he tells me is perched in a carrier on his chest. He and his wife, Erin Sutton, had a baby boy, Colin Michael Stanley, on Sept. 6, at least according to what I read in People.
"It's my second, and it's one of the things that really puts life in perspective,'' Stanley says. "It puts your importance in the world into perspective."
But he doesn't want to talk about that either, punctuating the warm sentiments with a businesslike "let's talk about the album."
Live to Win, in stores Tuesday, is his first solo album in more than 25 years.
Why now?
To my shock, and perhaps to the shock of his publicist, the answer involves Kiss.
"Over the years, I think a lot of the guys in the band at various times have come and gone and also continued to be involved with outside projects,'' Stanley says. "The only problem with that is that there have been times when I felt that if we all went off and did other things, we might not have a band. At times, there were some large leaks, and I needed to be bailing water, but I loved the band that much."
Now, he's taking time for himself, touring behind a collection of songs built on the optimistic tone of the title track. His touring band, which is the ensemble on CBS' Rock Star reality show, isn't Gene Simmons and Ace Frehley, but Stanley is inspired by the changes.
"Optimistic is a good word," Stanley says. "I guess what I tend to celebrate is the idea that we owe it to ourselves to succeed on our own terms and not let anybody get in the way. I'd rather fail on my own terms than be successful on someone else's.
"There's never going to be a shortage of people telling you it's impossible, but those are usually the people who failed."
So what's it like being on stage without that band that I'm not supposed to mention?
Stanley, who has not closed the door on future Kiss tours, makes it sound exhilarating.
"It's like Mel Gibson in Braveheart yelling 'Freedom!' It's total freedom to do exactly what I want. The beauty of it is that you're the casting agent for the movie and also the director."
In addition to his new songs, written in collaboration with Desmond Child and other songwriters, the show also will include "a whole lot of great songs I wrote for a band called Kiss."
So I can mention the name?
Stanley wouldn't have it any other way.
"Anything that comes my way comes because of Kiss,'' he says, "and it's a blessing."
"I've actually got two new babies now," the Kiss frontman chuckles quietly over the phone from his home in Los Angeles on a recent afternoon. One of them is little Colin Michael Stanley — born in early September to Erin, his wife of a year — who's sleeping in the next room. Which may explain why the 54-year-old singer/guitarist, a pleasant enough interviewee, is particularly subdued over the course of conversation (not that he's expected to shriek about "vodka and ahhwwnge juice," but c'mon!). The other baby he's referring to is Live to Win — a ten-track, 33-minute offering that's the first to bear the Paul Stanley name since he, Gene Simmons, Ace Frehley, and Peter Criss simultaneously released solo platters on September 18, 1978, at the height of Kissmania.
Why the long wait between albums? It wasn't for lack of desire. "I've always wanted to do this," Stanley says. "But the problem is that some of the other people in the band wanna be off doing other things all the time and, you know, somebody's gotta mind the store."
Store is the perfect word to describe it. With such recent additions to the group's vast merchandising and promotional efforts as the Kiss Kasket, Kiss Kondoms, and even a Kiss Koffeehouse, which opened earlier this year in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, offering — wait for it — Demon Dark Roast brew and a French Kiss Vanilla Frozen Rockuccino. Indeed, Kiss Kapitalism keeps the koffers filled, chuggin' forward unfettered.
Kiss the band, however, not so much. The novelty and thrill of the full makeup, 1996 reunion and the subsequent years of global touring have waned; Frehley and Criss, once again, are out (the former, balking at a farewell tour that never seemed to end, quit in 2002; the latter was fired two years ago). Simmons has certainly been going it alone of late, with his aptly titled 2004 solo album, Asshole; numerous business ventures (how 'bout that Gene Simmons Tongue magazine!); and, most recently, with Gene Simmons Family Jewels, his popular, Osbournes-style reality show for the A&E channel.
So the slight trace of resentment in Stanley's voice over having to act as Kiss "store manager" in recent times is understandable, although he moves on to a different metaphor to continue the thought. "When the good ship Kiss starts springing leaks, I'm not shy about saying that I'm the one in there bailing water," Stanley says. "As much as I wanted to do a solo album and do other projects, I had to pick and choose because I felt a tremendous responsibility to make sure that the band was solid. Nobody can do what I can do. I sometimes feel [the responsibility] has gotta stay with me, quite honestly."
Whether fed up with that duty once and for all or perhaps sensing that Kiss needs to go on the back burner for a while or risk flaming out entirely, Stanley put himself first over the past year, hammering out a new batch of songs for Live to Win. And though he collaborated with a phalanx of songwriters and musicians (including longtime Kiss cohort Desmond Child and former Kiss guitarist Bruce Kulick), Stanley says he stubbornly clung to his vision from start to finish.
"I really wasn't interested in any feedback or opinions. This is my album. It was the antithesis of doing a group album — there was no thought for anybody else and no diluting anything for someone else. It was incredibly rewarding, because when you work on a group album, invariably what you're doing is you're writing for the group's weaknesses and strengths. You're looking to make the most out of what you have, whereas when you do a solo album, you become the director of a film and the casting agent, and you're calling all the shots, so it's a completely different experience."
If Live to Win were a movie, it would absolutely be a Jerry Bruckheimer production — impeccably crafted, glossy as all get-out, bombastic, schmaltzy, a tad cliché, and in the end pretty entertaining — although you probably wouldn't admit to your friends that you liked it. Stanley's inimitable voice sounds terrific throughout, even if his lyrics generally stick to the sappy self-affirmations he's always peddled: "Live to win, till you die, till the light dies in your eyes/Live to win, take it all, just keep fighting till you fall," he belts on the title track. "Lift" — its verses pushed by choppy, downtuned guitars and vague electronic underpinnings — couldn't be any better designed for Nickelback-, Evanescence-, and Bon Jovi-dominated rock radio, while a semi-acoustic ballad like "Second to None" aims for the same consumers that made Kiss' "Forever" a gigantic hit. And the piano-and-strings-propped "Lovin' You Without You Now" is pure, unabashed end-credit pop-rock.
While Paul Stanley is probably the most "Kiss-like" of the four 1978 solo albums, Live to Win — except for a few fleeting moments — doesn't sound much like a Kiss album at all. That might disappoint some, but, says Stanley: "The last thing I wanted to do was try to re-create the past. I wasn't gonna make 'Son of Strutter' or 'I Wanna Rock and Roll All Night and Party Every Day More,' you know? I didn't want to carry the sword, cross, or banner for Kiss. I didn't want to be the 'one-man Kiss band,' and I could have done that. It would have been easy for me to go into the studio and make something that sounded exactly like a Kiss album. That would have taken no time, but that wouldn't have satisfied me, and then the criticism would have been, 'It sounds just like a Kiss album, what's the point?'
"At the same time, if you put out an album that doesn't sound like Kiss, people say, 'I like the Kiss stuff — why didn't he do that?' But I'm far beyond the idea of trying to please anyone except myself. I made an album that I liked. That was the bottom line. You gotta follow your heart, and if you succeed, great, and if you fail, you did it on your own terms. I love the album, I know a lot of people do too, and that's good enough for me."
With no provocation and barely a split second after pleasantries are exchanged, Simmons launches into a ribald half-hour defence of his refusal to marry the mother of his children and his longtime love, Canadian Shannon Tweed.
It seems Simmons expected to be nagged. The A and E show, after all, features him going head-to-head on the subject of matrimony with everyone from Tweed herself to his two teenaged kids and an angry female stranger in a bar who ends up wrestling him. Even Barbara Walters has asked him to explain himself.
"You women should grow up," Simmons, 57, says of his theory that the vast majority of women are desperate to walk down the aisle and will cajole and harangue their men relentlessly to make it happen. "You have to get over that stuff, because it will drive men away. And then you wonder why he's mounting your sister instead of you."
Marriage, Simmons says, is designed for women - it's "quicksand" for men.
"You just have to say 'I do' and you're done. You may as well just close the lid on your coffin because you can't get out; you're lowered six feet under. To get out of marriage is impossible without you women tearing one of our two God-given balls out, entrails and all."
So why are married men said to be the happiest of any demographic?
"Because if they say otherwise, their wives will kill them," he replies. "Do you know why men die before their wives? Because they want to."
For all his macho bluster, however, "Family Jewels" reveals the legendary rock star to be a man still enthralled by the lovely Tweed after 23 years together and, for all intents and purposes, happily married. He's clearly devoted to his two children, the hunky 17-year-old Nick and Sophie, 14.
He refers to Sophie as "the love of my life" and still recalls clearly the first time he ever laid eyes on Tweed at the Playboy Mansion and fell in love with her independent, no-game-playing persona. On "Family Jewels," Tweed and Simmons are physically affectionate and have settled into the type of easy friendship and mutual understanding that's a hallmark of any happy marriage.
These aren't the Osbournes - the show, airing Monday nights on A and E, shows a family remarkably respectful and loving to one another. Like Ozzy Osbourne, Simmons is the butt of most of the jokes in the Beverly Hills household, but the barbs on this show are gentle.
"It's good being a bastard," Nick remarks slyly at one point, causing a brief flash of remorse to cross his father's face before he quickly recovers.
Even the Newfoundland-born Tweed's proddings are sweet - at one point, she simply hums the wedding march, and she's frequently seen lovingly rolling her eyes at some of her sharp-tongued man's more outrageous pontifications.
But unfortunately for the onetime Playmate, Simmons insists in the interview that marriage is not in the cards and there's no surprise wedding in the works for "Family Jewels."
"Does Shannon want to get married? Of course! It's called woman. But do I want to get married? No. So therefore the answer is no," Simmons says.
"It's my decision for myself. Life should be a menu. If I order a hamburger, and everybody else orders salad, it's just as valid, you see. But people tend to think that life is a menu with one food for everybody. That doesn't work."
The show has been a huge hit for A and E, and in Canada the network is holding a "Family Jewels" contest (details at www.aetv.com/genesimmonsfamilyjewels/index.jsp). The family with a dynamic as compelling and unconventional as the Simmons clan will win a signed Gene Simmons guitar.
Simmons, in fact, is also a hugely successful businessman. He's keen to point fans to his website, www.GeneSimmons.com, as he calls from the back of a limousine in Florida where he's promoting a new Kiss fragrance line - that's right, a Kiss fragrance line that includes deodorant and body wash. Kiss, in fact, continues to be a juggernaut of licensing and merchandising, all due to Simmons's business acumen - there are Kiss Visa cards, Kiss cameras and even Kiss postage stamps.
There's also a place on the website for women to submit racy photos of themselves, in keeping with Kiss's guy-friendly image.
And while some might suggest that proves Simmons is outrageously sexist, in many ways he's not. Women, he says, have to stop defining themselves by their men - a message he's often imparted to his daughter. It's the social conventions that women feel they must adhere to, he says - not women themselves - that so vex him.
"It's the 21st century, you're free!" he shouts with gleeful exasperation. "Women are no longer indentured slaves. 'My car, my house, my woman' - that's over. You're free! You can make as much money as men, you can bed down as many men as you want. You're free!"
For Kenneth Hathorne, it was no decision at all.
"For me to meet him in person, I'll be lucky if I don't have a heart attack," said Hathorne, a 44-year-old car mechanic from Suwanee.
At the Mall of Georgia in Buford on Thursday, Hathorne was not at all alone amongst Kiss devotees who dropped at least $50 for either "KISS Him" or "KISS Her" and the chance to meet their hero. They were not disappointed in coming face to face with Simmons, the co-founder of the 1970's heavy metal group known as much for face paint and costumes as music.
When the scheduled three-hour signing began just after 4 p.m., perhaps 500 fans were already in line. Belk store manager Lori Brown-Jackson, standing in front of seven empty display tables that had been stocked with Kiss fragrance, said the store moved more than 1,000 bottles.
"Wow," said Hathorne afterwards after his seven-hour wait and brief audience with Simmons. "Oh, man. This is the best present I ever could have got, or am ever going to get."
Simmons and his bandmates have made their band something of an industry. Simmons' Web site sells everything from Kiss coasters to lip balm to personal checks.
The fragrances met at least one fan's approval. (A news release described the cologne as "modern oriental fusion" and the perfume as "succulent, wild floriental.")
"It smells really good," said Cindy Sauer of Social Circle. "It's worth it."
Sauer waited in line with her husband, Jim, and 5-year-old daughter Lily, who came dressed in full Kiss attire — make-up, black wig, and costume including a cape. Cindy Sauer guessed that about 200 people had taken pictures of little Lily's get-up.
Simmons seemed to be making it worth the wait. He warmly greeted fans and eagerly drew them in for pictures.
Erika Keith, well, she was pretty happy, too. While standing in line, she danced and pranced in hopes of catching the eye of the rocker.
And when her turn to meet Simmons finally arrived, this lifelong Kiss fan bounded into his arms. Simmons' response, according to Keith: "Whoa."
Simmons swung the 33-year-old massage therapist around the stage. Several minutes after, she was still glowing.
"Aside from having my child, it was the most amazing experience of my life," said Keith, which surely would come as welcome news to her child.
Underneath the Starchild makeup and atop the 7-inch platform heels, Kiss lead singer Paul Stanley has always had the heart of a talented songwriter. On "Live To Win," he casts off the shackles of Kiss and dishes up a second solo disc that's more Foo Fighters than Frehley.
But the modern sound is welded to a firm foundation of '70s and '80s rock and proves there's a lot more to this man than pouty red lips and a rose tattoo.
Many of the songs appear to deal with the recent turmoil in Stanley's life, including a divorce, remarriage and the birth of a child, and the title track drips with angst, tempered with an "I'm-not-giving-in" defiance. "Lift" is about a quest for forgiveness and redemption from a broken love, and "Wake Up Screaming" is perhaps the most infectious track here, with its electronic drum beat giving way to a thundering chorus amid the kind of catchy hook Stanley has been dishing up for three decades.
"Bulletproof" is the closest thing to classic Kiss here. It sounds a lot like 1988's "Rock Hard," and could have fit in easily on 1989's "Hot In The Shade" LP. "It's Not Me" weds a Prince-like groove to more memorable melodies and scorching guitar.
The downside of a solo album is there's no one around to say, "What are you, kidding?" when particularly cheesy ballads are proffered, and he has three chunks of cheddar here that make the much-maligned "Hold Me, Touch Me" from his 1978 solo album sound like "Stairway To Heaven."
KISS, VH1 and MTV want the KISS fans there in the "TRL" pit area, which is the area outside right in front of the window. They are requesting fans also come decked out in makeup and if possible costumes. After their appearance on "TRL", Paul and Gene will come down to the pit before leaving.
Fans interested in attending should email trlcasting@mtvstaff.com. Please put KISS in the subject title along with your name and the names of any guests you plan to bring. Arrival time is 3:00 p.m. on 45th and Broadway, Fans confirmed will be placed on a guest list.
On the long wait between solo albums:
"I've always wanted to do this. But the problem is that some of the other people in the band wanna be off doing other things all the time and, you know, somebody's gotta mind the store."
"When the good ship KISS starts springing leaks, I'm not shy about saying that I'm the one in there bailing water. As much as I wanted to do a solo album and do other projects, I had to pick and choose because I felt a tremendous responsibility to make sure that the band was solid. Nobody can do what I can do. I sometimes feel [the responsibility] has gotta stay with me, quite honestly."
On stubbornly clinging to his vision for the new solo CD:
"I really wasn't interested in any feedback or opinions. This is my album. It was the antithesis of doing a group album — there was no thought for anybody else and no diluting anything for someone else. It was incredibly rewarding, because when you work on a group album, invariably what you're doing is you're writing for the group's weaknesses and strengths. You're looking to make the most out of what you have, whereas when you do a solo album, you become the director of a film and the casting agent, and you're calling all the shots, so it's a completely different experience."
On making a solo CD that doesn't sound much like a KISS album at all:
"The last thing I wanted to do was try to re-create the past. I wasn't gonna make 'Son of Strutter' or 'I Wanna Rock and Roll All Night and Party Every Day More', you know? I didn't want to carry the sword, cross, or banner for KISS. I didn't want to be the 'one-man KISS band,' and I could have done that. It would have been easy for me to go into the studio and make something that sounded exactly like a KISS album. That would have taken no time, but that wouldn't have satisfied me, and then the criticism would have been, 'It sounds just like a KISS album, what's the point?'
"At the same time, if you put out an album that doesn't sound like KISS, people say, 'I like the KISS stuff — why didn't he do that?' But I'm far beyond the idea of trying to please anyone except myself. I made an album that I liked. That was the bottom line. You gotta follow your heart, and if you succeed, great, and if you fail, you did it on your own terms. I love the album, I know a lot of people do too, and that's good enough for me."
"Kissology: Volume One 1974-1977" goes all the way back one of the band's earliest live performances in the New York pre-punk glam rock bar scene of the early 1970s before tracing the rocket-paced transformation of KISS into international rock gods who filled the world's largest arenas as the undisputed hottest band in the land by 1977.
"Detroit Rock City" live concert footage:
Quicktime
Windows Media
"Rock & Roll All Night" live concert footage:
Quicktime
Windows Media
In related news, Peter recently signed a new drumstick endorsement deal with Pro-Mark. You might remember, Peter was with Pro-Mark once before from the early 1980s through the mid-1990s.
In celebration of Peter's new endorsement, Pro-Mark is producing very limited-edition drumsticks that will only be available at the Chiller Theatre Convention. There will be two different models which represent Peter's various music styles. The first model will be the Pro-Mark TXR3JW model, which is a jazz stick that will feature a "jazz cat" on it in green and black. The second model will be the Pro-Mark TX3RW model, which is a rock stick that will feature Peter's famous cross tattoo on it in red and black. Peter personally hand drew the artwork for both models! Each pair will come with a certificate of authenticity.
For plenty of the KISS faithful, it's never been about the makeup or the huge stage shows. The love for the band came from the music, and Stanley, more often than not, was the one dishing out some of KISS' best songs. With "Live To Win," Stanley - minus Gene Simmons and the rest of the "Hottest Band In The World" - is not only in top form, but has clearly released the best KISS-related item of any kind in more than a decade. It is a tremendous rock album.
The disc, in stores Oct. 24, kicks off with the explosive title track and then slams into the fresh and modern, yet also somewhat grand and trippy, "Lift." And it only gets better from there.
"Wake Up Sreaming" is loaded with infections hooks and clever instrumentation, and despite its aggressive title, it's really a song about loss and comes with some heavy sentiment. "Every Time I See You Around" - perhaps the best track on the album - is also insanely melodic, perfectly arranged, and is one the most passionate and visual tunes Stanley has ever penned.
Stanley, who often writes with a great sense of bravado, steps into those shoes again with the gritty and soulful "Bulletproof," which is also one of the few songs on the LP that sounds as if could have come from the KISS catalog, particularly the late `80s "Hot In The Shade" era of the band. The stomping and soaring "All About You" is one of the album's purest rockers, though it too is anchored by a fine mix of punch and melody and also gets some extra pizzazz from Stanley's proficient knob-twirling. Same goes for the dismissive "It's Not Me" and the uplifting "Where Angels Dare," which are also, like the rest of the album, bolstered by his strong vocals and the beefy production.
What's most interesting about the CD, besides Stanley's ability to craft a completely modern-sounding album that also stays true to his roots, is how he apparently has also remained so true to himself. The beautiful "Second To None" is clearly an ode to his second wife, with whom he recently had his second child, and yet some tracks, such as the equally beautiful "Loving You Without You," sound as if they were written during his divorce. Whatever the case, he's put all on the table and into the songs, and it's all a part of the reason he's delivered such a memorable album.
Perhaps the fact that "Live To Win" is loaded with so many highlights shouldn't come as surprise. When all four members of KISS surprised the rock world in 1978 at the height of their career and released solo albums on the same day, Stanley's was the best. And when it comes to combining thoughtful lyrics with a hard-rock kick, all you have to do is play KISS gems such as "Hard Luck Woman," "Sure Know Somethin' " "Reason to Live," "Forever," and "I Still Love You" to hear what he's capable of.
The man, whether writing alone or working with collaborators - as he did on many of these new tracks - is still a monster songwriter. Thus it should also come as no surprise that the guy who has often served as the heart of KISS, especially during the non-makeup `80s era of the band, might be the one to put music back in the heart of KISS fans.
Despite having written about pop and rock music for the past 14 years, I wasn't sure if I was going to write about this album. I didn't know if someone who is such a big fan of Stanley that he has a Paul Stanley-style rose tattoo on his right arm should be reviewing his new record. But after just a few listens, I knew I had to.
I had to do it for all of the fans tired of the bombardment of KISS merchandising, without any new music, and tired of changing band members. I had to do it for the fans who don't like Simmons' goofy TV shows (I like them, by the way), and for the fans who feel that, despite the band's excellent reunion tour with its original members a decade ago, and its subsequent quality tours with other members, it has also seemingly lost its way and its sense of focus.
I had to tell them that Paul Stanley, with some of his best work ever, has brought it all back home, and that with "Live To Win," he has single-handedly reminded at least one fan why he ever became one. Five stars for the Starchild.
According to Newsday.com, attendees paid up to $495 per person for a VIP cocktail hour, a buffet dinner of filet mignon and the chance to catch their favorite rockers in action inside the 1,200-seat theater.
The Hall honors artists or groups that were either born on Long Island, or resided on Long Island for a significant portion of their career. This year's inductees include original KISS members Criss, Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley, Billy Joel, TWISTED SISTER, VANILLA FUDGE and RUN-DMC.
Those buying Kiss Him cologne or Kiss Her perfume for $39 got an autograph or photo taken with Simmons, the flamboyant Kiss bass player famous for wearing black and white makeup and sticking out his long tongue.
"If people decide that a Kiss fragrance line makes sense," Simmons said, "who's to argue with America?"
The line of people waiting to meet Simmons snaked out the door at the Fort Bragg post exchange where the fragrances are sold.
Kiss, one of the top heavy metal acts of the 1970s, also has a coffee shop in Myrtle Beach, S.C., that opened this year. Simmons and other members of the band launched the fragrance products Oct. 1.
During the appearance, Simmons also stepped onstage to join the 82nd Airborne Division's rock band, Riserburn, to help with a rendition of the Kiss anthem "Shout It Out Loud."
Crowds began gathering at the mall at 7:30 a.m., with some driving more than six hours for a chance to spend about a minute with him.
A black-clad Simmons appeared around 1 p.m., sans white-and-black makeup and guitar. He is on a tour promoting new his-and-her fragrances.
"If you can make it in Peoria, baby, you can make it anywhere," Simmons said.
No one sat on his lap, but a black-clad Simmons did shake hands, flirt, hug, kiss, sign bottles of perfume and other memorabilia and, on at least one occasion, licked.
Diana Mroczek, 35, of Chicago, was finishing her weeklong vacation when she and friend Angie Whitney happened upon the large silver platform shoes erected at the KISS Coffeehouse at Broadway at the Beach.
Mroczek was 7 when her mom gave her a copy of a "Dr. Love" single, which she broke in half from overplaying but still keeps with her. At the coffeehouse, Mroczek learned of Simmons' appearance.
Read more at MyrtleBeachOnline.com.
Today, Alice Cooper is like comfort food. But he says there were always boundaries even he wouldn't cross.
"I've never used bad language in my show," says Cooper. "I've never used nudity, anything like that. To me, if you have to do that, you aren't clever.
"I always used to laugh at KISS. My joke for them was, 'When you guys can't think of anything to do, you just blow something up.' "
Cooper is far from bitter. He can headbang to ROB ZOMBIE, MARILYN MANSON and SLIPKNOT like anyone else, knowing they just took his shtick and amplified it by 10.
Now 58, he loves his status as rock's gruesome grandfather, taking any and all rip-offs as a compliment.
He also knows better than to mess with a classic. The same garish props and effects from his legendary 1970s concerts are still a mainstay, only now there's a tongue-in-cheek charm to it.
"I kind of go with what the audience wants," he says. "If they want the guillotine, you got the guillotine. If they want the straightjacket, it's right there.
"It works now as pure entertainment and as tradition, almost. The audience still loves to see it. You still love to see the guy on the tightrope. It's like, certain things never grow old.
"It's the spectacle of it now (that people like). In the '70s, it was shocking 'I'm not letting my kids go see a guy cut his head off on a guillotine!' anymore. That's not going to be shocking because you can turn on CNN and see a real guy get his head cut off by terrorists. CNN has become much more shock value than Alice Cooper or Marilyn Manson."
Read the rest of the article at this location.
So will Aucoin be managing LORDI now? "We don't know yet. We hope so," LORDI leader Mr. Lordi told KissNews.de. "Bill came over to see us. The chemistry betwen all of us was great."
While LORDI have great success in Europe, their records are not yet released in the USA. "The records are only available by import there. It's a record company thing," Mr. Lordi said.
During Bill Aucoin's stay in Finland, he showed LORDI a video clip of KISS' live performance of "Deuce" from 1973 on his laptop, which is going to be on the "Kissology" DVD set. So how is it? "Well, it's a black-and-white recording with one camera from 1973," Mr. Lordi said, "Bill Aucoin wanted to release it as a full concert, but KISS decided to release the footage just piece by piece."
Discussing also the questionable quality and mistakes on some official KISS DVDs, Mr. Lordi said, "I do understand better now. Unfortunately, often the profit is more important than quality standards. There is not enough time. We also have printing mistakes on the LORDI records, and it is my fault. When I sit on my computer in the middle of the night typing the text half asleep, I don't realize the mistakes, and we have to make the deadline. We have a LORDI book coming out, it has over 300 pages. It is done in Finland while we are on tour now. [It's] Friday now, and it just has to go to print on Monday, and 50 pages are not even done yet..."
KNAC.COM: This is your only solo album since the 1978 KISS solos, right? Why so long in between?
Stanley: Yeah. Good question. You know everybody was always running off to do their own projects on the side...I always thought that KISS needed some attention and, you know, if everybody's running around, who's minding the store? There have been times where I think the band was in some danger, and some trouble and somebody needed to be there to bail water, otherwise I think the "good ship KISS" could have sunk. So, I saw that as my responsibility and I did it, and finally it reached a point where I think that the band is solid and will do what it needs to and can do whatever it wants to. And I felt it's really my turn and my time to go do an album. It won't be another 28 years before the next one. (Laughs) Otherwise the next one I told people instead of being called "Live To Win" it'll be called "Hope To Live" (Laughs).
KNAC.COM: You said you're doing a great deal of practicing, so tell me about the touring plans?
Stanley: Our first show is on the 21st. and, we're just doing 18 shows. And then probably I'll go home and reassess what I feel like doing and more than likely go out and do more shows. I've got an amazing band, I got the house band from the TV show "Rock Star" which, whether you like the show or not, is good enough reason to watch it. The band is amazing, and we're just tearing it up every day. The songs we're playing are everything from the first solo album, to the KISS classics, to some really cool KISS songs that have never been played that I really like and things from "Live To Win". So, it's a full, full evenin'.
KNAC.COM: During the '80s you almost produced albums for GUNS N' ROSES and POISON, but it never happened. Why?
Stanley: All kinds of reasons: politics, personality clashes with some of the people involved, but everybody's done very well and I'm happy for everybody. It's great to see other people succeed and it's nice to be a part of people's success but when you can't, you know, it's really not the end of the world. Everybody has managed to do quite well with me and without me.
KNAC.COM: Gene's done a lot of producing…is that something you want to do?
Stanley: I'm pretty selective in how I use my time. The idea of just producing for the sake of producing is not of any interest to me. For something to take up my time it has to be something that I feel is worth sacrificing something else. (If) the right project comes along, sure, but just to, you know, to me there's a way people can seem to be busy and it's not that different from being on a stationary bike. You're pedaling a whole lot but you're not going anywhere. That's not to draw a comparison to Gene, it's more about the idea that I'm real selective in what I do and you only have so many hours in the day and the time you spend doing one thing means you're not doing something else.
KNAC.COM: Speaking of Gene…I know he's got to be like a brother to you…but he doesn't even hide it any more…the blatant "if I can make a buck, I'll do it" attitude… Do you think it helps or hurts KISS…and your efforts to be your own artist?
Stanley: I don't think it helps. But, you know, he's certainly entitled to say what he wants. We don't always agree, and I think that there are certain things he does that don't reflect well on the band, but, that's life. It's important for people, as much as possible, to realize that the squeaky wheel doesn't always have to get the oil. In other words, the person who is the most vocal isn't necessarily saying things that are reflective of the band or the point of view of the band. I think Gene often says things to get a rise out of people or to get press space, and that's fine. But it really doesn't necessarily mean it's more accurate.
KNAC.COM: Will KISS record again?
Stanley: It's possible. You know the problem with KISS recording is that the songs that everybody thinks of as the classics are much more than music at this point, they are really, I guess like snapshots of a point in somebody's life. People remember what they were doing when they heard a certain song. People remember who they were with, who they were screwing, whatever they were doing, so it makes those songs much bigger than just playing music. The problem with that is that no matter what, KISS would go in and record today, it's never going to measure up to that. Not because it's not as good, but because it doesn't have the history. I mean, you go to a (ROLLING) STONES concert, and truthfully, you tolerate the news songs, but you're not there to hear them, you're waiting to hear "Brown Sugar", you're waiting to hear "Honky Tonk Woman". It's just a matter of whether or not you're willing to accept that. Some bands want to continue making new music for their own creativity. I respect that. I just wonder if I'm up to putting that amount of effort into an album only to have people listening to say, "Oh, well, that's really nice. Play "Love Gun". (Laughs) So if I can reconcile that then I'd go back in, but I would want, you know, I would pretty much at this point, if we did a KISS album I would want to control it. You know, I'm not really in a place now where I want to compromise or dilute an album for anyone's quota of songs or anything like that. At this point I'd really want, I'd pretty much want to steer it.
Read the entire interview at KNAC.COM.
UltimateBet.tv will qualify two players to compete against Sully Erna of Godsmack, Vinnie Paul from Pantera and Big Vin Records, Ace Frehley of KISS, Dusty Hill of ZZ Top and Scott Ian of Anthrax for their favorite charities in the first VH1 Classic Rock'n'Roll Celebrity Poker Tournament airing early 2007 on VH1 Classic.
Pro player Phil Hellmuth will host the main event while poker champions Annie Duke and Antonio "The Magician" Esfandiari will be the Green Room co-hosts. Fan favorite Phil "Unabomber" Laak will offer "Tips and Tells" to all the players. Mark Tenner will offer color commentary and Matt Savage will serve as the main event tournament director.
Rock 'n' roll comedian and featured artist on XM Satellite Comedy Channel 150 "The Chinaman" will be on hand to warm up the crowd. Sam Ash Music is providing instruments for the set design.
Two lucky visitors to www.UltimateBet.tv will get the chance to participate with the rock 'n' roll stars with "free roll" qualifying tournaments being held Oct. 23. Flamingo Las Vegas has also invited one player to play alongside the rock 'n' roll celebs.
The first place main event champion will receive a $25,000 check donated to a charity of their choice, a seat in the Main Event of UltimateBet.tv's Aruba Poker Tournament worth $10,000.00 and a day of on-camera programming from VH1 Classic as "VJ for a Day." In the event of a non-celebrity winner, the winning player will appear as a sidekick with the highest-ranking celebrity of the tournament.
All players that are eliminated from the main event will have a second chance to win with a "Heads Up" tournament in the adjoining Green Room. The "Heads Up" tourney champ will win a June 2007 cruise for two to Alaska.
"I am proud to be working with the Flamingo and UltimateBet.tv to raise awareness and contributions for selected charities. We have also twisted up this tournament by adding something no one else in poker has done, with as much going on in the green room as we do the main tournament area," said producer Lisa Tenner.
"As we continue the process of reinventing the Flamingo, the VH1 Classic Rock'n'Roll Celebrity Poker Tournament is a prime example of the direction the resort will be taking in the future," said Don Marrandino, president of Flamingo Las Vegas. "This talented group of artists will rock the Flamingo."
The charity event will be taped in the Second City Theatre at Flamingo Las Vegas.
The authors are Olivia, Carly, Amanda and Jennifer. Minnesota's Olivia became a paid escort to movie stars, Arab royalty and the rich and famous. Carly took a walk on the wild side from porn industry publicist to one of its practitioners. Amanda, a 20-year call girl, is still on call. Jennifer, daughter of the late movie star Gig Young, was Heidi Fleiss' pal.
Besides the usual suspects like Gene Simmons and Charlie Sheen, the book's fire-engine-red cover lists such names mentioned inside as Schwarzenegger, Khashoggi, Candy Spelling and Victoria Sellers. And Brad Pitt, Kevin Costner, Laurence Fishburne, Matt LeBlanc.
For rockers, we're told Tommy Lee is "Ohmigod the best." Page 64 calls Kevin Federline "ugh, such a wigger," and what that means, who knows. One paragraph starts, "The girlfriend who introduced me to Dan Aykroyd asked if I wanted to accompany her to Jack Nicholson's house." It then gets colorful, particularly the part about "sitting around his mansion naked at his dining room table."
This bound, finished, ready-for-the-stores shovel - naming Hollywood's paying regulars, what they liked, how dirty, how often, how quick and with how many - has supposedly already had a legal vetting process including lie detectors. Supposedly, it's passed everything but the smell test.
The book is great for jewelers. Many wives will be getting many expensive gifts
Recorded on New Year's Eve 1999/2000 at Vancouver's BC Place Concert Bowl in Canada, the original "Alive IV" was set for a March 28, 2000 release. However, it quickly got pushed back to April 18 before it got shelved indefinItely. Around that time, Paul Stanley stated in an online chat: "'Alive IV' will be out at some point. We missed our deadline and we're still in midst of it."
KISS "Alive! 1975-2000" (view cover here) box set will consist of the following:
CD1: "Alive!"
CD2: "Alive II" (bonus track: "Rock and Roll All Nite" single version)
CD3: "Alive III" (incl. "Take It Off")
CD4: "Kiss Alive IV: The Millennium Concert" (2000)
01. Psycho Circus
02. Shout It Out Loud
03. Deuce
04. Heaven's On Fire
05. Into The Void
06. Firehouse
07. Do You Love Me?
08. Let Me Go Rock ‘N' Roll
09. I Love It Loud
10. Lick It Up
11. 100,000 Years
12. Love Gun
13. Black Diamond
14. Beth
15. Rock And Roll All Nite
16. 2000 Man
17. God Of Thunder
18. Detroit Rock City
"Kiss Alive IV: The Millennium Concert" was recorded by Pete McCabe and mixed by James "Jimbo" Barton, assisted by Patrick Thrasher, at Encore Studios, Burbank, California.
"Rock The Classroom brings diverse professional musicians into public elementary schools to offer a hands-on, standards based music program designed to support the core literacy curriculum currently in use. By integrating music into the existing curriculum, we provide an inspiring creative experience sorely missing from most classrooms while reinforcing key academic skills such as reading and writing."
In adition to the LTD EC-200 guitar signed by Bruce, other items in the auction include a Jimi Hendrix lithograph, a recording studio session, a day with the Dodgers, a year of free movie screenings at the Warner lot, and much more. Click here to bid on the LTD EC-200 guitar signed by Bruce.
In other news, The Right To Rock has posted their latest podcast (Podcast#3), which includes an interview with Bruce. Click here to check it out.
"C'mon and Love Me" (video)
"Deuce" (video)
"Strutter" (video)
Due on October 31, "Kissology: Volume One 1974-1977" chronicles the early development of KISS. The item will contain six solid hours of unreleased footage along with live performances and four full concerts. The DVD is the first volume in what will be a definitive three-part collection, with the second and third installments slated for release in 2007.
On who was the "boss" in KISS:
"Peter (Criss) and Ace (Frehley) used to beg for their songs to be on a KISS album. Both Peter and Ace were very frustrated and it caused them to be the 'bad boys.'"
"My outlook on the whole thing, was that Gene and Paul started this band called WICKED LESTER. They had songs already written and wanted to keep it that way."
On her forthcoming book, "Sealed with a Kiss":
"I wanted to always be able to remember the good times, so I would always have my little Kodak camera with me. KISS's fans get to see the behind-the-scenes antics and fun we were all always experiencing. It is a look at all the memories that I accumulated over the years with Peter and KISS. The book is a coffee table book, measuring 10" x 12" and has 368 color glossy pages. There is a 120,000-plus text manuscript and over 1,500 unseen photos, articles and memorabilia. By the way it weighs 4 1/2 lbs."
On her life with Peter:
"My life with Peter was a struggle, as commonly expected with young married couples. Our marriage was different just because in those days the wife didn't go to work. I really feel that I was very innovative at that time. I didn't care that my family felt that I was stupid in doing what I did. I had faith in Peter and that Peter would be something, he would be successful."
On how she handled her split with Peter in the book:
"I have taken the high road, while still telling the truth. I approach the end of my marriage just as I saw it. I left nothing out. It is probably the saddest part of the book."
On whether she has had any contact with Peter about the book, or at all since they got divorced:
"I have seen Peter very seldom since our divorce. I think I can count the times I have seen him on one hand. I have had absolutely no contact with Peter about this book."
Check out photos from the rehearsal sessions at this location.
"It is the ultimate conversation piece," joked auctioneer Leila "Lee" Dunbar, director of Sotheby's collectibles department, during the bidding.
Read more at SouthFlorida.com.
The 16-year-old rocker — real name Chris Hardman — is on the way to becoming a major artist in his homeland, but it's no thanks to the KISS bassist.
And he insists Simmons' boasts of having slept with 6,000 women is "all talk" and he falsely claimed to be close to the Osbournes.
He says, "All the girls I spoke to wouldn't touch him with a barge pole.
"He says he is good friends with Sharon Osbourne and Ozzy but he isn't. They hate him. I know because I spoke to Sharon and she says he is an a**ehole.
"He is probably in L.A. (Los Angeles) taking all the credit for my chart success even though he has done nothing to help."
MINI ROCKERZ signed a record deal with Universal Music Europe this past spring.
"Gene Simmons Family Jewels" stars Simmons and his family — Shannon Tweed (the woman he's been "happily unmarried" to for 23 years), and their children, Nick, 18, and Sophie, 14.
Simmons recently announced on his web site that "Gene Simmons Family Jewels"' first episode was the most-watched series premiere of any A&E show since the launch of "Dog the Bounty Hunter" in August of 2004. There have been 12 new prime-time series since that date.
DVD features:
* Exclusive interviews with the Simmons family
* Cast Biographies
* Photo Gallery
* Interactive Menu
* Scene Selection
* 8/7/06 Happily Unmarried (#1)
* 8/7/06 Next Generation Rock Star (#3)
* 8/14/06 The Demon Lives (#10)
* 8/14/06 Driving Me Crazy (#2)
* 8/21/06 Food or Sex? (#6)
* 8/28/06 Sexercise (#8)
* 9/11/06 The Un-Anniversary (#12)
* 9/18/06 Loose Change (#9)
* 9/25/06 Fan... Tastic (#7)
* 10/2/06 Horsin’ Around (#5)
* 10/16/06 Gene's Addiction (#4)
* 10/23/06 Shrinkwraped (#11)
* 10/30/06 Behind the Makeup (#13)
TheKissArmy.com: You were there from the beginning of KISS. Were Peter, Ace, Gene and Paul like brothers at first and then slowly started to pull apart or were there some cracks in the foundation from day one?
Lydia: I thought they were just like every other band that Peter was ever in, except that they were determined to make it. They were close, not like brothers, but you have to be somewhat close to be able to hang out with each other day after day, yet I always felt there was a jealousy between them. Whether it be that Peter was jealous of Paul and Gene because they could easily write songs, or that Paul and Gene were jealous of Peter because he dressed so cool. I think Ace was the only one that didn't give a damn. He was Ace and he was great at being himself. I think the fact that Peter and Ace drank and did drugs, kind of put some cracks in the foundation, since Gene and Paul didn't.
TheKissArmy.com: Why wait this long to do a book when it is the popular thing? Why wasn't it done years ago?
Lydia: Creating a book is not an easy task. I started the manuscript almost nine years ago, at the end of 1997, and finished it May 1, 1999. I then handed it over to my publisher. Unfortunately, he was an independent publisher and went bankrupt, and it took me years to get my stuff back from him. After that, I spent some time looking for a literary agent who then wasted a year trying to get me a book deal. I had no luck, because I was told that Gene had flooded the market with KISS books. By auctioning off my KISS collection, I raised enough money to publish the book myself. I then had the task of finding the right people to work with me, and finally, in October 2005, we started assembling the book.
TheKissArmy.com: Lydia, Peter and you come from Italian/American backgrounds, what was life like in your household as a child, and what did your folks think of KISS?
Lydia: I had a pretty strict Catholic upbringing. We were a close family and most of our relatives lived in the same neighborhood. Peter, on the other hand, had a much more liberal family life, even though Catholic, things were a lot more accepted and tolerated in his family. At first my folks thought KISS was strange, but by the time Peter was in KISS, I had been married to him for almost three years and my family had already gotten used to him.
TheKissArmy.com: Lydia, much has been said about Ace and Peter and their wild days, on a personal level, just how hard was it to deal with Peter and did Gene and Paul give you any support or did have to deal with it alone?
Lydia: Everyone knew that Peter was hard to deal with, but it wasn't all the time. The good definitely outweighed the bad. I think that Gene and Paul felt bad for me at times, but the majority of Peter and Ace's wildness was somewhat expected and laughed at most of the time.
Read the entire interview at www.thekissarmy.com.
Justices declined to consider lower court rulings dismissing Vincent's claim that he is owed royalties for his contributions to the heavy metal band's 1983 album Lick It Up.
Vincent, whose real name is Vincent Cusano, played with Kiss from 1982 to 1984, co-writing "I Love it Loud," "Lick it Up" and other songs.
The case is Cusano v. Klein, 05-1492.
Singer is a major contributor to the book chapter detailing BLACK SABBATH drummer Bill Ward's 1990 solo album, "Ward One: Along the Way". Singer performed on two tracks on the album, which also featured appearances by Jack Bruce of CREAM, Ozzy Osbourne and Zakk Wylde.
Some of the topics Singer discusses in the online interview include former BLACK SABBATH vocalist Ray Gillen, the creation of what eventually became 1987's "Seventh Star" and Singer's approach to interpreting early BLACK SABBATH material. The interview also provides Singer's take on rumored one-time SABBATH singer, Jeff Fenholt.
"When I sent out a request to Eric's camp regarding this project, Eric very quickly and enthusiastically responded," says Gausten. "In addition to covering Eric's work on the Bill Ward album, our conversation inevitably led to Eric's years in BLACK SABBATH. Since Eric's words offer insight into a unique time in SABBATH's evolution, I decided to isolate the band-related portion of our talk and post on my site as a stand-alone interview."
Joel Gausten is the former managing editor of Liner Notes magazine. A longtime musician, he has worked with a number of artists including PIGFACE and ELECTRIC FRANKENSTEIN. "Albums that (Should've) Changed the World" is slated for an August 2007 release.
The trailers are to promote the one-night-only showing of "Kiss Alive! at Cobo Hall 1976" along with the special rockumentary "Kiss Day in Cadillac, Michigan 1975". This special showing is a precursor to "Kissology: Volume One 1974-1977" two-disc DVD set that goes on sale October 31. "We came up with a fantastic trailer that kicks some ass," Tommy reported, "and the folks at National Cinemedia were great. I had fun visiting them."
"Kissology: Volume One 1974-1977" chronicles the early development of KISS. The item will contain six solid hours of unreleased footage along with live performances and four full concerts. The DVD is the first volume in what will be a definitive three-part collection, with the second and third installments slated for release in 2007.
Thursday, Oct. 12 - Philadelphia, PA
Friday, Oct. 13 - Raleigh, NC
Saturday, Oct. 14 - Myrtle Beach, SC
Monday, Oct. 16 - Ft. Bragg, Fayettville, NC
Thursday, Oct. 19 - Atlanta, GA
Friday, Oct. 20 - Jacksonville, AL
Saturday, Oct. 21 - Birmingham, AL
Sunday, Oct. 22 - Jackson, MS
Thursday, Oct. 26 - Fresno, CA
Friday, Oct. 27 - Las Vegas, NV
More details will be made available soon.
"Finally finished the mixing and mastering of the ESP 'Live in Japan' CD (featuring the lineup of Kulick on guitar, Eric Singer [KISS, ALICE COOPER] on drums, John Corabi [MÖTLEY CRÜE, RATT] on guitar/vocals and Chuck Garric [ALICE COOPER, DIO] on bass). Sounds great and the 11 tracks chosen rock for sure. It will be for sale starting in October and my page will have a link for ordering. The DVD is on its way to be manufactured as well. I am very excited about finally sharing the excitement of ESP with everyone, not just the countries we seem to visit.
"Back from a weekend with GRAND FUNK RAILROAD and got a chance to visit Sedona, as the Thunder Valley Rally with BLOOD SWEAT AND TEARS, and STEPPENWOLF, was in the Camp Verde area of Arizona. Really amazing how colorful the mountains are, and the ones I took on my cellphone prove it. I have lots more pix from my cellphone this time, and they look good! Took one of a dog that was in Harley gear, and ready to ride! Not sure how my dog Joe would do, but this one looked all ready to go on the hog."
Read the rest of Bruce's message at this location.
Simmons has generously allowed the A&E network to include an axe from his personal collection in this charity auction for the reality-TV A&E series "Gene Simmons Family Jewels".
The Gene Simmons axe bass guitar was briefly made available to the public during the late '90s and is no longer being manufactured. Each individual axe in this limited-edition signature series was handmade to the exact design specifications of Gene Simmons before being signed, numbered, and tested by the man himself. Having quickly sold out, this unique instrument has become increasingly rare in recent years.
You can access the auction at this location.
For more information, click here.
For more information, visit www.limusichalloffame.org.
Congressman Jim Langevin (D-RI), a member of the House Armed Services Committee, visited Mills Coffee Company in Providence, RI, to thank the KISS Coffeehouse team for donating the KISS Coffee to the RI National Guard members serving in Iraq. "I am pleased to support any effort made by our business community to bring a little bit of home to our troops who are serving so bravely in the war against terror," said Congressman Langevin.
Mills, the official roaster of KISS Coffeehouse products, generously matched the 1,000 bag donation by KISS Coffeehouse. "Along with creating the most exciting coffeehouse in the marketplace, we all wanted to recognize the men and woman serving overseas. Hopefully, our rocking coffee will give them a lift," added KISS Coffeehouse owner Brian Galvin.
Check out photos at this location.
Dave's On Tour: It's not as important to U.S. history as the John F. Kennedy conspiracy, but for the sake of rock and roll history, I've got to ask you this. The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame announced its 2006 inductees. It's some kind of conspiracy when bands like KISS and ALICE COOPER are not in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, and bands like PARLIAMENT-FUNKEDELIC and THE PRETENDERS are. Your comments?
Eric: Music is a generational thing. We all have that music from our teen years that really influenced and impacted us in a time period when you cared about it the most. Music becomes the soundtrack to our lives during those young and impressionable years. So each generation has its favorites, those bands and records that you can still play today that bring us back to a special place in time. The bottom line though with the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame is that it's a political thing. Voting is all about opinions. Sometimes the writers and critics think they know more than everybody else, and they voice that opinion with their vote. If a band sells a bunch of records and a lot of people attend its shows, it shouldn't matter if a voter doesn't think that band is critically relative. The bottom line should be if the music fans like it. KISS is a huge band and they're influential. They are part of Americana whether people like them or not. Here's an example of politics: Jann Wenner, the owner of Rolling Stone, doesn't like KISS, and they've never EVER made the cover of his magazine. ALICE COOPER has been very influential and belongs in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. He even influenced DAVID BOWIE, who switched his direction once ALICE COOPER came out.
Dave's On Tour: I've seen you quoted, and it obviously speaks for most KISS fans, that you'd love to see new studio material recorded. How important and how necessary is it for KISS to add new material from the 21st century to their legacy?
Eric: I think that's an artist's choice. Using ALICE as an example, it's great that he keeps recording new records despite not having any big hit songs. He wants to keep making music because that's what he does. He has so much energy. With KISS in mind, it would be a good thing to do a new record. It certainly wouldn't hurt. If Gene and Paul can do solo records, they can do a new KISS record. I don't make those decisions, and I wish I had more say and input in those things. If it were up to me, I'd say let's do a new record. But you know what? Somebody's got to pay for the record and somebody's got to write the songs. Those guys are the songwriters. They could put everything down and walk away any time they want. They don't need the money, and they don't HAVE to do anything. It becomes all about what they WANT to do.
Dave's On Tour: Does KISS have touring plans for 2007?
Eric: I hear the same rumors and rumblings, and I usually hear it from fans and through people like yourself in the business before I hear it from Gene or Paul. I would imagine that at some point, something's going to happen. Exactly when, I don't know. We all take things one day at a time, so after Paul and Gene do their individual things, they'll have a look around to see if going out again to tour is a good idea. It may just be the random, one-off shows that they did the last two years. My impression, based upon the talk I hear when I'm around them and the sense of their vibe, is that they don't have any interest in a full-scale tour. But that could change at any given time. I don't think we'll hear anything until spring 2007 at the earliest.
Read the entire interview at www.davesontour.com.
Click here for more details on all of Paul's art, but please note that the "Karma" piece has not yet been added to the site.
"Yesterday [Sunday, Sept. 17] Paul [Stanley] and Gene [Simmons] filmed various promotional clips for the 'Kissology' DVD, including an interview with Eddie Trunk for VH1 Classic's 'Hanging With' show. Several people on the set told KissOnline.com that the interview was quite engaging and is not to be missed when it airs some time in October. VH1 Classic's is planning a massive marketing campaign for 'Kissology' and we will continue to bring you all the details as soon as we receive them."
Due on October 31, 'Kissology: Volume One 1974-1977' is a two-DVD box set chronicling the early development of KISS. The item will contain six solid hours of unreleased footage along with live performances and four full concerts. The DVD is the first volume in what will be a definitive three-part collection, with the second and third installments slated for release in 2007.
Earlier today Paul enthusiastically spoke about bringing the house band on the road with him. "From the first time I saw them perform, I knew they were the band that could help deliver the songs for my solo tour with lethal force," he said. "Trust me, this is going to be awesome!"
KISS Underground: How was recording [your new solo album] "Live To Win" different than recording a KISS album, and how did it differ from recording your first solo album ("Paul Stanley" from 1978)?
Paul Stanley: "The difference between doing a solo album and a KISS album, or any 'band' album, is that when you do a 'band' album, you're tailoring the material to the specific band [you're recording with], and also taking into account the assets and what the band excels at. So you tend to limit yourself somewhat, whereas when you do a 'solo' album, you can bring in anybody you want for any song. So you really get TOTAL freedom. Both are a reflection of me. The difference is, in a band situation, certainly you have everybody's input more so. There's a certain amount of give-and-take, and a bit more compromise. As far as the difference from the first solo album, I've been doing this for THAT much longer and I was pretty clear on what I wanted to do. Outside of that, I don't think it was any different. It's not to say that the (two) albums are the same, but how they were done was the same. I did it without any compromise, and without any thought of what anybody else wanted it to be. If someone thought that this would be a continuation, or a sister/brother album of the first one, they're not taking into account that they're 28 years apart. Certainly the point of view is mine on both (solo albums), and the template for every song I write is melody and a good hook. That's something I always try to do."
KISS Underground: Even though none of the songs sound like they were written for a KISS album per se, do you think that any of the songs on "Live To Win" fit with any songs you've written on any past KISS albums?
Paul Stanley: "I don't really think so. I think the instrumentation and sonics of it are very different from what we've done in the past as KISS. Maybe some of the songs could have been on KISS albums, but they wouldn't have sounded like this. The last thing I wanted to do with my second solo album was to do something that sounded 'retro' and sound like an 'old' album. That to me was pointless. To pick up from where I left off would mean that I would have had to do the second album, maybe three years after the first.'
KISS Underground: A lot of fans have been curious as to why your solo tour is so short (15 dates). It's been stated they there MAY be additional dates added, but what's been posted is pretty much it?
Paul Stanley: "You gotta start somewhere. I'd rather commit to something short term and add to it, than do something long term and cut it. There's a lot going on right now. I wanna be home with my little boy and my family. (These initial dates) is a chance to go out there and see how it feels. In doing 15 or 18 shows, I get to play every major city in every major market, or close enough to it. For me to go out and do 50 shows wouldn't be any more productive. It would be less productive because it wouldn't be a great use of time.
KISS Underground: Being that this will be a "Paul Stanley solo" tour and not a "KISS" tour, will you pulling out some more b-side material like on your 1989 solo tour?
Paul Stanley: "It's my chance to do EXACTLY what I want. I'll play the songs that I enjoy and I think are appropriate, and try to balance things out betweem my solo albums and (my) KISS songs. In a sense, there is very little difference between any of them, because they're all written by me. It should be a good balance and a good mix-up of a lot of tunes that I really like. Probably some songs that I've never played before."
Read the entire interview at KISS Underground.
He even confirms that one of the ideas being discussed is a traveling version of the orchestral shows KISS played in 2003 in Australia, which resulted in the "Kiss Symphony" CD and DVD releases.
"It's not out of the realm of possibility," says Stanley, who welcomed his second son, Colin, with wife Erin on Sept. 6. "Anything's possible, but we're far away from conforming or committing to something like that. I'll let you know when it's true."
New KISS music is another matter, however. Stanley says as far as he's concerned, trying to make a new album in the shadow of KISS' classic repertoire is, at the very least, a challenge. "The fact is, [fans] may tolerate the new songs, but it's the old ones you want to hear," he notes. "I think Jimmy Page and Robert Plant found that out. THE [ROLLING] STONES certainly know it. THE WHO certainly know it. So unless you're willing to go into the studio accepting that how your album will be received will never match your expectations, I'm not sure it's worth the effort."
Read more at Billboard.com.
Paul Stanley's new album, "Live to Win", is scheduled for release on October 24, 2006 via New Door Records/Universal Musical Enterprises. The CD was self-produced by Stanley, who provides lead vocals, guitar and percussion alongside a studio core of guitarist Corky James (AVRIL LAVIGNE, THE MATRIX), drummer Victor Indrizzo (BECK, MACY GRAY) and keyboardist Harry Sommerdahl (CARRIE UNDERWOOD, LINDSAY LOHAN). Also performing on the album are former KISS bandmate Bruce Kulick and guitarist John 5.
While the heartfelt "Loving You Without You Now" was written without any outside collaboration, the remainder of the album reunites Stanley with former KISS songwriting partners Desmond Child (AEROSMITH, LEANN RIMES) and Holly Knight (TINA TURNER, PAT BENATAR), and introduces new collaborators including Andreas Carlsson (BON JOVI, BRITNEY SPEARS), John 5 (ROB ZOMBIE, MARILYN MANSON) and Marti Frederiksen (AEROSMITH, FAITH HILL). Seven of the ten tracks were co-written with Child and/or Carlsson, with Stanley and Child joined by John 5 on "Where Angels Dare" and Frederiksen on "Lift", and Knight teaming with the frontman on "It's Not Me".
For more information, contact (800) 453-SHOW (7469), (918) 288-7888, (817) 473-1089, fax (817) 473-6087.
Lydia (married to Peter 1970–1979) is self-publishing "Sealed with a Kiss", which is described as an "insider's look at the glory years of KISS." Measuring 10" x 12", "Sealed with a Kiss" is over 350 pages overflowing with more than 1,500 never-before-published images.
Lydia witnessed the amazing success KISS achieved in their early days when they catered to their fans every whim, and she's actively sought fans' opinions throughout the book's development, designing "Sealed with a Kiss" with their wishes in mind. Among the vast collection of photos and graphics are nearly 100 images from 1973 alone — go onstage, backstage, and in the studio with KISS when they were nothing more than a local New York club band. In response to repeated requests from KISS fans, the overwhelming majority of the photos are captioned with the exact date and location of where/when they were taken.
Where other bands have fan clubs, KISS has a full-fledged Army of the most rabid and loyal true believers in the world. For more than three decades, the KISS Army has wanted and demanded nothing less than the best from their band and across all those years, that's exactly what KISS has always delivered.
The biggest, baddest, most triumphant show band in rock & roll history, KISS has weathered and transcended the fads, follies and delusions of an industry based on the quick buck and the passing fancy.
In the past thirty years, a thousand musical trends and genres have come and gone and come again — sensitive singer-songwriters, glam, metal, punk, alternative, garage, roots, new wave, goth, hardcore, grunge, industrial, techno, retro, hip-hop, teenybop pop, boy bands, girl groups, etc. etc. — and through it all, there has always been KISS.
KISS endures because the band is archetypal, iconic, larger-than-life and louder than thunder. The band, the brand, the blood, the fire and fireworks, the spectacle, the shock and awe and wonder of it all. KISS has always given its Army the best rock in the world and neither side has ever settled for less. And, for all the flash and arena-sized theatricality, the core of KISS is really the music, as potent and powerful and connected to the true heart of rock & roll as any band or artist or performer of the past century.
For the KISS Army, the release this Halloween of "KISSology: Volume One 1974-1977" marks the arrival of nothing less than a Holy Grail: 6 solid hours of vintage KISS going all the way back to the deep early roots of the band's classic line-up — Gene Simmons, Paul Stanley, Ace Frehley and Peter Criss — captured and re-mastered on 2 state-of-the-art DVDs featuring more than 70 live performances and four full concerts bundled along with unreleased tracks and never-before-seen footage.
The mind-boggling first volume of a definitive three part collection (Volumes Two and Three are being readied for release in 2007) presented by VH1 Classic, "KISSology: Volume One 1974-1977" is a showcase of pristine digitally-restored video coupled with a 5.1 audio mix to provide both stunning visual quality and powerhouse finely-detailed sound designed to meet the approval of the most demanding KISSmaniac.
"KISSology: Volume One 1974-1977" goes all the way back one of the band's earliest live performances in the New York pre-punk glam rock bar scene of the early 1970s before tracing the rocket-paced transformation of KISS into international rock gods who filled the world's largest arenas as the undisputed hottest band in the land by 1977.
A dream come true for the KISS Army, "KISSology: Volume One 1974-1977" contains seldom seen high points of KISStory including significant never- before-available material drawn from the band's own personal video vaults. In addition to four full concerts from the peak of the band's first golden era, the DVD set also features notorious television interviews, early KISS music videos and rare unreleased tracks. Included in the lavish "KISSology: Volume One 1974-1977" package are spell-binding eyewitness liner notes penned by the members of KISS themselves.
Disc One of "KISSology: Volume One 1974-1976" takes a look back at an early bar-band KISS (freshly risen from the shards of WICKED LESTER) already thinking much bigger than any of their contemporaries. 1974 is covered with a live concert in Long Beach as well as KISS's televised appearances on ABC's "In Concert" and an interview/performance on "The Mike Douglas Show". By 1975, KISS was playing San Francisco's fabled Winterland, headlining NBC's "Midnight Special" and making videos for "C'mon & Love Me" and their signature "Rock and Roll All Night", all included on "KISSology". In 1976, KISS came to Detroit for an incendiary concert at the Motor City's Cobo Hall, captured on Disc One of "KISSology".
Disc Two of "KISSology" picks up the threads of 1976 with the band's interview and performance of "Black Diamond" on "So It Goes", a must-see and much-discussed interview and performance of "King of the Nighttime World" on "The Paul Lynde Halloween Special", and personal band footage from May 1976. The 1977 material on Disc Two captures the band at the pinnacle of its international fame, performing to tens of thousands of fans at the legendary Budokan Hall in Tokyo in April '77 and, a little more than a month later, headlining "Don Kirshner's Rock Concert". Disc Two closes with scorching concert footage from The Summit in Houston, Texas on September 2, 1977, showing KISS laying down the creed that still beats at the heart of the band: Rock & Roll All Night and Party Every Day!!!
KISS has recorded more gold records than any other American band in history and has sold 80+ million records throughout their career. The group has earned more than 55 gold, platinum and multi-platinum awards since receiving its first gold record for "KISS Alive!" in 1975. KISS has performed more than 3500 concerts in front of nearly eighty million fans in virtually every country on planet earth.
"KISSology Volume One 1974-1977" provides ample evidence of why KISS has lasted so long and continues to mean so much to so many millions of people. KISS is 100% dedicated to the heart and soul and power of ROCK and when the house lights go down, KISS is still the hottest band in any land.
Criss has spent the past couple of years working on a new solo CD, which is now not expected to surface before 2007. "This is the first time I've ever done it all, writing, arranging, singing, playing, editing, mixing and producing," Criss previously said about the upcoming effort. "I feel this is the best work I've ever done. I've never worked so hard on a record. It's about life, love, and ups and downs. Real Peter Criss!"
"20th Century Masters: Millennium Collection, Volume 3" (view cover here) track listing:
01. God Gave Rock 'N' Roll To You II
02. Unholy
03. Domino (live)
04. Hate
05. Childhood's End
06. I Will Be There
07. Comin' Home (live unplugged)
08. Got To Chose (live unplugged)
09. Psycho Circus
10. Into The Void
11. I Pledge Allegiance To The State Of Rock And Roll
12. Nothing Can Keep Me From You
Colin Michael Stanley was born in Los Angeles on Wednesday, Sept. 6, and weighed in at 8 lbs. 6 oz.
"Lucky for him, he looks just like his mother," Stanley tells PEOPLE.
This is the first child for Stanley, 54, and Sutton, 34, who wed last November. The rocker has another son, Evan Shane Stanley, from his previous marriage to Pamela Bowen.
Stanley, who co-founded KISS with Gene Simmons, is due to release his second solo album, Live To Win, on Oct. 24. His latest tour kicks off Oct. 21 in Atlanta and will wrap up in Los Angeles Nov. 14. Sutton is an attorney.
Almost 80 rock fans who dream of becoming rock stars will have their wishes granted when Rock 'n Roll Fantasy Camp gives them the opportunity to open for DEF LEPPARD and JOURNEY at Germain Amphitheater on Sunday, September 10 in Columbus, OH. The special Battle of the Bands blowout — in front of 15,000 ticketholders (5:30 p.m. - 7:20 p.m.) — will feature RRFC campers of all musical abilities who have spent the day rehearsing with their counselor/rock star legends. Almost half the campers hail from the Ohio area.
Sunday's sold-out one-day-only edition of Rock 'n Roll Fantasy Camp offers all campers 10-hours of rock tutelage with counselor/ rock star royals including Teddy Andreadis (GUNS N' ROSES), Simon Kirke (BAD COMPANY, FREE), Mark Farner (GRAND FUNK RAILROAD), Kelly Keagy (NIGHT RANGER), Gunnar Nelson (NELSON), Artimus Pyle (LYNYRD SKYNYRD), Spencer Davis (SPENCER DAVIS GROUP), Jeff "Skunk" Baxter (DOOBIE BROTHERS) and Michael Lardie (GREAT WHITE). The one-day-only RRFC offers campers use of studio-quality equipment, a pre-show meet-and-greet, a photo opportunity with DEF LEPPARD and JOURNEY, pre-show dinner for two, two tickets to the show ... and a lifetime of memories.
RRFC is more than jamming, recording and performing live with rock stars. In the words of recent attendees, it's "mind-blowing," "unforgettable" and "a life-changing experience." Over the last few years, Rock 'n Roll Fantasy Camp has drawn hundreds of people who have skipped out on their day jobs to seek a little bit of rock 'n roll nirvana, among them White House press secretary Tony Snow, who attended at recent edition of RRFC. RRFC also designs and organizes team building events and training programs for corporations.
For further information, go to: www.rockandrollfantasycamp.com.
To view the commercial, click here.
When former KISS manager Bill Aucoin discovered a tape in his archives a few years ago consisting of footage from these two last club shows KISS did before they went out on their first actual tour, he showed the video to Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley and ever since there have been negotiations on and off to get this material officially released on DVD. One of the two shows has been said to be the complete performance, while the other one is incomplete as a rehearsal had been taped over it.
When Bill Aucoin talked about the supposed vintage box set at the June 3 KISS Expo Belgium, he also mentioned several very cool bonus features to be part of the box set — including a full audio recording of a KISS performance at The Daisy in 1973 along with rehearsal footage from the LaTang Studios as well as a demo recorded for Casablanca Records founder Neil Bogart.
So, what will be on this six-hour DVD set then? According to the trailer, which you can view at this location, it includes "five infamous television appearances" (but — in some sort of sad KISS tradition — not complete as not all performed songs on "In Concert", "The Midnight Special" and "The Paul Lynde Halloween Special" are included!), four complete concerts and "never-before-seen live footage." All digitally restored video and 5.1 audio mix, and with liner notes from the band. The complete shows are: San Francisco '75 (January 31), Detroit '76 (January 26), Tokyo '77 (April 2) and Houston '77 (September 2). Other bits and pieces include the band's performance on "The Mike Douglas Show" in April of '74, the 1975 promo clips for "C'mon And Love Me" and "Rock And Roll All Nite" and the band's appearance on the English TV show "So It Goes" from August 21, 1976. This "definitive KISS video anthology" is presented by VH1 Classic, who will air the special "Hanging With... KISS" around the time of release. Distribution will be taken care of by Fontana Distribution, an independent music distribution company. And apparantly, the DVDs will also contain a couple of hidden features, being one song from one of the above mentioned final Coventry performances and KISS' one-song live performance at Ace Frehley's wedding, which took place on May 1, 1976 at The Americana in New York.
10/21 Atlanta, GA - TABERNACLE
10/23 Ft. Lauderdale, FL - REVOLUTION
10/24 Orlando, FL - HARD ROCK LIVE
10/26 Baltimore, MD - RAMS HEAD
10/27 Atlantic City, NJ - HOUSEOF BLUES
10/28 New York, NY - IRVING PLAZA
11/1 Pittsburgh, PA - PALACE THEATRE
11/3 Milwaukee, WI - RAVE
11/5 Detroit, MI - EMERALD THEATRE
11/6 Chicago, IL - HOUSE OF BLUES
11/7 Minneapolis, MN - QWEST
11/10 Seattle, WA - SHOWBOX
11/11 Portland, OR - ALADDIN
11/13 San Francisco, CA - FILMORE
11/14 Los Angeles, CA - HOUSE OF BLUES
Recorded on New Year's Eve 1999/2000 at Vancouver's BC Place Concert Bowl in Canada, the original "Alive IV" was set for a March 28, 2000 release. However, it quickly got pushed back to April 18 before it got shelved indefinItely. Around that time, Paul Stanley stated in an online chat: "'Alive IV' will be out at some point. We missed our deadline and we're still in midst of it." The tracklisting back then was supposed to be as follows:
01. Psycho Circus
02. Shout It Out Loud
03. Deuce
04. Heaven's On Fire
05. Into The Void
06. Firehouse
07. Do You Love Me
08. Let Me Go Rock 'N' Roll
09. I Love It Loud
10. Lick It Up
11. 100,000 Years
12. Love Gun
13. Black Diamond
14. Beth
15. Rock and Roll All Nite
The Japanese edition of the album was also slated to include the bonus tracks "2000 Man", "God of Thunder" and "Detroit Rock City".
In other Universal Music news, the band's former label will release yet another KISS compilation album. Titled "Millennium Collection – 20th Century Masters Vol. 3", the album is set for an October 10 release and will obviously be the sequal to volumes 1 and 2.
For more information, visit www.kissexpo.co.uk.
Q: Which photo session of yours is your all time favourite?
Barry: I would say my all time favourite photo session was with KISS on the Empire State Building in New York City. That's the one that's in the Rock and Roll Hall Of Fame and the one that's in the Best Of Rolling Stone magazine.
Q: What's the story behind that?
Barry: I said, "Hey, let's go shooting on top of the Empire State Building." We were doing some photo shooting all around town in New York and we had cleared it with Empire State Building, but we didn't reckon on going a level above. We just thought we were going to shoot it on that level that everyone attends. Then the managers of the building said "you know that there is one more level above that's a private level". We went up there and it had a very little ledge. It was a thin ledge, but if you fall over you fall like maybe five feet to another ledge, a wide ledge. But because of the perspective I was shooting, it didn't look like that. It looked like we where right on the very edge and because it was an overcast day I wanted a colour shot that was very monotone, cause they had black and white and that's what I got. It's colour but it looks monotone. I had two of their bodyguards hoist me up on their shoulders so I could shoot from that perspective. We had very little room to shoot. That was my favorite photo of all time.
Q: Which is the worst one?
Barry: The one we did in NYC with the colored mylar from behind them look great but [the session with] these little boxes they were standing on which were supposed to be lit but they weren't. That was the worst KISS photo session ever.
Q: But the worst of all?
Barry: Yngwie Malmsteen, what an asshole. The biggest asshole I ever met. I threw him out of my studio. He wanted me to shoot him on a throne with all these nude women and I said that's the dumbest idea I ever heard.
Read the entire interview at this location.
KISS' official web site, KissOnline.com, will be on hand to celebrate the upcoming release of Paul Stanley's new solo CD, "Live to Win", as well as the new KISS DVD series. KissOnline.com will have items to giveaway and will host an official "Live to Win" listening session. More details to follow soon.
Tickets are on sale now at this location or call (610) 351-3358. To reserve hotel rooms call the Days Inn & Conference toll-free: (888)395-5200.
KissKollector.com reported yesterday that KISS bassist/vocalist Gene Simmons told the "Dudley & Bob" morning show on Austin's classic rock station KLBJ that KISS will take out QUEEN + PAUL RODGERS on the band's 2007 tour. Gene said that both bands had talked during the "VH1: Rock Honors" show and agreed to hit the road together. In typical Gene fashion, he went on to claim in the interview that "QUEEN is playing with us, we're not playing with QUEEN."
However, a posting on KISS' official web site reads as follows:
"KissOnline received hundreds of emails asking about a rumored KISS/QUEEN tour, so Thursday night we asked Paul [Stanley] about the rumor. 'While the guys and I are huge fans and friends of QUEEN and Paul Rodgers, and touring together would be great...no KISS tour plans with or without QUEEN are currently in the works,' Paul said.
"One tour that IS in the works, is the Paul Stanley 'Live To Win' tour, which will kick off in late October with 15-20 shows planned across the U.S." First rumored date: November 14 at the House of Blues in Hollywood, California.
TWISTED SISTER frontman Dee Snider, ex-KISS guitarist Bruce Kulick and guitarist Joe Satriani were among the legendary rock musicians and songwriters who taught and played with around 80 rock and roll fans over a five-day period in New York City as part of Rock and Roll Fantasy Camp, where rock and roll dreams come true for fans who want to make their musical fantasies become reality.
In the documentary, narrated by Kevin Spacey (who plays the role of Lex Luthor in the latest Superman movie), Gene talks about coming to America (stating Superman is the ultimate immigrant kid) and mentions that as a kid he would grab a towel to wrap around his neck and — whenever Superman jumped off to fly — he would jump off his bed. Gene also comments on the mysterious death of the first Superman actor, who supposedly was either murdered or killed himself (trying to fly out the window). Other celebrities featured in the documentary include authors, historicians, comic book writers, actors, producers or publishers such as Stan Lee, Margot Kidder, Mark Hamill and John Peters.
To view and or /purchase visit, click here.
Simmons, 57, founded the heavy metal band KISS in the 1970s and became famous for wearing white and black face makeup, spitting fire and sticking his tongue out at sold-out elaborate performances.
Simmons, the band's bass player, was born Chaim Witz in the northern Israeli city of Haifa before emigrating to New York as a child.
Simmons sent a video message this week to Ron Weinreich, an Israeli soldier and die-hard KISS fan, who was seriously wounded in Israel's 34-day fight with Hezbollah guerrillas in Lebanon. Weinreich remains hospitalized and is paralyzed from the chest down. Above his hospital bed, a KISS poster is spread across the wall.
Weinreich's brother had his wedding relocated this week to the hospital, so his brother could attend. At the wedding, the surprise recording was played.
"Hi Ron, this is Gene Simmons. I'm talking to you from my home. I can't tell you how proud I am of you, and how much the world and Israel owes you a debt of gratitude," he said. "From the bottom of my heart, you are a real hero, you are everybody's hero, you are my hero and I wish I could be there with you."
Suddenly switching to confident Hebrew, Simmons added: "My name is Chaim, I was born in Haifa."
He concluded by saying in English: "I wish you my best, a happy life and I hope the wedding comes off and everybody should honor you because you are a real hero."
Rock Eyez: When he first found out KISS had an opening spot for a drummer, was he a KISS fan?
Loretta: He was in a band called FLASHER in Long Island; it was a four-piece band. One of the members left the band and an ex-member of the band came by and told Eric there was an opening for KISS. He said there was an ad in the paper, it was no secret and he said alright. He typed up a little resume and some pictures and sent it off in an orange envelope.
Rock Eyez: Do you remember where the audition was held?
Loretta: I would guess New York City.
Rock Eyez: Did he tell you what he had to play?
Loretta: I think he played "Black Diamond", but he was just so excited that he met them and how big Gene was. But Eric was never a fan of KISS — he was always into LED ZEPPELIN and THE BEATLES.
Rock Eyez: Do you remember the first concert Eric played with KISS?
Loretta: Yes, it was at the Palladium where at the time he was working with my dad delivering furniture. He had just gotten into KISS, but still kept the job delivering furniture while he was in KISS. So, he would rehearse with KISS then go and work with my dad after that. When we were outside the Palladium that day they were playing, the boss' sons from the furniture store saw my father and asked him, "What are you doing here?" He told them my daughters are fans of KISS and in reality Eric was on the stage. So the guy they knew was the guy behind the make-up: my brother Eric, who was delivering furniture for them, and they never knew.
Rock Eyez: How do you feel that people might make comments that you are just gaining from Eric's death, or why you don’t just let his memory live on without reaping benefits?
Loretta: They have a right to their opinions, but if they knew Eric as I did, he loved the attention: it would be a dishonor to him to not keep his memory alive. If the families of famous people who have passed away did not keep their loved ones' memories alive, like John Lennon, Freddie Mercury, Elvis Presley, to name a few, they would more than likely have been forgotten. It is not fair to the fans. Think of the history they would lose. My brother was an inspiration, a pure example of what one can do if they follow their dream. He always encouraged the fans to never give up. On the same hand there are people who love what I am doing for Eric's memory. You are always going to have a mix, but I respect that. My brother was a photographer and he took commercial arts for the Rockheads but he took his camera with him a lot and he has thousands of shots that were through his eyes. He always wrote on the back of every picture where it was taken. Anytime I put up a new photo Eric owned on the website, I get e-mails saying how great that photo was of Eric eating chicken (laughing). So from my perspective it's just my brother to fans — that's Eric. So God willing, by next year my brother’s personal photos will be put into a book with little stories. There are a lot of shots that were taken by Eric's roadie from behind the stage, and you will get to see what it was for Eric looking out at the crowd. The book is in the works and it's going to happen.
Read the entire interview at www.rockeyez.com.
Ed Roman Guitars recently announced plans to offer the official Vinnie Vincent (ex-KISS) licensed model guitar. A photo of the guitar, which was designed by Vincent, can be found at this location.
Ed Roman Guitars founder Ed Roman commented: "I first met Vinnie Vincent back in the '70s when he was playing with Felix Cavaliere of the RASCALS. This was long before he got the KISS gig. As I recall, I sold him a 1957 Strat for $400.00. Now you might think that was cheap!!!! Frankly, I was really glad to see it go. Today, of course, it's a very valuable guitar. But I wouldn't pay $400.00 for it today if I wasn't going to sell it."
For more information, click here.
"Live at the Marquee" was recorded in Australia in April 2006 and features the ESP lineup of Bruce Kulick (KISS, GRAND FUNK RAILROAD) on guitar, Eric Singer (KISS, ALICE COOPER) on drums, John Corabi (MÖTLEY CRÜE, RATT) on guitar/vocals and Chuck Garric (ALICE COOPER, DIO) on bass.
ESP's setlist consists mainly of KISS hits and obscure KISS songs that have never before been played live, along with selections from MÖTLEY CRÜE, GRAND FUNK RAILROAD, ALICE COOPER and other classic rock bands.
Special guests include Bob Kulick, Rock band SSG, Author Colette Shaw, Drumming sensation Angelo Coppola and Tribute bands Black Diamond and MR.SPEED.
KISSONLINE will be on hand to celebrate the upcoming release of Paul Stanley's new LIVE TO WIN CD as well as the new KISS DVD Series. KOL will have items to giveaway i and will host an official LIVE TO WIN listening session. More details to follow soon.
For rooms call 513-752-4400 or 1-800-HOLIDAY. Room rate for KISS EXPO is 89.00 a nite plus tax.
150 VIP Laminates will be sold at $30.00 each plus shipping/handling. VIPS get in 1 hour early and will receive a collectible KISS ALIVE 3D Poster (Given at the Door)
Blender.com: So, tell us a secret: How did you get Shannon Tweed to not marry you but still stay around?
Gene: Guys have become such wimps, it just shocks me. My God, what happened to the alpha male? I believe in total honesty. I believe in full disclosure before the fact, before you get with a girl. If you wanna marry her, say, "OK, I wanna marry, but let's talk about if we get divorced," because statistics say you will. So you must ask her the most important question, which is: If you want money, let me know how much. Let me make an educated decision.
Blender.com: You've said, "Women are great housekeepers: They get to keep the house."
Gene: Well, every hotel you've all been to is by definition a cohabitation agreement. You sign on the dotted line, and you agree to abide by the rules of the owner of the hotel. When you leave the hotel, you don't take half the hotel with you.
Blender.com: Have any of your exes ever come back to haunt you?
Gene: The reason you never find out some dark secret about me in those rags that women are addicted to — you know, The Sun and The Star and all the other stuff — is that there really is nothing to tell. The very first thing I did was show Shannon the photos I've taken, thousands of them, before we moved in together. In law that's called full disclosure, before the fact.
Blender.com: Was that a tough night?
Gene: No. It's better to find out there's trouble in paradise before you move into it than after. I like to think that I have the dignity and ethics of a prostitute: Before the blow job, I'm going to tell you it's gonna cost 75 dollars, this is what it is and so on. But women don't seem to have that integrity. If you ask really serious questions, they won't answer it.
Blender.com: Which band would you say you are most proud of offering that honor of opening for you?
Gene: AC/DC. That's my favorite band.
Blender.com: What was it about AC/DC?
Gene: I saw the boys play at a small club first in London with Bon Scott, and I'll never forget. They were starving, there were just 100 people in the club, and the lights went out, and even during the blackout, Angus was still going, doing his little dance step, back and forth. I thought, "Boy, these guys really care," so I cornered Angus, in Los Angeles after a show, and I said, "Do you wanna go grab a bite?" and he says, "Yeah let's go, mate." And when he smiled, I noticed he didn't have any front teeth. Literally. And I took him to a place called Ben Frank's, and he literally had beans and franks, and he had to chew on the side of his mouth. I thought to myself, "This poor little guy's got the heart of a lion," and I said at the table, "You're going out on tour with us." And his eyes were just like, "What?" You know, they thought they were forever gonna be in these little hellholes.
Read the entire interview at Blender.com.
"Live To Win" is due October 24 from Universal's New Door imprint. Stanley will support the release with a club tour this fall.
"It's not 1978 anymore," Stanley told Billboard.com of the album last November. "It's certainly the same mentality, and certainly I'm a better singer today. My perspective and where I'm at in my life at this point, and what I've experienced and seen, brings something else to the table that wasn't there then. But I still look back on that album as a really great snapshot of who I was and what I was doing then."
Joining Stanley on "Live To Win" are session drummer Victor Indrizzo, guitarist Corky James, former Marilyn Manson guitarist John 5, former Kiss guitarist Bruce Kulick (who plays bass on a few songs), keyboardist Harry Sommerdahl and noted string arranger David Campbell.
Among the songwriting collaborators are Desmond Child, Holly Knight, Andreas Carlsson and Marti Frederiksen. Stanley wrote the track "Loving You Without You Now" on his own.
Here is the track list for "Live To Win":
"Live To Win"
"Lift"
"Wake Up Screaming"
"Every Time I See You Around"
"Bulletproof"
"All About You"
"Second to None"
"It's Not Me"
"Loving You Without You Now"
"Where Angels Dare"
Check out the audio of Gene Simmons' interview with WashingtonPost.com at this location.
Stripping all the legendary bombast away, what becomes starkly clear is that besides rocking relentlessly, the power of human emotion and conviction on "Live to Win" can rattle not only the walls, but also touch the heart and soul of the listener. "What I wanted to do on this album was sing about my life because my life is not that different than anybody else's," says Stanley. "The truth is, what we all deal with in life is pretty similar. You change the names and the story's the same."
"This album is purely a labor of love," continues Stanley. "It is a labor of passion, and something where I was concerned with turning out the album I heard in my head, without regard for having glitz and star power from other sources. It was purely about making the album I wanted to make." While the heartfelt "Loving You Without You Now" was written without any outside collaboration, the remainder of the album reunites him with former KISS songwriting partners Desmond Child (AEROSMITH, LEANN RIMES) and Holly Knight (TINA TURNER, PAT BENATAR), and introduces new collaborators including Andreas Carlsson (BON JOVI, BRITNEY SPEARS), John 5 (ROB ZOMBIE, MARILYN MANSON) and Marti Frederiksen (AEROSMITH, FAITH HILL). Seven of the ten tracks were co-written with Child and/or Carlsson, with Stanley and Child joined by John 5 on "Where Angels Dare" and Frederiksen on "Lift", and Knight teaming with the frontman on "It's Not Me".
"Live to Win" is self-produced by Stanley, who provides lead vocals, guitar and percussion alongside a studio core of guitarist Corky James (AVRIL LAVIGNE, THE MATRIX), drummer Victor Indrizzo (BECK, MACY GRAY) and keyboardist Harry Sommerdahl (CARRIE UNDERWOOD, LINDSAY LOHAN). Also performing on the album are former KISS bandmate Bruce Kulick and guitarist John 5.
"I've always believed that when you give somebody an album, it should be like a fresh newspaper, where you get ink on your fingers and it's today's news," says Stanley, who wrote and co-wrote the ten tracks on "Live to Win" specifically for the new release. "For me, this album is where I'm at now — this is where things are in my life, and my perspective on my music."
Stanley is planning a North American club tour to coincide with the release of the album.
"Live to Win" (view cover here) final track listng:
01. Live To Win (3:07)
02. Lift (4:01)
03. Wake Up Screaming (3:00)
04. Everytime I See You Around (3:28)
05. Bulletproof (3:01)
06. All About You (3:16)
07. Second To None (3:35)
08. It's Not Me (3:19)
09. Loving You Without You Now (3:16)
10. Where Angels Dare (3:22)
Bret: I can remember my first gig opening for RATT and CHEAP TRICK. The only time I'd been in an arena was buying a ticket and sitting in the "ZZ" section. I'm glad that feeling stayed with me because I vowed to myself I didn't want to become jaded and bitter. I remember getting ready to go on stage with Steven Tyler and Paul Stanley; this was during "Look What the Cat Dragged In". I'm being cool but thinking: "If this guy only knew how many KISS albums I had."
Jay Jay French: "I read that, and that is the most ridiculous mistaken fact that is really untrue. I can say this: I was one of many guitar players who auditioned for KISS, and I spent a couple of weeks practicing with those guys. They didn't have a name yet — they were not KISS, they weren't WICKED LESTER — and I was one of many but somehow, someway, that statement I just gave you has been misinterpreted, misprinted, miswritten — everything from 'I was a member of KISS' to whatever, and I never, ever said it. I auditioned for the band in June of 1972, and in September of 1972, they picked up Ace [Frehley] out of maybe 25 or 30 people, and when they picked Ace, I called them around that time just to say, 'Hey, how are you doing? What is going on?' They told me they hired Ace, and I went down to rehearsal and watched them when they first rehearsed with Ace, and he was perfect for this band."
Simmons and his family, Shannon — the woman he's been "happily unmarried" to for 23 years — and their children, Nick and Sophie, 14, are starring in a new reality show for the A&E network called "Gene Simmons Family Jewels".
While the KISS Army rallied Saturday outside the Rock Hall, KISS got the most votes in an online poll at www.cleveland.com. Readers were asked to vote on whether 20 artists are worthy of induction and to write in their own nominees.
Close behind KISS (175 votes) were GENESIS with 162 tallies and VAN HALEN at 147. (No distinction was made between GENESIS with Peter Gabriel and GENESIS with Phil Collins or the David Lee Roth and Sammy Hagar versions of VAN HALEN.)
CHICAGO and the MOODY BLUES (each 138), YES (129), ALICE COOPER (128), ELECTRIC LIGHT ORCHESTRA (116), NEIL DIAMOND (103) and THE CARS (95) rounded out the top 10.
German electronic pioneers KRAFTWERK were voted least worthy with only 18 votes.
Fans took the time to write in nominations for dozens of bands. Homeboys the RASPBERRIES led with 59 write-in votes, just ahead of RUSH with 57. Among the others getting at least one vote: CARLY SIMON, TED NUGENT, BARRY MANILOW, DOOBIE BROTHERS, HUEY LEWIS & THE NEWS, TOTO, B-52S, MOTÖRHEAD, PHISH, THE SMITHS and ZZ TOP.
See the complete results at www.cleveland.com/rockhall.
Some 500 aficionados of the makeup-happy, blood-spewing metal gods descended upon the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum in Cleveland on Saturday to protest KISS' exclusion from the shrine.
Members of the KISS Army caravanned from all over the U.S. and Canada for the rally, turning up at Voinovich Park in full band regalia, chanting "We Want KISS!" and carrying signs bearing the message "Though Shalt Not Delay the Induction of KISS."
Launched by Paul Stanley, Gene Simmons, Ace Frehley and Peter Criss, KISS first hit the charts with its eponymous debut record in 1974. The band became eligible for Rock Hall consideration in 1999 and has been on the ballot in subsequent years, but never managed to get the necessary support from voters (including fellow musicians, journalists, music historians and industry types).
"We're not going to settle for a nomination. We want an induction," KISS rally organizer Kim Rolfe, who boasts of having seen the group more than 40 times, told the Cleveland Plain Dealer.
The spokeswoman for the New York-based Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Foundation, Elizabeth Freund, was unavailable for comment. But a museum representative told the Associated Press that this was the first time rock's hallowed hall has ever faced a demonstration by fans of a snubbed band. (The folks at the Hall responded to the demonstration by blasting "Rock and Roll All Nite" over the exterior P.A. system.)
According to the Hall of Fame's Website, inductions are decided on the basis of "the influence and significance of the artist's contributions to the development and perpetuation of rock and roll."
Emerging from New York's glam-rock scene, KISS became better know for its rollicking concerts (complete with Simmons spitting blood and blowing fire) and merchandising acumen (the band never met a marketing opportunity it didn't like) than its hit records ("Rock and Roll All Nite," "Beth," "I Was Made for Loving You"). Nonetheless, the band's larger than life persona, explosive stage theatrics and driving hooks paved the way for, better or worse, such '80s outfits as Motley Crue, Twisted Sister and Poison.
And it spawned the worshipful KISS Army fan club, which has been petitioning the Hall of Fame for several years to recognize its favorite band. But after six years without enshrinement, the faithful decided to kick it up a notch.
"We love it. It shows they're involved and they care," marcher Todd Mesek told the Plain Dealer. "These fans are passionate enough to come to the mecca and to stand up for their band."
There's been no comment from band masterminds Simmons or Stanley. They've been busy on the road, having just wrapped a brief Japanese tour and playing an intimate gig on July 26 for 1,300 fans at the Chumash Casino in Santa Barbara. Simmons has also been doing press for his new Osbournes-esque reality series, Gene Simmons Family Jewels, which premieres Monday night on the A&E.
Of course, KISS isn't the first band to make noise over Rock Hall exclusion. Ozzy Osbourne expressed his indignation at Black Sabbath repeatedly being a Rock Hall reject, accusing voters of "elitism" after dissing him two years in a row and demanding his band be removed from the ballot.
But Sabbath remained up for consideration and Osbourne made nice after the band was tapped for the class of '06 alongside the Sex Pistols, Blondie, Lynyrd Skynyrd and Miles Davis.
We'll have to wait and see if the KISS cabal manages to sway voters. Nominations for the class of '07 are due to be announced next month, with the inductees unveiled in December.
Said Gene: "It's not about money. Bill Gates still gets up and goes to work. It's always, 'Now what are we going to do?' I have books like 'Kiss and Tell' and 'Sex, Money Kiss' out with Phoenix. I have a pile of businesses. All tie-ins. I have to water those plants and remind the younger generation to spend on me. I use the show to shill.
"I'm a partner in this show's production but, basically, I'm too rich to care. Watch it if you like, and if you don't, don't."
For whatever reason, we got onto his mom Florence, 81, who lives here, whom he just visited and about whom he says, "Her English sounds like Zsa Zsa's." So a few minutes later Florence is telling me:
"I left Hungary for Israel, and when Gene, whose name then was Chaim, which means 'life,' was 9 we came here. To Williamsburg. I went to work, $39 a week, as a piece-goods worker in a factory and enrolled him in Yeshiva. He spoke Hungarian and Hebrew, but the boys beat him up because he didn't speak English. I told him, 'Go to the bakery. There they speak Hungarian.' He said, 'Because they speak Hungarian, I don't go there. I want to speak English.' "
Will she be watching her only kid's show tonight?
"I see all his shows. I not only watch, I tape it. You know, I was there for his first show 30 years ago. I schlepped myself to this Queens Boulevard coffeehouse. Not many people there. And I nearly didn't recognize him in the makeup. I thought he was someone else.
"Always he wanted to be a musician, but I said, first you finish college. This is a country, I told him, that if you work hard you can make it. Friends called him a sissy because they smoked but not him. He wouldn't drink. Didn't do drugs. He was very hardworking. He would pray then go to school then do a paper route in Jackson Heights. Out of a schmatta, I made a bag to hold those newspapers. And the first money he got he bought me a corsage. My boy became a mensch all by himself. Never asked help from nobody.
"He wanted a guitar for $70. I had to save for that money. But I gave my word to buy it and kept my word. And he kept his. He finished college. Now he says, 'I thank my mom for everything.' He said to me, 'When I was young and I wanted a cone of ice cream you gave it to me. Now I give you everything.'
"I don't anymore have to worry about the rent like I once did. Today I even have a housekeeper I take along when I go to the senior center. Chaim would tell me, 'Mama, if I knock on one door and they don't open, I'll knock on another door.' "
So, tonight, as the door to "Gene Simmons Family Jewels" opens, what the former Chaim Witz tells me is: "American TV must be broadcast around the world. Arab countries need to see that here women have two eyebrows not just one. It's jeans, rock 'n' roll and hamburgers that won the war on communism. Nobody's saying, 'Let's go grab some hummus.' They're saying, 'Let's grab a burger.' Our culture must be heard around the world."
Fans, some from as far away as California, carried signs and had painted their faces in black and white to resemble KISS band members.
Those participating in the half-hour demonstration were upset the band, formed more than 30 years ago, has not been admitted, even though it has been eligible since the late 1990s.
Artists become eligible for induction 25 years after the release of their first record, the museum's website states.
"Criteria include the influence and significance of the artist's contributions to the development and perpetuation of rock and roll," the site said.
A museum spokesman said it is the first demonstration by fans seeking to have a group inducted.
The foundation that selects inductees is based in New York City, not at the museum.
01. Paul Di'Anno (IRON MAIDEN) – "Ain't Talkin' 'Bout Love"
02. Jack Russell (GREAT WHITE) & Dweezil Zappa - "Unchained"
03. Mark Slaughter (SLAUGHTER) & Doug Aldrich (WHITESNAKE, DIO) - "I'm The One"
04. Jani Lane (WARRANT) & George Lynch (DOKKEN, LYNCH MOB) - "Panama"
05. Gilby Clarke (GUNS N' ROSES), Fred Coury (CINDERELLA), Frankie Wilsey (SEA HAGS) & Colby (HOLLYWOOD ROSES) - "Ice Cream Man"
06. Fee Waybill (THE TUBES) & Brad Gillis (NIGHT RANGER) - "Atomic Punk"
07. John Corabi (UNION, MÖTLEY CRÜE) & Bruce Kulick (KISS) - "Hot For Teacher"
08. Stephen Pearcy (RATT) & Jake E. Lee (OZZY OSBOURNE) - "Running With The Devil"
09. Joe Lynn Turner (DEEP PURPLE, RAINBOW) & Reb Beach (WHITESNAKE) - "Dance The Night Away"
10. ENUFF Z'NUFF - "Yankee Rose"
11. Jeff Scott Soto & Blues Saraceno (ex-POISON) – "So This Is Love?"
12. Doug Pinnick (KING'S X), Yngwie Malmsteen & Billy Sheehan (MR. BIG) - "Light Up The Sky"
Check out the album cover artwork at this location.
In the new show's main title sequence produced by BMD, an animated Gene Simmons — in his full KISS makeup and costume — rises out from the pages of an old book, with the tagline "Lord of Rock" appearing beneath him. Gene Simmons himself says, "Big Machine is as cool as cool gets. Our show rocks that much more because of the opener. It rocks."
Introducing a new and exclusive 5-pin series of your favorite rockers — the 2006 KISS Hilt Series pins! Larger, more detailed and posed to rock you into your next fantasy, the 2006 KISS Hilt Series pins are the perfect gift for any KISS-lovin' fan. Collect one or collect them all, the 2006 KISS Hilt Series pins are ONLY found in Hard Rock Dutch Auctions!
Each pin in the 5-pin 2006 KISS Hilt Series is produced and stamped limited edition 100. After production of each pin is complete, the pin mold is retired. Bid on the 2006 KISS Hilt Series pins ONLY in Hard Rock Dutch Auctions, and be certain that the pin you win is an authentic, limited-edition Hard Rock collectible. Hard Rock also released a KISS Framed Art & Pin Series limited edition of 100. Don't miss your chance to own this limited edition KISS pin AND the art that inspired it! This elaborate piece, created exclusively for Hard Rock Dutch Auctions, is sure to become the most valued artwork in any KISS lover's collection! Licensed and approved by KISS, each print in the new limited-edition 100 KISS Framed Art Series comes individually numbered and is accompanied by a certificate of authenticity. Artwork details the design of the pin and showcases each KISS member — Gene Simmons, Paul Stanley, Ace Frehley or Peter Criss — separately and in their most recognized roles. Matted in a sleek, black 19" x 26" frame, each piece of the framed art series includes the final version of the 3" x 3" pin inspired by it, bringing the print to a three-dimensional level and making this a KISS collector's ultimate prize. The bottom two images pictured here are the Gene and Paul pins of this edition and the one's right above that are the art.
"Live to Win" track listing:
01. Live To Win [3:10]
02. Wake Up Screaming [3:04]
03. Lift [4:03]
04. Every Time I See You Around [3:30]
05. Bulletproof [3:03]
06. All About You [3:18]
07. Second To None [3:39]
08. It's Not Me [3:22]
09. Loving You Without You [3:19]
10. Where Angels Dare [3:23]
In a February 2006 interview with ABC News, Stanley revealed that he is planning a tour to support the CD, and said he'll be bringing out a bigger band than he's used at past solo gigs, "because there's a lot more going on on this album." He estimated he'll have about six people in his band. As for the musicians he used during the recording of "Live to Win", Stanley said, "[It's] some friends of mine — it's not a 'who's who.' I didn't want to do one of those albums where you list people and it becomes some sort of a, trying to impress everybody with names. So it's a great album. Everybody loves it."
Check out a photo from a shoot Paul did for the CD at this location.
All four new releases are available in the following sizes and editions:
24" x 24" Edition of 2000
36" x 36" Edition of 1000
46" x 46" Edition of 500
54" x 54" Edition of 100
The "Destroyer" piece is only available as a 36" x 36" edition of 500 or 46" x 46" edition of 500.
For more information, visit www.celebritygallerie.com.
For video of all three newly added songs in action, head over to the IGN media section for Guitar Hero II at this location.
The complete list of tracks currently confirmed is as follows:
STONE TEMPLE PILOTS - "Trippin' on a Hole in a Paper Heart"
ANTHRAX - "Madhouse"
MÖTLEY CRÜE - "Shout at the Devil"
REVEREND HORTON HEAT - "Psychobilly Freakout"
KISS - "Strutter"
BLACK SABBATH - "War Pigs"
BUTTHOLE SURFERS - "Who Was in My Room Last Night?"
VAN HALEN - "You Really Got Me"
RUSH - "YYZ"
PRIMUS - "John the Fisherman" *
DRIST - "Arterial Black" *
* original master recordings
The single, "Make My Way", is released on August 1, available on all major download platforms, including iTunes and Napster. The first of three singles for the band, they also have an album of original material to follow and a tour of the U.K. next month.
When KISS's Gene Simmons headed a documentary to put together a rock band comprising of students from Kirkley High School in Lowestoft, England he unlocked a wealth of musical talent. Following the success of previous Kirkley students THE DARKNESS, auditions for a place in the band was a heated and competitive process. Though the selected five, HOAX UK, landed the prize of supporting JUDAS PRIEST and ANTHRAX in L.A., two members — guitarist Samanie Warren and bassist Linde Rose — broke away to team up again with three other musicians who had been in the running. THE UPRAW was born.
The line up is as follows:
Ellie Chapman (vocals, 15)
Samanie Warren (lead guitar, 16)
Linde Rose (bass guitar, 16)
Lily Vincent (keys, 15)
Loren Pashley (drums, 15)
Though the show demonstrated the head-strong girls were at odds with the Simmons training methods, the band have learned from their mentor and are now the polished article. Musically comprising of R&B-influenced keyboards along with the harder rock 'n' roll instrumentation, their aim is to explore avenues of creativity that are as yet untapped in today's music scene. "Make My Way" is a mercurial mix of driving guitar and melodic keyboards, and has already secured airplay on BBC Radio. And from playing to an audience of predominantly old-age pensioners in the second series of "Rock School", the only way has been up for the band, and fast.
"Make My Way" was produced by Jimmy Clarke and Mike Deal of Broeknrule Records, and showcase the vocal abilities of Ellie Chapman in the mix, recruited to the band after narrowly missing out on a place in HOAX UK.
Guitarist Samanie comments on the band's creation: "We did it because we could — we all love music, the TV crew had gone and there was no-one telling us what to do, so we formed an all-girl band. ROCK!
"We started rehearsing for fun and then one of the guys who had worked on the show kept in touch with us and what we were doing, and he then put us in contact with Mike from Broeknrule Records."
The band have already gained a cult following, and are frequently busy with meeting fans and giving autographs in the expected rock-star vein. Samanie is still getting used to "having to sign people in weird places on their bodies", but insists the whole musical adventure so far has been enjoyable, creative and not a little bit scary. It has been an incredible last few months for the band, who have had to combine rehearsals with recording as well as revision for their GCSEs. October's U.K. tour should be an even greater, though welcome, challenge.
"We're just doing what we do and enjoying the ride at the same time," adds Samanie. "We like what we're doing and we'd all love to be known as one of the U.K.'s greatest bands, like any band would, that's what we want to achieve! But we'll have to see how it goes."
On July 20, "Radio Reality Check" aired a special episode dedicated to the upcoming Kiss Army March in Cleveland, Ohio to help secure KISS' long overdue induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Special guests on the program will include Bob Kulick (performed and co-wrote material on KISS albums), Jan Kuehnemund (founder of '80s female hard rock band VIXEN), Ron Keel (founder of KEEL, produced by Gene Simmons), Joey Fatale (founder of MINI KISS), plus Kiss Army March planners Paul Carpenter, Kim Rolfe and Kristine Connell. The show also included a special interview with Loretta Caravello, sister of late KISS drummer Eric Carr.
"KISS rocked a standing-room-only crowd tonight at the Chumash Casino [in Santa Barbara County in California on Wednesday, July 26], and we mean standing room only! The room, including the aisles, was packed full with fans who were treated to a special intimate show, which to everyone's surprise included fireworks, pyro and confetti! Gene [Simmons] even breathed fire and spit blood. So much for a no-thrills, scaled back show! KISS responded to the intimate setting with an energetic set that included 'Kissin' Time' and the addition of 'C'mon and Love Me'."
KISS' setlist - July 26, 2006 at Chumash Casino in Santa Barbara County, California:
01. Detroit Rock City
02. Makin' Love
03. Watchin' You
04. King of the Night Time World
05. Deuce
06. Christine Sixteen
07. Firehouse
08. Got To Choose
09. Strutter
10. Heaven's On Fire
11. Kissin' Time
12. I Love It Loud
13. Love Gun
14. God of Thunder
15. Do You Love Me
16. Shout It Out Loud
17. Black Diamond
18. Let Me Go, Rock & Roll
19. C'mon On and Love Me
Encore:
20. God Gave Rock & Roll To You
21. Rock and Roll All Night
99. "Don't Cry" - GUNS N' ROSES (1991)
76. "To Be With You" - MR. BIG (1991)
36. "Beth" - KISS (1976)
27. "More Than Words" - EXTREME (1991)
05. "Every Rose Has Its Thorn" - POISON (1988)
To view the entire list, and to read explanations for why each song was selected, visit Music.AOL.com.
Encore:
God Gave Rock & Roll To You
Rock and Roll All Night
Encore:
God Gave Rock & Roll To You
Rock and Roll All Night
NGTV has yet to launch its programming, but the public company hopes to do so in the last quarter of the year via a pay-per-view, video-on-demand distribution deal with In Demand (which is a joint venture owned by Time Warner, Comcast and other cable companies). And currently, NGTV is not only negotiating with Gene for a new agreement between Gene and the company, but they're also negotiating a distribution deal on the internet with Google. Gene has invested in NGTV by loaning the firm money, and after the IPO Gene will own a 4.1% stock in NGTV — if he signs a new agreement that is. Not having a CEO (Chief Executive Officer) at the moment — NGTV went through no less than three CEOs in two years — the company is headed by its co-founders Jay Vir and Kourosh Taj, who act as directors and co-presidents. Previously, the duo worked as executives at MusiTopia — a music-themed, multi-purpose retail and commercial real estate development in Los Angeles that apparently never got off the ground. Interestingly enough, Gene's partner in Simmons/Abramson Marketing, Richard Abramson, happens to be the first (co-)CEO for NGTV as he and Allan Brown were named ce-CEOs in February of 2004. Only five months later Abramson quit as CEO but continued as one of the directors, while Brown remained CEO until he got fired in February of this year. The third CEO is John Burns, who only lasted for about a month after which he said he'd sue NGTV. The company is also without a COO (Chief Operating Officer) but has offered the job to one of its directors, Al Cafaro — former chairman and CEO of A&M Records (which used to be a PolyGram/Universal label before it had to be closed down) who currently serves as co-CEO of concert production and promotion company Metropolitan Talent and also as co-CEO of independent record label Hybrid Recordings (home of the GIN BLOSSOMS, to name only one act). NGTV's Securities and Exchange Commission filing states that Cafaro has filed for personal bankruptcy protection in August of last year, after he went through some "trouble" with KISS' former record company PolyGram/Universal. As one financial expert said, while referring to some KISS tunes, "Ah, the Sweet Pain of Wall Street, it's Hotter Than Hell."
Encore:
Medley: Love Her All I Can / Parasite / She / Shock Me (Paul on vocals) / Hotter Than Hell
God Gave Rock & Roll To You II
Rock & Roll All Night
"Vinnie Vincent Invasion" was produced and arranged by Vinnie Vincent and Dana Strum at Baby 'O Recorders in Hollywood, CA between January and March 1986 and was mixed at Cherokee Recording Studios in Hollywood, CA in April 1986. More information is available at Amazon.com.
"Radio Reality Check"'s KISS special will air on Thursday, July 20 between 8:00 p.m. and 10:30 p.m. PST. Listen and chat live at www.radiorealitycheck.com.
Encore:
17. God Gave Rock and Roll To You
18. Rock and Roll All Nite
Simmons and his family, Shannon Tweed — the woman he's been "happily unmarried" to for 23 years — and their children, Nick and Sophie, 14, are starring in a new reality show for the A&E network called "Gene Simmons Family Jewels". Simmons has boasted about sleeping with 4,600 women, despite living with ex-Playboy playmate Tweed for over two decades. But Nick has hit back at the claims, insisting it's all part of his father's image saying, "He doesn't cheat on her (Tweed). "He just goes out and squeezes breasts. He doesn't cheat on her. He's just too chicken!"
Specifically, the label has assembled its first compilation, a collection of female tribute bands paying homage to some of classic rock and metal's biggest names. In stores August 22, the 13-track "Girls Got Rhythm" — featuring cover art by Alan Forbes (AFI, QUEENS OF THE STONE AGE, BLACK CROWES), the artist who designed the Liquor and Poker logo — features such well-known groups as THE IRON MAIDENS, CHEAP CHICK and MISTRESS OF REALITY, as well as three acts celebrating AC/DC.
The complete track listing is as follows:
01. THUNDHERSTRUCK - Thunderstruck (AC/DC)
02. THE IRON MAIDENS - Run To The Hills (IRON MAIDEN)
03. MISTRESS OF REALITY - Fairies Wear Boots (BLACK SABBATH)
04. CHEAP CHICK - Surrender (CHEAP TRICK)
05. BLACK DIAMOND - Love Gun (KISS)
06. MS. FITS - Last Caress (THE MISFITS)
07. HELL'S BELLES - Back In Black (AC/DC)
08. THE LITTLE DOLLS - I Don't Know (OZZY OSBOURNE)
09. ZEPPARELLA - The Lemon Song (LED ZEPPELIN)
10. KISSEXY - Lick It Up (KISS)
11. WHOLE LOTTA ROSIES - Dog Eat Dog (AC/DC)
12. RAMONAS - Sheena Is A Punk Rocker (THE RAMONES)
13. FOXEY LADY - Foxey Lady (JIMI HENDRIX)
Plans for a series of record release parties are currently underway, and a "Girls Got Rhythm" tour is also in the works.
Asked, for example, which KISS song is his favorite, he said, "The one that sells the most is my favorite."
But Simmons for public consumption isn't necessarily Simmons all the time. Evidence of that will begin appearing in August in bookstores, where his longtime love, Shannon Tweed, will have her memoir "Kiss and Tell", and on TV screens, when A&E airs "Gene Simmons Family Jewels".
In the book, Tweed actually uses words such as "sweet" and "humble" to describe her man.
The series is not only about Simmons but also about the Simmons-Tweed family, including Shannon and their children, 17-year-old Nick and 14-year-old Sophie. It shows the current home life as well as footage going back to when Nick and Sophie were young.
Nick — tall, lanky and funny — could emerge as the real star of the show as well as one of the antidotes to Gene's outrageousness. But even in the news conference, Simmons was taking fire from several directions — the kids and Tweed.
When he and Tweed were asked about parenting, Tweed called him "Mr. Absentee Rock Father." And he conceded that most of the parenting was done by Tweed.
Which means, of course, that Daddy is famous for being an overly amorous rocker and Mommy is well-known for being naked. But Tweed and Simmons insist they are regular parents in a lot of ways.
"Our household is actually run pretty straight ahead," said Simmons, who — unlike, oh, Ozzy Osbourne — insists that he has never been high or drunk. "Our responsibility is to protect our kids, supply the money and nurture and love and protect them with our lives. Their job is to do well in school and behave. Period. This notion of parents having to negotiate with their children... is out of the question."
Read more at www.ohio.com.
The release of Jesse Hilsen, 66, fueled his ex-wife's fear he'll simply go on the lam again like he did for a decade beginning in 1994.
Back then, he traveled to Europe, Israel and South Africa rather than pay ex-wife Rita, the mother of his three children.
Hilsen is in a perfect position to flee the U.S., Rita noted yesterday — since he still has an Israeli passport and a condo in South Africa, which does not have an extradition treaty with the U.S.
In the 1970s and 80s, Hilsen was a successful Manhattan psychotherapist. He became KISS's manager in 1988 because the band had grown leery of music-industry insiders; Dr. Hilsen was the therapist for Paul Stanley, KISS's frontman.
KISS leaders Gene Simmons and Stanley were served subpoenas by a private investigator in September 2003 before their performance at Chicago's Tweeter Center in connection with the case.
The purpose of the subpoenas was to determine what, if any, financial ties exist between Hilsen and the band, as well as whether any band members have been in touch with him since he became a fugitive. Hilsen and KISS split in 1992.
Simmons, his partner, actress Shannon Tweed, and their children - 17-year-old Nick Tweed-Simmons and 14-year-old Sophie Tweed-Simmons - let cameras into their home for the new A&E series Gene Simmons Family Jewels.
"Our responsibility is to protect our kids, supply the money and the structure and the love," Simmons, 56, said this week at the Television Critics Association's summer meeting.
"Their job is to do well in school and behave, period. This notion of parents having to go negotiate with their children who just learned to wipe their butts is out of the question."
Tweed is not one of those mothers who nag about picking up clothes off the floor, either.
"We focused more on the important things in life, like your schoolwork," said Tweed, 49, Playboy's Playmate of the Year in 1982. "The kids have their priorities straight - staying sober and paying attention."
Simmons said he lives by the same rules he applies to his children.
"I've never been high, drunk, never smoked in my life," he said.
"Can't say the same for me," said Tweed.
The tongue wagging KISS frontman was at press tour yesterday to promote Gene Simmons: Family Jewels, which premieres Aug. 7 at 10 p.m. on A&E. The Osbournes-like reality series shows Simmons the doting dad at home with his beautiful Newfoundland-born Playboy Playmate Shannen Tweed. The pair have been "happily unmarried" for 23 years and have two kids Nick, 17, and Sophie, 14.
Bad enough that their dad wore Demon makeup and spat blood on stage. These kids also had a mom who posed nude and once lived with Hugh Hefner. Still, they seemed remarkably normal and well adjusted at yesterday's session.
Stiletto-heeled Tweed describes herself as more of a "soccer mom" these days. As for being the world's most tolerant partner, don't believe everything that Simmons says, she said. "If those things were true he'd be missing a limb."
After the session, Simmons was asked point blank if he was really the legendary swordsman he always claimed to be.
"I want everybody to believe in their heart that I mount any female within a thousand yards," he said. "You've got to be afraid of the boogeyman. I want to be the boogeyman. I don't want to be the next door neighbor."
Simmons, who claims never to have touched booze or drugs, says he did watch his old tour pal Ozzy shuffle and slur through The Osbournes. The lesson? "Don't do drugs," he said. "If you have any doubts, watch that show."
"Once we had all the lists, we did a little math. Every time a band was ranked #1 by someone, it received 10 points; #2 rankings received 9 points, and so on. When the points were added up, we had a list that represented the collective wisdom of the voters ... in theory, anyway.
"In part two, we gathered everyone together, showed them the results, and asked them to either stand by it, or change it as they saw fit, the only rule being that a majority had to vote in favor of every change. The discussion and debate over the rankings is what you see in the Overdrive show."
Read more at MTV.com.
"Top 10 Greatest Heavy Metal Bands Of All Time," according to MTV.com's panel of "experts":
01. BLACK SABBATH
02. JUDAS PRIEST
03. METALLICA
04. IRON MAIDEN
05. PANTERA
06. SLAYER
07. AC/DC
08. MOTÖRHEAD
09. KISS
10. MÖTLEY CRÜE
BLACK SABBATH - Sabbath Bloody Sabbath (1973)
KISS - Alive! (1975)
MOTÖRHEAD - Overkill (1979)
IRON MAIDEN - Killers (1981)
JUDAS PRIEST - Screaming for Vengeance (1982)
POISON - Look What the Cat Dragged In (1986)
SLAYER - Reign in Blood (1986)
DIMMU BORGIR - Spiritual Black Dimensions (1999)
TOOL - Lateralus (2001)
MASTODON - Leviathan (2004)
Detailed commentary by the codirectors of the documentary "Metal: A Headbanger's Journey" on each of the above LPs (and pictures of the LP covers) can be found at Blender.com.
The 15-year-old singer/guitarist, who is nicknamed Little Chris by his friends in Lowestoft, England, was wowed viewers with his musical talent and extrovert personality.
Hardman is amazed by his achievement. He says, "I can't believe it. When they offered me the deal I genuinely thought it was a big joke. It is going to be really cool making my first album."
A spokesperson for RCA predicts Hardman will be a massive success in U.K. "Little Chris is best described as a grown-up Bart Simpson after he discovered rock music," he said. "He has a massive personality. He's like a cartoon character in a good way."
Simmons said of Hardman on the show, "He could be a recording artist within three years. He's a David in a Goliath's world. He has the heart of a lion, charisma and delusional self-confidence despite living in Lowestoft, which is the most depressing place I have seen."
Commented Ricky Beck Mahler: "Don [owner of Don Hill] ran the Cat Cub back in the late '80s, which was a great room both acoustically and especially socially. We filmed our 'Call of the Wild' music video in that room and had some great times playing NYC in that era. We look foreword to returning after all these years, seeing old friends and playing Don's room"
The show will be filmed for CIRCUS OF POWER's upcoming longform DVD retrospective, "Got Motor? (Swamp Boogie In The Big City)", which is due for release in early 2007 through Renegade distribution. The DVD will include many classic performances of the band as well as the now legendary appearance from the "Morton Downey Jr." show. The show is a time capsule of New York's chaotic rock scene of the late 1980s. Highlights from the show include the band performing their song "White Trash Queen" from their debut album along with KISS guitar player Ace Frehley. The DVD will also contains live performances as an rare acoustic version of "Don't Drag Me Down" from the "Vices" album from Japanese TV.
Says Stone: "The chaos and turmoil that eventually caused this great band to dissolve 10 years ago simply doesn't exist right now. I'm excited to have old friends back together with clear heads playing music and having fun with it. I'm honored that they are in my new film and are convening in New York City from all over the country to show support and play the release party. I welcome them into the Urban Street-Bike Warriors family wholeheartedly."
"I hate to part with this, but it is time. Ace's sister lived four blocks away from me when I was 12 years old. My friend told me she lived there, so I stopped by one day. She answered the door with her little boy, and I asked, 'Are you Ace Frehley's sister?' and she said 'Yes,' and her little boy said, 'Is he asking about Uncle Paul?' She then showed me a wedding picture of Ace (with his make-up off), and gave me a 8x10 glossy promo picture from a 'Love Gun' photo shoot and then held out a candy dish full of these picks. She said, 'Go ahead and take one.' I said thank you and I never went back and bothered her again. That was in 1977, so I've had this pick for that long, stored in a plastic bag in a smoke free home. Has never been used. On the 1975/76 tour, KISS used signature guitar picks for the very first time… on the front of these picks, the name of either Ace, Paul Stanley or Gene Simmons is printed, while on the back the name of the manufacturer is printed, Pastore Music (except for Gene's picks, which didn't have Pastore on the back)."
"Have you received any money from the respondent whatsoever [since 1994]?" lawyer Jacqueline Bukowski asked client Rita Hilsen.
"No," answered the frail ex-wife, who has lived in an Upper West Side homeless shelter for 11 years.
In the 1970s and 80s, Hilsen was a successful Manhattan psychotherapist. He became KISS's manager in 1988 because the band had grown leery of music-industry insiders; Dr. Hilsen was the therapist for Paul Stanley, KISS's frontman.
KISS leaders Gene Simmons and Stanley were served subpoenas by a private investigator in September 2003 before their performance at Chicago's Tweeter Center in connection with the case.
The purpose of the subpoenas was to determine what, if any, financial ties exist between Hilsen and the band, as well as whether any band members have been in touch with him since he became a fugitive. Hilsen and KISS split in 1992.
Filled with songs from the first two decades of earsplitting rock (1964-1984), "Heavy Metal" boasts stadium anthems by ALICE COOPER, KISS and the SCORPIONS and the over-the-top orchestrations by acts like IRON BUTTERFLY and QUEENSRŸCHE. QUIET RIOT's pop-crossover hit, "Cum on Feel The Noize" is tempered by DIO's sonic masterpiece "Holy Diver" and MOTÖRHEAD's speed metal "Ace of Spades", showcasing the full spectrum of the heavy metal genre. Defined by its loud instrumentation, relatively simple song structure and raucous lyrics, heavy metal first roared on both sides of the Atlantic in the 1960s and continues to be one of the most enduring and popular forms of rock.
"Heavy Metal: The First 20 Years" (view cover here) track listing;
01. THE KINKS - You Really Got Me
02. IRON BUTTERFLY - In A Gadda Da Vida
03. ALICE COOPER - 18
04. URIAH HEEP - Easy Livin'
05. KISS - Detroit Rock City
06. TED NUGENT - Free For All
07. BLUE ÖYSTER CULT - Godzilla
08. RAINBOW - Kill The King
09. MOTÖRHEAD - Ace Of Spades
10. JUDAS PRIEST - Breaking The Law
11. ALDO NOVA - Hot Love
12. HELIX - Heavy Metal Love
13. QUIET RIOT - Cum On Feel The Noize
14. DIO - Holy Diver
15. QUEENSRŸCHE - Queen Of The Reich
16. KROKUS - Screaming In The Night
17. ACCEPT - Balls To The Wall
18. SCORPIONS - Rock You Like A Hurricane
KISS' official web site, KissOnline.com, spoke to the happy couple and they said they were still in shock. Ron said the Coffeehouse staff went all out and decorated the store for the wedding, shot confetti off right after they were married and even got them a wedding cake! Then the biggest surprise of all came just as they were celebrating, Lisa and Ron received a phone call from Paul Stanley wishing them well. Lisa said she almost passed out and hoped she did not ramble too much to Paul.
Check out pictures from last night's ceremony at this location.
For more information, go to this location.
"Dad is Gene Simmons — the legendary, tongue wagging demon of KISS. Mom is Shannon Tweed — former Playmate Of The Year, actress and model. And their kids, Nick and Sophie, are, well...surprisingly charming, well-behaved teenagers dealing with the trials and tribulations of adolescence, even though Mom and Dad are like no one else's parents.
"Gene and Shannon have been happily UNmarried for 22 years and have no plans of getting married any time soon. Gene is a rock star, and a multi-media magnate. He is also the kind of dad who brings Gatorade to his daughter's soccer games and stands in the front row of his son's rock band when they play gigs."
"Gene Simmons Family Jewels" is scheduled to premiere on August 7 at 10:00 p.m. EST. RealityTVWebsite.com has posted episode summaries at this location.
Australian Guitar: Recently you contributed to Paul Stanley's (KISS) solo record. Can you tell us about that?
Kulick: "Well, you know, it was kind of unusual how I got involved. First of all, Paul was doing the album, I guess, over the course of a year and a half. At the very beginning it started off with just the demos. He got me involved to play bass, to jus tbe there and go over the arrangements with the drummer and everything. A few of those never really got used due to covers and publishing. But he keeps getting more serious about his record and I didn't hear from him every time he cut a track. But once in a while, all of a sudden, he'd give me a call saying, 'Hey, I want you to play bass.' A lot of people aren't aware that through my KISS years I got to play bass, although more on Paul's songs than Gene's. I would be upset if Gene asked me to play bass on one of his songs. You know, 'Hey, you wrote it. Play the bass. Don't be lazy.' But I used to do a lot of the demo stuff with Paul, so it was easy for me to jump in and do it in the studio after we already had a shape of the song. So the same thing happened where he just felt like, 'I like the way Bruce plays bass, so let's bring him in.' I haven't heard the whole record, but I guess I'm on about five tracks [playing] bass guitar. I'd hit him up and say, 'Let me play some lead guitar,' and he'd say, 'Yeah, we'll get to that,' but it never really happened because I was busy and he worked with a lot of different people. I think he's going to have a really strong record. I know he's looking at getting it out sooner than later this year, that's for sure."
Australian Guitar: What did you think of Gene's recent solo album ["Asshole"]?
Kulick: "What's interesting about Gene [is] he has a strong personality and point of view. But on this record, ironically enough, I think he was all over the map. So he'd have stuff that was as heavy as songs from KISS' 'Carnival of Souls' and then he'd have like a syrupy ballad with pedal steel on it. It was very unusual. Some of the songs I like, but it was a bit of a mess. You know, with him there's no rules. Paul's solo album will be much more defined and much more where a KISS fan will be very pleased with it."
Check out a scan of the entire interview at this location.
Revue: What can fans expect from your upcoming "American Witch" tour with ANTHRAX? Is it gonna be classic, full-blown ROB ZOMBIE chaos with the intricate staging, or more scaled down, like some of your more recent tours have been?
Zombie: "No, the scaled-down days are over. That was sort of an experiment that actually worked quite well. But, it's over. The scaled-down thing was just to sort of get myself back in the groove. 'Cuz I'd been away from touring and playing music for so long, and I had a new band and everything. I'm like, 'Let's just go out there and be a band before it becomes this giant, crazy show.' And that's basically what we did. But now we're back to the giant, crazy show."
Revue: Who's playing bass now?
Zombie: "He calls himself Piggy D. He was in a band called AMEN for a while, and then he was in a band called WEDNESDAY 13. He made his debut with us on 'David Letterman' last week. And, he will be the new guy."
Revue: Is he fitting in well with the dynamic then?
Zombie: "I hate changing members, just sometimes it happens, this time it happened amicably. Blasko got offered to go play with Ozzy, and wanted to go play with Ozzy. We worked together for eight years, and there's no hard feelings — thank goodness — with it. But I hate auditioning people. I won't audition people because it's just a cattle call of nonsense, usually. I did that one time only, back in the days of WHITE ZOMBIE, and it was ridiculous. People would just show up, they'd fly in from all over the country and then they're terrible. And you're like, 'Why would you fly 3,000 miles when you know you're terrible? What do you think, we're stupid?' You just feel bad after a while. I refuse to audition anybody, so I kinda just do research, and his name kept coming up. Our drummer Tommy had known him because he had tried out for Alice Cooper at one point, and he had hung out with him and said, 'Oh, he's a really good guy, he's really good. For whatever reason he didn't get that gig, but he was a great guy and I always remembered him, and other people knew him.' And I had met him through friends, it was just one of those things where all arrows were pointing to him as being the right guy. Same with John 5. Someone said, 'Oh, John 5,' and I knew John 5 was a great guitar player, obviously, and then I met him. I was like, 'What a great guy. Done. The search is over.' I looked at one person and that's where it ended."
Revue: With the "VH1 Rock Honors" show, what was it like, actually, jammin' with Slash, Tommy Lee, Scott Ian, Gilby Clarke and Ace Frehley?
Zombie: "It was f****n' awesome. It was great. I mean, I had kind of jammed with some of those people before, like Tommy Lee, obviously — he's played on a bunch of my records, so I knew Tommy, and I had played with Slash one other time, when we both played with Alice Cooper, for a live record in Cabo. But, it was great, there was a moment when we were soundchecking and…all those guys are fantastic, and it was awesome to play with them. But the biggest thrill for me was playing with Ace Frehley. Because, thinking back to being a fourth-grader, buying 'Destroyer' and looking at the pictures, and it's just mind-blowing that I'm standing onstage and he's like (in a voice that sounds like he just sucked helium), 'Hey, Rob that sounds pretty good, all right let's play!' And I'm thinkin', 'Holy sh*t. Ace Frehley.' And just hangin' out, like we got off stage and Paul Stanley and Gene Simmons were there, and they're like, 'Hey, good job. Sounds good.' It's like, 'This is f*****g surreal.' Oh it's bizarre. Not even you get to meet them, you get to meet them as you're walking onstage to perform with them. That's the trippy part. Just like, I mean, I've known Alice Cooper for a while, but when we went through Arizona this time he came down to the show, and he stood on the side of the stage while we played. I never get over being thrilled by that."
Read the entire interview at www.revuemag.net.
Ed Roman Guitars founder Ed Roman commented: "I first met Vinnie Vincent back in the '70s when he was playing with Felix Cavaliere of the RASCALS. This was long before he got the KISS gig. As I recall, I sold him a 1957 Strat for $400.00. Now you might think that was cheap!!!! Frankly, I was really glad to see it go. Today, of course, it's a very valuable guitar. But I wouldn't pay $400.00 for it today if I wasn't going to sell it."
For more information, click here.
Bandmates Paul Stanley and Gene Simmons, sans the trademark makeup, greeted a crowd of hundreds to mark the grand opening in this beach town, according to The Associated Press.
"You can live to rock, but you have to eat to live," Stanley told the crowd.
Some fans drove from as far away as Colorado and Oregon. One came all the way from Poland.
"I can't believe I just met them," said Adrian Czarnbey, who introduced the band at a news conference. "It's just like seeing Jesus for me."
Fans were in line as early as 8:30 a.m. for the grand opening party nearly 12 hours later. The coffeehouse poured its first cup of Rockuccino on Saturday.
The settlement, announced Wednesday, said the "amicable resolution" of Georgeann Walsh Ward's lawsuit over the way she was portrayed in the documentary "When KISS Ruled the World" involved no payment of money to her.
Ward, 53, was a girlfriend of Simmons' in the 1970s. She filed the lawsuit in January 2005, alleging that the documentary defamed her by juxtaposing Simmons' commentary about himself with photographs that included her.
The settlement of Ward's lawsuit, announced by Simmons spokesman Stan Rosenfield, includes recognition by her that the KISS rocker played no role in the production, editing or selection and inclusion of her photographs in the documentary.
The documentary chronicled the band's 30-year career, its impact on rock music and the quartet's "wild" antics. The other members of the band, whose hits include "Rock and Roll All Nite" and "Detroit Rock City," were guitarist/singer Paul Stanley, drummer Peter Criss and guitarist Ace Frehley.
Simmons says during the show, "There wasn't a girl that was off limits, and I enjoyed every one of them," Ward's court papers say.
They say photos of her appeared 11 times during the documentary, which was shown on the cable television music network several times in July and August 2004. In it, Simmons claimed to have had sexual encounters with 4,600 women.
Simmons says in the documentary, "I was a 24-hour whore. All I ever thought about was sex." This, court papers say, was followed by a photo of Ward with him.
Ward's papers say that because a photo of her with Simmons -- though her name is never mentioned -- was shown during remarks about his sexual adventures, she was in effect portrayed as "wild" and "unchaste."
Simmons denied that any inferences suggested by Ward could be reasonably drawn or understood from the documentary.
"I value my early relationship with Ms. Ward and wish her well," Simmons said in the announcement. "My quotes in the documentary that Ms. Ward took issue with were solely about me, not Ms. Ward or anyone else."
No listed telephone number for Ward's lawyer, Martha Martin McBrayer, could be found Wednesday. Ward's lawsuit had sought unspecified damages.
In a statement sent to Kiss Kollector Online, Shaun Micheel said, "Just a quick note to say how much of an impact Tommy had on the overall success of my third annual Make-a-Wish tournament. We raised over 200K this year and are able to help over 40 children make their 'wish' come true. Tommy got up and played 7 or 8 songs with my good friend, and musician, Gerry Finney. We capped the party off with 'Rock And Roll All Night'. No confetti, but a big hit nonetheless. My thanks are to Gene, Paul and Eric for the signed guitar. I am grateful for their generosity."
Check put a photo of Thayer at the event at KissKollector.com.
Jul. 11 - Wabash, IN @ Honeywell Center
Jul. 13 - Walker, MN @ Moondance Jam
Jul. 14 - Waukegan, IL @ Genesee Theatre
Jul. 15 - Merrillville, IN @ Star Plaza Theatre
Jul. 16 - Knoxville, TN @ Tennessee Theatre
Jul. 19 - Elkhart, IN @ Elco Theatre
Jul. 20 - Dayton, OH @ Fraze Pavilion
Jul. 21 - Fond du Lac, WI @ County Fair
Jul. 22 - London, ONT @ Rock The Park
According to Dawn Bryant of MyrtleBeachOnline.com, KISS bandmembers Paul Stanley and Gene Simmons caused chaos by their mere presence at the first coffeehouse to bear the band's name.
"Myrtle Beach has always been a party center," said Stanley, grasping a Kiss Coffeehouse cup for the national TV cameras filming. "This was the best place to get it started. Myrtle Beach is ground zero. ... We're bringing coffee to a whole 'nother generation."
Hundreds of fans — many ranking members in the fan club known as the KISS Army, several showing off their latest KISS tattoos — came from New Jersey, Michigan and even Poland for the chance to shake hands with the guys who played the tunes that created such devotion.
They lined up as early as 8:30 a.m. for the grand opening party that started nearly 12 hours later. They sat through downpours, clutched cameras and took days off work just to see half the band.
"Once you see them, it is like an aura. It takes over," said Rob Frasure of Conway, who walked around with the back cut out of his shirt to show off his new KISS tattoo.
Read more at MyrtleBeachOnline.com.
Under questioning from his ex-wife’s attorney, Jacqueline Bukowski, Hilsen invoked his Fifth Amendment rights several times rather than provide information during sworn testimony.
Administrative judge Nicholas Palos wasn’t too pleased when he heard Hilsen’s intentions, and warned him that “taking the Fifth” might cast a negative perception over Hilsen’s side of the case.
But Hilsen — who’s been in prison for two years after a decade as a fugitive abroad — testified that he no longer knew where his passport was. When Bukowski asked him which countries he had passports for — the United States or South Africa, where he hid for a decade — Hilsen invoked the Fifth Amendment. When she asked him if he had an Israeli passport, he replied that he wasn’t sure.
Bukowski, representing Rita Hilsen, fears that Jesse Hilsen will exit the United States quickly if Palos releases him from prison without first ascertaining the location of his assets. Divorced from his wife in 1984, Hilsen never paid court-ordered child support or alimony. The amount he owes is estimated at more than $1 million, and for the last decade Rita Hilsen has lived in a shelter on the Upper West Side.
In dispute now are the location (or existence) of assets Rita Hilsen claims her ex-husband has hidden, possibly with ex-lover Dr. Joan Packles-Margolis, a Manhattan psychiatrist.
While Jesse Hilsen testified, Packles Margolis — a thin, tense woman — paced nervously around the Family Court waiting room. When I asked her if her husband, Dr. Richard Margolis, had accompanied her to court, Dr. Packles-Margolis rolled her eyes expressively as if to say, "Are you crazy?" and walked away.
Hilsen’s most contradictory testimony yesterday was about whether or not he’d inherited money from his mother’s estate. At first he claimed that his 50 percent interest in the estate was limited to personal belongings, but later conceded that his mother had left behind at least three companies.
He invoked his Fifth Amendment rights when asked what the companies did, and said he couldn’t remember where his mother had lived or what her address had been. Whether or not those were her companies or his has not been established yet. Court resumes again this afternoon.
"Vinnie Vincent Invasion" was produced and arranged by Vinnie Vincent and Dana Strum at Baby 'O Recorders in Hollywood, CA between January and March 1986 and was mixed at Cherokee Recording Studios in Hollywood, CA in April 1986. More information is available at Amazon.com.
In an interview from August 2004, Shaun Micheel said he's getting guitar lessons from Tommy: 'I'm just learning how to play. I was with my friends from KISS last week. The guitar player and the lead singer were both trying to give me some guitar lessons, so my first song that I'm learning is 'Kumbaya', and that's only two chords, and I have not quite figured out how to do that."
"I was with them last week in Atlanta. I was actually going to have Tommy come up to the golf course and was actually going to have him help me present the guitars to the guys last night, but they added some shows. But I was with him last week in Atlanta and I flew down and rode with him to the show, and we got stuck in the Atlanta traffic trying to go to their gig. Paul and I were just talking, he's just showing me little things, just very beginning, where to put my fingers, basically little chords. It's exciting. And then the next day, I took Tommy out and Doc McGhee, their manager to play at the Peachtree Club in Atlanta.
"Tommy and I are going to exchange services, but I think it is going to take him a lot longer to teach me to play guitar than me to teach him to play golf."
Much like the Palms show back in 2003, the intimate, no-frills concert will allow KISS to flex its musical muscle! "It's a chance for us to just show people who and what we are musically," stated Gene Simmons.
Paul Stanley added, "We just couldn't pass up an opportunity where we could play such a cool intimate show. This will be a lot of fun especially right after playing the big festivals in Japan!"
Tickets for the 8 p.m. show go on sale Monday, June 26 at 3:00 p.m. Eastern. Tickets are priced from $155.00 to $235.00 and will be available by visiting the Chumash Casino Resort Box Office or by calling StarTicketsPlus at 1-800-585-3737.
The Chumash Casino Resort is located in Santa Barbara County, California, between Los Angeles and San Francisco, in the heart of the Santa Ynez Valley wine country. Visit their website at www.chumashcasino.com for directions and other info on the Resort.
Detroit Rock City
Take Me
Let Me Go, Rock And Roll
Ladies Room
Firehouse
Makin' Love
I Want You
Cold Gin
Ace Guitar Solo
Do You Love Me?
Nothin' To Lose
Gene Solo
God Of Thunder
Peter Drum Solo
Rock And Roll All Nite
Missing are the show encores and the band intro and the first half of "Detroit Rock City". Still, this is one of the most exciting video finds in years. Collectors now have pro-shot videos from most of the original line-up tours. Screen shots are available for viewing on www.kissfaq.com.
In other news, Russian label Lilith will be re-releasing the four KISS 1978 solo albums on picture disc in a CD "box set" – titled "Ace, Gene, Peter & Paul". Each CD is said to be a replica of the original picture disc. The CDs are offset and packaged in individual cardboard sleeves which are housed in an accordion-style PVC sleeve with four pockets (one for each CD) that can be hung on the wall. The PVC sleeve is itself housed in a plastic bag with the four CD covers printed on the front.
Due for release in July, each picture disc CD features an original replica of the 1978 releases.
The Collector's Box features all four albums on picture disc CD. The titles have never before been released together and the CDs are offset and packaged in individual cardboard sleeves which are housed in an accordion-style PVC.
Oli Brown, lead singer and guitarist with BLUE EVOLUTION, shot to fame when he was plucked from the crowd to play during a blues night at the Norwich Arts Centre a couple of years ago.
The youngster from Scottow will meet the KISS bassist/vocalist and "Rock School" presenter, who famously turned a group of no-hopers from Kirkley High School in Lowestoft into rock hopefuls in the last series, later this summer when he is touring with the American blues band BLINDDOG SMOKIN.
The meeting comes after the rock god was given a copy of BLUE EVOLUTION's demo CD and thought the band were talented and worth following up.
Read more at www.eveningnews24.co.uk.
If you are coming out to the Grand Opening of the KISS Coffeehouse and are interested in meeting Stanley and Simmons, here are the details:
Paul and Gene will be available to say hello to fans from 8:30 p.m. until 9:45 p.m. inside the KISS Coffeehouse. In order to meet as many KISS fans as possible, Paul and Gene will not be signing autographs or posing for photos. However you will be allowed to take photos of them. KISS Coffeehouse will allow fans to begin lining up outside starting at 10:00 a.m. If you decide to arrive early, bring lots of sunscreen! KISS Coffeehouse will be open all day on June 27, closing from 4:00 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. to prepare for the official Grand Opening. For fans that do make it in, please understand that the line will have to be moved very quickly as large crowds are anticipated and the organizers want as many fans as possible to get inside. Fans that are unable to get in should head to the stage where KISS Army will be playing at 9:45, when Paul and Gene will come onstage to address the crowd.
Through a deal brokered by the band's exclusive merchandising company, Signatures Network, the Kiss Coffeehouse opens June 27 in Myrtle Beach.
Kiss bandmates Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley will be on hand to cut the opening-day ribbon. But the performing duties go to tribute band Kiss Army.
A man convicted of killing a call girl who was once married to former KISS guitarist Vinnie Vincent had his appeal rejected Wednesday (June 15) by the state Appellate Court.
Gregory McArthur, formerly of Hartford, maintained that two drug dealers were probably responsible for the slaying of AnnMarie Cusano in 1998.
On appeal, he argued there was not enough evidence to justify his manslaughter conviction, and that a judge improperly barred statements about one of the drug dealers from closing arguments.
But the court found there was sufficient evidence, including a taped confession and testimony that McArthur led police to Cusano's remains, to convict him of manslaughter.
According to the tape, Cusano — who usually served wealthy customers — told McArthur she wasn't comfortable staying with him at a Hartford boarding house.
McArthur said the two argued because she wanted to leave and she refused to take his money. He said there was a struggle, and at one point he held Cusano in a headlock. When he let go, he said, she collapsed and was no longer breathing.
A witness testified McArthur traded Cusano's car for crack cocaine, and took from her purse $30, a bank card, and an American Express card belonging to Vincent, the one-time KISS guitarist whose real name is Vincent Cusano. He and AnnMarie Cusano were briefly married in the 1980s.
Stanley's first non-KISS release since his self-titled 1978 album (issued in tandem with solo projects from the other three original KISS members) features contributions from session drummer Victor Indrizzo, guitarist Corky James, former MARILYN MANSON and current ROB ZOMBIE guitarist John 5, former KISS guitarist Bruce Kulick (who plays bass on a few songs) and noted string arranger David Campbell. Songtitles set to appear on the CD include "Wake Up Screaming", "Second to None", "Live to Win", "Bulletproof", "Where Angels Dare" and "Lovin' You Without You Now".
In a February 2006 interview with ABC News, Stanley revealed that he is planning a tour to support the CD, and said he'll be bringing out a bigger band than he's used at past solo gigs, "because there's a lot more going on on this album." He estimated he'll have about six people in his band. As for the musicians he used during the recording of "Live to Win", Stanley said, "[It's] some friends of mine — it's not a 'who's who.' I didn't want to do one of those albums where you list people and it becomes some sort of a, trying to impress everybody with names. So it's a great album. Everybody loves it."
KISS bandmates Paul Stanley and Gene Simmons attended the wedding. But missing was drummer Eric Singer who was traveling in Europe. Also absent were the pyrotechnics synonymous with a KISS performance. For this show, the bride wore white, the roses were burgundy, and it was tradition all the way, says Mary Berglund.
01. I Love It Loud
02. Rise to It
03. All Hell's Breaking Loose
04. Heaven's On Fire
05. Thrills in The Night
06. Tears are Falling
07. Who Wants to Be Lonley
08. Uh! All Night
09. Reason To Live
10. Turn On The Night
11. Crazy Crazy Nights
12. Let's Put The X in Sex
13. Rock Hard
14. Forever
15. Unholy
16. Domino
17. Every Time I Look At You
18. God Gave Rock & Roll to You
And while the KISS scents do not contain actual band member sweat – as far as we know - they do contain a heady blend of black cumin, white pepper, dark rum, cypress, moss and honeyed amber blend (pour homme) and crushed red peppercorns, wet fig leaves, wild red poppy, musky bare skin accord, shiny patent leather and vintage mahogany (pour femme). And both the men's and women's scents and ancillary products - Party Shower Gel, Lovin' Body Lotion, Rockin' Bath Splash - also contain pheromones, which are said to increase libido and up one's sexual attraction factor.
The KISS men's fragrance will be packaged in shiny black patent-looking box featuring the band's signature flame red logo ("representing heat and passion," according to a spokesperson), while the ladies' scent is housed in a translucent glass bottle with a black KISS logo. Fans can choose from one of four bottle caps, each depicting a different band member's likeness.
Retailing from $20 for the Bath Splash to $49 for Eau de Parfum Spray, the line is likely to be carried in Federated department stores, Sephora and possibly Tower and Virgin record outlets (distribution negotiations are still underway).
What is certain, according to Neil Katz, the president and CEO of Gemini, the company behind the fragrance, is that the KISS scents will r-o-c-k. And, he's hoping, sell like leather-coated hotcakes. "KISS has sold a billion dollars in merchandise," said Katz. "We really have two target [buyers]: the nostalgia buyers or collectors, and the younger, 18-to-24 target."
To this end, Gemini is planning a major advertising and marketing campaign - with logo-driven print ads, scented tattoos, car fresheners, stickers, and in-store band appearances, among other things - as well as on-campus promotional events aimed at teaching students how to rock and roll all nite and smell good ev-e-ry day.
As if this weren't enough to make KISS fans spew flames of joy, the band recently launched a premium denim line and announced plans to open the world's first KISS Coffeehouse on Tuesday, June 27th, in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina.
And yes, Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley will be on hand to cut the ribbon on what a press release describes as "the most outrageous coffee and dessert shop ever constructed."
And those itching to join the KISS Army can enroll here, as the café will not only be home to 20-foot-tall smoking KISS boots and rare KISSmemorabilia and costumes, serve "KISS Frozen Rockuccino, the most caffeinated and refreshing coffee beverage on the market, as well as a full array of cookies brownies and cupcakes," but will also function as "an official KISS Army recruiting office."
"Every army needs food and drink and the KISS Army is no exception!" said Gene Simmons. "Even the non-enlisted will find our treats and java rockin' good!"
And actual enlisted men will not be forgotten, either, as the band plans to ship 1,000 bags of KISS Army Blend coffee to the US Armed Forces in Iraq in conjunction with the cafe's grand opening.
Added Stanley, "the KISS Coffeehouse is our way of providing everyone with a buzz of great, quality treats and coffee filled with enough sugar and caffeine to get the party started and keep it going!"
Pheromones not included.
The show, which premiered at 9 p.m. May 31 and included tributes from FOO FIGHTERS, GODSMACK, THE ALL-AMERICAN REJECTS, Tommy Lee, Slash, Scott Ian, Gilby Clarke and Rob Zombie, averaged a .8 18-49, attracting 1.1 million total viewers, a +166% increase over the same time period last year. The show also drew significant numbers in its 11 p.m. encore, drawing in an average 600,000 total viewers for that airing.
VH1 GM Tom Calderone enthused: "Rumors of rock's demise once again prove to be false. We thank all of the immense talent who performed with such passion that night. Our first 'Rock Honors' was indeed an honorable evening, and we're glad that we could share it with our viewers. Now, if I could only make back the $10k I lost there in blackjack."
Hosted by "My Name Is Earl"'s Jaime Pressly, the show featured the FOO FIGHTERS joining QUEEN's Brian May and Roger Taylor for "Tie Your Mother Down". GODSMACK delivered a medley of JUDAS PRIEST's work. THE ALL-AMERICAN REJECTS covered DEF LEPPARD's "Photograph". An all-star band tribute to KISS included surprise guest Ace Frehley with Tommy Lee, Slash, Scott Ian, Gilby Clarke and Rob Zombie performing "God of Thunder".
Stanley recently completed work on his first non-KISS release since his self-titled 1978 album, issued in tandem with solo projects from the other three original KISS members. Joining Stanley on his new solo album are session drummer Victor Indrizzo, guitarist Corky James, former MARILYN MANSON and current ROB ZOMBIE guitarist John 5, former KISS guitarist Bruce Kulick (who plays bass on a few songs) and noted string arranger David Campbell. Songtitles set to appear on the CD include "Wake Up Screaming", "Second to None" and "Live to Win".
HardRock.com has just released the brand new 2006 KISS Flex Series pins (photo), which are said to be "larger, more detailed and extremely limited." Each pin in the five-pin 2006 KISS Flex Series is produced and stamped in a limited-edition casting of 100 and the mold retired. Bid on KISS Series collectible pins ONLY in Hard Rock Dutch Auctions at this location and be assured that the pin you win is an authentic Hard Rock collectible!
Here's the contents information for the issue:
* "Behind The Curtain" by Christopher Franchi
* "Something Wicked This Way Comes" by Ken Sharp
* "Editorial" by Warren Lapine
* KISS Rocks Hondafest
* "I Photographed KISS" by Bill Hagan
* "Sports Stars Raise Their Glasses to KISS" by Scott Engle
* Fan Art and Photos by the KISS Army
* "The Sight of Blood!" by Spiro Papadatos
* "Guitar Picks The Ultimate Concert Souvenir" by Ken Rodenas
* "Girls of KISS" Sweet Mel
* An Interview with Bob Kulick by Melanie Falina
* "Make Up In the Mirror" by Tara Shyrock
* "A Carnival of Like Minded Souls" by Melanie Falina
* "Eric Singer: KISS Rock The Nation Live! Outtakes" by Ken Sharp
* "Inside The Vaults" by Jeff Suhs
Check out the cover of issue #5 of the official KISS magazine at this location.
FRANKENSTEIN 3000 made a return appearance at Don Hill's on Sunday, June 4 as the house band for performances by former RUNAWAYS vocalist Cherie Currie and BOW WOW WOW singer Annabella Lwin. Cherie Currie appears on FRANKENSTEIN 3000's CD, "America's Hit Remakers", dueting with Keith Roth on a cover of the RUNAWAYS' "American Nights".
For more information, visit the official FRANKENSTEIN 3000 web site here.
* KISS performing "Detroit Rock City" (video)
* All-star band consisting of original KISS guitarist Ace Frehley, ex-GUNS N' ROSES axeman Gilby Clarke, Rob Zombie (vocals), Slash (guitar; VELVET REVOLVER, ex-GUNS N' ROSES), Tommy Lee (drums; MÖTLEY CRÜE), and Scott Ian (bass — yes, bass; ANTHRAX) performing the KISS classic "God of Thunder" (video)
In related news, Célébrités Galleries in Maui, Hawaii will host another Paul Stanley art show on June 14. More information is available at www.celebrityfineart.com.
Exclusive honoree performances found only on VSPOT:
* "Under Pressure" by QUEEN with Paul Rodgers
* "The Green Manalishi" by JUDAS PRIEST
* "Rocket" by DEF LEPPARD
* "Deuce" by KISS
Exclusive & Extended "VH1 Rock Honors Pre-Show" Interviews:
Interviews conducted from the "black carpet" by Matt Pinfield and Jillian Barberie include: Jamie Pressly, FOO FIGHTERS, GODSMACK, Jaime Kennedy, JUDAS PRIEST, Rob Zombie, Scott Ian, Jim Breuer, Tera Patrick, THE ALL-AMERICAN REJECTS, Vince Neil and Natasha Henstridge.
VH1's "Air To The Throne" winner announced: You voted, now see who rocked their way up to VH1's "Air To The Throne".
* "We Will Rock You/We Are The Champions" by QUEEN with Paul Rodgers and FOO FIGHTERS
* "Breaking The Law" by JUDAS PRIEST
* "20th Century Boy" by DEF LEPPARD
* "Detroit Rock City" by KISS
Rock royalty received the ultimate form of flattery, at VH1's first annual "VH1 Rock Honors", where some of today's hottest rock acts honored legendary bands KISS, QUEEN, DEF LEPPARD and JUDAS PRIEST. Taped at the Mandalay Bay Events Center in Las Vegas, "VH1 Rock Honors", saluted the ground-breaking bands of rock, the once-in-a-lifetime events and the influential people who made a lasting mark on the history of hard rock. Hosted by Jaime Pressly with tribute performances by FOO FIGHTERS, GODSMACK, THE ALL-AMERICAN REJECTS, Paul Rodgers, Tommy Lee, Slash, Scott Ian, Gilby Clarke, Rob Zombie and surprise guest Ace Frehley. The show also included appearances by Kiefer Sutherland, Gina Gershon, Jaime Kennedy, Jim Breuer, Natasha Henstridge, Brittany Snow and Penn Jillette.
The sitcom star lands on Maxim magazine's Top 10 "Living Sex Legends" list having allegedly done the deed with 5,000 women.
Sheen, 40, is currently going through a messy divorce with one of those ladies, wife-actress Denise Richards. Among the many reasons -- drug use, alcoholism, violence -- she's divorcing the horndog is his constant infidelity, addiction to what appears to be underage porn and frequent dealings with prostitutes. Hey, if you have to pay them to sleep with you, doesn't that invalidate your total number of conquests?
Surprisingly, the top lothario isn't anyone rich or famous (until now) at all. The men's magazine claims that lowly Venetian hotel porter Umberto Billo has charmed 8,000 women to his bed. "They crossed oceans to see me," he boasts. While guest satisfaction is the randy Italian's trademark, his work ethic isn't. Maxim reports that he has been fired after getting it on took precedence over his paid duties.
"Sometimes he was too exhausted to carry the guests' luggage," says his ex-boss.
Nevertheless, he still can't touch the late Wilt Chamberlain's title: 20,000 women.
The full Top 10 list of "Living Sex Legends" follows:
10. Bill Wyman (Rolling Stones bassist) - 1,000
9. Earvin (Magic) Johnson (basketball star) - 1,000
8. Lemmy Kilmister (Motorhead frontman) - 1,200
7. Jack Nicholson (actor) - 2,000
6. Ilie Nastase (tennis star) - 2,500
5. Engelbert Humperdinck (singer) - 3,000
4. Julio Iglesias (singer) - 3,000
3. Gene Simmons (Kiss frontman) - 4,600
2. Charlie Sheen (actor) - 5,000
1. Umberto Billo (Venetian hotel porter) - 8,000
Lydia witnessed the amazing success KISS achieved in their early days when they catered to their fans every whim, and she's actively sought fans' opinions throughout the book's development, designing "Sealed with a Kiss" with their wishes in mind. Among the vast collection of photos and graphics are nearly 100 images from 1973 alone — go onstage, backstage, and in the studio with KISS when they were nothing more than a local New York club band. In response to repeated requests from KISS fans, the overwhelming majority of the photos are captioned with the exact date and location of where/when they were taken.
"Sealed with a Kiss" is divided into three sections, each covering a particular era of Lydia's colorful life:
* Section I: July 3, 1966 (the day she first met Peter) – 1973. Six chapters.
* Section II: 1974 – 1979. Thirteen chapters.
* Section III: 1980 – Present. Four chapters, plus a bonus fifth chapter filled will "deleted photos." The final chapter is dedicated to an archive of Peter Criss' club days, detailing the date and location of over 500 gigs Peter did prior to joining KISS.
Lydia is considering promoting her book with a trailer consisting primarily of her long-lost 1970s home movies of KISS. A 20-30-minute version of the trailer is also being considered for screening purposes during personal appearances on her book tour.
"Our thanks to you for making our dreams come true."
Check out the photos and video clips at this location.
Commented Stanley: "The atmosphere between the bands was all smiles and hugs. It was so relaxed and everyone was really happy and excited to see each other and play together. We all had stories to tell each other and catching up to do. I thought all the bands' performances left no doubt why they were being honored. There was actually talk among some of us of touring together! I have to say the best was seeing Ace. It was like being with family. He's a wonderful guy to be around. He's healthy, looks great and is playing really great. I'm very happy and proud to see him this way. It couldn't have been warmer or more upbeat between all of us. Of course he belonged there with us and I was so glad he wanted to be there! Also, him playing 'God of Thunder' with Rob, Slash, Tommy, Scott and Gilby...How cool is that? We spent a lot of time together at the show and the after-party. It couldn't have been more positive all around. He told me how great we sounded and how wild it was to be able to see KISS without being up there. We took lots of photos together and laughed a whole lot. An awesome night!"
For more information, click here.
TINY KISS, which includes three little people and a 350-pound woman, were recently embroiled in a feud with the all-dwarf KISS tribute band MINIKISS over who came up with the idea for such a group.
"VH1 Rock Honors" is the first-ever show to pay homage to the legends who influenced the sound of hard rock. This year's celebration honors the music and influence of JUDAS PRIEST, KISS, QUEEN and DEF LEPPARD. Premiering on Wednesday, May 31 at 9:00 p.m., "VH1 Rock Honors" was taped at the Mandalay Bay Events Center in Las Vegas and will include performances by all of the honorees as well as tribute performances by GODSMACK (who are paying tribute to JUDAS PRIEST), FOO FIGHTERS and THE ALL-AMERICAN REJECTS (DEF LEPPARD).
"VH1 Rock Honors" setlist – May 25, 2006 at Mandalay Bay Events Center - Las Vegas, NV:
FOO FIGHTERS w/ Brian May and Roger Taylor:
01. Tie Your Mother Down
QUEEN:
01. Under Pressure
02. The Show Must Go On
03. We Will Rock You/We Are The Champions
GODSMACK:
01. Medley: The Hellion / Electric Eye / Victim Of Changes / Hell Bent For Leather
JUDAS PRIEST:
01. Breakin' The Law
02. You've Got Another Thing Comin'
03. The Green Manalishi (with the Two Pronged Crown)
THE ALL-AMERICAN REJECTS:
01. Photograph
DEF LEPPARD:
01. Rock Of Ages
02. Rocket
03. 20th Century Boy
All-Star Band featuring Rob Zombie, Ace Frehley, Slash, Gilby Clarke, Scott Ian, Tommy Lee:
01. God Of Thunder
KISS:
01. Detroit Rock City
02. Deuce
03. Love Gun
04. Makin' Love
Highlights, according to a BLABBERMOUTH.NET visitor:
* FOO FIGHTERS: AMAZING
* Seeing Ace hug Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley (it won't be long now)
* DEF LEPPARD: Their set was suprisingly good.
* Vince Neil's old lady falling flat on her face.
Lowlights:
* THE ALL-AMERICAN REJECTS (Wow, I didn't know a group could be so bland)
* Rob Zombie coming in too early on "God of Thunder", just as the solo switched from Ace to Slash.
* What the fuck is going on with Rick Savage? Is it bad plastic surgery or what?
* $7.50 for a Sam Adams.
Surreal Moment of the Evening:
Towards the end of the KISS set (but before "Makin' Love" was played), all of the honorees were brought out for a final bow. At one point Ace was next to Tommy Thayer (in the Spaceman makeup). It was really strange...
Check out pictures from the show:
Film Magic:
Backstage & Audience
Show
Red Carpet
Rehearsals
Wire Image:
Show
Rehearsals
Arrivals
Red Carpet
Getty Images:
Show
Rehearsals
Backstage & Audience
Arrivals
After-Party
Slash & Ace
Scott Ian, Slash & Tommy Lee
Slash & Ace
Scott Ian & Tommy Lee
Slash & Gilby
Ace #1
Ace #2
Ace #3
KissOnline.com: Peter Criss [original KISS drummer] recently said that "VH1 Rock Honors" is honoring the original KISS. Is that true?
Paul: "No, it's not true. I have been part of meetings from the day VH1 first had the idea to do this. I can tell you that 'Rock Honors' is celebrating and honoring KISS, QUEEN, JUDAS PRIEST and DEF LEPPARD for their enduring and sustained impact on the world of rock, its fans and other bands. There is actually not one band being honored that is playing with, or has in its lineup, all its original members. I hope Peter feels tremendous pride and satisfaction at this honor that he's a part of. His contribution has been huge and he deserves it. Who could argue that? But his statement is unfounded, untrue and the reasoning for making it, is obvious. For all our accomplishments together, I toast him in his absence in Vegas."
"VH1 Rock Honors" is the first-ever show to pay homage to the legends who influenced the sound of hard rock. This year's celebration will honor the music and influence of JUDAS PRIEST, KISS, QUEEN and DEF LEPPARD. Premiering on Wednesday, May 31 at 9:00 p.m., "VH1 Rock Honors" will be taped at the Mandalay Bay Events Center in Las Vegas on Thursday, May 25 and will include performances by all of the honorees as well as tribute performances by GODSMACK (who will be paying tribute to JUDAS PRIEST), FOO FIGHTERS (QUEEN) and THE ALL-AMERICAN REJECTS (DEF LEPPARD). Riki Rachtman will serve as backstage announcer.
The two-hour tribute will salute the groundbreaking bands of rock, the once-in-a-lifetime events and the influential people who made a lasting mark on the history of hard rock. The influence of these honorees will be felt through spoken tributes, filmed packages and performances by some of today's hottest rock acts as well as the legends themselves.
I delivered the Long Island Star Journal in Jackson Heights, Queens, known as the Long Island Press on Sundays. Later, I picked up a second route, since I could put those papers in the same shopping cart. I had discovered you could make almost twice the money without putting in twice the time.
How old were you?
13
How much did you make?
$37.50 a week for the first route, $28 a week for the second.
What did you learn on your first job?
If someone likes you, they'll buy what you're selling, whether or not they need it. No one needs Forbes or KISS, but they buy it anyway. Farmers and teachers provide what people need, but don't get paid a lot. I also learned that I love making money. Anyone who is not afraid of work will be happy with the money they make. Think about, if you work every weekend to make overtime, you'll make almost as much as you did during the week. What do you need time off for? You can come home in the evenings and watch the ballgame or go chase girls. There's no reason to be home in the daytime because everyone else is working. Are you going to sit around watching I Love Lucy?
Who was your best, or worst, boss, and why?
The best boss is me. The worst is me. I crave ideas, and when an idea hits me, it grips me and it tortures me until I master it. I know nothing about racing, but it's a positive that I go and learn it. I'm my own hardest task master. I've had nine-to-five jobs and gotten promoted because the bosses notices I wasn't watching the clock.
What was your big break?
Being born. The rest was easy. As long as you're in the game, you've got a chance; after that it's just hard work. I don't care how many misses I get, I'll keep swinging.
What has been your biggest failure?
There are always things--the girl you didn’t get, the deal that didn't happen. Who cares how many singles you miss when those occasional home runs bring in three or four other guys? You can't fail in America. There's Chapter 11, they can't take your home in Florida, every step you take there's a net. There's a socialist net of safety called the welfare state. Everything I do makes money. Your stamp collection can be a source of joy, but it also can be a source of money. I'm lucky because I like what I do, but it all makes money.
How many hours do you work in an average week now?
I don't consider any of it to be work. For example, I got up at 5:40 this morning to go through my emails. I have Simmons-Abramson marketing, where we promote for the Indy 500 and other races. We also have investments and television--we got an A&E show coming up in August, with 13 episodes. I have never taken a vacation in my life. Vacations are for wimps.
What is the worst thing about work?
God has given you a thumb as a tool, it's up to you to use it or stick it up your butt and sit on it.
What is the best thing about work?
It's that you get paid. The poorest person in the world will always tell you that. The fat, bloated American will always tell you it's about doing work they love. People who are the salt of the earth get up and go to a job that they hate. I love money; that's why I've owned the Money Bag logo for 28 years.
Gene Simmons co-founded the rock band Kiss in 1973. He runs a marketing and promotion partnership that concentrates on auto racing events.
Through a deal brokered by Signatures Network, Inc., KISS's exclusive merchandising company, the KISS Coffeehouse in Myrtle Beach, SC is the first licensed coffeehouse by the band known for their incredible stage show, face paint and full throttle rock and roll.
"The idea was to take the energy and excitement of the live KISS show and bring it into a retail setting," explains longtime KISS fan and storeowner Brian Galvin. "KISS fans will not be disappointed!" pledged Galvin, who knows firsthand the high expectations loyal KISS fans will have for this concept. The coffeehouse will also serve as an official KISS Army recruiting office, exposing new fans and reminding die-hard supporters why KISS continues to be one of the most exciting bands in history.
With over twenty foot tall smoking KISS boots flanking the storefront and rare KISS memorabilia and costume pieces on display, the KISS Coffeehouse raises the bar for retail design. "This will become a major tourist attraction," states Galvin confidently. "This is truly the most exciting coffee shop on the planet!"
The KISS Coffeehouse menu will feature Signature KISS Coffee, including Demon Dark Roast and French KISS Vanilla, eight flavors of the KISS Frozen Rockuccino, the most caffeinated and refreshing coffee beverage on the market, as well as full array of cookies, brownies and cupcakes. For more info and a complete menu list, please click here.
According to Paul Stanley, "The KISS Coffeehouse is our way of providing everyone with the buzz of great, quality treats and coffee filled with enough sugar and caffeine to get the party started, and keep it going!"
Gene Simmons adds, "Every army needs food and drink and the KISS Army is no exception! Even the non-enlisted will find our treats and java rockin' good!"
To add to the Grand Opening festivities, KISS tribute band, KISS ARMY, will be performing on the Celebrity Square Stage at Broadway at the Beach from 8:00 until 10:00 p.m., when a KISS-style fireworks display will light up the sky in front of the shop. Myrtle Beach's classic rock station, Wave 104.1, will promote the event and will be on site broadcasting live.
In conjunction with the opening, 1,000 bags of the KISS Army Blend will be shipped to the U.S. Armed Forces serving in Iraq. "Anything we can do that lets our brave armed forces personnel know that they are always in our hearts and on our minds is a small token of our deep appreciation for the sacrifices they make every day for us. We pray for their safe return," said Stanley.
To listen to VISION's version of "Lick It Up", click here (MP3, 8 MB).
"VH1 Rock Honors" is the first-ever show to pay homage to the legends who influenced the sound of hard rock. This year's celebration will honor the music and influence of JUDAS PRIEST, KISS, QUEEN and DEF LEPPARD. Premiering on Wednesday, May 31 at 9:00 p.m., "VH1 Rock Honors" will be taped at the Mandalay Bay Events Center in Las Vegas on Thursday, May 25 and will include performances by all of the honorees as well as tribute performances by GODSMACK (who will be paying tribute to JUDAS PRIEST), FOO FIGHTERS (QUEEN) and THE ALL-AMERICAN REJECTS (DEF LEPPARD). Riki Rachtman will serve as backstage announcer.
The two-hour tribute will salute the groundbreaking bands of rock, the once-in-a-lifetime events and the influential people who made a lasting mark on the history of hard rock. The influence of these honorees will be felt through spoken tributes, filmed packages and performances by some of today's hottest rock acts as well as the legends themselves.
Visit the gallery's website at www.celebrityfineart.com for more info on these and Paul's other artwork.
Whatever the response, the notorious rock star makes people pay attention -- which is why Simmons says he's up to the task of generating interest in a sport that continues to struggle for a mainstream identity.
As a member of Kiss, Simmons has portrayed "the Demon" for more than 30 years. He spits fake blood during concerts, wags an abnormally long tongue and professes an attraction for "every woman who walks the face of the earth."
But as the partner in a marketing firm, he has worked since January to make political, corporate and fan connections for the racing league that will present the 500-Mile Race on May 28 at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway.
If people have a problem with Simmons being affiliated with a fixture of wholesome American culture, it's OK with him.
"There's no such thing as good news and bad news," Simmons says. "There's only news. You're either important enough and you become the water cooler conversation, or you're nobody and you don't count.
"All I care about is that people talk about Indy. Wake up in the morning and talk about it. Even if it's 'Ah, that bloated, fat Gene Simmons -- what does he know about stuff?' Good. You're talking about it."
Love him or hate him, the P.T. Barnum of rock 'n' roll is hyping the 90th running of the Indy 500.Marketing background
Simmons' track record with Kiss reflects a knack for spreading the word. From credit cards to caskets, more than 2,500 varieties of merchandise have featured the group's logo.
"He likes to say Kiss is a band, but more than a band, it's a brand," says Mike Ringham, who was hired in October as the Indy Racing League's vice president of marketing.
The IRL wouldn't say how much it is paying Simmons Abramson Marketing, a Los Angeles-based company headed by Simmons and former Pee-wee Herman manager Rich Abramson, or how long the company is under contract.
So far, Simmons has provided "I Am Indy" as both a slogan for the league and a song that's piped through loudspeakers at IRL events.
And regarding the "IRL" abbreviation, Simmons says it sounds like a disease or a stodgy corporation.
Instead, he refers to the league, its schedule, the 500 and the city as "Indy."
The 56-year-old fits the description of wide-eyed fan when marveling about track speeds that exceed 220 mph. "Rock stars in rockets" is another of his catch phrases.
Simmons acknowledges the budding celebrity of drivers such as Danica Patrick and defending Indy 500 champion Dan Wheldon.
He insists anyone possessing the skill and courage to drive in the league deserves a spotlight.
"If you look at our drivers, they really are rock stars," Simmons says. "If they weren't driving Indy cars, they'd be onstage trying to steal your girlfriend. Well, it would be different in the case of Danica."
Family life
The suggestion of sex is a predictable part of any conversation with Simmons. In a 2002 autobiography, the bass player claimed he's had more than 4,000 female partners -- so far.
Meanwhile, he's maintained a relationship with actress Shannon Tweed since 1983. They have two children, and their home life is chronicled on the A&E cable television series "Family Jewels."
"I don't hide the fact that I have a fantastic life," Simmons says. "People don't understand that I can be happily unmarried to the same girl for 23 years and make no apologies."
Because of a Kiss show scheduled May 25 in Las Vegas, Simmons won't get to Indianapolis until two days before the 500. But he promises to make the pre-race rounds.
"I'll be everywhere and do everybody," he says.
League executive Ringham characterizes Simmons as "a very interesting individual" and applauds the rock star's outspoken opposition to drug and alcohol abuse.
The 2004 race champion, Buddy Rice, figures that if the league had an issue with Simmons' persona, he wouldn't have been hired as a consultant.
"No matter what, he's going to attract somewhat of a different crowd," Rice says. "I think that's good for everybody involved."
Does things his way
Fishers resident Keith Leroux oversees the official Web site for Kiss, Kissonline.com.
"I don't think Gene's outlook on marriage pertains even to a lot of Kiss fans or a lot of Kiss band members," Leroux says. "But he's Gene. One thing I've always liked about him is that he does things his own way, regardless of what other people think."
As evidenced by 1970s polls that ranked Kiss as both the most loved and most hated rock band, the musician-actor-entrepreneur has a charisma that attracts and repels.
"I am arrogant," Simmons says. "I'm responsible to myself for my happiness. I don't look to anybody else. I've never borrowed a dime, and I'm not looking for a handout. I live my life my way.
"I want Indy, with all due respect, to have that kind of arrogance -- this kind of pride in what it is."
When Simmons is modest, he credits Kiss fans for his success and he refers to Abramson and himself as "two more horses hitched onto the ride" of marketing the Indy Racing League.
Making contacts
Rather than being a famous name connected to the sport, Simmons says his real work is making contacts with government officials in host cities and making pitches to potential corporate sponsors.
Abramson brought NBA star Carmelo Anthony into the league as a sponsor for Hemelgarn Racing and rookie driver P.J. Chesson, a noted free spirit who counts Simmons as a mentor.
Ringham reports that TV ratings have slightly improved for all three races of the young season when compared with a year ago.
He says the accomplishments of Simmons Abramson Marketing will be measured by the amount of business the company brings to the league and the amount of publicity generated across a 14-race schedule.
"Gene is remarkably good -- and maybe brazen would be a better word -- about picking up the phone and calling people," Ringham says. "It's really quite interesting to hear about people returning his calls. Most everybody returns Gene Simmons' calls, for some reason."
Tickets will be priced at $100 for VIP (including a private VIP reception with hosted bar from 8-10 pm) and $50 for general admission.
For more information, click here.
There's plenty of dust and half-built structures inside the coming KISS Coffeehouse.
Workers are there daily, trying to get it ready for a late May or early June opening.
And the cafe is already looking to fill jobs.
If you are interested, swing by the half-built cafe at Broadway at the Beach and grab an application. They are in a box just inside the front door.
This will be a hard-rocker special. There will be servers with the trademark KISS face paint for special occasions and KISS classics rocking overhead as customers fill up on a KISS Frozen Rockuccino or a French KISS Vanilla.
The coffeehouse will fill a 1,305-square-foot space at Celebrity Square, across from the Key West Grill.
Band members Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley plan to attend the grand opening.
Stanley married Sutton on November 19, 2005 at The Ritz-Carlton, Huntington in Pasadena, California. This is the second marriage for Stanley, who has an 11-year-old son, Evan Shane Stanley, with his first wife, Dallas native Pamela Bowen.
Stanley recently completed work on his first non-KISS release since his self-titled 1978 album, issued in tandem with solo projects from the other three original KISS members. Joining Stanley on his new solo album are session drummer Victor Indrizzo, guitarist Corky James, former MARILYN MANSON and current ROB ZOMBIE guitarist John 5, former KISS guitarist Bruce Kulick (who plays bass on a few songs) and noted string arranger David Campbell. Songtitles set to appear on the CD include "Wake Up Screaming", "Second to None" and "Live to Win".
Each half-hour episode of "40 Greatest Metal Songs" will feature VH1's panel of rock scholars and metal all-stars like Lars Ulrich, Scott Ian, Jerry Cantrell, Ronnie James Dio, Toni Iommi, Dave Mustaine, Lemmy Kilmister, David Draiman of DISTURBED, Frank Bello, Riki Rachtman, Jacoby Shaddix of PAPA ROACH, Evan Seinfeld of BIOHAZARD, Tera Patrick, Chris Jericho, Doro Pesch, Dee Snider and many more who will weigh in on this definitive list of the greatest metal music the world has ever known. ANTHRAX guitarist Scott Ian steps up to the metal month plate by writing and recording the show's original theme music, which is a first in VH1 history. Never before has an artist written and recorded the music for a VH1 show that they also appear in.
The top 10 greatest metal songs of all time are:
01. BLACK SABBATH - "Iron Man" (1971)
02. GUNS N' ROSES - "Welcome to the Jungle" (1987)
03. METALLICA - "Master of Puppets" (1986)
04. AC/DC - "Back in Black" (1980)
05. JUDAS PRIEST - "You've Got Another Thing Coming" (1982)
06. KISS - 'Detroit Rock City" (1976)
07. IRON MAIDEN - "The Number of the Beast" (1982)
08. SLAYER - 'Raining Blood" (1986)
09. OZZY OSBOURNE - "Crazy Train" (1980)
10. MOTÖRHEAD - "Ace Of Spades" (1980)
Premiering on Wednesday, May 31 at 9:00 p.m., "VH1 Rock Honors" will be taped at the Mandalay Bay Events Center in Las Vegas on Thursday, May 25 and will include tribute performances by FOO FIGHTERS and THE ALL-AMERICAN REJECTS. Additional performers, presenters, and special guests will be announced as they are confirmed.
The two-hour tribute will salute the groundbreaking bands of rock, the once-in-a-lifetime events and the influential people who made a lasting mark on the history of hard rock. The influence of these honorees will be felt through spoken tributes, filmed packages and performances by some of today’s hottest rock acts as well as the legends themselves.
Tickets priced at $60, $125 and $175, not including applicable service charges, went on sale April 22 via www.ticketmaster.com and at all Ticketmaster outlets or in Las Vegas by going directly to the Mandalay Bay Box Office or by calling 877-632-7400 or 702-632-7580. For VIP tickets contact VH1 Save The Music at 212-846-7882 or rsvp@vh1.com.
VH1.com is in search for the top air guitarists in the country, challenging all wanna-be rock icons to its "Air to the Throne" air guitar competition. The champion will win a trip to "VH1 Rock Honors" in Las Vegas where he or she will perform on the red carpet and be crowned VH1's "Air to the Throne". The champ will also win a coveted spot in the official U.S. Air Guitar Championship Finals in New York. To enter, visit air.vh1.com.
"We're expecting many music and film guests, plus Mick Jagger, Carlos Santana...well, almost! The photographs are so brilliant, you can feel the artists' presence," says Claris Sayadian-Dodge of studioexpresso who's hosting the event with Wild About Music.
While much has been written about Kramer's innovations in the recording studio, few have ever been exposed to his considerable talent in photography. "During 1967-1972, I was very fortunate to have been in the presence of some of the greatest rock artists of all time — even luckier to have had a camera along with me," says Kramer.
The event is designed for the growing ranks of independent music professionals and business operators such as artists, managers, studio owners, producers and music and film executives.
"We have augmented our permanent collection for this special event to include over 40 single images as well as large photo montages," says Wild About Music's Shelley Meyer. "These unique personal works are rarely exhibited and have never been published in mass media making them extremely desirable for collectors." All images are available by special order in a variety of sizes and groupings.
A Q&A session and reception will follow the slide presentation.
These high-quality "Destroyer" canvas images are produced as a "Giclee" on canvas with hand painted embellishments. KISS canvas wall art is offered as a limited-edition numbered series of 1000.
For more information, click here.
Simmons is starring in an unscripted TV show about his life — "Gene Simmons Family Jewels", now in production for A&E. The second season of "Gene Simmons' Rock School", a VH1 show on which he trains British kids to rock 'n' roll, is airing in England, and his life also served as the framework for "My Dad the Rock Star", an animated TV show on Nickelodeon.
"KISS for women features top notes of apple-tini, wet fig leaves, racy bull accord and red peppercorns; middle notes of red poppy, black orchid, sueded frangipani petals and calla lily, and base notes of amber crystals, musky bare skin accord, patent leather and mahogany.
"KISS for men is composed of top notes of bergamot, white pepper, anise and black cumin; middle notes of lavender, cypress, dark rum and fir balsam, and base notes of sandalwood, tonka, moss and honeyed amber crystals."
The KISS fragrances are due in 2,000 department stores in September. In a previous press release Paul Stanley was quoted as saying: "While most upscale fragrances communicate a similar personality, we wanted these scents to break the rules and speak a different body language. Like KISS, these fragrances make no apologies for embodying an attitude that is unrepentedly sexy, aggressive and incredibly unique." In the same press release, Gene Simmons stated, "KISS fragrances have the smell of success for us... and for all the men and women who will wear it. These fragrances hit all the right notes and will top the charts in no time."
Shannon Tweed was raised on a mink farm in Newfoundland, Canada with six brothers and sisters, moved to Los Angeles at age 24 when she was named Playmate of the Year, and lived for a time with Hugh Hefner in the Playboy Mansion. She soon became a very successful actress, starring in countless movies and various television shows. She met Gene at a Midsummer Night's Dream party and still lives with him today, along with their two children, Nick and Sophie. Shannon will appear this summer on "Gene Simmons Family Jewels", a reality series on A&E.
In other news, Phoenix Press/Simmons Books will release the updated paperback version of Gene Simmons' bestseller "Sex Money Kiss" in conjunction with "Kiss and Tell" in August of 2006. Watch for both titles.
The victim estimated the loss at $8,000.
The items also included drum sticks, autographed photos and guitar strings.
According to the victim, the memorabilia had been arranged in shadow boxes by group.
Other artists in the collection included TED NUGENT, ZZ TOP and FLEETWOOD MAC.
The victim moved to Las Vegas in November and left the items in the house which is up for rent.
The victim also reported $250 worth of pool balls missing.
A neighbor reported the burglary April 6.
Loomis, a former drummer for MINIKISS, was performing with TINY KISS, which includes three little people and a 350-pound woman, on St. Patrick's Day at Beacher's Madhouse, a Las Vegas variety show, when the incident occurred.
Show host Jeff Beacher told The Times on Monday that Fatale "tried to sneak in saying he was TINY KISS" and had to be escorted from the premises. According to the New York Post, Fatale's lawyers sent a legal cease-and-desist letter to the show trying to shut down the act.
Loomis told the Post: "[Fatale] came out here [to Las Vegas] and tried to cause trouble, so I had him 86'd from the Hard Rock. The impression I got was that he was looking for a fight. He'd been threatening me over the phone."
But Fatale disputed the accusation, telling The Times: "This whole thing about me going to the Hard Rock with my gang — that didn't happen. What happened was, I went there because somebody told me [TINY KISS was] doing the show that night…. Nobody escorted me out of there. I went there by myself to approach them as a gentleman."
Fatale says he has "nothing to say" about Loomis, except, "He's a nice guy." And, he added, "This is all a big publicity act for the guy at Beacher's."
Glam-Metal.com: Another one of my favorite artists that you have worked with is Paul Stanley of KISS. You worked with him on his soon-to-be-released solo record, right?
Fernquist: "Yes, I did. I played almost all the leads on his record. I also played some rhythm guitar. That was a really great experience. He was totally fun to hang out with and he was funny. I meet him before briefly but never spent any time with him, so I didn't know what he was like or what to expect. But he turned out to be a great guy to be around. And the music is very cool."
Glam-Metal.com: What does it sound like?
Fernquist: "Well, I'm younger, so I think that he brought me in because he wanted it to sound more like modern rock. If it does sound like KISS, it's because it's Paul Stanley. But it's modern rock, it does have some heavy tunes and a couple of laid back ballads. But overall it sounds very modern."
Glam-Metal.com: Did you co-write any of the material with him?
Fernquist: "No, no definitely not. Basically what happened is I worked for an artist that Doc McGee managed and he called me in and Paul liked my playing and from there it just worked out."
Glam-Metal.com: Wow, what a great gig that must have been. There are probably 30 million guitarists out there that would have killed for the chance to play on Paul Stanley's new upcoming release.
Fernquist: "Yeah, it was pretty cool. To be honest because I'm younger, I kind of missed out on the whole KISS thing. I knew the obvious songs and hits and stuff like that, but I kind of missed the whole big KISS thing. But even so, I still knew who KISS and Paul Stanley were, but I didn't grow up learning Ace Frehley riffs or anything like that. But don't get me wrong, it was definitely cool working with him, I had to pinch myself a few times to prove that I wasn't dreaming. It was fun. He was a very cool guy to work with."
Glam-Metal.com: Do you consider yourself a Kiss fan now after working with him?
Fernquist: "Definitely. I actually had a chance, because I was out on the road touring, and got a chance to see my first KISS show a couple summers ago in either Houston or Dallas. And I totally got it. I was like 'Wow, this is like the biggest show I've ever seen.' And I've been to a lot of big shows. It had you interested from the beginning to the end. The guys in the GOO GOO DOLLS are big KISS fans as well and I've learned a lot about KISS through those guys. But, after seeing their show, I would buy tickets in a second to watch them play again."
Read the entire interview at Glam-Metal.com.
KISS fan Patrick Viguier from France, who owns a Kiss Cola bottle, was reportedly contacted by someone representing Gene Simmons and was told that Simmons would trade a signed copy of his biography "Kiss and Make-Up" for the bottle. "I already have the book," is what Viguiers reportedly told the Simmons representative and suggested Gene visit him at home in his KISS museum in France, where he would give him the bottle as a gift. But Simmons — who is apparently unable to make the trip to France — refused to give up, sending another letter to Patrick asking him to reconsider his decision and indicating that Gene was willing to buy the bottle and all that Viguier needed to do was name a price. But Viguier would not budge, telling Simmons, "I don't care about money. I am not asking for something impossible. I am a longtime KISS fan and once in my life I would like to meet my hero!"
Check out a picture of Patrick Viguier with his Kiss Cola bottle at this location.
Check out the "Kiss and Tell" book cover at this location.
Q: Why are you coming to [the Sarasota Film Festival], and what are you going to be doing once you get here?
Gene: Well, first of all, "Funny Money" (the opening-night film) is a nice little movie, and sometimes big surprises come in very little packages ... but the reason I'm flying down to Florida is, coincidently with my relationship with Simmons Abramson Marketing — uh, I'm the Simmons part of it — we've taken over the worldwide branding marketing for Indy Racing. Part of my job is to bring celebrity attention ... and to make matters better, instead of worse, I am now the grand marshal of the St. Pete Indy races, which is going to be a real hoot. (The Honda Grand Prix will be held today through April 2 in downtown St. Petersburg.) (The film festival) is just 40 minutes outside of Tampa. The ("Funny Money") director, Leslie Greif, really deserves to get this film in front of people's eyes. And I intend to be there, because I think he's a powerful and attractive man.
Q: So you're going to be here to show support for the director of the film?
Gene: Yeah! And also, there'll be cameras, and girls, and what's wrong with that?
Q: Penelope Ann Miller is going to be here as well. Are you going to hit on her?
Gene: Well, that's the job of the male species. That's what we do ... that's why nature, in her wisdom, made sure the blueprint of the male of (the) species makes us manufacture billions of sperm every single day. If that's not a description of our, shall we say, urge to merge, I don't know what is.
Q: There is a new Gene Simmons stamp. Do you have to lick it, or is it self-adhesive?
Gene: It's a legitimate U.S. postage stamp. It costs 39 cents. I decided to do it partly for ego; you know, I wanted to be able to turn to Mom and say, "Hey, look what I did." But it's also actually doing some good. The proceeds, a lot of it, are going to the Humane Society, and I think that's a good thing. And it features my beautiful lips imprinted on it. It's not a KISS product, it's just a Gene Simmons thing.
Q: But do you have to lick it?
Gene: You know, I haven't licked one yet, but I don't think you do. I think it's self-adhesive.
Q: Really? Oh, that's kind of a bummer. You can't lick Gene Simmons.
Gene: I suppose you could, but don't tell anybody. You know what Charlie Rich says ...
Q: What did Charlie Rich say?
Gene: What goes on behind closed doors ... that's a good record, by the way.
Q: Yes, I know. But you have told what goes on behind closed doors, to a certain extent. (In his autobiography, "KISS and Makeup", Simmons claimed to have slept with more than 4,000 women.)
Gene: Oh yeah, my life is an open book. You know, all these poor unhappily married guys who say, "If my wife ever finds out, she'll kill me," they're just whipped. Just stand up, grab life by the scruff of its neck and say, "This is me, this is who I am, you don't have to like it, but this is me." Period ... Which is why (when) mothers and wives and everybody else ask, "Where are you going?", we guys should stand up and say, "Who wants to know?" It's time for men to come back, don't you think? ... Last time I checked, the only one who owns me is the mother who gave me birth. In return for life, she is allowed to torture me. No other woman is allowed to do that. They haven't earned the right!
Q: So when your mother asks you where you're going, do you tell her?
Gene: Well, I set my mother straight a long time ago. When the band first started going, I called her and I said, "Go anywhere and buy any house." And she did. And thereafter, I said, "From now on, you have to recognize that I am a man. You kicked me out of the nest, I walk on my own, therefore your privileges have stopped. You know the phrase 'While you're living under my roof?' Guess what, I'm not living under your roof. And here's another point: Your roof? I bought it for you."
Q: Getting back to the film festival, are you going to be singing, or giving a talk, or what exactly will be going on?
Gene: I'll be going around and by request, giving lap dances. I'm really good, you know. But no, I'm an only child, and I'm not from America, so I like attention. I'll walk down the red carpet and probably make an ass out of myself.
Q: Do you have any advice for guys who are hoping to get some female attention at the Sarasota Film Festival?
Gene: Yes. Bring lots of money. Because ultimately, guys may say, "Do you love me?" But girls will always say, "How much?" If you pull up in a Volkswagen, you're not getting any tail. Pull up in a Rolls-Royce, and see what happens.
The charity event, presented by CelebrityPokerPlayer.net and produced by Tenner and Associates Inc., will be taped Thursday, June 8, 2006 in the Second City Theatre at Harrah's Flamingo Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas.
Two lucky visitors to CelebrityPokerPlayer.net will get the chance to participate with the rock 'n' roll stars. "Free roll" tournaments will be held at the site during the next two months. Harrah's Flamingo will also qualify one player to sit at the table with the rock 'n' roll celebrities.
"CelebrityPokerPlayer.net is the one online poker room where you really can play alongside the 'stars,'" Lance A. Perry, Executive Producer and CEO of New Poker Corporation, says. "We are looking forward to a great show, watching the celebrities play for their favorite charity and giving a couple of our players the chance to be a part of a big tournament on VH1 Classic."
The VH1 Classic Rock 'n' Roll Celebrity Poker Player Tournament will air on VH1 Classic in addition to DirectTV programming on Jet Blue and Frontier Airlines. Pro player and fan favorite Phil Laak will host the show. Matt Savage will serve as tournament director.
The celebrities will donate all winnings their favorite charity. The celebrity and guest left standing will take over VH1 Classic for an entire day, programming music videos and serving as on-air hosts.
CelebrityPokerPlayer.net (CPP) is a new free roll site and the place to play poker, as well as 'see and be seen' alongside or chat with Hollywood celebrities, musicians, singers and top athletes.
VH1 announced Thursday that it will debut the VH1 Rock Honors next month to pay homage to the gods of hard rock. The inaugural honourees are Kiss, Queen, Def Leppard and Judas Priest.
The ceremony, to take place May 25 in Las Vegas, will pay tribute to hard-rock legends much like the Rock Hall of Fame does, with "spoken tributes, filmed packages and performances by some of today's hottest rock acts as well as the legends themselves."
VH1 has aired the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction ceremonies the past few years.
VH1 Rock Honors will air May 31. It's not the first genre to get the tribute treatment from the network; last week VH1 announced plans for its third annual Hip-Hop Honors, which will air in October.
Known internationally for their "rock and roll all night," message, the hand-painted and hand-etched label embodies the band's brand and image. The collection commemorates over 30 years of rock and roll by featuring the same artwork from their fourth studio album in a classic form.
Celebrity Cellars, working in close collaboration with Signatures Network, KISS's long-time merchandise and licensing representative, has been groundbreaking by producing collectable bottles that embody entertainment industry's most celebrated artists.
The 2004 Alexander Valley Cabernet Sauvignon limited edition sells for $100 per bottle. Its bouquet is a subtle blend of cassis, black currants and chocolate.
To order and for more information, visit www.celebritycellars.com/kiss.php.
With stage personas like "The Demon," "The Starchild," "The Catman," and "The Spaceman," KISS has stormed the planet and rocked arenas for more than three decades. Since their inception in 1974, KISS has sold more than 75 million albums worldwide. KISSteria has spawned a series of KISS-specific conventions, a comic book series, a feature film and a Movie of the Week. No longer relegated to heavy metal subculture, KISS has gone mainstream; they performed at the halftime show for Super Bowl XXXIII, at the 2002 Winter Olympics, and with the 70-piece Melbourne Symphony Orchestra.
But KISS is best known for thirty years of sold-out arena performances; rock 'n roll theatrical extravaganzas that pioneered a host of now-standard pyrotechnics, strobe and laser effects and-always-costume flourishes. Those savage-looking, goth-o-ramic stage personas have been meticulously recreated by Sideshow's artistic team. Sculptor Pablo Viggiano, working with clothing fabricators Greg Mowry and Gidget Earle, has created the definitive 1:4 scale reproduction of each band member. Sideshow's Premium Format sculptures stand approximately 18 inches tall, and utilize a variety of components, including polystone, metal, and fabrics to achieve an astonishing likeness.
Sideshow's Creative Director, Tom Gilliland, anticipates limited editions for each Premium Format KISS figure, with an MSRP of $249.99. The KISS line will begin shipping with "The Spaceman" figure in fourth quarter, 2006. A new figure will be shipped every other month thereafter, until all four band members have regrouped in your collection. Sideshow is the premier source for highly collectible figures, statues, busts, framed art, prop replicas and figure-study maquettes. Sideshow products are available online at: www.sideshowcollectibles.com, as well as through specialty shops, comic book stores, and via collectible web sites worldwide.
However, there should be one exception. As planned, Gene Simmons will stomp through the crowd while conspicuously tailed by a camera crew, his own camera crew.
Devotees of the shock rock group KISS will likely beg the fire breathing and blood spitting musician for an autograph. While the remainder of the crowd will be busy asking each other: "What the heck is Gene Simmons doing here?"
The guest of honor at tonight's swanky shindig is Chevy Chase. Which makes sense since he's the star of the Opening Night film, "Funny Money." Chase's co-stars, Penelope Ann Miller and Chris McDonald, are also scheduled to appear.
And then there will be veteran rocker Simmons, who might be overheard blurting out pearls of wisdom such as:
"The reason you do TV shows is you get paid a lot of money."
Which is what he told this reporter when he called last week.
Why is he coming to Sarasota?
Because Simmons is shooting a new reality show for A&E titled "Family Jewels." And the producer of "Family Jewels" is Leslie Grief. And Grief is the director of "Funny Money." And, heck, who wouldn't want to meet Simmons and appear on his new TV show, eh?
Well, here's what could happen if the situation arises.
Let's say you're downing some bubbly, munching on an unpronounceable hors d'oeuvre and here comes Simmons, followed by a blaze of camera lights.
For starters, ask him about his workload. The response will be something like: "I can't wait to get up every day and do this seven days a week . . . When you enjoy what you're doing it's not work . . . I work seven days a week and I love it."
At least that's what he told The Herald - in an interview that he conducted from his home on speaker phone so his TV crew could tape the incident for possible use on the new show.
Next, we suggest asking Simmons what his longtime girlfriend Shannon Tweed and two young daughters think of daddy working "seven days a week."
He should get real excited about this one. Except a response such as: "The days of my mom wiping my (butt) are long gone . . . Not my kids, not Shannon, no one is going to guilt me for working . . . It's time for men all over the world to stop wimping out."
Tell Simmons he's a great bass player and he'll probably laugh. His musical abilities are the one thing the man is humble about.
"I never claimed to be a musician," he said. "On stage, I'm an entertainer."
And if you ask Simmons if he cares what others think of him expect another zinger: "How people perceive me doesn't matter, I'm too rich to care."
What will he say if you ask him about his famous, over-sized tongue?
We have no idea. We didn't ask.
Sarasota Film Festival special events
What: Opening Night Film "Funny Money"
When: 7 p.m. today
Where: Van Wezel Performing Arts Hall, 777 N. Tamiami Trail, Sarasota
Tickets: $15
Celeb sightings: Chevy Chase, Penelope Ann Miller, Chris McDonald, Herb Nanas and director Leslie Greif. Gene Simmons will be on hand taping portions of the evening for his A&E show "Family Jewels."
What: Opening Night Gala
When: 9 p.m.-1 a.m. today
Where: The John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art, 5401 Bayshore Drive, Sarasota
Tickets: $150 (includes one ticket to the opening night film)
Celeb sightings: Same as above
What: "Fool" Moon Party
When: 9 p.m.-1 a.m. Monday
Where: Rustic Grill, 400 N. Lemon Ave., Sarasota
Tickets: $50
Celeb sightings: Stars of the "Boynton Beach Club," including Sally Kellerman, Susan Seidelman and Jeremy Renner
What: World Cinema Celebration
When: 7:30 p.m.-midnight Wednesday
Where: Lemon Avenue, between Main Street and First Street
Tickets: $60
Celeb sightings: Guests gather to celebrate World Cinema and to honor legendary filmmaker Werner Herzog with SFF's World Cinema Master Award. Expect an array of live bands and street performers.
What: Luncheon Under the Banyans
When: noon Thursday
Where: The Marie Selby Botanical Gardens, 811 S. Palm Avenue, Sarasota
Tickets: $100 (reserved seating)
Celeb sightings: Honoring the career of "West Wing" star Allison Janney.
What: Independent Visions: Queer Cinema Now!
When: 9 p.m.-2 a.m. Thursday
Where: 500 Tallevast Road, Hangar, Sarasota
Tickets: $20
Celeb sightings: OBIE Award-winning cabaret duo Kiki & Herb take the stage. Emcees from the featured documentary "Pick Up the Mic," which chronicles the gay hip-hop scene.
What: Night of a Thousand Stars
When: 9:30 p.m.-2 a.m. April 7
Where: Michael's on East, 1212 S. East Ave., Sarasota
Tickets: $125
Celeb sightings: Chic red carpet event with edge, featuring a provocative show by L.A.-based burlesque performers Ivan Kane's Forty Deuce. This event's guest list will include Felicity Huffman, William H. Macy, Allison Janney, Joe Pantoliano and more!
What: Tribute Dinner
When: cocktail hour 7-8 p.m., dinner 8 p.m. April 8
Where: The Longboat Key Club & Resort, Island Side
Tickets: $300
Celeb sightings: Honoring William H. Macy, Felicity Huffman, Robert Towne and Paula Wagner. Film awards announced.
What: Late Night Wrap Party
When: 11 p.m.-2 a.m. April 8
Where: The Longboat Key Club & Resort Island Side
Tickets: $75
Celeb sightings: Brazilian Girls rock the house at this traditionally cool party.
The Sarasota Film Festival Box Office is open 10 a.m.-8 p.m. daily through March 30 and 10 a.m.-10 p.m. March 31-April 9. The box office is at the Sarasota Main Plaza, adjacent to Hollywood 20 at 1991 Main St., Suite 108, near Applebee's Restaurant.
Single tickets for films are available for $8.
Information: 366-6200 or www.sarasotafilmfestival.com.
I've been there and done that.
And, I have to tell you from the bottom of my heart, I believe! I believe in Indy!
It happened almost a year ago. I was invited to an IndyCar Series race at Texas Motor Speedway. What I saw blew me away. It hit me the way very few things in life hit me. It hit me emotionally.
I saw amazing pride and craftsmanship in the pit crew guys and their cars.
I saw our drivers from all the corners of the planet competing against and with each other to see who's the best, who's the fastest. I saw the crowd having the time of their lives. I saw dads with their kids, having a hot dog on a sunny afternoon. I saw people standing at attention and saluting a flag that makes it all possible.
And ever since then, I have to say I am a convert.
I am Indy!
For more information, click here.
Commented Simmons via his web site: "[I] was proud to attend the first race of the new Indy Racing League series at Homestead/Miami. And, while I was thrilled to be there with the Nuggets' Carmelo Anthony (and his PJ Chessin-driven Car Melo) and to wave the Green Flag which started the race, I was stunned and devastated to learn that Paul Dana died during the warm-up to the races. Our deepest condolences to the Dana family."
For more information, click here.
"I'm so busy getting ready," Galvin said. "We're under construction and hope to open May 9."
That date isn't set in stone as work continues, including getting the OK from Burroughs & Chapin Co. Inc. on the unique storefront design. B&C owns Broadway.
Details about the grand opening party still are in the works. It will be in June, and band members Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley are still committed to attend, Galvin said. More details should come in about two weeks.
The KISS founder and his business partner, Richard Abramson, a veteran Hollywood marketer, film producer and talent manager, who together formed Simmons Abramson Marketing, are telling anyone who will listen that the Indy Racing League is the next frontier. The new great American pastime.
"It'll be about a dad and his son and a hot dog on a Sunday afternoon," said Simmons, who is waving the green flag as honorary starter for this afternoon's Toyota Indy 300 at Homestead-Miami Speedway. Simmons attended his first IndyCar series race in Texas last year and has been hooked since.
Read the rest of the article at Sun-Sentinel.com.
"Rock the Nation Live!" DVD was filmed in 2004 in Washington DC. Besides the concert footage, the DVD features behind-the-scenes features and interviews with the band members.
KISS will tour Japan this summer beginning on July 18 in Nagoya.
KISS guitarist/vocalist Paul Stanley is expected to release his new solo album, "Live to Win", later in the year. The CD features contributions from session drummer Victor Indrizzo, guitarist Corky James, former MARILYN MANSON and current ROB ZOMBIE guitarist John 5, former KISS guitarist Bruce Kulick (who plays bass on a few songs) and noted string arranger David Campbell.
You have to love the guy -- all black sports coat/white shirt unbuttoned to where most 56-year-olds wouldn't dare, 6 foot 4 of him. He’s always on. And that’s his job with the Indy Racing League.
Simmons, who has first billing in the title of a successful firm (Simmons Abramson Marketing), and Richard Abramson are at Homestead-Miami Speedway during the IndyCar Series’ Open Test to “press the flesh and spread the word.
Sure Simmons stands out as he walks pit lane; he did on stage with KISS for almost two decades. But he’s comfortable on any stage, especially when discussing the “i am INDY” campaign and song.
Breaking news: Spanish, Portuguese and a slightly more rock ‘n’ roll versions of the anthem are being prepared. More to come.
Making the IndyCar Series news is the team’s first priority. “Either you’re news or you don’t count,” Simmons said.
“If the message is clear and clean and the product is good, it can go forever. Our job, Richard Abramson and Gene Simmons, is to come here and not re-invent the IndyCar wheel. This is as cool as cool can be. What we’re here to do is make sure that everybody in the world just pivots their heads a little bit over here and they’ll see the fastest thing on four wheels.
Consider us two more horses that have been put on the team to help pull the load. Eventually, we hope sooner than later, everybody will think of us as part of the family. We do come from shark-infested waters called Hollywood. We want people to understand that we’re the rottweilers who understand how the rottweiler world works.”
"We're very excited to announce Gene as the grand marshal of the 2006 Honda Grand Prix of St. Petersburg," said Kevin Savoree, managing director of the Honda Grand Prix for Andretti Green Promotions. "After meeting Gene earlier this year, his energy, passion and excitement for IndyCar racing was clearly evident. Having him in St. Pete should be a great thrill for all the fans and should bring an even greater buzz to our event."
Simmons, whose famed KISS brand has earned more gold records than any other American group (RIAA, 2003) and procured more than 2,500 licenses, continues to gain traction with a broader, more dynamic fan base than ever before. Most recently, Simmons co-founded and developed worldwide and branding marketing company, Simmons Abramson Marketing, alongside entertainment industry veteran, Richard Abramson, best known for his role as Paul Reuben's manager, where he ultimately energized his portrayal of Pee-Wee Herman's character to a multi-million dollar end.
Actively engaging in the catapulting success and fine-tuned direction of the Indy Racing League, Simmons has already established himself as a brand-marketing frontman, the likes this league has never seen before. The sagacious implementation of the "I Am Indy" campaign, anchored by its signature song, "I Am Indy", co-authored by Simmons himself and an up-and-coming band off his Simmons Records label, BAG, ejected the rocket-speed momentum for the newly-created marketing company and set a precedent with the birth of the first official theme song for a motor sports league.
"With 'I Am Indy' you're making a pledge of allegiance to the United Nations of Indy. The phrase knows no bounds — racial, sexual or otherwise. It applies to drivers, fans, sponsors," Simmons explains.
Simmons Abramson Marketing leverages myriad assets to broker deals on behalf of the IndyCar Series and effectively position the league as a competitive entertainment property to be reckoned with. The recent partnership solidified between NBA star Carmelo Anthony and Indy Racing League veteran Ron Hemelgarn of Hemelgarn-Racing to put rookie PJ Chesson behind the wheel for IndyCar exemplifies the purposeful eminence of Simmons Abramson Marketing. The new 'Car' Melo had its' debut at the Toyota Indy 300 and added explosiveness to the 2006 IndyCar Series season open, which took place at the Homestead-Miami Speedway in Miami, Florida on March 26.
"I'm perhaps the public persona of a really simple message: You should all be blessed because you're standing on hallowed ground," Simmons said. "This is the Indy, baby... These are the fastest cars on four wheels. We have rock stars and rockets. These cars will drive on the ceiling."
As the Grand Marshal of the Honda Grand Prix at St. Petersburg IndyCar race on Sunday, April 2, Simmons will carry forward a legacy as grand in tradition as his own and more glorious a spirit than any one person can contain, IndyCar Racing.
The 2006 Honda Grand Prix of St. Petersburg, which is promoted by Andretti Green Promotions, LLC, marks the second race in the 2006 IndyCar Series schedule. The 2006 season schedule includes 14 races with 11 ovals, two permanent road courses and St. Petersburg's 1.8-mile temporary street course. The event will be held March 31 through April 2, 2006. Tickets range in price from $25 for adult single-day general admission to $110 for a three-day, reserved seat pass and are available at all Ticketmaster outlets, online at www.ticketmaster.com, or by calling (813) 287-8844. Tickets are also available by calling (727) 824-7223, ext. 225.
For more information on the Honda Grand Prix of St. Petersburg, visit www.gpstpete.com.
Tickets for the SKY ACADEMY featuring Uli Jon Roth And Friends are now on sale and can be purchased through Ticketmaster.
Uli Jon Roth's North American tour dates:
May 12 - Springfield, VA - Jaxx
May 13 - Cleveland, OH - Beachland Ballroom
May 14 - Milwaukee, WI - S h a n k Hall
May 15 - Chicago, IL - House of B l u e s
May 16 - New York, NY - BB K i n g 's
May 19 - Concord, CA - Bourbon Street
May 20 - Sacramento, CA - The Kennel Club
A very significant and delightful announcement today as we once again match up a car owner, a driver, a very well-known person in the music industry and now marketing, and a very well-known person from another form of sports.
Let me introduce, first of all, the members of the panel, beginning with someone whose face is probably most familiar to us to those of us who have been around here for a long time. Ron Hemelgarn, who won the 1996 Indianapolis 500 with Buddy Lazier and the 2000 IndyCar Series championship with Buddy, has a total of eight IndyCar Series wins and finished second in IRL points in 2001. Ron Hemelgarn. (Applause)
Next, the gentleman who conducted a live interview just a few moments ago with ESPN, we're just delighted to have him connected with IndyCar racing, first of all to see him here today and to welcome him to the Conseco Fieldhouse tonight as his team, the Denver Nuggets, play the Indiana Pacers. Going back to his college days, he was a second-team all-American at Syracuse, was named the outstanding player in the 2003 Final Four, was the third draft choice of the Denver Nuggets. He has had an incredible career in the NBA, and in the month of March he has been averaging 29 points a game and has an incredible shooting percentage of 59 percent. Carmelo Anthony. (Applause)
Next is the gentleman here on my far or my near left who will be the driver of the car here at the Indianapolis 500 in the 90th running of the 500. He’s a native of New Jersey, a veteran of Sprint car racing. As a matter of fact, as I recall, when he won his first race in what was it, North Dakota, I believe, it was a preliminary race, but after taking the checkered flag he climbed the fence just like Helio Castroneves has.
P.J. CHESSON: But I fell off of it, though. (Laughter)
JENKINS: Anyway, this individual has most recent experience in the Indy Pro Series, in fact won three races, consecutive races in the Indy Pro Series last year. From Far Hills, New Jersey, P.J. Chesson. (Applause)
JENKINS: On my far left, the individual who needs no introduction at all, he is a legend in the music industry. He is involved in so many projects, but we're glad that he has taken on the project of partnering with the Indy Racing League in promoting this series. He is also, of course, written the "I Am Indy," which is so prominently displayed around the room today. A delight to have him associated with the Indy Racing League and the Indy 500, Gene Simmons. (Applause)
Ron, tell us about your plans for 2006.
RON HEMELGARN: Well, it's a very exciting what we have going on. Obviously, this came together sort of late in the season, have been working on it very hard. Got to thank Gene Simmons, Rich Abramson for working with us so closely to put this together. But I think it's probably one of the most unique opportunities ever to bring a star of the NBA, not a past star but the real star of the NBA, a sprint car driver which stands on the gas, you don't have to tell him to stand on it, you might have to tell him to slow it down. So we've got a guy that wants to win. You've got a guy that is winning and then Hemelgarn Racing, we've been around a long time at the Speedway and IndyCar racing, and we're just delighted to be involved. I really think that as the year goes on, we're going to have some great success and Hemelgarn Racing will be back on top with this combination.
JENKINS: Carmelo, tell us about your interest in cars, in racing and the partnership that we're announcing here today.
CARMELO ANTHONY: Well, for the record, I'm not getting in the car. I want to let that be known. I'm not getting in that seat, it's too small anyway. The opportunity came to me, and the story is too long for me to be here and try to get into all the details how we met and how it came about. I'm just excited about the project, about this venture right here with Ron and Gene and my driver over there, P.J. So I'm excited right now. I think that we are going to have a lot of fun to come.
JENKINS: You moved from the Indy Pro Series to the Indy Racing League. Tell us about your thoughts on making the transition.
CHESSON: Well, you know, there's so many people that have really stood by my side the whole time. I had a little bit of a trip in the barrel, and there's a lot of people that stepped up for me. Gene, Rich, a lot of people at the league, Ron Hemelgarn and now Carmelo has come on board. Scare the hell out of him this year a little bit. (Laughter)
And we're just, you know, I think with Ron and Carmelo and Gene and Rich and the support that we have from everybody around the series, I think that this is going to be a good year. I'm really looking forward to it. We're going to definitely cause some trouble. (Laughter)
JENKINS: Gene, as somebody who is a huge music fan, I know I join a lot of other people in welcoming you to this partnership. Tell us how you were able to bring all of these people together into one unit.
GENE SIMMONS: Well, this is much ado about nothing actually. I get all the credit and Rich Abramson, my powerful and attractive partner who is sitting in the corner over there, is really the guy with the horns on his head. Because if the devil is in the details, he's got to go and do all the stuff.
I'm perhaps the public persona of a really simple message. You should all be blessed because you're standing on hallowed ground. This is the Indy, baby. Ninety years of defying the critics, the odds. These are the fastest cars on four wheels. We have rock stars in rockets. These cars will drive on the ceiling. You think I'm kidding? Do your due diligence, find it all out. This is the best damn thing out there, and it deserves to get the attention that somebody of a legendary status of Carmelo is giving it. We intend on carrying this message around the world because it deserves it. Indy? I am Indy, baby. (Laughter)
JENKINS: Thank you. Since we're on the subject of making introductions, let's go ahead and do that before P.J. has a presentation to make. First of all, Tony George, the founder and CEO of the IndyCar Series and CEO of the Indianapolis Motor Speedway is here. Tony. Brian Barnhart, the president and COO of the IndyCar Series. (Applause)
Lee Kunzman, who is the general manager of Hemelgarn Racing, over there on the side. (Applause)
Bill Sanders, the vice president of marketing for BDA Sports Management, which is the agency that represents Carmelo right over there. (Applause)
And as Gene pointed out, Rich Abramson, the partner in Simmons/Abramson Marketing. (Applause)
P.J. has a special presentation at this time.
CHESSON: I was thinking there couldn't be a better time but to have a little present for Señor Carmelo. I'm a loyal boy, and I take care of people. There's not a better way to take care of my man here than to keep him safe on the court. So my man, you've got to wear this thing tonight. (Laughter)
(Presentation of racing helmet).
ANTHONY: Appreciate it, baby. (Applause)
JENKINS: So you want him to wear this tonight at the Pacers’ game on the court?
CHESSON: I'm trying to get him to get down and dirty tonight. I want to see elbows and things flying.
ANTHONY: I might need this. Thank you. I appreciate it.
JENKINS: Let's take questions from you people out there. Again, one-on-ones will be available outside when we finish up inside.
Who has a question?
Q: Gene, you and Rich have gotten into this thing and seems to have gotten in full bore. I have heard comments you made around the country when somebody said, "Can I get a word out of you?" And you said, "Yeah, IndyCar.com."
SIMMONS: Ask me what time is it.
Q: What time is it?
SIMMONS: I'm glad you asked me that question. Log on to IndyCar.com.
Q: Now that I played your straight man, what is it that attracted you and Rich to get involved?
SIMMONS: That's a fair question. I have to tell you that everybody is aware of Indy, specifically the Indy 500. I was always aware of it, everybody knows it's huge. I didn't know it was this huge, that it's the single largest live event on planet Earth. And I have to admit, I was the grand marshal at more than one NASCAR events, and we have three KISS NASCARs and three NHRAs and stuff like that.
I want to tell you my life was changed. We were invited down strictly socially to go see the Indy race in Texas, and I've said this before to people and they think it's a sound bite, but if you look into my eyes, you'll know what I mean. I saw families, I saw reverence for a flag that went up that made all our lives possible. I saw some real cornball things that I think are missing from America. I saw athletes, one of perhaps, you know, a few perhaps out of a hundred who can drive these cars. The more I found out about it, the more I fell in love with it. So everything for me and for Rich is a tug of the heart. If your heart strings get plucked, you love it, you're into it.
Money? Yeah, we all like making money. Look, Carmelo makes millions of dollars, and so do I and stuff like that. The God's honest truth is KISS is going to Japan Mount Fuji; I'll make more in one night than the entire year here.
ANTHONY: With the tongue?
SIMMONS: I would stick it out, but you see the floor is dirty, it's not clean. (Laughter)
But the God's honest truth is it's something bigger here happening. The more I have found out, the more I realize this really is the pre-eminent American sport on four wheels. There's nothing that touches it. This is the coolest thing, and we're here because we want to be there at the finish line, because Indy was No. 1, it can be No. 1 again. It may not be tomorrow, we're going to see it through to the -- we're here for the long haul. We had dinner last night; we talked about it; we're here for the long haul. This is not a press conference; this is the beginning of a relationship.
JENKINS: Anyone else?
Q: Carmelo, you played before 30-some-thousand people in the Carrier Dome and so forth. What was your thought when you came in here and saw the seating capacity?
ANTHONY: I only seen half of it. (Laughter)
And that was amazing just seeing how many possible people could just sit in there and watch, you know, P.J. go around a track at 230 miles per hour. I was amazed. I play in front of 30, 33,000 people every night. The most I ever played in front of was 70, I think in the national championship game in New Orleans. So to be in front of 400,000 people is, I can't even understand or feel, you know, the adrenaline rush that I'm going to have. So I can imagine how much adrenaline he's going to have.
JENKINS: P.J., when people talk like that, does it send a rush of adrenaline through you in anticipation?
CHESSON: Yeah, my problem is I wake up in the morning with that kind of adrenaline, something is wrong with me bad. (Laughter) But they get talking like that, and I get shaky and all weird and hard to like be around.
No, it's pretty cool to hear the guys that are in my corner talking like that. It definitely gives me a boost of confidence and makes me feel real good about what we're about to do here.
SIMMONS: And ladies, they're all single.
ANTHONY: I'm not single.
HEMELGARN: I'm not single. (Laughter) They're televising that. Don't start that.
SIMMONS: You're not single?
CHESSON: Well, I'm single. (Laughter)
Q: Carmelo, I thought the car would be No. 15; it's No. 91. What's wrong with the No. 15?
ANTHONY: Somebody already have 15. We need to get that No. 15.
Q: 91 mean anything or what's the number?
HEMELGARN: It's a number we've used for years since 1987.
ANTHONY: It's tradition. We can't change it now. (Laughter)
CHESSON: Fight's off.
Q: If maybe somebody other than Ron could address this. You're moving into a team that hasn't raced at the top for a couple years now. This is going to be a building process. You say you're in for the long haul, but there's going to be some difficult moments. In this sport, difficult moments are painful either for the car or the driver. This is not the Bobcats losing the first so-many games of the season. You talk about your patience or do you have any perception of what this is going to be like?
CHESSON: Who are we talking to here?
Q: Anybody but Ron. We know how Ron feels about it.
SIMMONS: OK, everybody is shy here; I've got a big mouth. Here is how it works. Any champion will tell you that the hard work begins on day one when you start training. If you're going to start looking for the knockout before you start training, you're going to lose. Real champions don't worry about anything; they run their own race and never look over their shoulders to see who's coming up behind you. Real champions are only in competition with themselves. If this team does the best it can, it will be a winner. Watch us burn rubber, baby.
CHESSON: My God, you're good. (Laughter)
Q: This one is for Ron. Ron, I recall for a lot of years, the first year you came into racing, you're kind of a quiet guy, and people don't realize what you have accomplished in your life. The guy sitting to your right is anything but quiet. The guy on your far left is anything but quiet. Carmelo seems to be kind of quiet.
Your entire situation to me is kind of new to you. These guys are going to be in front of everybody, and you're going to be pounding. Here we are, get out of our way, and we're here to race, and we're here to win. How are you going to handle that?
HEMELGARN: First of all, I think it's fantastic to be involved in a group like this. Everything I've done in my life I've done as a team. I have a lot of employees that work for me, and there are a lot of people who work for me who has a lot of enthusiasm and excitement and so on. I don't worry about that. I know who I am and what I am, and I think this kind of promotion that we have going on is not just about Ron Hemelgarn or Hemelgarn Racing, this is about the Indy Racing League, what it's going to do for the league, which I'm real excited about. This kid here, who's really, really hung it out, tried to show what he is made of. He comes from what I like as sprint cars and so on. I'm happy about that. Gene, that guy is motivated all the time, but the whole group. Rich is so motivated. When the opportunity came about, I thought it was great. Never once did I wiggle on the thing because I think it's what you need to win and to build a first-class team and so on. I've been at the top, and I've been at the bottom. No matter where I'm at, I'm always digging and trying to get back to the top. So I think we're going to do it. I think P.J. has a lot to learn, but the one thing he has, he's a wild stallion, and I would rather that a stallion and tone him down a little bit than take an old nag and try to get him to stand on the gas. P.J., we won't have to worry about that. Gene, he's motivated all the time.
This guy is a champion, 22 years old. And what he's accomplished in this life, just to rub next to him I already know success will be with us.
I just think it's a unique opportunity. I think we're going to do well with it. I don't care what has happened to me in the past because I don't worry about that. I worry about the present. I'm just blessed to have had this opportunity come our way. It took a lot of work and so on and a lot of handshakes. We've pulled it off, and it's great.
SIMMONS: By the way, the lawyers are way in the back. We didn't wait for anybody on this one. We just said, you know what? We love each other, we belong together, let's go raise some hell. The lawyers are going, ‘Yeah, but wait a minute, the paperwork.’ Shut up. (Laughter) Am I right?
HEMELGARN: This is true.
Q: Ron, it was 10 years ago that you won the 500. What does it feel like to be building yourself back to that opportunity again?
HEMELGARN: Well, I think probably when we win it again, it will make the win that much more better. You know, winning it there in '96 was a dream come true, and there was no way of expressing what the emotions were involved. You know, we had a good run there, just basically a championship team right on through. We got caught in some changes in engines and so on and we went a little backwards. Now we're just rebuilding. But the way I see it is build this into a winning team, especially with this kid right here, with his attitude. He's going to have fun doing it. And it's exciting. To me, I don't worry about anybody but the team itself, and that's how I've always run our team. Good, bad or indifferent, but we walk away every year with our heads high. Some years are better than others, but 10 years ago I'll never forget that moment, and I hope that we get to experience it together.
I don't know what it's like to win an NBA championship, but I'm sure he'll experience it. If I'm rubbing next to him, I'm going to experience with him.
But anyway, the emotions are high at this place. There's no place better to ever win a championship than this race here, and we did it. So exciting. It's just like yesterday.
JENKINS: One last question.
Q: This is for Carmelo. I know your NBA schedule is pretty hectic and so forth. What can the race fans expect in terms of your involvement in racing?
ANTHONY: Well, if I'm not there, I'm sure P.J. is going to hear from me, good or bad. And if you do bad, I might give him some pointers of how to drive through the lane. (Laughter) But I'm going to try to make it to some races. The most important one is the Indy 500 race here in Indianapolis, and I'm going to try to be here. We might be playing, hope to be playing but worst case, if not, I'll be here on the 28th.
JENKINS: All right, one-on-ones available. Carmelo, any prediction on the Pacers game tonight? Be careful. (Laughter)
ANTHONY: I'll tell you guys after the game. (Laughter)
JENKINS: Thank you for being here, all four of you. Congratulations. One-on-ones available and the photo op out side. The photo opportunity will be first outside. Thank you for attending.
Jul. 18 – Nagoya, JPN @ Rainbow Hall
Jul. 20 - Fukuoka, JPN @ Kokusai Center
Jul. 22 - Tokyo, JPN @ Udo Festival
Jul. 23 - Osaka, JPN @ Udo Festival
Commented KISS guitarist/vocalist Paul Stanley, "The invitation to headline these festivals and add a couple of additional shows was an invitation we wouldn't miss. KISS will be there with an arsenal of pride, power and pyro!"
But Simmons, the front man for the rock group KISS, has teamed with Denver Nuggets forward Carmelo Anthony to sponsor an IndyCar Series driver.
The two are among those who have partnered with team owner Ron Hemelgarn to put rookie driver P.J. Chesson on the track this season. The team will debut March 26.
So has Anthony begun to like the music of KISS?
"Now I do," said Anthony, who said he got to know Simmons through mutual friends. "I never really listened to them (before). Just seeing their merchandise and listening to them here and there (has given him an appreciation)."
Anthony long has had an appreciation for auto racing. That's why he has gotten involved in the project.
"But I'm not getting behind the wheel," he said.
Anthony wouldn't divulge how much money he has put into the team. There will be a news conference about his role Wednesday in Indianapolis, the day the Nuggets play the Indiana Pacers.
In other news, Thayer was recently asked by a fan on his official web site which record producer he would love to work with that he hasn't worked with already.
"I have been fortunate to work in the studio with several great rock producers, namely Bob Rock, Bruce Fairbairn and Bob Ezrin, all of whom are exceptional," Tommy replied. "If I had the opportunity, Mutt Lange would be my choice of a producer to work with. I'm especially a fan of his work on the earlier DEF LEPPARD albums, 'High 'N' Dry' and 'Pyromania' and AC/DC's 'Highway To Hell', 'Back In Black' and 'For Those About To Rock'."
KISS Army Sweden is now celebrating its 15th year. The fanclub/fanzine was started in 1990 by Johan and has subsequently been run by Stefan Lundström and more recently Niklas Olsson.
For more information, visit KissArmySweden.com.
Commented Kulick: "This year's counselors and special guests included Neil Schon, monster guitarist from JOURNEY, the entire CHEAP TRICK band, who I have known for years, Mark Farner from GRAND FUNK RAILROAD who I never met before, but all of you should know THAT would be interesting working and jamming with him after me being the lead guitarist for GRAND FUNK for the past 5 years. Mickey Thomas super vocalist from STARSHIP, Mickey Hart from the GRATEFUL DEAD, Kip Winger and Mark Slaughter whom I shared an amazing KISS tour back in 1990 that I will never forget, Doug Fieger from THE KNACK, whose song 'My Sharona' I will never get out of head, camp director and good friend Jack Blades from NIGHT RANGER and DAMN YANKEES whom is always inspiring to work with, his great drummer Kelly Keagy from NIGHT RANGER, and Micheal Lardie from GREAT WHITE and NIGHT RANGER who is always good for a laugh with me. "
Read the rest of Kulick's message and check out photos at Kulick.net.
As previously reported, Frehley's mother passed away in early February. Several MP3 files containing the audio of original Ace's appearance on the "Merry KISSmass Special" with Eddie Trunk on New York's Q104.3 FM on December 23, 2005 have been made available for download at www.eddietrunk.com.
Frehley's former record label, Megaforce Records, in Jnuary issued a compilation titled album, entitled "Greatest Hits Live". According to a press release, this CD "represents some of the best work from legendary KISS guitarist Ace Frehley during the period after his highly publicized departure from one of the greatest rock bands of all time."
Behind the garish makeup, Simmons, 56, was the driving force behind a blitzkrieg of KISS-themed products, including lunch pails and caskets. The band's heyday is long gone, but Simmons says he's far from finished.
The Beverly Hills-based impresario is starring in two reality TV shows, developing a magazine, running his own music label and launching an entertainment-themed pay-TV show that will feature uncensored music videos and celebrity interviews. Think "Access Hollywood" meets "Girls Gone Wild."
Simmons, who calls himself "Disney without the overhead," still occasionally dons his KISS get-up to perform as the Demon.
"I'm as ravenous as ever," he said. "I remember when my belly was empty, and I didn't like the feeling."
Since January, he and entertainment industry veteran Richard G. Abramson have been marketing the Indy Racing League, the once-dominant auto racing circuit that has suffered since its split from CART, now the Champ Car World Series. Both "open-wheel" leagues lag behind stock-car racing's NASCAR in popularity, although Indy has the sport's signature event in the Indianapolis 500 and an emerging star in Danica Patrick.
Simmons got involved with the Indy Racing League after meeting marketing chief Phil Lengyel during a race at Texas Motor Speedway in Fort Worth.
According to Lengyel, Simmons pointed to an IRL sign and said, "Is that your logo? It stinks."
"We started off with a friendly confrontation," Lengyel said, "and we've been brutally honest ever since."
A few days after the race, Simmons invited Lengyel and the IRL's top brass to Los Angeles, where he and Abramson pitched an alliance with their company, Simmons Abramson Marketing. To launch the effort, Simmons wrote the foot-stomping anthem "I Am Indy" with the quirky one-man band BAG to serve as the league theme song.
"At the racetrack, you could just feel and breathe in the dust," Simmons said during an interview at his Benedict Canyon home, where his sprawling office is packed with KISS merchandise and memorabilia. "It was an old man's game in need of a makeover."
Saying "IRL" sounded like a disease, Simmons set out to re-brand the league as "Indy."
"These are individual, personalized rocket ships streaking 220 mph," Simmons said. "With 'I am Indy,' you're making a pledge of allegiance to the United Nations of Indy. The phrase knows no bounds — racial, sexual or otherwise. It applies to drivers, fans, sponsors."
Simmons Abramson Marketing may help "bring together what has been a fragmented part of the motor sports industry," said David M. Carter, head of consultancy Sports Business Group in Redondo Beach and a faculty member at USC's Marshall School of Business.
Still, he said, all a celebrity like Simmons or Jon Bon Jovi, who founded the Arena Football League's Philadelphia franchise in 2003, can do is "whet your appetite. It's then up to the sport itself to turn you into a customer."
Simmons and Abramson are uncharacteristically mum when it comes to their pay-television venture. It's known as NGTV, short for No Good TV, and will feature profanity-laced interviews and nudity.
The TV operation plans a public stock offering in the spring and is now in the "quiet period" required by the Securities and Exchange Commission. Simmons is chairman of the Beverly Hills-based company and Abramson is a board member.
Segments taped so far feature conversations with Ben Affleck, Angelina Jolie, Halle Berry and other celebrities, as well as appearances by musicians such as the Black Eyed Peas and Pink, the IPO filing says.
"The timing is right for this sort of leading-edge, uncensored programming in the pay-per-view business," said Alan L. Jacobs, chief executive of Capital Growth Financial, the Boca Raton, Fla., investment bank underwriting the deal.
Financial analyst Tom Taulli, author of "Investing in IPOs," advises investors to tread gingerly, noting that Capital Growth Financial has managed only a handful of obscure public offerings.
And NGTV has yet to generate revenue, let alone any profit.
"It sounds like a great concept and maybe it is, but it's still just a concept," Taulli said. "It could take six to eight months before the product even gets out there."
The company's auditor said NGTV, which has racked up $16.8 million in debt in recent years, might not remain a "going concern" without the IPO proceeds, the prospectus notes.
"Hollywood is a hits-driven business, and you never know what the consumer is going to go for," Taulli said.
Simmons, who says KISS has grossed more than $1 billion since 1974 from sales of records, concert tickets and 2,800 licensed products, could settle down to a cushy life with his companion of 22 years, actress and 1982 Playboy Playmate of the Year Shannon Tweed, and their two children.
But that wouldn't be his style. Instead, like Ozzy Osbourne did, he is starring in an unscripted TV show about his life — "Gene Simmons Family Jewels," now in production for the A&E network. The second season of "Gene Simmons' Rock School," a VH1 show in which he trains British kids to rock 'n' roll, is airing in Britain, and his life also served as the framework for "My Dad the Rock Star," an animated show on Nickelodeon.
On top of that, there is his record label, Simmons Records, and Gene Simmons Game, an upcoming magazine with an electronic gaming flavor.
The Simmons touch, of course, is not always golden.
The self-titled CD "BAG," the first Simmons Records release in more than a decade, has sold a meager 100 copies, according to Nielsen SoundScan. Gene Simmons Tongue, the previous version of his glossy magazine, lasted 12 issues in 2002 and 2003.
Simmons met the 58-year-old Abramson in 2001 at a pitch meeting for an MTV game show. Abramson managed actor Paul Reubens' career as the Pee-wee Herman character in the 1980s and produced the film "Pee-wee's Big Adventure" and the Emmy-winning TV show "Pee-wee's Playhouse."
In addition to their other deals, Simmons and Abramson started working last year as advisors to ITU Ventures, a Century City-based venture capital firm. ITU Managing Partner Chad Brownstein, a longtime KISS fan, said he was watching "Gene Simmons' Rock School" late one night when he realized that the prolific marketer could help analyze potential entertainment investments for the firm.
Said Abramson, "People see Gene as this crazy character from KISS with his stage antics, when in reality he is a very smart, erudite guy."
Born Chaim Witz in Haifa, Israel, Simmons immigrated to New York at age 8 with his mother after his father abandoned the family.
A matinee showing of Walt Disney Co.'s "Pinocchio" helped inspire Simmons to think big, he said.
"When Jiminy Cricket sang 'When You Wish Upon a Star,' I thought that little bug was singing to me," he said. "I walked out of that movie theater, and he had done more for me than any religious figure ever could. I was empowered. It was electrifying."
Simmons and bandmate Paul Stanley, who control the KISS merchandising empire, trademarked the group's facial makeup and costumes early on and bought out guitarist Ace Frehley and drummer Peter Criss in 1980.
Simmons, who writes his autograph with dollar signs instead of the letter S, doesn't mind that KISS was never a hit with music critics.
"Credibility, schmedibility — anyone who thinks popular music is about artistry is kidding themselves," he said.
"Rock stars are not rocket scientists. There but for the grace of God any one of us is asking the next person in line, 'Do you want fries with that?' "
The Simmons-Abramson team
Gene Simmons
Age: 56
Birthplace : Haifa, Israel
Career highlights: Co-founder of KISS. With bandmate Paul Stanley, oversees merchandising of the "rock 'n' roll brand." Other media projects include television shows "Gene Simmons' Rock School" and "Gene Simmons Family Jewels," Simmons Records and Gene Simmons Game magazine.
Trivia: Former schoolteacher; briefly managed Liza Minnelli's recording career; speaks German, Hebrew and Magyar (Hungarian).
Personal: Lives in Beverly Hills with actress Shannon Tweed and their two children, Nicholas and Sophie.
Richard G. Abramson
Age: 58
Birthplace: Syracuse, N.Y.
Career highlights: Once managed actor-comedian Pee-wee Herman. Produced the movie "Pee-wee's Big Adventure" and the TV show "Pee-wee's Playhouse." Arranged insurance-backed financing for movie studios. Developed databases for forecasting film revenue.
Trivia: Produced and directed Army films during the Vietnam War era, including President Nixon's Christmas message to the troops.
Personal: Unmarried; lives in Los Angeles.
Simmons: "What was the first sign that we'd made it? Simply, the girls. As soon as we'd started KISS, girls were turning up backstage and wanting to get into bed with us. The girls got prettier and prettier. There was more and more of them. By the time we started touring Europe in '76, everyone wanted to fuck us. The supply of women was endless. Roomfuls of girls. It was like heaven turned on its tap and said, 'Take whatever you need.' And you have to remember, I was an ugly son of a bitch. At my best, I looked like a dog at birth. But, now that I was in this famous band, I was in a position where I could mount anybody's girlfriend and mother, often at the same time. That's the magic of rock 'n' roll right there. It means that even Meat Loaf can get some puss."
Stanley: "Through '76, you could gauge our success by the parties we were throwing. As we got bigger, the parties got more and more debauched, and everyone was welcome so long as they were female. All requests were considered and honored. Those parties were as insane as you can imagine. Every conceivable excess. And then some. It certainly went beyond anything I could fathom. This was a time when the worst consequence of casual sex was a shot of penicillin. So the possibilities were limitless. There were no boundaries. We did whatever the fuck we wanted. We were like Vikings roaring into town, but the difference was that everyone was left smiling. It's okay to pillage so long as everyone is left satisfied."
Simmons: "We had different tastes in women. Paul was fussier than me. Basically, he's into classic beauties. If she's carrying a few extra pounds, forget about it. Peter [Criss] tended to take it slow with girls — the romantic type. Ace [Frehley] only liked women who were buts. I was your basic male slut. But I preferred them big, fat and sweaty."
Stanley: "I was during 1976 that we awoke to the possibilities of KISS merchandising. That came out of listening to our fans rather than any marketing genius on our part. It was our fans who decided what would be cool, and we were happy to give it to them. It probably started with KISS belt buckles and KISS dolls. Then it took off from there… lunch-boxes, transistor radios, jeans, jackets, garbage pails, bubblegum cards, our own Marvel comic…"
Simmons: "There were problems with drink and drugs, but I was completely oblivious to it then. I've never been drunk or high in my life. If you're talking about Peter and Ace, you're talking about the kind of personalities that are so peculiar you wouldn't know if they were high or not. Even when he was straight, Ace was unable to walk in a straight line. Also, he naturally talks in a slurred way. He was no different when he was high. He had a strange sense of humor, too. He'd be coming out with stuff like, 'Hey, I fucked an alien last night.' He is, without doubt, the laziest, most self-destructive person I've ever met."
To check out news on this book or John's other goings-on, visit him online at www.john-corabi.net or www.myspace.com/john_corabi.
"Rock School" features Simmons creating a rock band from a class of classically trained students at an exclusive British boarding school. Simmons is curently working on "Gene Simmons' Family Jewels", which will focus on his own family, including longtime girlfriend Shannon Tweed and their two teenaged children. The show is slated to air on the A&E channel sometime this year.
.KISS items up for auction include stage-worn costume pieces, a Paul Stanley "stage-broken" guitar from 1979, the first KISS red siren beacon from 1973, various 1970s paper goods, autographs, and even a 1976 handwritten postcard from original KISS guitarist Ace Frehley.
To view photos of the items being auctioned click here. The auction ends at 5:00 p.m. EST, on Sunday, February 26.
Stanley is planning a tour to support the CD, and says he'll be bringing out a bigger band than he's used at past solo gigs, "because there's a lot more going on on this album." He estimates he'll have about six people in his band. As for the musicians he used during the recording of "Live to Win" — a list which includes session drummer Victor Indrizzo, guitarist Corky James, former MARILYN MANSON and current ROB ZOMBIE guitarist John 5, former KISS guitarist Bruce Kulick (who plays bass on a few songs) and noted string arranger David Campbell — Stanley says, "[It's] some friends of mine — it's not a 'who's who.' I didn't want to do one of those albums where you list people and it becomes some sort of a, trying to impress everybody with names. So it's a great album. Everybody loves it." Other songtitles set to appear on the CD include "Wake Up Screaming" and "Second to None".
"We thought about doing makeup. But we weren't sure how many women would want to walk around with white-painted faces," Stanley said.
Stanley noted that the fragrances were designed to be commercial scents. "This isn't about what I like," he said. "It's really about what the majority of consumers will like. Sexy is an overused word, but I'd like to think that these fragrances are unapologetically sexy and edgy. They have an attitude. This is the fragrance for people who dare to be like KISS — not fans of KISS."
Stanley added the packaging makes full use of the KISS logo. "It's one of those things that is immediately recognizable," he said. He also noted personal appearances are a possibility.
Stanley said a full complement of ancillary products would launch with the fragrances.
"This isn't the fragrance of a rock band, it's the fragrance of an attitudinal lifestyle," he said. "We wanted to make sure that the distinction, while subtle, was there."
Stanley, who recently designed a guitar line, noted that truly believing in something is the only way he or his bandmates will get involved: "We're in this for the long haul," he said. "[Some celebrities] do a fragrance just for the money, and certainly that works for at least the first thing. But picking up the check is the easy part. I want a lot of checks, and that involves doing a lot of homework and refining products to the point where they are something that will last."
Stanley said the band is developing an apparel line, and that he is hard at work on a solo album that is expected to be launched within the next four to six months.
The deal, brokered by the band's management, Doc Mc Ghee Management, and its merchandise and licensing representative, Signatures Network, includes both fragrance and beauty products, with men's and women's scents launching first. Terms of the deal were not disclosed.
"Everything is so expected in fragrances these days," Neil Katz, president and chief executive of Gemini Cosmetics, said in an interview. "We wanted to do something completely unexpected and create some excitement in department stores. We wanted a recognizable name, but not an expected one."
Katz said that he first thought about doing a KISS fragrance after attending a gathering of the group's fans. "There was a whole ballroom of people selling KISS merchandise and memorabilia," he said. "When I investigated, I found that KISS products do more than $1 billion in sales worldwide. At one Japanese concert alone, more than $1 million in licensed product sales were done. There is a huge market there."
The band played its first concert in 1973 and members are well into middle age. Katz said he expects the fragrances' users will fall into two major groups: 18- to 24-year-olds who are just discovering the band, and 40- to 55-year-olds.
While the band is, well, flamboyant, Katz said its fragrances won't be. "They are going to be very elegant, which will probably shock a lot of people," he said. "It's somewhat in juxtaposition to what KISS' image is, given their wildly painted faces and rowdy shows. But [the band members] love the idea that we are going to use their logo and makeup icons, rather than plastering their faces on the bottles." Katz also is planning offbeat in-store events for the scent launch. "The promotional possibilities are great," he said with a laugh.
The deal with Gemini "was done in about two hours," said Katz. "Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley [the two founding members of the band] are real gentlemen. Their stage persona is one thing, but offstage, they are excellent businessmen."
The rock group is putting the final touches on a line of perfumes and colognes, Paul Stanley said from the party's red carpet.
"They're unrepentantly sexy and a little naughty," he said.
Stanley's also finishing a solo album.
"It's been about 26 years since my last solo album. That's a big gap. There's a lot of catching up to do," he said.
"It was something I really felt I needed to do. It was a labour of love. I didn't have to worry about whether or not it was going to succeed - if it sells 10 copies or 10 million copies my life doesn't change any."
KISS fans shouldn't worry though. While KISS members are always working on independent projects, the band has no plans to part ways.
Says Stanley: "KISS is the virus that keeps on giving."
In an e-mail to Peter's official web site, George Xirocostas from the Australian KISS Army wrote, "I have a question for you on behalf of all Australian Peter Criss fans. Are you going to tour in Australia for you solo world tour? I am a member of the Australian KISS Army and we have a large membership and this question keeps popping up in our forum. You have many fans here who would love to see you Down Under. Your Number 1 fan is a lady by the name of Eliana who lives in Melbourne and worships you (she is also Italian). Hope you reply back to me so that I can report back to my fellow fans."
Responding to Xirocostas' e-mail, Gigi Criss wrote, "If you want Peter Criss to respond to your question then I suggest you put the original band on you banner. Peter finds this totally disrespectful and will not be part of any site that put Tommy and Eric in Ace or Peter makeup. It's bad enough that Gene and Paul are disrespecting the name KISS, why should you too? Peter loves Australia and all of the fans there as well, but please show you love him by putting him where he belongs."
After receiving Gigi's reply, Rachel — co-founder of the www.AustralianKissFans.com web site — shot off the following missive:
"We received on our site a copy of an e-mail you have sent to one of our members, in reply to a question regarding the Peter Criss solo tour.
"Here is a response to your alligations directed towards our site, www.AustralianKissFans.com, and its current banner, and also your allegation of our disrespect towards Peter Criss on our site.
"NOW… in regards to the very anally retentive response that was received from yourself....
"The banner was selected by the majority of the fans on this site through a vote at the time when we were choosing one to take on as a symbol to recognise us as Australian KISS fans.
"I personally purchased extremely expensive tickets to see your husband play with Gene, Paul and Ace as part of the Farewell Tour in Adelaide, Australia under the impression that this was going to be the last time I was going to get to see all the original KISS band members in full KISS makeup and costume.
"It may come as a small surprise, but when we received a letter in the mail explaining that Peter had pulled out of the Farewell Tour due to 'ongoing injuries' and offered a full refund on the tickets, we all still went along, and the fact that Eric Singer did finish off the tour at the last minute in full costume and makeup was fantastic, the rest of the band still powered on... If I also recall correctly, this wouldn't be the first time Mr. Criss has pulled out on an Australian tour at the last minute.
"Anyway, the point I am getting at, is that due to that fact that we were told as fans that he was physically unable to drum anymore due to medical disabilities (carpel tunnel, if I remember correctly), it was sad, but accepted and understood by the fans (even though he could have continued along with the tour to show his respect to his Australian fans, even if it was to make a small appearance and sing 'Beth' while someone else took over the drumming).
"Now HE has the nerve to have someone else respond rudely on his behalf to a fan and say:
"Quote: 'If you want Peter Criss to respond to your question then I suggest you put the original band on you banner.'
"As put at the start of the post, the banner was selected by members who were on this forum at the time. Also, the site is a CURRENT and PAST KISS fan site, so [having] current KISS members on the banner is relevant.
"Quote: 'It's bad enough that Gene and Paul are disrespecting the name KISS, why should you too?'
"Someone took the time out to e-mail your husband asking a genuine question as a fan. There is no need for us to hear about all the gripes of the world and you use it as an opening to air your dirty laundry. If Peter has a problem with Gene and Paul, have a go at them, not the fans!
"Quote: Peter loves Australia and all of the fans there as well but please show you love him by putting him where he belongs.'
"The last comment is the one that got me the most, I laughed until I almost cried...
"One comment pretty much sums it up... If Peter really loves Australia and all of the fans, then why in hell did he ditch us twice at the last minute?!? I'm sorry, but the guilt trips just don't work with me anymore.
"Now I will leave you with my closing conclusion to your complete and utter rudeness... Peter should be grateful that fans here in Australia have still stuck by him after how in my honest opinion he has spun us quite clearly a load of bull with his 'disabilities,' which now seem to be more clear as 'hissy fits.'"
In other news, the playlists for all eight of Tony's "Black Sunday" radio shows on Planet Rock to date have been added to Iommi.com. The two-hour radio show is available to listen online worldwide every Sunday at 7:00 p.m. U.K. time at www.planetrock.com. Listeners in the U.K. can also tune in via DAB Digital Radio and via Sky Channel 861, NTL channel 680 or Telewest Channel 924.
Lydia continues to publish exclusive images from "Sealed With A Kiss" on her web site with the most recent image posted last week, a never-before-seen live shot of KISS from their first tour in July 1974. "The venue was so small that KISS had to sit their lighted logo on the side of the stage," Lydia noted in a recent update on her web site. You can see the previously unpublished KISS photo here.
"Sealed With A Kiss" will be published in a large, coffee-table format, roughly 10" x 12" in size, and contains over 1,500 unpublished photographs of KISS during their 1970s heyday.
Please visit www.lydiacriss.com for further updates, exclusive previews, and the ongoing "Photo of the Month" feature.
KISS
POISON
WARRANT
SAVOY BROWN
GEORGE THOROGOOD
PUDDLE OF MUDD
GREGG ROLIE
JOHN WAITE
SEVEN MARY THREE
GRAND FUNK RAILROAD
More acts will be announced soon.
For more information, visit www.rock-fest.com.
Commented Singer: "Realizing that this industry is a business and not about friends was probably the hardest thing to swallow. Any time a band says there's musical or personality differences, it's usually about money.
"I come in and give bands what they want. I've always brought professionalism to the show. It's not always about just playing the beats. It's about the day-to-day preparations and surviving the road so you can get up and play consistently. It's about being a quick study, and being on time and professional. Bringing a good vibe is important, too."
Eric also talks about donning Peter Criss' legendary Catman make up: "I had mixed feelings. But it's what I do for a living. It's a good drumming gig on a high level. It's a gig with all the amenities and a nice paycheck. I thought, 'This is my living, and if I don't do it, someone else will.'"
Get A Life Inc presents the 2006 INDY KISS Expo. Get ready for another great KISS Weekend! The KISS Expo will take place at the Holiday Inn Indianapolis East, 6990 East 21st St. For hotel rooms - call 317-359-5341 and ask for the special KISS Expo rate. KISS merchandise and collectibles will be on sale throughout the day. If you plan on staying at this hotel get your room soon, they are selling out quickly. There are a couple of hotels accross the street from this one that still have rooms. See below for other hotels that are near the Holiday Inn.
Special guests include:
Legendary Bill Aucoin was KISS manager from 1973 to 1980. He was also responsible for getting KISS their recording contract with Casablanca Records in 1973, after seeing them perform at the Hotel Diplomat in August 1973. Bill then managed their peak years in the 70s which made KISS a legend in the rock industry.
Appearing for the first time at any KISS Expo is KISS former Director of Security John Harte. He was immortalized in People magazine as he held out his hand to cover Paul Stanley's face as he was leaving a limo. John definitely was in involved in a lot of aspects of KISS and their most popular time in pop culture. Don't miss out on this rare opportunity to meet one of members of true KISStory!
Doors open at 11AM for VIP ticket holders (TWO Hours earlier than regular ticket holders!), 1PM for regular tickets. Some of the day's events include raffles, trivia and a costume contest. Bill Aucoin and John Harte will be available for photos and autographs in the afternoon. A newly revamped MR. SPEED will also perform. See why they are the one of the best KISS tribute bands ever!
VIP tickets are $25 in advance, $30 at the door. VIP ticket holders also will receive FREE an officially licensed KISS Army Lanyard! Regular admission is $20 in advance and $25 at the door. Kids 12 under get in free.
If you are a dealer interested in tables for the event please email us at info@kissarmywarehouse.com. Tables are selling very fast due to the success from the last few years. Reserve your table soon, before they are gone. Click the ticket images below to order.
Add an element of the unattainable to your Valentine's greeting this year -- surprise that special someone by sending their Valentine sealed with their favorite celebrity's kiss! By donating their lip prints, these celebrities are acknowledging the important role The HSUS plays in animal protection, and by purchasing these stamps, you too can be considered a well connected philanthropist.
Zazzle is offering these limited edition real US postage stamps, called ZazzleStamps, to celebrate Valentine's Day in partnership with The Humane Society of the United States. The stamps are available beginning today and will only be available through the 28th of February, 2006. In accordance with the established Zazzle Community Giving Program, The HSUS will be receiving up to 27% of the total net sales from the stamps. Each sheet includes 20 individual large-format stamps and is available in the most common rates.
2006 is all about customization, and Zazzle is a place that lets you create your own stamps, cards, posters and t-shirts. Beyond celebrity kisses, use Zazzle to make special Valentine's Day cards, stamps bearing your own lips or photographs, posters full of giant roses, or t-shirts declaring your love for all the world to see. Zazzle also participates in other charity programs with organizations such as Cure Autism Now, Save the Children, and the National Children's Leukemia Foundation, just to name a few.
About Zazzle: At Zazzle, anyone can share and celebrate their interests and passions with unique, one-of-a-kind products including apparel, posters, U.S. Postage, greeting cards and more. It's easy, fun, and affordable for all! Zazzle combines on-demand manufacturing, a robust online community, the largest online collection of customizable digital images and unmatched personalization tools to empower consumers to create their products. In addition, individuals can choose to become contributors by sharing their unique creations in Zazzle's public galleries. Within these galleries, anyone can browse, comment and connect with others who share their interests. Contributors also earn royalties every time their creations are purchased by others. For anyone who wishes to create, wear, display, sell or celebrate their interests, Zazzle provides a compelling interactive marketplace to a worldwide audience. For more information, please visit http://www.zazzle.com.
About The Humane Society of the United States (HSUS): The HSUS is the nation's largest animal protection organization with 9.5 million members and constituents. The non-profit organization is based in Washington, DC and has regional offices across the country. On the web at http://www.hsus.org.
And one other thing puzzled him... if it was bombed in the war, why haven't they replaced the windows yet?
Simmons' extraordinary interest in Coventry's most treasured monument was sparked by his visit to the city to film an episode of the popular Channel 4 TV programme "Rock School".
He spotted the ruins during a break in filming at the nearby Golden Cross Inn.
The lead singer of the band KISS was with event promoter John Oliver who recalls: "We were standing outside the pub and Gene pointed to the building.
"He asked what it was and if it was derelict. I told him that no, it was the old Coventry Cathedral and it was bombed during the war. He said 'And they haven't repaired the windows yet?' Then he asked if it was for sale. He seemed disappointed when I told him that it probably wasn't."
Read the rest of the article at this location.
The rock band KISS is coming to Sault Ste. Marie Michigan this summer, LTVNEWS has confirmed.
KISS will kick off their concert tour featuring original members from the '80's band at the Sault Michigan establishment.
Kewadin Casino told LTVNEWS Tuesday, the band has been booked for a one-time show July 21, 2006 for an outdoor concert.
On a slight technicality, it should be noted that the date is tentative, as Kewadin officials told LTV that the contract has not yet been officially signed.
However, once everything is official, 10,000 tickets will be sold for this blockbuster event.
Information regarding purchase of tickets will be announced by Kiwedin within the next week, Kiwedin officials say.
The headliner band is one of up to four big acts Kewadin Casino is looking at for the busy summer concert series.
No ticket prices have been announced as of yet.
Other fairly big names coming up to the Michigan Sault based casino include, RICHARD MARX on February 25 and TOTO scheduled for July 6.
Madison Road Entertainment is a Los Angeles-based branded entertainment studio serving the broadcast television and advertising industries. The company's primary function is to develop and exploit large-scale network television opportunities through which advertisers can more effectively reach their audience. Opportunities include television projects originally developed by Madison Road, as well as those co-developed with or wholly owned by the U.S. television networks. By functioning as an advertiser-supported studio, Madison Road operates with negligible risk while dramatically improving revenue per episode of affected primetime programming — thus increasing chances for success and positively impacting both network and studio cash flows as well as advertiser targets for the audience’s ‘share of mind’.
Presently, MRE has a series that is their own original production with Imagine Entertainment entitled "Treasure Hunters", a CBS telenovela with Jonathon Prince, and Jackie Collins' "Dirty Laundry". They have had brand integrations in "The Apprentice", "America's Next Top Model", "Bernie Mac", "Last Comic Standing", and several others. In addition, Madison Road has an exclusive branded entertainment partnership with NASCAR.
As previously reported, Frehley's former record label, Megaforce Records, will be issuing a compilation titled album, entitled "Greatest Hits Live", on Tuesday, January 24. According to a press release, this CD "represents some of the best work from legendary KISS guitarist Ace Frehley during the period after his highly publicized departure from one of the greatest rock bands of all time." As with the previous Megaforce Ace Frehley releases "12 Picks" (1996) and "Loaded Deck" (1997), Ace himself had nothing to do with putting this package together.
For more information, visit www.getalifeinc.com.
As part of the KISS-Steiner agreement, Steiner will arrange an appearance with KISS and offer autographed guitars, photographs, drum heads and other memorabilia. Fans will also have the opportunity to send in their own favorite KISS collectibles to be signed by the band.
For more information, check out www.steinersports.com.
"Rock School" featured Simmons creating a rock band from a class of classically trained students at an exclusive British boarding school. KISS co-founder Paul Stanley told Launch that Simmons is free to do whatever he likes, as long as it doesn't negatively impact KISS. "I think Gene has earned the right to do whatever he wants to," he said. "Gene certainly in all venues has the freedom and the right to do whatever he chooses, as long as it doesn't directly impact on anything that he's only part of. He's come away unscathed 'til now."
The latest KISS release is a concert DVD called "Rock The Nation Live!", which came out in December.
The band KISS is adding one more ingredient to sex, drugs and rock 'n' roll: coffee.
The rockers, known for slapping their brand on everything from coffins to coasters since their heyday in the 1970s, will show a more mature side this spring when the first KISS Coffeehouse makes its debut at Broadway at the Beach in Myrtle Beach.
Don't expect the same old laid-back coffee place.
This is KISS, a band known for its legendary partying, stage theatrics and white-and-black makeup.
Envision servers donning the trademark KISS face paint for special occasions and KISS classics blaring as a machine whips up the trademark KISS Frozen Rockuccino or a French KISS Vanilla.
"This concept is a little different," said Brian Galvin, a KISS fan for 31 years who developed the coffeehouse idea. "It's a stimulating environment to drink a stimulating beverage."
The coffeehouse will fill a 1,305-square-foot corner space at Celebrity Square, across from the Key West Grill. It will open sometime this spring or early summer. Officials didn't give an exact date. Galvin said band members Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley plan to attend the grand opening.
Myrtle Beach offers the perfect stage for a KISS Coffeehouse, Galvin said, because of its appeal to the "Middle America" market, the segment likely to "Rock and Roll All Nite."
The Hard Rock Cafe, which has Paul Stanley's guitar and signed photos of other band members, is eager to welcome its new Celebrity Square neighbor, general manager Mike Davis said.
"Everything that is rock 'n' roll is good for us. One happy family," he said. "I can't see why it wouldn't work. They are kind of a caffeine, high-energy band so that makes sense."
If the KISS-themed coffee blends and sweets back up the eye-catching entrance, the coffeehouse will do well, said Pat Dowling, spokesman for Burroughs & Chapin Co. Inc., which owns Broadway and prides itself on family values.
"It's different," he said. "It's not offensive at all. It's just fun. People will see it and say, 'That's cool. That's new. Let's go see.'"
Dowling downplayed the band's once raucous reputation.
"The band KISS was just an act," he said. "I don't think they are after the same attention anymore."
KISS has become a merchandising machine, putting its name and flair on hundreds of items, including bowling balls, checks, a coffin, ceramic tile and silver coins.
Signatures Network of San Francisco, which handles licensing for KISS, declined to comment on the coffeehouse Friday.
Galvin's company, The Galvin Group Inc. in Warwick, R.I., operates two Ben & Jerry ice cream shops, one in Florida and another in Connecticut. This is Galvin's first project with the band, and the band's first foray into food, he said.
Galvin plans to open more locations, possibly one in Las Vegas, if this one is a hit, he said.
"It was an honor to play guitar on Rob's record, because I enjoy his music so much," John told Guitar World. "But I was also given the opportunity to write a couple of tracks on there too. I think there's more guitar stuff on this ZOMBIE record than on any other."
In addition, since completing Ozzfest, John has been working with Paul Stanley on songs for the KISS frontman's upcoming solo album. "It was a dream come true for me, because I'm such a big KISS fan," said John. "I went to his house and wrote a song with him and [songwriter/producer] Desmond Child. Then Desmond called me again to write a song with him and [MÖTLEY CRÜE's] Nikki Sixx for MEATLOAF's 'Bat Out of Hell III'."
Despite his commitments, John has found time to form his own band, LOSER. The group's Island Records debut is scheduled to hit the streets in early 2006 and will be supported with a tour. John describes the group's music as "hooky," attesting to its radio-friendly appeal. "I had been writing all these commercial rock songs that ended up on the radio for so many other artists," he told Guitar World. "I decided to dive in and write some songs like that for myself."
Check out LOSER's track "Away", to be included on the group's upcoming debut album: Windows Media (High, Low), Real Media.
LOSER supporting STAIND, THEORY OF A DEADMAN:
Jan. 29 - Philadelphia, PA @ Electric Factory
Jan. 31 - Springfield, MA @ Hippodrome
Feb. 01 - Springfield, MA @ Hippodrome
Feb. 03 - Mashantucket, CT @ Foxwoods
Feb. 04 - Portland, ME @ State Theater
Feb. 07 - Norfolk, VA @ The Norva
Feb. 08 - Charleston, SC @ The Plex
Feb. 09 - Atlanta, GA @ Tabernacle
Feb. 11 - Daytona Beach, FL @ TBD
Feb. 14 - Springfield, MO @ Shrine Mosque
Feb. 15 - Oklahoma City, OK @ Bricktown Events Center
Feb. 17 - Sioux City, IA @ The Orpheum theatre
Feb. 18 - Lacrosse, WI @ Lacrosse Center
Feb. 19 - Minneapolis, MN @ Myth
Guitar World: What inspired you to play guitar:
Ace Frehley: "I was raised in a musical household, so I was surrounded by music all day long. My parents played piano, and my brother and sister played piano and folk guitar. My brother showed me a few chords on his acoustic guitar. The one day I visited a friend who had an electric guitar and a small amp, and it changed my life. I held the guitar in my hands, turned the volume to 10 and hit the low E string, and the sound just droned. I was hooked! It was like a heroin addict's first shot of dope."
Guitar World: What was the first song that you learned how to play?
Ace Frehley: "'(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction' by THE ROLLING STONES. Shortly thereafter, I learned how to play another ROLLING STONES song, 'The Last Time', and it made me feel so good about myself. Not only did I figure out how to play itbut I got the exact sound from an Ampeg Reverberocket amp my dad had bought me. I had the riff and the reverb!"
Guitar World: What was your mosr embarrassing moment onstage?
Ace Frehley: "Getting electrocuted in Lakeland, Florida during the 'Destroyer' tour. It was right before KISS got wireless guitars. I was walking down these steps onstage with those very-high-heeled boots. I grabbed the railing because I was losing my balance. The railing wasn't grounded properly and I got zapped with 240 volts. I saw sparks and don't remember much else. I was told the roadies carried me offstage. I had burns on my hand and the band had to stop the show. When I finally regained consciousness, I couldn't feel my right hand. It was scary."
Guitar World: What have you been doing lately?
Ace Frehley: "I've been working on a solo album and a few film projects. I'd love to do an instructional video, but I want it to be comedic. [Laughs] I don't want it to be just another boring how-to-play video. I may not be the world's greatest guitarist, but at least I'm never boring."
In a series of four themed hours premiering Monday-Thursday, May 1-4 at 9 p.m, "Heavy: The Story of Metal" explores four decades of music, each hour examining this powerful and often misunderstood genre, from metal's pioneers to its love of glam and excess; from the fight for metal's rebellious soul to its storied flirtation with the devil:
Episode One traces metal's roots in the late-'60s in the bombed-out industrial town of Birmingham England to the spectacular rise of KISS and "glam metal" in the early 70's.
Episode Two examines metal's growing pains during the '70s when both high-brow rock critics and punk rock threatened its very existence. By decade's end, bands such as IRON MAIDEN, JUDAS PRIEST and DEF LEPPARD gave birth to what became known as "The New Wave of British Heavy Metal."
Episode Three sees metal thrive in, of all places, sunny California. VAN HALEN, POISON, MÖTLEY CRÜE — it's the world of hair metal. And, keeping everyone's Jacuzzi-soaked ego in check, a little film called "Spinal Tap" emerges.
Episode Four takes a walk on the dark side: GUNS N' ROSES, METALLICA, thrash, grunge, and how the music and images of MARILYN MANSON became associated with the Columbine massacre.
Told from the perspective of the musicians, promoters, writers and fans who have kept metal's flame alive for four decades, "Heavy: The Story of Metal" contains revealing, hilarious and sometimes shocking conversations. Interviews include Sebastian Bach, Jerry Cantrell, Phil Collen, Bruce Dickinson, Fred Durst, Ace Frehley, Rob Halford, Scott Ian, Tony Iommi, Chris Jericho, Lemmy Kilmister, Chuck Klosterman, Jani Lane, Tommy Lee, Doc McGhee, Bret Michaels, Dave Mustaine, Vinnie Paul, Mark Putnam, Riki Rachtman, Dave "Snake" Sabo, Nikki Sixx, Slash, Dee Snider, Geoff Tate, Eddie Trunk, Rob Zombie and more.
In the same vein as VH1's critically acclaimed, award winning 2004 hip-hop chronicle "And You Don't Stop", "Heavy: The Story of Metal" combines interviews, verite moments and rare and exclusive footage and photos, to bring metal's history to life while examining the considerable pop-culture impact of the loudest music that ever was.
"Heavy: The Story of Metal" is produced by 441 Productions in conjunction with VH1. Stephen Mintz serves as Supervising Producer. Matt Maranz is Executive Producer for 441 Productions. Brad Abramson, Shelly Tatro, and Michael Hirschorn serve as Executive Producers for VH1.
A&E exec veepveep-general manager Bob DeBitetto said the "Family Jewels" series grew from a "Biography" special on Simmons.
"Suffice it to say, he lives in an interesting world, both unconventional and traditional at the same time," DeBitetto said. In the past year, Simmons was a guest judge on "American Idol" and starred in the VH1 reality series "Rock School", teaching classically trained students in the U.K. about rock 'n' roll.
"Gene Simmons' Family Jewels" will revolve around the family life of Simmons, his longtime girlfriend Shannon Tweed (a former Playmate of the Year) and their two kids. The Grief Co./ A Day With and the Gene Simmons Co. are producing.
KISS Coffeehouse will feature several blends of signature KISS coffees, sinful sweets, and when you need something to cool you off, the KISS Frozen Rockuccino.
KISS' official web site will be following the construction in the months to come, so check KissOnline.com for updates.
Visit Music Star Productions at booth #5810 for performance and signing schedules.
Today marks a special announcement for the Indy Racing League and a unique marketing alliance has been formed between the League and Hollywood-based Simmons-Abramson Marketing. Simmons-Abramson Marketing is made up of rock legend Gene Simmons and entertainment industry veteran Richard Abramson. The agreement will see Simmons-Abramson Marketing engaged in League marketing events, public relations, sponsorship, merchandising and branding efforts.
Today’s announcement is also highlighted with the debut of the campaign "I am INDY." The campaign is anchored by a signature song co-authored by Simmons. The effort marks the first official theme song for a modern professional sport. The song can be found by visiting us at www.IndyCar.com.
Joining us on today’s call is Gene Simmons, Richard Abramson and Brian Barnhart, the Indy Racing League’s president and chief operating officer. Gentlemen, thank you all for joining us on today’s call.
Let’s start with you, Brian, and just give us your thoughts about today’s announcement and why the League chose to partner with Simmons Abramson Marketing.
BRIAN BARNHART: This is obviously a special day for the IndyCar Series and the Indy Racing League as we are announcing a unique marketing alliance with Simmons Abramson Marketing. We spent a lot of time with Gene and Rich the last few weeks, and their enthusiasm for the sport is unparalleled.
The IndyCar Series is all about some of the most competitive racing, diversity, talent and skill in the world, and Simmons Abramson shares our excitement in the IndyCar Series and we look forward to working with Gene and Rich in communicating that attitude of daring and courage to all of our fans as we move forward.
It’s a very unique partnership, and like I say, what really stood out is their enthusiasm for what we’re doing. They believe in the sport, they think it’s cool and hip, and I think they’re going to find unique ways to communicate and market and promote our sport to audiences that can respond to these attitudes.
THE MODERATOR: Many of you out there will recognize Gene Simmons as a member of the rock group KISS. However, Simmons has long been recognized in the entertainment world as a leader in branded entertainment. Richard Abramson has distinguished himself as a marketer, record promoter, film producer and financier. Abramson has been in the entertainment industry for nearly three decades. Before we open it up to questions, we’ll just get opening comments from the newest partner of the Indy Racing League. Gene, thoughts on today’s announcement.
GENE SIMMONS: First let me start off by saying something very important, it’s near and dear to our hearts, and that is this is a tug of the heart for us. We’re deadly serious about this. We’re serious about this as a heart attack.
We intend to go places where perhaps no one initially thought of going. We’re going to turn over every rock and get everybody’s attention on it.
Our job, if you will, is to be the missionaries of Indy. We’re going to make sure people around the world, especially America, recognize the coolest of the cool is Indy because it is America. It’s the landscape of America. It’s multinational, it spreads across all lives. We’re already had the highest level discussions with CEOs of various companies. We don’t want to tell you too much too soon, but as soon as we’re ready with specifics, you’ll be blown away.
We’re here because we want to be here and we consider it a privilege to be in business with you guys, and the reason, by the way, we call the entity Simmons Abramson Marketing is because we don’t hide behind a corporate moniker, no big fancy optimum and industry, none of that stuff. We stand by what we say and we mean everything we say, and if somebody is going to get blamed, it starts right here. We’re serious about this and we’re proud to be in business with you.
Q. Richard, quickly, your thoughts on today’s announcement, as well?
RICHARD ABRAMSON: Well, Gene and I were talking a few weeks ago because we had planned -- this is kind of a personal thing. We had planned on originally, before we got involved with Indy, spending this year working on movies and doing some other stuff that’s close to our hearts. But you know what, everybody is doing that. This is one of the most exciting challenges that I’ve faced in my life.
Gene and I talk about this, I don’t know, 40, 50 times a day it seems. We send e-mails back and forth, we’ve got people scurrying around. It means everything to us. What we want to do is we want to figure out how to get the great Indy message across.
Once we went to a race, and Gene went to a couple races last year and so did I, it was like, "Oh, my God, this is unbelievable." The drivers are like rock stars in rocket ships, these cars go 225 mph. They’re all cool, hip people. We’ve got to get this word out, we’ve got to make it known to everybody, and we’ve got to try to figure out -- the challenge for us, and we will succeed, we will absolutely succeed, is to take Indy and to make it accessible to every man, woman and child in America and around the world.
The "I am INDY" theme, which we’re very proud of, both as a musical piece and as a theme for the campaign, will be heard and known by everyone. We’re not going to -- Brian and Tony George and all the great people at Indy, they put on a terrific race and a terrific product. We have nothing to do with that. We’re not going to change a thing or advise they change a thing, even if we could. What we’re going to do is make sure every single person on the planet knows how great this is.
Q. Thank you so much for coming on here today. There’s a question for Gene and Rich. Were you fans of Indy racing before you got interested in this project? And what were your early experiences with auto racing? And then when you came into it, what was it that drew you in?
GENE SIMMONS: Very good multi-faceted question. I don’t know if you’ve ever run for politics, but you would do very well. Here’s the simple bullet point that you should understand, that nobody is as much of a racing fan as the person that sits inside that rocket that goes around the track at 220 mph. I don’t want to cornball you with sound bites or anything like that. Everybody is a certain distance away from Indy. The fan who is the fan who doesn’t go to the races, that watches Indy on television is on one level; the fan that shows up at the event to watch the races is on another level. There are people whose lifestyle, everything, breathes, lives, eats Indy.
I just want to be clear about the following, and that is we don’t care on what level you love Indy, you know, if you watch it on TV, if you know about it, because we intend to take Indy in areas perhaps that we haven’t been before. There’s going to be Indy Girl clothing lines, there’s going to be Indy fashion shows. The idea is to virally spread this message because above and beyond the sport, we intend to make this a lifestyle.
Here’s what we mean: There are probably some guys sitting right next to you who are wearing a t-shirt, one of those sport shirts, and on that shirt is a guy on a horse swinging some kind of bat playing polo. The guy that’s wearing that has never played a polo game in his life, has never been on a horse, but somehow that image has become part of America.
Our notion is really very simple, not to stress – at least our message is not to stress how many rpms go around the track, but more to talk about the United States of Indy notion. And by the way, there’s nothing like going to an Indy race. You get seduced by it. There’s a vibe in there. And I’m into NASCAR, we have all kinds of stuff, including the Hot Rod Association, NHRA, something going on in Indy that other sports don’t have; it’s called family. We met Tony and Laura, salt-of-the-earth kind of people. By the way, they’ll tell you, you look into each other’s eyes and you get it. You either get that they care about this more than just a sport. We’ve met Tomas (Scheckter), and we’re going to meet the rest of the drivers in a few days.
This is going to be the kind of road that perhaps we haven’t traveled together. We think out of the box, we move fast, we do our own promos, we go to the highest level of people, and our job is to make sure that they understand what Indy is about, more about the drivers and the sport, less about how many rpms it goes around. That’s our job.
Brian will tell you all the specifics about all that stuff. You have to understand, we’re in a world of Romans, and when in Rome you’ve got to speak Roman. So to the masses our job is to make sure that message is clear and is a tug of the heart, less technical, more emotional, less sport, more icon, less about sort of the idea of people going around the track and more a part of this is America. Big story, and it needs to be told.
RICHARD ABRAMSON: That’s our job, the Indy people’s job, is to put on the great races. Are we lifelong fans, no. Are we fans now, unbelievable. To be honest, before I became partners with Gene about four or five years ago, I had never been to a Kiss concert, but I’m a Kiss fan now. I’m especially a Gene fan. Once we saw the product, went to the races, heard the cars, once we started to even meet the drivers, we were immediately captivated by it and knew we could do a great job in getting that message across.
Q. This question is for Brian: Brian, is this a new age of aggressiveness in marketing the IRL?
BRIAN BARNHART: Well, it’s certainly unique, no doubt about that. And yeah, it is aggressive, and I think that’s a stance that I think we have to take. I think we’re really excited to see Gene and Rich bring their entertainment sense and entertainment marketing ideas to the IndyCar series, and I think it is at a point in time where we need to be thinking outside the box, and with what they bring in terms of connections and opportunities, I’ll tell you what, in the time that we have spent with them the past few months, it’s been amazing the doors that can get opened and the possibilities and opportunities that this marketing relationship are going to create.
Yeah, I think it’s very aggressive and I think it’s exactly what the IndyCar Series needs.
Q. What kind of support has ABC thrown behind this and ESPN, or has it gone on yet, that conversation?
BRIAN BARNHART: Well, we have a long-term relationship with ABC and ESPN.
Our television package is in place through the 2009 series, and they’re very supportive of what we’re trying to do here because in a nutshell, what we’re trying to do is grow the value of participation in this sport and to grow the IndyCar series. I think they’re going to be very supportive of any direction the league takes that helps make that happen.
Again, because they’re in the entertainment industry, there’s some familiarity there. ABC and ESPN are committed to the series. We’re going to see some new changes in terms of our broadcast as we move into 2006, and they’re going to be a good part of it, an integral part of it, just as Gene and Rich are, and I think it’ll be a good marriage.
Q. To Gene Simmons, you’ve been in the Freak Nation before; welcome back. We talked to you about drag racing, and now you’ve moved to talk about Indy, but Indy has a lot of advantages to it from the IRL, the 500, the Brickyard, USGP. Does your contract include all of that?
GENE SIMMONS: Well, I’ll let the legal guys answer it, but in a simple word, yes. We’ve been brought on, privileged, I should say, to take a look at the entire Indy world. The reason you keep hearing the word Indy from us is we believe our side of the equation is to simplify the message, which is to say Indy is of course IndyCar, the Indianapolis 500 and so on and so forth, but there’s something here that tugs at your heart. It’s a personal sort of pledge of allegiance; Indy as in independent, Indy as in individual.
The driver who gets into his modern rocket on the ground and individually decides how to go down the highway of life, if you will, and you’ll be hearing me at least say the same thing over and over again, and I’ll tell you why: But if it’s true, it will always be true. The idea of Indy is a big idea, and if we stretch it out to a non-perhaps IndyCar fan, the word. Indy is much more seductive, much more importantly it’s much easier understood because everybody is an Indy.
We have to spread the Indy message to everybody, not just guys, not just girls, not just white, not just black, not just American but around the world, which is why we came up with the notion, and our political platform, if you will, our mantra, "I am Indy," it’s our theme song, it’s what we believe in, and it’s a personal statement that’s a sort of a personal allegiance to the United States of Indy.
Q. With looking at the USGP, the problems that it had last year, will you be able to address that? Is this a way of solidifying the USGP in the United States, or just how will you be able to capitalize on that brand around the world?
GENE SIMMONS: Well, we’re only involved in IndyCar. We appreciate what everybody else is doing, and we’re big fans of anybody that gets up every day and celebrates being another day above ground.
But our mandate, and we intend to deliver, is to take IndyCar together with everybody involved to places where it’s never been before.
Q. Does this mean that Gene Simmons will still have his involvements? As I said, we’ve talked to you about drag racing. Will that still be a part of the Gene Simmons interest level and marketing plan?
GENE SIMMONS: Well, Gene Simmons was never involved in NASCAR or any other entity, KISS has. Whether KISS continues or not as an entity is another idea. You’re an individual and America is a country. Sometimes America does things you agree with, sometimes not. But you as an individual are allowed to do what you believe in. This is something we believe in.
Again, we’re putting our names right on there. If you have something to say to anybody about what we have to say, it’s our names, our reputations, and what we believe in is right on there. We’re easy to get to, SimmonsAbramson.com.
Q. My question was for Gene and Richard. What kind of marketing initiatives did you like over what the IRL has done in the past, and what do you kind of see that you need to change or specifically what kind of things would you like to promote more?
RICHARD ABRAMSON: First of all, promote more is just get the word out better and bigger. I think one of the things we’re doing, and we’re going to have some big announcements over the next few months, is changing a little bit -- well, I don’t want to give it away, but there’s some big announcements coming in terms of -- well, I’ll just leave it at big announcements coming.
In terms of what they’ve done in the past, I look at they’ve been on ABC, been on ESPN. I think one of the -- it’s not a problem, we’re just coming at it -- I don’t want to comment on what they’ve done in the past. We’re taking a different approach. We’re taking an outside-the-box approach. We’re taking a fan approach, and what we’re trying to do is just bring it to a much wider audience. That’s what we’re going to do.
It already is pretty hip and cool, and when you realize that that’s what it’s about, we’re going to make sure everybody really understands that. We want to involve Hollywood more, we want to involve music people in it more. We want to get more individual people involved as opposed to flocks of people.
I think it’s going to become evident in the next few weeks some of the things that we’re going to do, some of the stuff we just want to make sure we’ve got completely nailed down before we announce it.
But in terms of the past, this is kind of like a new era for Indy marketing, and everything should go from now into the future.
Q. I guess some drivers criticized Danica Patrick more over some of the other drivers. Is that something you need to get away from rather than isolating one or two drivers?
GENE SIMMONS: Anyway, anyhow we can get the message out there to the masses is good. You’ve got to remember most people don’t go to events, are not Indy fans. Our job is to -- you notice we keep saying Indy instead of IndyCar. We understand it’s the IndyCar Series, we understand what it’s about. But in the same way that when you go to see, for argument’s sake, the Rolling Stones, they don’t call it the Rolling Stones. People don’t want long, convoluted messages. I’m going to go see The Stones.
When the message is clear, you can’t simplify it any more. Kiss, by the way, you can’t simplify it any more. If you go see Emerson, Lake & Palmer it’s ELP; Crosby, Stills & Nash, CSNY. We’re not simplifying a message, we want something that’s got a nice point like an arrow that can go far, sleek and hit any target we choose.
To answer your question specifically about Danica, what a glorious story, what a wonderful story. It means it appeals to women. All of a sudden you’re on the cover of Sports Illustrated. That’s cool. That’s a good beginning. Danica I’m sure will be the first one to say, look, this is a great story but it’s only one of a lot of great stories, and we intend to make sure that all these stories get out there.
The stories, by the way, are the people who actually go around the track at 220 miles an hour. That’s what "I am Indy" is all about.
Q. Congratulations on your announcement. This question is for either Gene or Richard. A lot of fans have already pulled away from the IRL scene due to the fact that they feel that the drivers are divas, they feel that they’re inaccessible, they feel that IRL has become too Hollywood, and it’s a completely unreachable series for them as fans. What would you say to the fans right now with this announcement to sort of ease their minds and say, hey, we are doing this for the good of IRL?
RICHARD ABRAMSON: I don’t know that people consider -- you may be closer to fans than we are, but the people we talk to think that it needs to be more interesting and more accessible. I agree with you on that part. As far as them being divas, I think they’re all individuals. I think this idea that we’re talking about, rock stars and rocket ships, we do want -- one of the things that I’d like to see personally is people to be able to get a little bit closer to the drivers.
They came up with a good idea last year of introducing the drivers, but they’re too far away. There’s some new things that are going to happen at the racetrack now that I believe will get people closer to the drivers; they’ll see what they look like. We’re going to do some special things to get people to understand who these guys are.
I think they’re interesting characters; I think as Gene has been saying all day, it’s the United States of Indy because it’s a melting pot. There’s people from all over the world that come here, and I think we’re going to be able to figure out how to get people behind it and behind certain drivers. So people will pick drivers and go after them based on maybe where they’re from and everything else.
We’re going to encourage the drivers to get behind, work all the markets, work in all the markets where the races are. We’re going to try to make them just more accessible. I don’t think that making -- everybody loves Hollywood, everybody loves Hollywood stars. I’m not sure that making drivers Hollywood stars is necessarily a bad idea. I think they have to be accessible to the people, and I think they have to be cool and hip and exciting, and they already are, we’re just going to make them a little bit more accessible.
The first product of the association is the debut of an “I am INDY” campaign that is anchored by a signature song, co-authored by Simmons and BAG. The IRL says this “marks the first official theme song for a modern professional sport."
“Indy cars are rockets on the ground. These drivers are modern knights in shining armor, risking their lives at close to 225 mph,” Simmons said. “‘I am INDY’ speaks to the independent spirit in all of us.”
IRL officials met with Simmons and Abramson at several racing events last year, and were persuaded that they were of like mind in how to promote the IndyCar Series.
“The IndyCar Series is about thrilling racing, championship endeavors, diversity, talent and skill,” said IRL president Brian Barnhart. “Simmons Abramson shares our excitement in the IndyCar Series and we look forward to working with Gene and Rich in communicating an attitude of daring, courage and the pursuit of the ultimate achievement in motorsports, victory at the Indianapolis 500. We are all about the focal point that brings all of us together in our mutual and individual pursuits of success – Indy. And Indy carries over to each and every event on the schedule; on and off the track.”
The IRL acknowledged that “IRL fans and others may be surprised that the league’s marketing efforts will be linked with Gene Simmons, who is better known for his blood-spitting antics as ‘the demon of KISS.’” It pointed out, however, that “the entertainment business world has long recognized Simmons’ business acumen as evidenced by his upcoming Jan. 17 keynote speech at Branded Entertainment Magazine’s ‘Next Big Idea, West: The Future of Branded Entertainment.’
“IndyCar Series races are far and away the most exciting events in the world, and this message will be driven boldly to every corner of the globe,” Abramson said.
In conjunction with Simmons Abramson Marketing, the Indy Racing League has engaged the support of B|W|R, a Los Angeles-based public relations agency, to “front-line position the drivers and teams as celebrities, athletes and compelling personalities,” the IRL says.
Simmons founded KISS 32 years ago, and the band has broken box office records around the world. Abramson, a veteran marketer, talent manager, film producer and financier, has conducted marketing campaigns for many major film releases. His management clients include actor Paul Reubens, aka Pee-wee Herman.
Listen to the "I Am Indy" song at this location (.M3U file).
01. Rock Soldiers
02. Love 'em And Leave 'em
03. Strutter
04. Rise To It
05. Detroit Rock City
06. All American Man
07. I Love It Loud
08. Calling Dr. Love
09. I Stole Your Love
10. Not For The Innocent
11. Psycho Circus
12. Unholy
13. Ladies Room
14. Rock And Roll Hell
15. Shout It Out Loud
The songs have been recorded by three musicians who used to be students at the school, while seven current students were selected to sing lead on the songs. For the album's cover, four students of different ages whose faces resemble the original KISS members were picked to have makeup applied on by a professionnal makeup artist (a former student of the school).
For more details, and how to order the CD, check out the "Christeen Sixteen" web site.
"The Classic Metal Show" airs Saturday nights between 9:00 p.m and 3:00 a.m. More information is available at this location.
Q: The "Rock The Nation" DVD is now out. It clearly shows the great chemistry between you four guys live. Do you think that there still might be a chance to capture that chemistry in studio? Do you have any plans to release yet another studio album? Do you feel it might be possible?
Eric: "We do have a great chemistry playing-wise and off stage as well. I think this is because we all are very professional as people and take what we do seriously and with a lot of pride. I would love to see a recording of some kind in the future if it is meant to be."
Q: There's been a debate on our forum about whether you play the drums on "God Gave Rock 'n' Roll to You II" or Eric Carr? I know he's in the video, but I remember Paul [Stanley] revealing in an interview that it's actually you on the track. How did it feel to step into Eric Carr's shoes?
Eric: "Yes, I did indeed play drums in the studio on 'God gave Rock 'n' Roll to You II'. This was, of course, produced by Bob Ezrin! This was his return to KISS and it was such a good chemistry that he did 'Revenge' as well. At the time, Paul called me to record the track for the movie soundtrack since Eric was ill and I lived in L.A. I was very honored to be asked & had no idea at that time how sick Eric really was. He was a really great drummer and sadly left us way too early..."
Q: Paul Stanley is planning to release a solo album next year. Have you heard it? What is your opinion about it?
Eric: "I have heard four tracks only. Very good stuff and modern-sounding in a very classic Paul Stanley way :-) I know ALL the fans are gonna dig this record. I hope Paul does some shows this year. I know I will be there!!"
Q: You have been in KISS for some time now. What is your dearest memory from that time?
Eric: "I have many ups and downs from KISS (and life in general ), don't we all? I would have to say I really look back on 'MTV Unplugged' with a lot of pride. It was very cool to show the world that KISS is much more than smoke and mirrors! Also the first time in make-up with Paul, Ace [Frehley] and Gene [Simmons] was surreal, to say the least!!!"
Paul's very first public showing of his paintings took place at this same gallery on April 6, 2005. Stanley recently told Kiss Kollector Online that he is also planning on art exhibitions throughout the USA soon.
In other news, the Paul Stanley fan web site Paul Stanley's Paradise has decided to take it one step further and also put out a print fanzine dedicated to the Starchild. Earlier this month, the 24-page premiere issue came out, featuring articles on Paul's upcoming solo album (summing up some of the most important news bits from the Internet), an exclusive interview with Gerard Marti (the owner of the Célébrités Gallery where Paul had his two art exhibitions), a Paul Stanley timeline for 2005, a review of the KISS show from September 10 in Columbus, Ohio, and more. More information is available at this location.
Stanley recently completed work on his first non-KISS release since his self-titled 1978 album, issued in tandem with solo projects from the other three original KISS members. Joining Stanley on his new solo album are session drummer Victor Indrizzo, guitarist Corky James, former MARILYN MANSON and current ROB ZOMBIE guitarist John 5, former KISS guitarist Bruce Kulick (who plays bass on a few songs) and noted string arranger David Campbell. Songtitles set to appear on the CD include "Wake Up Screaming", "Second to None" and "Live to Win". An early 2006 release is expected.
In a posting on his web site, Eddie had the following to say regarding Ace's appearance on the show: "He has nothing but positive things to say about all members of KISS, past and present. He said he has spoken to Paul [Stanley] several times and hopes to reach Gene [Simmons] soon. Now that he has changed his life he says he has no idea how Gene and Paul put up with him for as long as they did and he has no problem with anything they have done with the band and its history. He feels that Tommy Thayer is the best possible replacement for him in KISS. He feels his time in the band did not end that badly and simply believed that the Farewell Tour was a .... farewell. He is open to doing one final show or tour with KISS if approached. He wished all of the bands past and present members a Merry Christmas, as well as band manager Doc McGhee. Ace plans on touring in the spring with an all new 'all-star' band. He will also launch an official website soon that he hopes to sell his next CD on. No time table for when the CD will be done but it might be a three-CD set with some different styles of music and maybe an all-covers CD."
As previously reported, Frehley's former record label, Megaforce Records, will be issuing a compilation titled album, entitled "Greatest Hits Live", on January 24, 2006. According to a press release, this CD "represents some of the best work from legendary KISS guitarist Ace Frehley during the period after his highly publicized departure from one of the greatest rock bands of all time." As with the previous Megaforce Ace Frehley releases "12 Picks" (1996) and "Loaded Deck" (1997), Ace himself had nothing to do with putting this package together.
As previously reported, Frehley's former record label, Megaforce Records, will be issuing a compilation titled album, entitled "Greatest Hits Live", on January 24, 2006. According to a press release, this CD "represents some of the best work from legendary KISS guitarist Ace Frehley during the period after his highly publicized departure from one of the greatest rock bands of all time." As with the previous Megaforce Ace Frehley releases "12 Picks" (1996) and "Loaded Deck" (1997), Ace himself had nothing to do with putting this package together.
In other news, Steiner Sports Marketing is currently arranging an appearance with KISS and offering autographed guitars, photographs, drum heads and other memorabilia. The first signing is scheduled for January 18, 2006. More information is available at SteinerSports.com.
As previously reported, KISS singer-guitarist Paul Stanley told Launch that the group is currently on hiatus, with the individual members focusing on their own endeavors. "Right now we're sitting back and taking some time to decide when we go back out," he said. "I've spent quite a bit of the last year off and on working on my album, so that's really been my focus — although KISS is always my focus, always has been and it's well documented. You know, everything will pretty much be on hold until I see this through."
Stanley said he's completed recording the solo album and is now looking for a label to release it.
"My Dad The Rock Star", created by Simmons in collaboration with the Canadian animation company Nelvana, tells the story of a mild-mannered son of a Gene Simmons-like rock star who wanted to live a normal life, but whose wealthy and eccentric father make that goal near-impossible.
For more information on "My Dad the Rock Star", click here.
Stanley said he's completed recording the solo album and is now looking for a label to release it.
Former KISS guitarist Bruce Kulick, now a member of GRAND FUNK RAILROAD, played bass on Stanley's album.
The "Rock the Nation Live!" DVD was filmed last year in Washington DC. Besides the concert footage, the DVD features behind-the-scenes features and interviews with the band members.
"It really, for me, resoundingly validates why this band exists," says singer-guitarist Paul Stanley, who's looking for a label home for a solo album he recently finished. "It's not a tepid re-creation of the past. It's really an ageless beast that dominates at will. It's timeless."
Stanley says the current lineup, which includes co-founder Gene Simmons plus drummer Eric Singer and guitarist Tommy Thayer, has the musical dexterity to incorporate more songs, something KISS' original lineup lacked.
"Unfortunately, after the [1996] reunion tour, old problems and old limitations and old roadblocks began to pop up again," Stanley says. "We were pretty much limited to the same set list for all subsequent tours, and that was not fun, challenging or what I wanted us to be doing.
"It took some regrouping and changing to keep marching forward, but this [lineup] allows us to maintain the best of what we are and what we have been. There was no desire to change, just to sharpen the blade. The band has never been better."
"I had a great time at this event," Criss said. "It was terrific to hang out with heroes like firemen and the police, not to mention all the fans that came out for the event."
Check out pictures at this location.
Criss is currently putting the finishing touches on a new solo CD, which he hopes to release early next year. "This is the first time I've ever done it all, writing, arranging, singing, playing, editing, mixing and producing," Criss had previously said about the upcoming effort. "I feel this is the best work I've ever done. I've never worked so hard on a record. It's about life, love, and ups and downs. Real Peter Criss!"
He visited the Indianapolis Motor Speedway and dined in one of the private dining rooms at 14 West with IMS CEO Tony George and driver Tomas Scheckter.
What does it all mean? Nothing yet, said IRL (Indy Racing League) spokesman John Griffin. Simmons might be back for the Indianapolis 500 as a VIP guest, but no other official relationship was forged during this visit, Griffin said.
"Greatest Hits Live" (view cover here) track listing:
01. Rip It Out (Live)
02. Breakout (Live)
03. Cold Gin (Live)
04. Shock Me (Live)
05. Rocket Ride (Live)
06. Deuce (Live)
07. Strangers In A Strange Land (Live)
08. Separate (Live)
09. NY Groove (Live)
10. Rock Soldiers (Live)
11. One Plus One
12. Give It To Me Anyway
"Greatest Hits Live" features members of ACE FREHLEY'S COMET: Anton Fig (drums), John Regan (bass), Tod Howarth (guitar/keyboards) and Richie Scarlett (guitar), and Jamie Oldaker on drums.
"After a two-week delay, (OVERKILL drummer) Ron Lipnicki and I finally recorded the KISS cover 'Almost Human' at Crystal Studios last week. It's available now on my website www.DanLorenzo.net.
"Ron and I have been jamming KISS covers together since he joined HADES in 2000. After he beat cancer two years ago Ron told me he wanted to record some. I had never recorded cover songs before, but it makes us happy, so I figured, 'Why not?'
"In 1978 when I first picked up a guitar, it was all about KISS. Even if they eventually became a joke, their old stuff still holds up.
"Ron will be back behind the drums on the next OVERKILL tour starting in February. You gotta go see Ron play live, he kicks ass."
"I think I'm not done. I think that, unfortunately, things just haven't gone as smoothly as expected, and the second, you know, revision of that first surgery just didn't do what was necessary. And I think after the new year I'm gonna have to start looking to probably have something redone."
The 55-year-old says the degeneration of his left hip is partly the product of thousands of shows performed since the early '70s.
Stanley has finished work on a solo album that he plans to release in 2006.
KISS have just released a new concert DVD, Kiss Rock The Nation Live!, which was filmed last year in Washington D.C.. The DVD includes the group's 20-song performance as well as behind-the-scenes features and interviews. You can order the DVD online by clicking this link:
The biggest selling item was the original album artwork for "Rock and Roll Over", which sold for $9,954.00. The artwork, which was created by artist Michael Doret in 1976, was one of the most watched and bid-upon items in the auction. Gene Simmons' fire-breathing sword sold for $6,043.00 and his famous "$" boots went to the highest bidder for $6,238.00. The auction, which ran well into late Sunday night, experienced a heavy round of bidding on several items from the 1979 KISS show at the Detroit Pontiac Silverdome. Gene's bloody towel from that show received over 30 bids and finally sold for $2,024.57. "The towel was one of the most interesting items to watch in the end," explains Backstage Auctions co-founder Jacques van Gool, "because a few of the bidders fiercely going after the towel had attended that show back in 1979, which for a collector makes the item that much more desirable."
The "KISS My Auction" event brought together KISS fans and collectors from all over the world. "KISS continues to be one of the most highly collectible bands and this auction proves that regardless if you love the band or not, there is no denying that KISS fans and collectors still want a piece of them and will pay just about anything to get it," explains Kelli van Gool, co-founder of Backstage Auctions.
Backstage Auctions has wrapped up their 2005 auction season but there are always unsold auction items available at the Backstage Auctions online store which is found at their website, www.backstageauctions.com. Backstage Auctions hosted several major auctions this year for the Motor City Madman (Ted Nugent), classic rock journalists and photographers Steven Rosen, Billy Tompkins and James Fortune and the very successful Rock Art Poster auction which featured over 1000 Bill Graham and Family Dog original posters. Backstage Auctions is already preparing for their 2006 auction line up. "We have scheduled a couple of amazing auctions to kick off next year," explains Kelli, "and we will be announcing those after the first of the year."
Backstage Auctions is a leading online auction company specializing in classic rock memorabilia direct from the private collections of music industry professionals. Founded on the principles of combining their client’s career achievements and popularity with the demand and interest of collectors and fans who desire truly authentic and unique collectibles, Backstage Auctions is the place where rock legends live on.
For additional information and to view a complete KISS My Auction Prices Realized, visit www.backstageauctions.com.
"We were on our tour last spring around Europe," Lordi said. "On our day-off, ESP [featuring Kulick and current KISS drummer Eric Singer] was playing at The Rock in Copenhagen, and we were to play there at the same club the very next day. So, we rushed from Germany to Denmark to catch them. After the ESP gig, I asked their tour manager if there would be any chance to get Bruce to do a guest appearance on the next LORDI record. Few days later, I got an e-mail that said yes. So, that's pretty much how it came about!"
Kiss Kollector Online: Why did you want Bruce to take part in your new album?
Mr. Lordi: "KISS has played a huge part in our lives. Without KISS, there would not be LORDI, that's for sure. And since we (the band) grew up in the Eighties, we grew up with KISS with Bruce in it. I'm still secretly waiting for the re-reunion, with Bruce! (laughs) So, of course, just to ask him was a huge deal for us. And we never really thought that he would actually be willing to do it! It's Bruce Kulick, for God's sake! (laughs) It was more like, it doesn't hurt to ask. So we are really excited to have him. Our guitarist Amen still gets kicks out of it every single day, without any exaggeration! For us it is so unreal to even understand this, Bruce Kulick is playing on our song!?"
Kiss Kollector Online: Please tell me a little about the song Bruce played on.
Mr. Lordi: "The song is called 'It Snows In Hell'. It's not quite a ballad, but it is definitely the slowest and 'prettiest' piece on the album, minus my vocals (laughs). Bruce's solo is a 'Revenge'-style solo — these are his own words."
In addition to Kulick, "The Arockalypse" features a guest appearance by by former ACCEPT frontman Udo Dirkschneider (on "They Only Come Out at the Night").
Criss is currently putting the finishing touches on a new solo CD, which he hopes to release early next year. "This is the first time I've ever done it all, writing, arranging, singing, playing, editing, mixing and producing," Criss had previously said about the upcoming effort. "I feel this is the best work I've ever done. I've never worked so hard on a record. It's about life, love, and ups and downs. Real Peter Criss!"
Modern is a scary word,” opines Stanley, when asked for a characterization of the record. “I would certainly say that it is very much in keeping with my personality and keeps a very consistent viewpoint, but it sounds really big and the songs are great. The singing is great and the songs are great and the playing is great. You know, so far so good.
Quite diverse like Gene’s album, or is it a fairly unified sound? “Well, it certainly… you know, not to be smart, but it’s consistent in its diversity. There’s enough divergence in terms of the songs, and yet they all sound like they belong on the same album. There’s nothing that’s experimental and there’s nothing that is out of character, but after doing this as long as I have, I’ve covered enough bases that I think I’ve just brought them all home on this album.”
Stanley is also celebrating the release of KISS’ new DVD – Rock The Nation Live!, a gorgeous concert package shot in the DC area last year, stuffed with rarities like ‘Love Her All I Can’, ‘Tears Are Falling’ and ‘Makin’ Love’. Paul offers comment on the advantages of the two disc package. “Well, you know, the fact that it is high def makes a huge difference. And that we have this KISS Powervision, as we’re calling it, where you can choose who you want to watch. And of course if you have your sanity and your good taste, you’ll be watching me. It’s a great concert and a great time capsule of the last tour. Again, what it does is that it very much says that this band really is justified in terms of the longevity and how people view the band, good or bad. I could care less. We are exactly who we aspire to be, and who we work our asses off to be. This isn’t a shadow of a bygone era. When we hit the stage, as in the last tour, you see a stage set up and show that is signature KISS. The band looks and sounds like it was… you pick a year.”
As for Richie Sambora, he says in an interview in the December/January issue of Germany's Metal Heart magazine that Gene Simmons had invited him down to Los Angeles to audition for KISS even before he joined BON JOVI. "Gene Simmons called me and invited me to come to L.A. to audition for KISS," Sambora said. "KISS absolutely wasn't my favorite band, but obviously it was a big honor and a big opportunity for me. In the end, nothing came out of it, but at least I had a couple of great weeks in Los Angeles." Upon returning home, Richie's then-bass player told him he should hook up with a certain Johnny Bongiovi. They hit it off, and a few weeks later they started writing songs together. Long story short, John Bongiovi changed his name into Jon Bon Jovi, and Richie and Jon would become very famous with their band BON JOVI after releasing their debut album in 1984 and opening for KISS that year.
Yngwie Malmsteen states in a September 2005 interview on Glam-Metal.com, "I remember once when I was living in Sweden and I got a phone call from KISS. It was so funny because it was like, 'Yeah we hear that you are really, really hot' and I'm like, 'I don't know... it's quite cold here.' (Laughs) Stuff like that, I didn't fucking get it at all. Then they asked if I was at least 6 feet tall and I'm like, 'I don't know, I'm 1 meter and 83 cm.' I had no fucking idea what they meant at the time. There was a real communication problem there."
Yngwie was discovered in 1982 by Shrapnel Records founder Mike Varney (also a writer for Guitar Player magazine) and asked to fly in from Sweden to L.A. to play on the debut album by STEELER. After STEELER, Yngwie joined ALCATRAZZ and in '84 he released his first solo album under the name "Yngwie J. Malmsteen's Rising Force".
Planners for the American march couldn't be happier. "We were thrilled when we heard about the plans in Australia," says Paul Carpenter, chair of the American rally. "KISS has had a widespread influence on rock and roll, and Australian fans are some of the most passionate people in the world. Their plan is a perfect complement to the Cleveland march."
Plans for the American rally include the posting of flags from all over the world, sent in by fans unable to attend the U.S. march in person. "We've received email from all over the world expressing support," explains Joe Apple, the co-chair of the Cleveland event. "It's only a matter of time before the Hall of Fame realizes that when KISS introduce themselves as 'the hottest band in the world,' they have the credentials to prove it."
The 2006 inductees into the Hall of Fame are BLACK SABBATH, SEX PISTOLS, MILES DAVIS, LYNYRD SKYNYRD and BLONDIE. More information about the rally is available at this location.
"Following our press release of the 20th of June, the KissWorld closure is continuing but it is a long and painful process. It is with a heavy heart that we must announce that under instructions from our bankers, the KissWorld stock is to be auctioned on the 15th of December 2005. The Charles Leski auction house in Melbourne Australia will be staging the auction, which will be accessable to all KISS fans, collectors and investors around the world.
"The auction will include some very rare pieces such as the one-of-a-kind Dave Ashman airbrushed KISS surfboard, (The Purple Rose), Gene's [Simmons] leather jacket signed by all four members, Bruce Kulick's signature guitar, the KissWorld building's eight huge external murals, 'Rock the Nations' signed lithographs and many other rare pieces. This is it so grab your piece of Kisstory before it disappears for good, because good or bad, KissWorld is a part of the KISS journey.
"To view the items being auctioned, obtain the price range and a bidding form; please visit either of the following websites: www.kissworld.net, www.leski.com.au.
"We would also like to take this opportunity to thank those members of staff, the artists and the fans who helped us to get KissWorld off the ground and who stuck by us during the difficult times.
"You wanted the best, you almost had the best, KissWorld!"
Gene Simmons in a 1999 interview: "I've never been high, I don't drink, I don't smoke. . . You have to be an idiot to numb yourself with chemicals."
Hilsen, 65, has been in prison for the past year and three months awaiting trial on charges that he failed to pay support to his ex-wife, Rita Hilsen, and their two children.
In the 1970s and 80s, Hilsen was a successful Manhattan psychotherapist. He became KISS's manager in 1988 because the band had grown leery of music-industry insiders; Dr. Hilsen was the therapist for Paul Stanley, KISS's frontman.
KISS leaders Gene Simmons and Stanley were served subpoenas by a private investigator in September 2003 before their performance at Chicago's Tweeter Center in connection with the case.
The purpose of the subpoenas was to determine what, if any, financial ties exist between Hilsen and the band, as well as whether any band members have been in touch with him since he became a fugitive. Hilsen and KISS split in 1992.
"Udo has my absolute favourite heavy metal voice," said LORDI leader Mr. Lordi. "I saw U.D.O. on the 'Animal House' tour in 1998. I was there in the first row, and since that I've been to every single U.D.O. and ACCEPT gig in Finland. His voice has influenced me a lot. I'm sure that some fans may have noticed how I sometimes desperately try to imitate his singing style," Mr. Lordi laughed.
Regarding Bruce Kulick's appearance on the CD, LORDI guitarist Amen said, "We are all huge KISS fans, so to co-operate with a legend like Mr. Kulick is the greatest honor we could get! I remember when I was a kid and I saw KISS's video 'Who Wants to Be Lonely' where Bruce Kulick is playing a solo in a shower. Well, of course I wanted to be like him! Me and my friends went to my parents' garden, and while the others spurted water all over me I was playing a guitar — it was a lot of fun! This is something I never could have imagined, even in my wildest dreams. To play guitar on the same track with Bruce Kulick is just unbelievable."
"Without KISS, we wouldn't have our little band", added Mr. Lordi. "I grew up in the '80s, and I grew up with KISS with Bruce in the group. So, for me personally in some way, Bruce Kulick is the 'real' lead guitarist of KISS! Also, KISS's musical influence on LORDI comes primarily from the Eighties lineup."
Ward admits that she was in a three-year romantic relationship with Simmons that she says was monogamous, and which preceded her equally monogamous relationship with her now-husband. And she claims that Simmons's comments about his admittedly prolific sex life — he claimed to have had sexual encounters with 4,600 women — falsely suggested she was unchaste or promiscuous, when VH1 juxtaposed these comments with photographs of her.
Read Hilden's arguments for why the case should have been dismissed at FindLaw.
Stanley is currently working on his first non-KISS release since his self-titled 1978 album, issued in tandem with solo projects from the other three original KISS members. Joining Stanley on his new solo album are session drummer Victor Indrizzo, guitarist Corky James, former MARILYN MANSON and current ROB ZOMBIE guitarist John 5, former KISS guitarist Bruce Kulick (who plays bass on a few songs) and noted string arranger David Campbell. Songtitles set to appear on the CD include "Wake Up Screaming", "Second to None" and "Live to Win". An early 2006 release is expected.
Two things are certain about the birth of the KISS Army -- Bill Starkey founded that fan club as a Terre Haute teen-ager in 1975, and "it's a very bizarre story" as he puts it.
So let's start at the end.
Starkey is now a 49-year-old elementary teacher at Indianapolis Public School 109. His third-graders aren't too familiar with KISS -- that quartet of face-painted, platform-heeled rockers who hit it big with 1970s anthem tunes such as "Rock and Roll All Night." Some of those kids' parents remember KISS. But not like Starkey does.
KISS hailed from New York. But their most persistent fan worked from a basement in Terre Haute.
It was 1975. The primary rock 'n' roll radio station in town, WVTS, would play anything from obscure album cuts by Robin Trower to FM staples by The Beatles and The Who. But WVTS absolutely would not play any songs by KISS, a new band Starkey had seen in concert elsewhere around the Midwest. The programming director, Rich Dickerson, wouldn't budge, Starkey says.
When Starkey and his friends called the WVTS request line, "They'd laugh and say, we don't play KISS."
What happened next is part of rock music folklore, and it comes in two versions -- the well-known mythical tale, or the less widely understood truth.
The myth, favored by KISS star Gene Simmons and the band's official publicity, claims Starkey and his KISS Army -- totaling nearly a thousand fans -- surrounded the WVTS studios in the woods near West Terre Haute and refused to leave until the disc jockeys finally relented and played KISS.
Dramatic as that sounds, it never happened. As one of Starkey's KISS Army rank-and-file members Mike Leslie explains, "The myth is kind of good for their reputation, but we weren't that diabolical back then."
In reality, the process was more like water torture. Six months' worth of phoned-in KISS requests by Starkey and his friends slowly chipped away the station's resistance. Starkey's Terre Haute North classmate Rob Smith, using the cover of one of Leslie's albums, produced the first-ever KISS T-shirts in the print shop at the high school, where they became a hit. And then came a letter-writing campaign, threatening WVTS's demise and trashing the station's mainstays, such as Aerosmith.
But the real icebreaker turned something far less sexy and outrageous -- the free-market system. A new station, WPFR, hit the airwaves and, of course, immediately seized the neglected KISS market share. "Rock and Roll All Night" is exactly what WPFR did. And when word came that KISS had been booked for a concert in Hulman Center that November, Dickerson realized his teen-age nemesis could give WVTS the upper hand in the battle for listeners.
So Dickerson asked Starkey to send him more of those pro-KISS letters, vowing to read one each night at 5 o'clock.
The concert turned into a sellout. And when the band's PR people found out, they excitedly begged WVTS to tell them how it happened.
"They told them, 'There's this 18-year-old idiot in his basement who calls himself the KISS Army,'" Starkey says.
The concert on Nov. 21, 1975, drew 11,026 fans -- nearly a thousand more than Elvis Presley attracted here four months earlier. "It was crazy," Starkey recalls. "KISS could not have done anything wrong." KISS even was greeted by his grassroots KISS Army (which included four buddies wearing KISS-like face paint known as the Unknown Soldiers) when the band members arrived on a plane at Hulman International Airport. The State High band performed. (North and South wanted free tickets, Starkey remembers, and they'd all been sold.) The real Army -- the U.S. kind -- also came, and gave the wild musicians a motorcade escort into town, where they visited the WVTS studios and then rocked Hulman Center.
Later, Starkey feuded with KISS when its Army spread nationwide and the band chose to base it in larger markets. But over the years, he's made peace with longtime band members Paul Stanley and Simmons, considers current KISS guitarist Tommy Thayer and drummer Eric Singer friends, and even received a thank-you plaque from the band at one of their Hulman Center concerts. (They've played here eight times.)
"They had to finally give credit where credit is due," says Pat Kelly, another former Terre Haute KISS Army member. "It was Bill."
Kelly sees Starkey at an annual KISS expo in Indianapolis each year. Leslie spins his old KISS LPs "when I get, as my kids call it, in my hippie moods," and his 4-year-old grandson's favorite song is "Rock and Roll All Night." They're 49, like Starkey, and many of the other KISS fans who helped make Terre Haute "a part of history" -- at least, rock history.
As for Starkey, he saw KISS at Verizon Music Center in Noblesville last July. And he's still recognized in rock circles as the founder of the KISS Army. "Anytime VH1 has done a KISS special, they interview me," Starkey says. The KISS Army even got mentioned recently by Jon Stewart on "The Daily Show" and in a "Simpsons" episode.
"Anytime pop culture gets a hold of something I did in my basement, it just blows my mind," Starkey says.
With the 30th anniversary of the KISS Army's public birth in Terre Haute coming this Monday, Starkey just wishes his hometown would just recognize that.
"It's still a part of history," he says.
Wednesday's debut solo album, "Transylvania 90210: Songs of Death, Dying and the Dead", is available now on Roadrunner Records.
According to the publisher's description, "The Guitar Play-Along Series will help you play your favorite songs quickly and easily! Just follow the tab, listen to the CD to hear how the guitar should sound, and then play along using the separate backing tracks. The melody and lyrics are also included in the book in case you want to sing, or to simply help you follow along."
Previous books from Hal Leonard on KISS, or featuring KISS, include: "Best of MTV Unplugged" (this one features the KISS track "Rock and Roll All Nite"), "Guitar Pack KISS August Buyers Guide", "KISS Alive!", "The Best of KISS", "The Best of KISS for Bass Guitar" and "The Best Of KISS – A Step-By-Step Breakdown Of The Band's Guitar Styles And Techniques".
The auction, which will run through November 30 at www.mimifishman.org, features over fifty items including signed guitars, New Year's Eve ticket/VIP pass packages, and signed posters. Every item is either signed, or rare. Other artists featured include PHISH, PHIL LESH, THE STRING CHEESE INCIDENT, UMPHREY'S MCGEE, BECK, COLDPLAY, NICKEL CREEK, YONDER MOUNTAIN STRING BAND, JACK JOHNSON, 311, BRIAN WILSON, LORETTA LYNN, and many others.
The Station Family Fund is an all-volunteer, 501 c 3 recognized, tax exempt, nonprofit organization founded to offer assistance and relief to people directly affected by the fire at The Station nightclub in West Warwick, Rhode Island. 100 people perished, close to 200 were severely injured, and more than 60 children lost one or both parents in the horrific fire on Feb 20, 2003. Station Family Fund information can be found at www.stationfamilyfund.org.
Todd King, a survivor himself of the fire, is the President of the Station Family Fund. "It's vital we don't forget the families left behind. The Station Family Fund was formed to help those families, as well as the survivors," said King. "The Mimi Fishman Foundation has been instrumental in helping our organization raise funds through past online auctions."
"It's near and dear to my heart because it's where I started," Thayer said Thursday (Nov. 10) of school band programs. "It worked for me."
Thayer, who grew up in Cedar Hills, where his parents Jim and Pat Thayer still live, played the saxophone at Sunset High School. He also learned the guitar and eventually took over for original KISS member Ace "The Spaceman" Frehley.
For the past few months, Thayer has been rediscovering his Oregon roots: He was recently elected to Pacific University's board of trustees, is building a house at the Oregon Coast and has donated money to Sunset High.
Thayer met W.L. Henry Principal Enedelia Schofield at a recent administrative retreat for Pacific University in Forest Grove. She mentioned to him that the school has never had a full band.
The 620-student elementary school has the second-highest poverty rate in the district: 90 percent of its students receive free or reduced-price lunches.
"A lot of our students have a lack of role models (for music education)," Schofield said. "They don't have the exposure to music. Music could be the key to their success."
According to a posting on KissOnline.com, Frehley made the rounds at The Borgata in Atlantic City on Saturday (Oct. 1), dropping by to hang out with Rick Springfield after Rick's sold-out show at the resort. Ace and Rick chatted it up about the biz and touring and were then escorted over to the other venue within the casino complex to catch the final encore of PEARL JAM's also sold-out performance, where Ace was penciled in to jam with the band. Ace was brought up onstage by PEARL JAM guitarist Mike McCready, who announced to the capacity crowd, "I never would have picked up a guitar if it wasn't for Ace Frehley." Springfield and his entourage cheered Ace on from the VIP area as the band launched into an overcharged rendition of "Keep on Rockin' in the Free World" with Ace offering up the blistering leads to the SRO crowd.
As part of the Steiner-KISS agreement, Steiner will arrange an appearance with KISS and offer autographed guitars, photographs, drum heads and other memorabilia. Fans will also have the opportunity to send in their own favorite KISS collectibles to be signed by the band. The first KISS signing is scheduled for late 2005.
Formed in 1973, KISS is one of rock n roll's most enduring groups. Though they're famous for their outlandish makeup and wild costumes, such songs as "Rock and Roll All Nite", "Beth" and "Detroit Rock City" remain rock radio staples to this day. The current incarnation of KISS features original members Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley, as well as Eric Singer and Tommy Thayer.
So says Manhattan Supreme Court Justice Rosalyn Richter, who's allowing a suit to proceed by an upstate woman angry at Simmons for implying she was "unchaste," The Post's Dareh Gregorian reports.
Lawyers for Simmons argued that Georgann Walsh Ward's slander suit should be thrown out because the times, they have-a-changed — and that implying Ward had sex out of wedlock isn't slanderous anymore. Ward, 53, sued Simmons this year after seeing pictures of herself and Simmons featured in a VH1 "rockumentary" titled "When KISS Ruled the World." Most of the pictures were shown during a segment called "24-Hour Whore," a title inspired by Simmons himself.
"I was a 24-hour whore. All I ever thought about was sex," Simmons said in the rock doc. "There wasn't a girl that was off limits, and I enjoyed every one of them."
Pictures of Ward are shown in the film as Simmons recounts his various conquests, which he's estimated at over 4,600 women. One photo shows her "embracing Simmons, who is barechested and wearing studded leather pants, and shows Simmons' leg wrapped around plaintiff and plaintiff grabbing Simmons' behind," as the suit puts it.
But Ward maintains she was no Kiss groupie. She says she met Simmons in 1972, while he was an elementary-school teacher living with his mom in Queens, and that they had "an exclusive monogamous romantic relationship" for the next three years. She met her current husband in 1976, has a 21-year-old son and doesn't appreciate the implication that she was "a prostitute" or "sexually loose woman."
Richter said she's allowing the suit to go forward despite Simmons' argument "that changing social morés could affect how certain sexual conduct is viewed by the community." The judge said "allegations of unchastity, when combined with claims of promiscuity and casual sexual encounters," can still be considered defamation.
Ward's lawyer, Benedict Morelli, called Simmons' argument "novel" and said, "Good try." Simmons' lawyer, Linda Steinman, did not return a call for comment.
"So far everybody that's heard [the album] thinks it's great, so I'm real pleased with it," Stanley told Billboard.com of the as-yet-untitled set. "Again, at this point, if it sells 100 copies or 100,000 copies or 10,000,000 copies, it won't change my life either way. All it's about is doing what I want to do and what I have the freedom to do. That being said, it's a very mainstream album. I don't think I'm going to surprise anybody being mistaken for somebody else. It was important to me to do the album I wanted to do, without any regard for anybody else's opinion or direction."
With regards to how the new CD compares to his solo debut, Stanley said, "It's not 1978 anymore. It's certainly the same mentality, and certainly I'm a better singer today. My perspective and where I'm at in my life at this point, and what I've experienced and seen, brings something else to the table that wasn't there then. But I still look back on that album as a really great snapshot of who I was and what I was doing then."
Joining Stanley on the album are session drummer Victor Indrizzo, guitarist Corky James, former MARILYN MANSON and current ROB ZOMBIE guitarist John5, former KISS guitarist Bruce Kulick (who plays bass on a few songs) and noted string arranger David Campbell.
"It was great because there's a freedom to also being the director," Stanley enthused. "In the studio, it's called the producer, but in actuality, it's the director — the person who puts the scene together. It's great to not be limited by having to use a set group of people, because then you have to tailor to their ability or to their taste. So in doing something like this, you have total freedom to not only do what you want, but to bring in the people who can do it well. It's been great."
On the possibility of solo tour in support of the new album Stanley told Billboard.com, "I would love to go out, and my plan is to go out and play."
State Supreme Court Justice Rosalyn Richter denied Simmons' motion to dismiss two of three claims by Georgeann Walsh Ward, 53, who says in court papers made public Friday that Simmons slandered her during a "rockumentary" about KISS.
Ward said in her lawsuit, filed in January, that photos of her appeared 11 times during the report on KISS, which was shown on the network several times in July and August. In it, Simmons claimed to have had sexual encounters with 4,600 women.
The documentary, "When KISS Ruled The World," chronicled the band's 30-year career, its impact on rock music and the quartet's "wild" antics. The other band members were guitarist/singer Paul Stanley, drummer Peter Criss, and guitarist Ace Frehley.
Simmons says during the show, "There wasn't a girl that was off limits, and I enjoyed every one of them," Ward's court papers say.
At another point Simmons says, "I was a 24-hour whore. All I ever thought about was sex." This, court papers say, was shown and followed by a photo of Ward with Simmons.
Ward's papers say that because a photo of her with Simmons — though her name is never mentioned — was shown during remarks about his sexual adventures, she was in effect portrayed as "wild" and "unchaste."
Richter let stand Ward's two claims that she was depicted as unchaste or promiscuous during the documentary, even though Ward admitted she was in a "romantic" relationship with Simmons.
Social mores regarding sex between unmarried persons have changed, the judge said, but the law still says that calling a woman unchaste is defamation.
The judge dismissed Ward's claim that her likeness was used for commercial purposes without her permission. Richter said editorial use of photographs in documentaries or news publications is not barred by law.
Ward's lawyer, Martha McBrayer, did not return calls for comment.
Linda Steinman, who represents Simmons, did not return calls for comment.
"Udo has my absolute favourite heavy metal voice," said LORDI leader Mr. Lordi. "I saw U.D.O. on the 'Animal House' tour in 1998. I was there in the first row, and since that I've been to every single U.D.O. and ACCEPT gig in Finland. His voice has influenced me a lot. I'm sure that some fans may have noticed how I sometimes desperately try to imitate his singing style," Mr. Lordi laughed.
Bruce Kulick, KISS's lead guitarist for 12 years and a member of GRAND FUNK RAILROAD, UNION and ESP, will play a solo in a song called "Snowing in Hell".
"We are all huge KISS fans, so to co-operate with a legend like Mr. Kulick is the greatest honor we could get!" LORDI guitarist Amen said. "I remember when I was a kid and I saw KISS's video 'Who Wants to Be Lonely' where Bruce Kulick is playing a solo in a shower. Well, of course I wanted to be like him! Me and my friends went to my parents' garden, and while the others spurted water all over me I was playing a guitar — it was a lot of fun! This is something I never could have imagined, even in my wildest dreams. To play guitar on the same track with Bruce Kulick is just unbelievable."
"Without KISS, we wouldn't have our little band", added Mr. Lordi. "I grew up in the '80s, and I grew up with KISS with Bruce in the group. So, for me personally in some way, Bruce Kulick is the 'real' lead guitarist of KISS! Also, KISS's musical influence on LORDI comes primarily from the Eighties lineup."
"The Arockalypse" is tentatively scheduled for release early next year.
"KISS remains one of the top collectible bands today and with a large array of items in the market, serious collectors are searching the market for those unique, one-of-a-kind pieces," explains Kelli van Gool, co-founder of Backstage Auctions. The consignors in the "KISS My Auction" are individuals who were part of the KISS family in one capacity or another from 1973 through the early 1980s. Backstage Auctions is extremely honored to represent these individuals who are now willing to open their personal KISS treasure vault and share their personal and historic mementos with the ever growing KISS Army.
Among the more notable pieces will be the original artwork for "Rock and Roll Over", Gene Simmons' fire breathing sword and a pair of boots, a vintage Paul Stanley Gibson Marauder guitar and a stage worn Peter Criss belt. Also featured in the auction are record awards, vintage shirts and jackets, tour documents, press kits, rare vinyl, picks 'n sticks, party invitations, Christmas cards, rare photos, promotional items, toys and so much more.
"It will be an early KISSmas this year," says Jacques van Gool, co founder of Backstage Auctions and long time KISS collector. "I thought I had seen it all, but even I have been in awe over the rich history behind these authentic pieces."
The "KISS My Auction" preview will go live Sunday, November 27 and the auction will open for bidding on Sunday, December 4.
Taped this summer in Washington, D.C., and Virginia Beach, the Image Entertainment release features core members Paul Stanley and Gene Simmons flanked by guitarist Tommy Thayer and drummer Eric Singer.
"We were playing a lot of songs that Kiss hadn't played in years, or haven't played at all," Thayer told Billboard.com. "One day, Doc McGhee, the manager, came into the dressing room, and said, 'We really need to film and record this show, because it's so good. It's probably the best Kiss performance I've seen.' So we said, 'OK.' That was the spark that got the whole thing going."
"Rock the Nation Live!" boasts the "Kiss Powervision/Select-A-Kiss" option to hone in on an individual member as well as candid behind-the-scenes vignettes.
"At any moment, a viewer can choose what they want to see, and use different camera angles," Stanley said. "So if you happen to have the good taste to see me, you can watch pretty much solely that. It's really your mix and your version of the show. I don't think we can forget that the band is really in peak form, and that's really shown on this DVD."
Stanley said he was thrilled to air out such Kiss oldies as "Christine Sixteen," "She" and "Parasite" during the tour.
"To be able to go out and play every and any Kiss song was very freeing," he enthuses. "We reached a point where a lot of the tours after the reunion tour were virtually the same set list, and it wasn't because we didn't want to play other songs. Once Tommy and Eric came in, on any given night, we could change the show, and really dig deep into our catalog. A band that's been together this long not only should be able to play 'Rock and Roll All Nite' and 'Love Gun,' but (also) 'Two Timer' or 'Got To Choose."'
Still, fans continue to await a vault-clearing visual release, a project that Stanley said is closer to reality than ever before.
"Yesterday was the beginning of planning really the ultimate Kiss experience," he said. "That Scorsese/Dylan piece ('No Direction Home: Bob Dylan') was eye opening, at least to me, in terms of how you can be immersed in a time capsule, and not only see the music and be part of the crowd, but also get a sense of who Dylan was then. There are times when I'm much more interested in actual footage of somebody in the moment than somebody reminiscing 20 or 30 years later. It's fascinating to see where somebody was at, and what their mindset was in the midst of storm, as opposed to looking back on it. That set a really high bar, and I think that is more likely our approach at this point."
One activity not on the horizon for the time being is a return to the studio for Kiss, whose last album was 1998's "Psycho Circus." "There's definitely talk," Stanley said. "I had a hip replacement a year ago, and that unfortunately didn't go as well as it should have, and they did it again, and that also didn't go as well as it should have. So the recovery from that has been longer, although about six weeks ago we did a corporate show for 15,000 people, in Columbus, Ohio. The band is as good and ready to go as ever. The difference is that I have to make sure that I can commit 100% of my energy for a tour, and not just a show."
In Eric Carr's memory, his family is releasing the official Eric Carr Bobblehead figures this month through the official Eric Carr web site, www.ericcarr.com. These exclusive, handmade figures have been manufactured by Bobblehead Heros, Inc. in a limited edition of 500 pieces. Each figure is 7" tall and is made of a sturdy resin and individually packaged. These one-of-a-kind bobbleheads are hand-painted and numbered.
In other Eric Carr news, the November issue of KISS Kollector magazine — which will be out in a few weeks — will include an annual memorial tribute to Eric Carr, featuring never-before-seen Carr material as provided by his family.
Jesse Hilsen, 65, has been in prison for the past year and three months awaiting trial on charges that he failed to pay support to his ex-wife, Rita Hilsen, and their two children, now grown.
"I knew it was wrong not to pay child support," Hilsen told U.S. Magistrate Judge Theodore H. Katz as he entered the plea.
He also agreed to pay nearly $162,000 in restitution. The plea to a misdemeanor rather than a felony will enable Hilsen to keep his license to practice child psychiatry and to work off his debt.
He remained incarcerated after the plea and after agreeing to disclose all his assets to the government. No sentencing date was immediately set.
Rita Hilsen, who has lived in a homeless shelter in Manhattan for the last decade, originally sued Hilsen for $2 million.
"To me, it's beyond comprehension," she told The New York Post. "He left his children and wife on welfare and food stamps and fled the country for 10 years."
Hilsen could get time served after spending the past 15 months behind bars while awaiting trial on charges he stiffed his ex-wife and three kids.
The plea deal, set to be finalized as soon as Monday, would require Hilsen to return to work and fork over half of his post-tax income each week to his former wife, Rita Hilsen, until he has paid her nearly $162,000 in restitution.
"I'm hopeful that this will be resolved soon," lawyer Eric Sears said.
A key provision in the plea is that Hilsen, 65, would cop to a misdemeanor instead of a felony, thereby allowing him to keep his license to practice child psychiatry and work off his debt, sources said.
Misdemeanor and felony charges relate to failure to pay child support both carry the same maximum sentence of two years behind bars.
Hilsen, who used 10 aliases while hiding out in three countries, was busted in the Catskills last June after 10 years on the run.
Hilsen raked in $300,000 to $500,000 annually in the four years he managed KISS, but had filed for bankruptcy and refused to pay alimony to his ex-wife.
Rita lost her East Side apartment in the bankruptcy proceeding and has lived in an 8-by-12-foot room in a shelter for the last ten years.
KISS leaders Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley were served subpoenas by a private investigator in September 2003 before their performance at Chicago's Tweeter Center in connection with the case.
The purpose of the subpoenas was to determine what, if any, financial ties exist between Hilsen and the band, as well as whether any band members have been in touch with him since he became a fugitive. Hilsen had been Stanley's psychiatrist for several years before becoming the band's business manager. He and the band split in 1992.
The company told investors that its end-of-year balance sheet "will show net liabilities" — meaning that, technically, the business is worth less than nothing.
Shares in Sanctuary plunged 15 per cent as the company said that it was reviewing its accounting policies, as well as dealing with the consequences of a dismal year of trading.
Sanctuary is also planning on making 175 staff redundant to cut costs, twice the amount planned initially. According to analysts, that exercise will cost an estimated £8 million, to achieve annual cost savings of about £16 million.
Read more at Times Online.
Paul has also discussed the RASPBERRIES influence on his music. In an interview for the group's official biography, "Behind The Mask", Paul spoke about borrowing some RASPBERRIES riffs ("Tonight" and "Ecstasy") for "Wouldn't You Like To Know Me", from his 1978 solo album. Paul also came up with the electrifying guitar figure that kickstarts "Deuce", which was inspired by the guitar riff that frames the RASPBERRIES biggest hit, "Go All The Way".
Check out a picture of Stanley hanging out backstage with the RASPBERRIES at this location.
Oct. 24: Edgar Winter
Oct. 25: Horror master Wes Craven, Rob Zombie
Oct. 26: "Ghostbusters" star Dan Akroyd, Ronnie James Dio
Oct. 27: Film director John Carpenter, Glenn Danzig, Dee Snider (TWISTED SISTER)
Oct. 28: Ozzy Osbourne, Al Jourgensen (MINISTRY)
Oct. 31: Gene Simmons (KISS), Elvira
"Nights with Alice Cooper" is a classic-rock format and is nationally syndicated on the United Stations Radio Networks. Air times differ, so make sure to check out NightsWithAliceCooper.com for more information.
According to TheReporter.com, Bonifacio, who loved heavy metal music and comic books, had mentioned to his fiancee, Michelle Baptiste, that he wanted to be buried in such a coffin.
The news was forwarded to James Lubs, the funeral director, who drove to Los Angeles recently to retrieve the special coffin that was Bonafacio's last wish.
Bonifacio was a part of the National Guard's 1st Battalion, 184th Infantry Regiment based in Dublin.
While working for a Martinez refinery, he was called up in December for deployment to Iraq.
A car bomb explosion killed Bonifacio Oct. 10, while he was manning a checkpoint at the heavily fortified Green Zone, surrounded by a maze of barriers erected to protect American and Iraqi officials.
Bonifacio's funeral was held Friday (Oct. 21) in Vacaville.
For more information and/or to donate online, go to JustGiving.com.
As previously reported, Stanley is currently working on a new solo album, tentatively due in early 2006. Paul has been collaborating with Swedish songwriter Andreas Carlsson (BON JOVI, DEF LEPPARD), and for the first time in 15 or so years, Desmond Child (BON JOVI, AEROSMITH), on material for the CD. The drumming on the album was handled by Victor Indruzzo, who has toured and recorded with MACY GRAY, toured with BECK and appears on various recordings by the Matrix production team. Most of the guitars were laid down by Corky James, who also is heard on various recordings by the Matrix team, including AVRIL LAVIGNE. Keyboards were handled by Russ Irwin who has toured with both STING and AEROSMITH. Songtitles set to appear on the CD include "Wake Up Screaming", "Second to None" and "Live to Win".
"Please click on the link here to download the show or listen to the show directly from your browser. Or subscribe to our show by way of our xml subscription feed (instructions to be found in the Marshall amp on the right)."
"Gene Simmons' Rock School", which is one of VH1's most successful shows, has become somewhat of a pop culture phenomenon as legendary KISS bassist Gene Simmons shows fledgling musicians how to rock out, heavy-metal style!
"They really missed the point," agrees rally co-chair Paul Carpenter. "Among other things, Stewart told us that 'candidates are reviewed and discussed relative to their impact on this music that we broadly call rock and roll.'
"What the Hall establishment fails to acknowledge is not just KISS's impact on music, but on rock and roll itself. KISS not only created a musical spectacle, but a culture. For much of the world, the word 'KISS' is synonymous with the phrase 'rock and roll.' KISS reset the bar for other artists when they stormed into the '70s. Three decades later, their influence on show business is everywhere."
Apple and Carpenter have received support for the protest rally from all over the world. "The outreach from fans, performers and volunteers is exactly what we expected — generous and enthusiastic," Apple says. "We can't wait until August."
Information about the rally is available at this location. Volunteers for the event can sign up to participate by clicking here.
The museum's goal is to educate and excite visitors with a comprehensive collection of classic "pop culture" toys, with an emphasis on the social and historic evolution of the action figure. It is the only official action figure museum in the world, paying tribute to the designers, sculptors, and toy companies that have turned action figures from a child's plaything to a work of art.
As part of the grand opening, a costume contest was held and of course three KISS fans dressed as the hottest band in the world won the contest.
For more information visit www.actionfiguremuseum.com.
Lydia's book will contain over 1,500 rare and previously unpublished photos, memorabilia and memories from the early days of KISS.
"[On Sunday], Ace Frehley visited the annual Sober Teens Festival at Carmel High School in Carmel, NY, to co-sign contracts of teenagers who signed a contract to remain sober until they’re 21 years old. Obviously, Ace's appearance attracted some KISS fans. A handful of fans showed up to meet Ace, and got a few items signed by the original Spaceman. The contract signing took place at the Celebrity Stage from 1 – 4:30 p.m., with Ace showing up around 2 p.m. Ace and bodyguard arrived in a limo at the back of the school, and once Ace got out of the car he signed a dozen items before heading for the Celebrity Stage. When Ace was done co-signing the teenagers' contracts, he casually walked out of the school to be picked up by the limo again. Before he drove off, he signed some more KISS items for the few fans present."
Early last year, Kiss Kollector Online reported that the former KISS axe slinger had seriously started focusing on getting and staying clean and sober again — and that he had already stayed away from the party scene at that point for over half a year. Frehley has now reportedly managed to stay sober for about two years and has kept a low profile for all that time. He only popped up once in a while here and there — including jamming with PEARL JAM very recently.
Santana is reportedly appalled by the standard of Simmons' music and insists the rocker hides his lack of skill behind layers of gothic clothing and black makeup.
Santana said, "He's not a musician, he's an entertainer. A musician is (John) Coltrane, Bob Marley. KISS is Las Vegas entertainment, so he wouldn't know what music is anyway. That's why he wears all that stuff.
"A musician doesn't need the mask and the mascara so there's a difference between an entertainer and a musician."
Writing on his official web site in response to Santana's comments, Simmons said, "Carlos Santana is cool. His assessment? I have no problem with it. That's why they make menus in restaurants. Not everyone likes the same meal. I wish him well."
Nov. 23 - Alpenrock - Zürich, SWI
Nov. 25 - Stadthalle - Babenhausen, GER
Nov. 26 - Burnout - Witten, GER
Dec. 01 - The Rock - Copenhagen, DEN
Dec. 02 - (venue TBA) - Barcelona, SPA
Dec. 03 - (venue TBA) - Madrid, SPA
Dec. 04 - La Gabbia – Vicenza, ITA
The goal is still the same. Students will be asked to sign contracts pledging to stay sober until the age of 21, then the contracts will be co-signed by celebrities. This year, Kiss guitarist Ace Frehley is already on board, and other stars are in the works.
But what's happened since the free festival's inception is that it's become a "must-play" gig for local high school bands. With at least 700 students expected to attend the festival Sunday, musicians say it offers the perfect opportunity for exposure. This year, five bands from Putnam County will hit the stage, and one is traveling from New Jersey.
Chris Cassone, a recovering alcoholic and the founder of Sober Teens, said he is grateful for the festival's popularity. He was inspired to start it after 16-year-old Andrew McArdle, a Carmel High School junior and football player, died in a 2002 car crash that may have been alcohol-related. McArdle was friends with Cassone's youngest daughter.
With experience in the music industry, he knows rock 'n' roll isn't typically associated with sobriety. Seeing that students are working to change the stereotype is "very cool," Cassone said.
Jeremy Aquilino and Alex Lipton, Mahopac High School seniors, said word about the Sober Teens Festival has spread. Their band, One Month Standing, will be performing. They doubt their performance will do much to change the age-old combination of sex, drugs and rock 'n' roll, but they think it's important to support sobriety.
"Keeping kids responsible and out of trouble is always really good," said Lipton. "Getting kids to go to a show instead of going and drunk driving is better."
According to Mothers Against Drunk Driving, more than 2,200 children died of alcohol-related traffic accidents in 2002. About 10.7 million children between 12 and 20 were reported to have consumed alcohol during the month before a nationwide survey in 2001. That's about 30 percent.
The Putnam County Sheriff's Office supports the festival, and local businesses have already donated more than $7,600.
"Numbers" is the latest multi-artist tribute that Kulick has conceived and overseen. He previously helmed projects dedicated to METALLICA, QUEEN, ALICE COOPER, AEROSMITH and KISS (of which his brother, guitarist Bruce, once belonged). In fact, MOTÖRHEAD won the 2004 best metal performance Grammy for the version of "Whiplash" they recorded for a second album Kulick devoted to METALLICA, "Metallic Attack: Metallica - The Ultimate Tribute".
"I really try to take the proper tools for the job," Kulick said of how he determines who plays on which song. "And also, a lot of these guys played on tours with MAIDEN or were influenced by MAIDEN or [are] just huge MAIDEN fans."
"Richie Kotzen [for instance] may not be a real big name value here, but in Japan, because he was in MR. BIG, they know who that is more than they know some of the people that we know. So because these records are released worldwide, it's also important for me to make sure that there's enough people on there that will appeal to any individual territory."
"I can't reiterate too much how much the fun part is part of this," Kulick said.
"[WWE wrestler and FOZZY frontman Chris Jericho] was going to wrestle me to the ground if I didn't put him on this record," Kulick joked. "Paul Gilbert's going, 'This guy's a superstar wrestler who happens to also sing,' and he's in awe of him and asking for autographs for nephews and relatives and friends, and here's Chris Jericho just drooling because [Gilbert is] one of the guys that he thinks is one of the greatest guitar players to ever walk the planet."
"Numbers from the Beast" features 11 classic IRON MAIDEN tunes revamped in honor of the band's 25th anniversary. The final track listing, complete with stellar rock personnel is as follows:
01. Run to the Hills
Vocals: Robin McAuley (MSG)
Lead Guitar: Michael Schenker (MSG)
Rhythm Guitar: Pete Fletcher (PYGMY LOVE CIRCUS)
Bass: Tony Franklin (THE FIRM)
Drums: Brian Tichy (BILLY IDOL)
02. Wasted Years (mp3, streaming)
Vocals: Dee Snider (TWISTED SISTER)
Lead Guitar: George Lynch (DOKKEN, LYNCH MOB)
Rhythm Guitar: Bob Kulick (PAUL STANLEY BAND, MEATLOAF)
Bass: Jeff Pilson (DOKKEN, FOREIGNER)
Drums: Jason Bonham (BONHAM, FOREIGNER)
03. Wrathchild
Vocals: Paul Di'Anno (IRON MAIDEN)
Lead Guitar: Alex Skolnick (TESTAMENT)
Rhythm Guitar: Chris Traynor (HELMET, BUSH)
Bass: Frank Bello (HELMET, ANTHRAX)
Drums: John Tempesta (HELMET, TESTAMENT)
04. Flight of Icarus
Vocals: Tim "Ripper" Owens (JUDAS PRIEST, ICED EARTH)
Guitar: Doug Aldrich (WHITESNAKE, DIO)
Bass: Jimmy Bain (DIO, RAINBOW)
Drums: Simon Wright (DIO, AC/DC)
05. Fear of the Dark
Vocals: Chuck Billy (TESTAMENT)
Guitar: Craig Goldy (DIO)
Bass: Rickie Phillips (STYX)
Drums: Mikkey Dee (MOTÖRHEAD)
06. The Trooper (mp3, streaming)
Vocals: Lemmy Kilmister (MOTÖRHEAD)
Guitar: Phil Campbell (MOTÖRHEAD)
Guitar: Rocky George (FISHBONE, SUICIDAL TENDENCIES)
Bass: Chuck Wright (ALICE COOPER, QUIET RIOT)
Drums: Chris Slade (AC/DC)
07. Aces High
Vocals: Jeff Scott Soto (YNGWIE MALMSTEEN, SOUL SIRKUS)
Guitar: Nuno Bettencourt (EXTREME, DRAMAGODS)
Bass: Billy Sheehan (Mr. BIG, NIACIN)
Drums: Vinny Appice (BLACK SABBATH, DIO)
08. 2 Minutes to Midnight
Vocals: Joe Lynn Turner (DEEP PURPLE, RAINBOW)
Guitar: Richie Kotzen (MR. BIG, POISON)
Guitar: Bob Kulick (PAUL STANLEY BAND, MEATLOAF)
Bass: Tony Franklin (THE FIRM)
Drums: Chris Slade (AC/DC, THE FIRM)
09. Can I Play With Madness? (mp3, streaming)
Vocals: Mark Slaughter (SLAUGHTER)
Guitar: Bruce Kulick (KISS, GRAND FUNK RAILROAD)
Bass: Marco Mendoza (THIN LIZZY, TED NUGENT)
Drums: Aynsley Dunbar (DAVID BOWIE, WHITESNAKE)
10. The Evil That Men Do
Vocals: Chris Jericho (WWE wrestler, FOZZY)
Guitar: Paul Gilbert (MR. BIG, RACER X)
Rhythm Guitar: Bob Kulick (PAUL STANLEY BAND, MEATLOAF)
Bass: Mike Inez (ALICE IN CHAINS, OZZY OSBOURNE)
Drums: Brent Fitz (VINCE NEIL, UNION)
11. The Wickerman
Vocals: John Bush (ANTHRAX, ARMORED SAINT)
Lead Guitar: Jeff Duncan (ARMORED SAINT)
Guitar: Scott Ian (ANTHRAX)
Bass: Blasko (ROB ZOMBIE)
Drums: Ben Graves (MURDERDOLLS)
Backing Vocals: Jason Miller (GODHEAD)
The cover of every official IRON MAIDEN album has featured a zombie called "Eddie." Eddie has been painted by artist Derek Riggs for 20 years. "Numbers from the Beast" cover art was naturally painted by Riggs and is a must-have for any MAIDEN fan.
"Numbers from the Beast" marks the first release on the newly revamped Restless Records. William Hein, current president of Rykodisc and former head of Enigma Records, co-founded Restless in 1985 as a punk and metal sub-label of Enigma. Restless became a stand-alone label after Capitol-EMI acquired Enigma, and was subsequently acquired by Rykodisc in 2003. Now, back with a new sound and logo, Restless returns to its roots with the MAIDEN salute, as well as an upcoming reissue from California punk outfit 45 GRAVE.
As previously reported, Britain's Channel 4 recently gave the go-ahead to a second series of "Gene Simmons' Rock School".
The show, which follows Simmons as he tutors teens in the ways of rock and roll, began in the U.K. on Sept. 30 with a respectable 2.1 million viewers.
Production on the series' second season reportedly began last week in Kirkley High School in Lowestoft, Suffolk. As well as taking on a mix of students aged 14 and 15, Simmons will also be required to live in a nearby stately home.
For the one-time assistant football coach/English teacher seeking out his “15 Minutes” was never the objective. Neff was simply looking for a way to motivate the football team that had named their defense KISS (Keep It Simple Stupid). But the results of one special 24-hour period on October 9, 1975 went beyond motivating a football team; it brought students and administrators together and inspired a whole community. It also helped to shape the legacy of one of rock music’s all time greatest bands, KISS.
“It brought the high school together,” said then principal John Laurent. “For years, we had been trying to unite the student body and our faculty. Kiss accomplished that in one night. It’s also unlikely the impact the band had on Cadillac will ever be repeated.”
PUMPED UP
Their time in Cadillac also had a lasting impact on the band.
“We came to Cadillac because we loved football and we were excited that our music was the inspiration behind a winning football team,” said bassist Gene Simmons. “However, we (the band) were the ones who left Cadillac inspired. That concert, the parade and everything else from our time there will go down as one of the most important moments in our band’s history. We have performed hundreds of concerts in lots of cities all over the world and the Cadillac performance will never be forgotten by any of us.”
The Cadillac KISS concert continues to rank as one of the greatest rock and roll publicity stunts of all time, but Neff (the event/concert mastermind) laughs at that because it was never about the publicity for KISS or Cadillac, but was simply about celebrating the success of the football team as a result of being inspired by the band’s music.
“These guys were so sincere that getting publicity out of this was the furthest thing from their mind,” said Neff. “The publicity came after the fact and not during. Basically, we had some local media coverage but there wasn’t even one professional photographer at the concert. After this happened it became international news and, without knowing what we were doing, it resulted in millions of dollars of publicity for KISS.”
HOT TOPIC
Even 30 years later Neff continues to receive inquiries from fans and media all over the world and figures he has received a couple thousand requests for information. Some of those requests have come from VH-1 for their documentaries on the band, including most recently “When KISS Ruled The World,” that features interviews with Neff and in-depth details on the Cadillac concert. The 2002 KISS biography includes a detailed account and 16 pages of photos from the Cadillac visit.
As with any rock and roll event of historical significance, the stories and participation become as mythical as the event itself.
“At best 2,000 people were at the concert, but if you count all the people who claim to have been there, then more than 10,000 people were packed into the gym that night,” laughs Neff. “Heck, I have had people claim to have been at the concert who were only three years old when it happened.”
Another thing Neff finds interesting is the hundreds of people who claim to have been involved in coordinating the event, when actually there were only about a dozen.
“Years later I would have students come up to me, often students of the kids who were from the class that has become known as ‘The KISS Class,’ and ask me if I was around when Kiss came,” said Neff. “Before I could respond they would tell me how their uncle or dad organized the whole thing. One of my favorite stories was a boy who told me how his mom partied all night with Kiss. Well, I was with the band from the time they arrived to the time they left and there wasn’t an all-night party.”
OFFICIAL ESCORT
The schedule was tight for the band when they arrived in Cadillac at noon on October 9, 1975. They headed to their rooms at Bill Oliver’s Caberfae Motor Lodge, put on their makeup, had lunch, and then headed to the fire and police station for an official escort to Cadillac High School. Upon arriving at the high school, the students had formed a tunnel along the walkway to welcome the band. Principal Laurent was on hand for a ceremonial ribbon cutting as the band entered the school.
Inside the school the band was treated to a screening of a film about KISS made by students; then it was off to meet the famed KISS defensive unit and the rest of the football team. KISS even took time to hang out with the marching band before heading into the gym for a sound check.
“As I reflect back on some of the memorable moments, the fact that they allowed several people from the community with small children to watch their sound check spoke volumes of the character of these guys,” said Neff. “Then they took time to take pictures with these young kids aged three to 12 and their parents. At homecoming there is always a ceremonial bonfire and it was before the concert. The band came for that and Gene jumped out of his limousine and blew two flames from his mouth. These guys did everything and more than we asked of them.”
NO BLOOD, PLEASE
Everything and more meant some special requests from the school administrators. Neff remembers that there was a lot of uncertainty about this, especially from some of the religious leaders from the community. The school administration was concerned as well, but Neff said despite whatever preconceived “bad boy” reputations that the band had, they were absolute gentleman during their visit.
“First coach Brines went to Paul Stanley over concerns to the introduction to the song ‘Cold Gin,’ explaining that this was a high school and they could play the song, but just pull the intro, and Stanley said sure, whatever you want, coach,” said Neff.
“Another example was when Principal Laurent approached Gene Simmons about his legendary blood-spitting during concerts. He told Simmons that Cadillac was a conservative community and the blood-spitting might offend a lot of people. He also told
Simmons that it was the band’s concert and that he should do what he felt was most appropriate. Simmons responded, ‘Out of respect for the school and the community, I won’t do it.’ “He kept his word.”
Simmons speaks with pride at the fact that in the history of hundreds of KISS concerts, the only time he has ever skipped his blood-spitting was in Cadillac.
“Look, we were guests in their home,” reflects Simmons. “If someone asks me to take off my shoes to enter their home I am going to respect that. There has always been this take on rock stars and in particular with Kiss that we are a bunch of self-centered egotists that didn’t have any respect for others. In the early days of the band we use to hear that we worshiped Satan and that the band stood for Knights in Satan’s Service. I didn’t have to think twice when they came to me because they had enough respect to talk to me about it. They didn’t ask me not to do it, they respected my artistry and my ability to make the right decision.”
LINGERING ON
The band proved to Neff and Cadillac that their visit was sincere long after the concert.
“Every Friday night, no matter where they were at, they would have us call them or they would call us to find out how the team did,” said Neff. “This continued for at least a couple of years.”
“I could remember on several occasions our manager telling us that Cadillac had won their game and we would be giving each other high-fives backstage,” said Simmons.
Drummer Peter Criss feels that at times it is almost like the band attended the high school.
“Every so often someone from that class would show up backstage with the yearbook from that year,” said Criss. “We would flip through the book and look at the pictures, and while we were there just for the day, it was like we were there for the whole year.”
The Cadillac class of 1976 yearbook features several photos of the KISS experience and is a definite collectors item. Occasionally one appears on Ebay, selling for hundreds of dollars.
As for pulling it off again, Neff feels it would be impossible.
“We didn’t tell the students about the band coming until two days before it actually happened,” said Neff. “We only charged $2 to get into the concert and we kept 50 cents to pay for all the make-up we used (all the students, teachers and community leaders had their faces painted) and gave the band the rest. We only gave then $3,000 and that didn’t even come close to covering their expenses. They picked up the rest. The costs to do something like this again would make it prohibitive.”
BACK TO THE FUTURE?
So what about a reunion concert?
“The band and I have talked about it, but they are so big and their production is so large it would really be impossible,” said Neff. “Where would we hold it? How would we determine who gets to come? I guess we all agree that we wouldn’t be able to truly capture that moment again.”
Since 1975 only one member of KISS has returned to Cadillac.
“I had my own band,” said Criss. “We had played Detroit and were headed to Northern Michigan (Upper Peninsula) for a concert. This was I think 12 years ago. As we were headed north I asked my bus driver if we were close to Cadillac. He said yes, so I said let’s go there for the night.”
Neff remembers getting a call from Criss.
“I was at school and they had me come to the office and Peter says to me, hey I am in town with my band and we would like to play here tonight,” said Neff. “I had him go over to the Pines and boy was the owner surprised when Peter Criss came in and said, ‘Hey, how would you like to have my band play here tonight.”’
As for Neff, he remains friends with the band and their management. Anytime KISS performs in the Midwest he is offered tickets and backstage passes. He has attended numerous concerts and has lots of memories.
“A couple years after they came to Cadillac they had this big New Year’s Eve concert in New York City (at that time a Gallup Poll had KISS as the number one band in the world) and they flew my wife and I to the show,” said Neff. “They gave us VIP treatment and after the show we hung out together. I even snapped a photo of Gene without his make-up. Gene said to me, ‘You know Jim, that picture would be worth a lot of money.’ I told him I would never sell it or show it to anyone. He told me he believed me and I kept my word.”
KISS SNOWSTORM
It has been a couple of years since KISS has toured and since Neff has last spoken to any of the members. He is not sure if they will tour again and jokes that maybe for the 50th reunion of the Cadillac concert, the band could come back and do an unplugged show (the band members would be in their late 70s by then).
But for Neff what is really important these days is spending time with his grandchildren, though a day doesn’t go by that he doesn’t give some thought to that magical 24 hours with KISS.
“My 15 minutes of fame has extended to 30 years,” laughs Neff. “I guess what makes me most proud is to know that at every concert since the one in Cadillac, our community is honored during their encore when the famous KISS Snowstorm takes place. Yes, we invented that at the Cadillac show and they have used it ever since.”
After a breakfast with civic leaders KISS particpated in a parade through down before heading back to the school to say goodbye. As KISS boarded their helicopter at the high school around noon the next day after enjoying a breakfast with community leaders, they paid Cadillac back by giving them a snowstorm of leaflets. The band members leaned out of the helicopter and threw out 4,000 fliers that read, “Cadillac, KISS Loves You!”
It’s a love affair that has lasted for 30 years.
For an in-depth look at the KISS in Cadillac experience visit Jim Neff’s website, www.neffzone.com , where copies of the original letters between him and the band exist, along with a detailed account of all the events that took place including the development of the famed KISS Snowstorm.
As previously reported, Apple, Motorola and Cingular Wireless recently announced the availability of the world’s first mobile phone with iTunes, the ROKR, enabling music fans to transfer up to 100 of their favorite tracks from the iTunes jukebox on their Mac or PC to their mobile phone. Cingular Wireless is running an ad campaign for the new service they provide for the iTunes phone. An outdoor billboard ad was revealed by Cingular COO Ralph de la Vega, which features KISS. You can also select "Rock and Roll All Nite" as one of the online demos for the new iTunes phone. Head over to the Cingular Make me Dance campaign web site. Click on the "Make Them Dance" button (lower left). Drag song number 4 to the phone's display to see any character dance to KISS.
"Rock School - Music from the First Series" track listing:
01. QUEEN - We Will Rock You
02. MOTÖRHEAD - Ace Of Spades
03. DEEP PURPLE - Smoke On The Water
04. THE KINKS - You Really Got Me
05. DAVID BOWIE - Suffragette City
06. T REX - Get It On
07. FREE - Alright Now
08. STEPPENWOLF - Born To Be Wild
09. RAINBOW - Since You’ve Been Gone
10. THE DARKNESS - I Believe In A Thing Called Love
11. PLACEBO - Teenage Angst
12. FAITH NO MORE - Epic
13. THE RAMONES - Rock & Roll High School (Live)
14. GEORGE THOROGOOD AND THE DESTROYERS - Bad To The Bone
15. THE TROGGS - Wild Thing
16. BLONDIE - One Way Or Another
17. DAVID BOWIE - Heroes
18. RAY CHARLES - Mess Around
The DVD of the series will be available from November 14.
In other news, Frehley, who has previously announced plans to begin work on a solo album, attended grand opening of the Hard Rock Cafe in Times Square, New York City on September 17. Check out pictures from Wire Image.
KISSTERIA has made appearances nationally and worldwide, including television shows such as ESPN's "Sport Center" and NBC's "Last Call with Carson Daly".
After the event, KISSTERIA hit the streets of New York and Times Square and were literally mobbed by tourists with cameras wanting photos with the group.
In other news, Holland's Kiss Kollector magazine, one of the premier KISS fanzines in the world is celebrating its 14-year anniversary. The full-color fan magazine is published four times a year by KISS aficionado Joop Van Pelt.
Available in early November, the 40-page issue #54 features an exclusive Kiss Kollector interview with Gene Simmons, a tribute to the 30th anniversary of KISS "Alive!" with an exclusive behind-the-scenes interview with album cover photographer Fin Costello, Gene's 56th birthday party, the exclusive KISS Honda Fest concert and much much more. Kiss Kollector's issue #54 also features a special annual memorial tribute to Eric Carr.
For more information, visit www.kisskollector.com.
Featuring 512 high-gloss pages packed with over 525 full-color photographs of rare KISS collectibles (no black-and-white photos on poor grade paper here!), this vast identification and price guide is the second work on KISS produced by Tom Shannon, author of the Bible of the KISS collecting world, "Goldmine KISS Collectibles Price Guide", published in 2000. Prices have been updated, and the range of items covered has been multiplied. As if all of that is not enough, the price has been slashed to an unheard of $12.99! That's right, a KISS book, value priced. At this price everyone can afford to become a KISS memorabilia expert.
Highlights of the book include:
* 512 easy-to-read pages jam-packed into a handy 4.25" x 5.25" size, with descriptions and prices of thousands of pieces of KISS memorabilia from around the world!
* Over 525 full-color photographs on quality high-gloss paper. This is a top-quality book through and through, not rough paper with a couple of color insert pages.
* Also included is an exclusive 29-page interview that Tom Shannon conducted with the genius behind KISS, original manager Bill Aucoin. Bill discusses such topics as:
* The first appearance of KISS as a group on vinyl (not the KISS LP).
* How KISS singles were selected, and why there were not more photo picture sleeves from America.
* Why "Alive!" has not been certified platinum to this day (seriously, it is not certified.)
* The error version of the "Alive II" LP.
* The greatest publicity stunt ever for KISS, the Cadillac Michigan celebration, including a hilarious version of how the KISS helicopter was used.
* The story behind the Gibson Marauder guitars Paul busted.
* Why Paul does not wear a fire helmet anymore.
* The real reason KISS included inserts in their LPs (Bill is a genius! The record labels need to do this again to cut down on consumers burning CDs)
Known as the KISS Army, fans of the make-up wearing, blood-spitting icons say they are tired of the lack of respect given to the '70s icons who are still playing to packed stadiums 30 years after their creation.
"KISS has been America's number one gold-record-award-winning group of all time," says rally chairman Paul Carpenter. "Look at their impact on the music industry! Artists from Lenny Kravitz to Garth Brooks have said on record that KISS were the most influential musicians in their lives. The fact that year after year the Hall has failed to place KISS on its list of finalists is not just an oversight but a disgrace."
According to rally co-chair Joe Apple, KISS fans from all around the world are already making plans to converge on the Hall of Fame Museum in Cleveland on August 4, 2006 to tell the Hall and the world that KISS deserves a place of honor among the legends of rock & roll. "The KISS Army formed as a grassroots movement by a teenager in Indiana 30 years ago," says Apple. "We're going to mobilize the generations of KISS fans who have enlisted over the years to make this an event the entertainment world will never forget."
Information about the rally is available at this location. Volunteers for the event can sign up to participate by clicking here.
KISS singer-bassist Gene Simmons doesn't necessarily disagree with that idea. He told Launch that the concept of original members isn't widely held by fans, and it isn't really accurate anyway. "There's no question that there's a core of fans — five-10 percent, my sense is — who believe in original members," he said. "And yet, when you look at original members, THE BEATLES are not original members — Ringo is not an original member; the STONES — barely. You know, they've had so many members come and go, but it's the STONES; and AC/DC's aren't original members; and VAN HALEN; and JOURNEY...you go down the list of every — almost every band you can think of."
"Following a review of the discussions to date regarding a possible offer for the company, it has decided to withdraw from all remaining discussions with third parties who had previously expressed an interest," Sanctuary said in a statement.
Music majors including EMI Group and Warner Music Group had at one time considered buying some or all of the company, according to sources familiar with the situation.
Sanctuary said it still has the support of its bankers. The company's shares fell 18 percent to 6.5 pence by 1527 GMT (4:27 p.m. British time).
Sanctuary is the world's largest independent music label and a major force in artist management, touring and merchandising. Its artists include Elton John and former Guns 'n' Roses frontman Axl Rose.
Last week Sanctuary said it expected to post a full-year loss before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation, well below analyst expectations, following a series of problems at its operating businesses. It plans a major series of cost-cuts by year-end.
KISS Army has once again brought a lot of attention to KISS in Norway. The tribute album got maximum exposure in the media, making entertainment headlines on national television, radio and in newspapers.
"Gods of Thunder – A Norwegian Tribute to KISS" consists of chart-topping and award-winning bands from Norway, including million-selling artist Espen Lind, "World Idol" winner Kurt Nilsen (who beat U.S. platinum artist Kelly Clarkson in last year's final) and Norwegian superstars WIG WAM, with a guest apperance by former KISS guitarist Bruce Kulick. In addition to the music, the CD cover is quite historic and unique, as it was designed by Ken Kelly, the man behind the original "Destroyer" and "Love Gun" paintings.
Prior to the release, executive procucer Stig Karlsen of KISS Army claimed that this album was going to bring tribute CDs to a new level, both musically and visually, and judging from the reviews and responsw from the fans, he and his team might well have succeeded.
You can pick up a copy of the CD from KISS Army Norway (PayPal or credit cards acccepted) at this location.
Q: What's the best concert you've seen?
A: Probably KISS.
Q: Was this pre- or post-makeup era?
A: It was after the makeup era, but remember, it came back. I loved them in the late '70s, when I was 8 or 9.
Q: Did they do the fire-and-blood thing?
A: Yeah. It was a complete show.
Q: Whose show would you rather be on: Oprah or Jerry Springer?
A: Oprah. I don't know, if you're on Jerry Springer, you've got to be pretty trashy.
After the show, KISS frontman Paul Stanley summed it up, "Doing a kick-ass show like last night with one rehearsal after such a long break, proves to us once again that we are not only in KISS, but KISS is in us."
If you're wondering why this unique KISS show took place in Ohio, that's because in 1977, Honda formed a partnership with Ohio that changed the face of the automotive industry. The Honda Motor Company today has nearly 16,000 employees in Ohio, which is two-thirds of Honda's total U.S. employment.
KISS has broken box office records set by Elvis and The Beatles and continues to be the juggernaut of licensing/merchandising, with over 2,500 licenses. Among the marketing and merchandising accomplishments of the band:
Visa partnered with the band to create a branded KISS Visa card.
The KISS Canon camera recently debuted in Japan.
KISS has done commercials for both Pepsi and Coca Cola, among other advertisers.
KISS and Warner Bros. have just begun work on "KISS Babies," a new cartoon show.
A KISS Broadway show is currently in development.
KISS has three Nascars.
KISS has three NHRA Hot Rods.
As an individual and rock icon himself, Gene Simmons:
Discovered Van Halen and produced their 15-song demo.
Managed the music career of Liza Minnelli and others.
Produced the New Line movie Detroit Rock City.
Created and executive produced the hit Nickelodeon cartoon "My Dad the Rock Star," created the popular Oxygen series smash "Mr. Romance" and is currently shepherding "Gene Simmons' Rock School," a reality show for VH1 to debut this September, and "Gene Simmons' Family Jewels," a reality show for A&E also to debut this Fall.
Has written two New York Times best-sellers: Kiss and Make-up and Sex Money Kiss.
Is publisher of his own magazine, Gene Simmons Tongue (SterlingMcFadden).
Co-starred in the Michael Crichton movie Runaway, in the action drama Wanted: Dead or Alive and in the teen comedy The New Guy. He has also guest starred on myriad television series including "Miami Vice," "The Hitchhiker," "Family Guy" and as a guest judge on "American Idol."
Heads his own record label, Simmons Records/Sanctuary Music.
Heads his own DVD label, Simmons Audio Visual.
Heads his own publishing imprint, Simmons Books/Phoenix Books.
"Besides being an accomplished entrepreneur, Gene has a canny sense of how entertainment can organically enhance a sports institution such as boxing," stated Joe Cellura, chairman and CEO of Orbit Brands Corporation. "His active involvement in BBKO will fuel the growth of the company in all areas, and we enthusiastically welcome him aboard."
About BBKO
A wholly-owned subsidiary of Orbit Brands Corporation, BBKO is a 21st-century boxing venture that seeks to broaden the sport of boxing beyond its traditional ring by infusing it with equally hard-hitting entertainment. The company will recruit and market up to 20 fighters with world-class potential, along with the world's best boxing trainers and managers. Partnering with major network partners, BBKO is developing television programming to be shot in compelling venues with celebrity participation and top-rate production values. BBKO reveals its unique hybrid nature through its acronym: "Beats" (musical artists who root for competitors through various genres, from rap to rock), "Bouts" (the contests themselves), and "Knockouts" (a fitting metaphor for young ladies whose presence will prove inspirational to all).
About Orbit Brands Corporation
Orbit Brands Corporation is a publicly traded Delaware Corporation listed on the NASDAQ. The primary focus of the Company is growth via the acquisition and development of early-stage, high-growth companies in the technology, health and fitness, and consumer goods industries. Orbit Brands Corporation is positioned to identify, acquire, fund and develop these companies for the purpose of creating business and shareholder value. Website: www.orbitbrandscorp.com.
FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS: Statements regarding financial matters in this press release other than historical facts are "forward-looking statements" within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, and as that term is defined in the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. The Company intends that such statements about the Company's future expectations, including future revenues and earnings, and all other forward-looking statements, shall be subject to the safe harbors created thereby. Since these statements (future operational results and sales) involve risks and uncertainties and are subject to change at any time, the Company's actual results may differ materially from the expected results.
Kiss Kollector Online: The first time you photographed KISS was on March 21, 1975 at the Beacon Theatre in New York. What did you think of them wearing all that make up and outlandish costumes and why did you decide on photographing an unknown band?
Fin Costello: "I had only moved to the U.S. a few weeks before that show and was in at AGI with Peter Corriston [who designed KISS' 'Dressed to Kill' album sleeve] working on the design ideas for the first RAINBOW cover when he asked me if I wanted to see KISS — who were virtually unknown then outside the New York area — at the Beacon just around the corner. I had been shooting the Brecker Bros at Todd Rundgren's studio that afternoon so I had the cameras with me. I have often described it as being akin to the Gates of Hell or Dante's Inferno. They were doing the first number when we came into the back of the theatre and I had never seen anything like it. Smoke, flames, etc. and the audience going ballistic. See the first tour programme for the pictures from that gig. The costume and makeup were perfect for the scary theatrical show they had conceived."
Kiss Kollector Online: How did you end up shooting KISS for their first live album back in '75?
Fin Costello: "They day after I had shot them at the Beacon Theatre gig, I showed Joyce Biawitz and Bill Aucoin the shots. They liked them and brought the band in to see them. At that point I showed them some other work I had done, such as DEEP PURPLE's 'Made In Japan', and of course the HEEP album."
Kiss Kollector Online: Did the band ever thank you for the inspiration and everything, or perhaps award you with a gold record?
Fin Costello: "Yes, they did, and I had a gold disc, but it was stolen from my studio at a party there in the '80s along with a Michael Jackson one."
Kiss Kollector Online: Who decided not to take the photo at the actual live show at the Cobo Hall, but at the empty Michigan Palace instead?
Fin Costello: "Michigan Palace was a rehearsal place then (a Victorian music hall and home gig of the STOOGES and the MC5, now a car park) where we shot a promo film and did the publicity shots for the album which was to be recorded the next day at Cobo. I got them to do the 'STATUS QUO' pose (Gene's words) a few times, which is where the shot came from. At that time we were just shooting every idea that came to mind. I was still thinking we would get the cover shot at the actual gig."
Kiss Kollector Online: What can you tell me about the photo on the album's back cover? Fuelled by comments from the late Sean Delaney, fans have wondered for quite some years now whether that photo was really taken at a big KISS show or not. Sean once told me that he took you along with the big banner to a sold-out STYX show to get some good shots for the back cover. As Sean claimed, there's not a single person in a KISS t-shirt or in KISS make-up on that photo. Before someone starts believing in a conspiracy theory, please set the record straight for once and for all… Did you take the photo at the Cobo Hall (or any other KISS show)?
Fin Costello: "The shot is taken at Cobo — on the contact sheets I have other shots of the kids and some taken from the top of the hall looking down on the stage. I saw the two kids with the banner and asked them down to the front to get a shot with the big crowd behind them so that we could show how big a draw the band were by then. It was intended for press and magazines but was used on the cover. I think Sean — great guy, by the way — is mixing up another story where a RUSH photo was used for a 'guide dummy' on a RAINBOW cover and the record company used it on the final sleeve, airbrushing out the RUSH t-shirts. Remember, this was before the KISS Army was launched and there were not many KISS t-shirt's about then. Incidentally, sitting on the right of the two kids with the banner are Chad Smith (RED HOT CHILLI PEPPERS) and his brother Richard who were then at one of their first gigs."
Kiss Kollector Online: Judging from the many KISS photos you shot that year, you must have had a good relationship with band and management. What was working, and interacting, with them like?
Fin Costello: "With all the bands I have worked with, I was always more of a crew member than an outside photographer. I would travel with them and always let them see the pictures before they went out. I also did a lot of pictures of family/kids/girlfriends, etc. but never let those out so a trust built up and I have always had a reputation for that. Also I would always get them involved in the ideas and concepts and take on board their ideas (see the Ozzy covers). It was collaborative. Bill and Gene were fantastic to work with and full of ideas. The bike shoot was my idea for Poster magazine in Sweden and Bill organized the Fire House Studio in New York ('Ghost Busters 1') because he knew the potential of the shot and also that I didn't have that kind of budget for a magazine shoot."
Kiss Kollector Online: This year it's 30 years ago that KISS released "Alive!" What's the difference between those days and nowadays? I guess it's not so much a community anymore as back then in the early '70s?
Fin Costello: "Yes, back then the bands were closer to the audience and related to them more. I had often stood at a bar with the musicians and the fans having a drink. That doesn't happen anymore. Also back then they wanted to be in a band and be musicians in the first place, and that explains why there were so many great records during that period. Nowadays a lot of them just want to be stars first and musicians later. The other thing is that we were all the same age group and had grown up on ELVIS, LITTLE RICHARD, etc. and were in fact writing the story for the first time then. I grew up in the London clubs of the '60s with people like Mick Jagger, Eric Clapton and Jack Bruce, etc. where we were all fans of the blues and shared the same influences. It was a very small community of music fans back then. Bands like MÖTLEY CRÜE and GUNS N' ROSES were trying to copy their heros, like ZEP and the STONES, and that is never the same as doing it for the first time. Now the major record companies treat the music like any other marketable commodity and often the staff could just as well be selling soap powder rather than music."
Kiss Kollector Online: When you lived in Connecticut and they were all still living in New York, did you ever party or hang out with KISS? Or on the road, while on tour?
Fin Costello: "No, I have only hung out with a few of the bands I've worked with and that more on a family level. Peter Criss and his wife came up to the house in Connecticut a couple of times for dinner and to do the 'car' shot for Creem."
Kiss Kollector Online: I believe you're planning a coffee table book. how many KISS photos will be in there?
Fin Costello: "There is a lifetime retrospective exhibition and a book in the planning but no fixed date yet. Yes, KISS will feature along with comments from many musicians who grew up with KISS 'Alive!' Jon Bon Jovi, Dani Filth, Ozzy, etc. etc. It was one of the most influential albums of the '70s and I am immensely proud to have been involved."
Kiss Kollector Online: Is there anything else you'd like to share with the KISS fans worldwide?
Fin Costello: "Only that it's nice to be part of what is now a worldwide community which seems to be growing rather than diminishing. Also thanks to everybody who comments so favorably about the shots."
Straight-laced Pacific University may be loosening up a bit.
The newest member of its board of trustees is the lead guitarist of KISS, the 1970s heavy metal band known for its elaborate makeup and costumes, stadium pyrotechnics and high-volume mantra that spoke of the need to "rock and roll all night and party every day."
Tommy Thayer, a Cedar Hills native and 1978 graduate of Sunset High School, was elected this summer to the board of trustees. He joined business executives, doctors and former Gov. Vic Atiyeh on the board guiding the 2,500-student liberal arts college.
On the road, Thayer wears the sequined black leotard abandoned in 2002 by Ace Frehley, a founding member of KISS. He becomes "The Spaceman," duplicating Frehley's trademark makeup that includes a white base with a silver-and-black mask around both eyes.
He is the only rock star on the Pacific University board.
The board's 37 other members unanimously voted to add Thayer. Trustees said they wanted to notch down the average age of board members — Thayer is 44 — and maybe find a potential donor. And even earn a little attention.
"I made it clear that I expect to see them all at the next Portland concert," Thayer said. "I told them I'd provide the earplugs."
Board members said Thayer's father, Jim Thayer Sr., past president of the Beaverton Chamber of Commerce, recommended his son for the position. The elder Thayer is a retired colonel in the U.S. Army Reserve and civilian aide to the U.S. Secretary of the Army. He also serves as a trustee at Reed College and on the Tuality Hospital Foundation.
When The Spaceman takes a break from touring and belting out KISS anthems — with lyrics including "I'm a hooligan/I won't go to school again . . ." — Thayer will come to Forest Grove four times a year for daylong budget meetings and debates over the finer details of building design as the school expands to Hillsboro.
"It's an opportunity to get involved in the home front and be a little less conventional," Thayer said. "You never know, maybe I'll end up taking some classes."
"Many of you want to know when KISS will record a new album or when we'll tour.
"Please give us a chance to do things we've always wanted to do — outside the band.
"Paul [Stanley, KISS frontman] is very excited about his solo album — and so am I — I can't wait to hear it. And when he tours, I'll be there to cheer him on, as I did on his last solo tour. No one is better.
"And me? I have things I want to do as well.
"KISS?? We'll come back. You can bet on it."
"You don't have to know how to read or write music at all to be successful in the music business," Simmons told The New York Post. "And as far as rap is concerned, you don't need to have any qualifications whatsoever, you could just be a drug dealer off the street and simply start talking — it's not about music, it's about charisma."
Regarding the fact that he appointed the smallest, geekiest kid in the class to be the band's frontman because of the kid's charismatic performance in an audition, Simmons said, "You can have a huge show and be a fantastic instrumentalist, but if you're not charismatic, nobody will care. By the way, you don't even need to be the lead singer — I was as interested in Pete Townshend as I was in Roger Daltrey in THE WHO because he made a spectacle out of himself."
Simmons says "Rock School" is just one of 14 shows he has in production at various networks and studios, including an animated show called "My Dad the Rock Star" on Nickelodeon and "Mr. Romance" on Oxygen.
"There's been a lot of talk about the forthcoming KISS DVD 'Rock the Nation Live!' amongst fans over the last few months. Whereas a release date still hasn't been announced, according to Sanctuary Records' website the initial idea of releasing a 2-DVD set recently changed into a 4-DVD set. Unfortunately, details about the extra two discs are unknown as of yet (but a little while ago word went around that these two additional discs are to feature a 1972 concert as well as a supposed Winterland '73 show — however, KISS wasn't named KISS yet back in '72 although Ace Frehley joined the band in December of that year — and as far as we know WICKED LESTER performed their last live concert in '71 so it's quite impossible to include a live show from '72, and KISS didn't play live in Winterland in '73…) but in the fourth issue of official KISS magazine — which came out recently and mentioned a summer release for the DVD — the track listing for the 2 DVDs containing the actual Rock the Nation Tour footage was revealed. As well as several other details about the discs' contents.
"And if all that hasn't changed by now, then things look very promising for the upcoming DVD. It might turn out to be the coolest KISS DVD released up till now. Not only will it contain no less than 20 live tracks, but also incredible behind-the-scenes footage. Intermingled with the songs will be exciting backstage footage — including stuff shot in the dressing room, at soundcheck, on the road, etc. Tommy Thayer (who previously was responsible for the KISS DVDs 'The Second Coming' and 'Symphony' as well as Ted Nugent's 'Full Bluntal Nugity') was in charge of the DVD project and likes to refer to all the behind-the-scenes footage — which was filmed by Spiro Papadatos — as little 'documentaries.' Kevin McCullough (who did the editing for the 'Symphony' DVD and worked with Gene Simmons on his 'Speaking In Tongues' DVD) edited the concert footage whereas Tommy edited the behind-the-scenes/documentary footage. The documentary sections have been divided into 7 different chapters, and include voice overs by the band members.
"First up is The Dressing Room, which chronicles what each band member does to get ready for the show (including Paul Stanley's vocal exercises), putting on make up and costumes, etc. Then there's Photo Shoot, taking you back to the March 2004 photo session at Neil Zlozower's studio which was a month or two before the Rock The Nation Tour kicked off. The third documentary is titled The Meet & Greets, which explains the reasoning behind doing the Platinum Packages (and which features the best 3 or 4 meet & greets). Next up is Soundchecks, including bits 'n' pieces of 'Mr. Speed', 'All The Way', 'The Oath', 'I Stole Your Love', 'Comin' Home' and 'Two Timer'. The fifth documentary is The Theatre Shows, featuring bits from the two theater shows during the 2004 Australian tour which brings back memories of the band's original theater/club days. On The Road is the title of the next documentary, showcasing pretty much the other 22 hours of the day on a typical concert day (flying on the private KISS jet, traveling to each city and venue) as well as off-days (on which you could find the band bowling). And ending the 'Rock the Nation' discs is Fan Testimonials/Credits, which speaks for itself.
"As a very cool bonus, the new DVD — for which post-production was done by San Francisco company MX Entertainment who also worked with acts such as RUSH and the ROLLING STONES on DVD projects — will have Power Vision/Select-A-KISS on 7 songs, which means you can select the camera focusing on one of each band member exclusively, each member appears in his own 'window' and you can navigate from one to another (which is something the STONES already did on three songs on their 'Four Flicks' DVD, obviously it's called Select-A-Stone then)."
The full track listing for the two 'Rock the Nation Live!' discs is as follows:
Disc 1:
01. Intro
02. Love Gun
03. Deuce
04. Makin’ Love
05. The Dressing Room (documentary)
06. Lick It Up
07. Christine Sixteen
08. Photo Shoot (documentary)
09. She
10. Tears Are Falling
11. Got To Choose
12. The Meet & Greets (documentary)
13. I Love It Loud
14. Love Her All I Can
15. I Want You
16. Soundchecks (documentary)
17. Parasite
Disc 2:
01. War Machine
02. 100,000 Years
03. The Theatre Shows (documentary)
04. Unholy
05. Shout It Out Loud
06. On The Road (documentary)
07. I Was Made For Lovin’ You
08. Detroit Rock City
09. God Gave Rock And Roll To You II
10. Rock And Roll All Nite
11. Fan Testimonials/Credits (documentary)
ESP's setlist consists mainly of KISS hits and obscure KISS songs that have never before been played live, along with selections from MÖTLEY CRÜE, GRAND FUNK RAILROAD, ALICE COOPER and other classic rock bands.
The six-week series, which debuted Aug. 19, runs through Sept. 23. A reunion episode will air Sept. 30. Simmons conducted the interview via e-mail.
NorthJersey.com: Countless famous rock stars have named KISS as their influence. Were you shocked at all when you heard that these 13-year-olds never heard of you?
Gene Simmons: "I wasn't shocked that the kids didn't know much about KISS. It's curious, however, that some of them knew Gene Simmons. Maybe through movies, who knows? But the school is very regimented and disciplined. All very admirable. But unfortunately, none of that means much in rock-and-roll. In point of fact, most rockers, myself included, can't read or write music, and no matter what any of them say to you, the reason they got onstage is because, in another life, they would probably be asking you if you want fries with that."
NorthJersey.com: Why an English boarding school, why not America?
Gene Simmons: "We shot in England because an English production team approached me with the idea for English television. The results seemed to appeal to people, because it's been picked up in 27 countries. People seem to like the results. I do."
NorthJersey.com: Why did you think the concept might make a good reality-television series?
Gene Simmons: "The idea appealed to me because before KISS, I had actually taught in Spanish Harlem. But only for a short time. Six months. And the band I was in, KISS, exploded. Within a year, we were playing Anaheim Stadium. I always wondered if I was any good at teaching. Here then was an opportunity for a second chance. And how many times does life give you a second chance to try something. The result? I'm damn good."
NorthJersey.com: How and why was this idea conceived? Had you ever seen the "School of Rock" movie with Jack Black? If so, did you like it and why?
Gene Simmons: "Never saw the Black 'Rock School' movie but have seen the TV adverts, and they looked great. Originality is highly overrated. Either something is compelling, or it's not. I am not a fan of 'fake' reality shows. I like to see things that 'really happen.' So the idea was, roll the cameras, and let's see what happens when I do things. My way. It's always that way. My way, or the highway."
NorthJersey.com: What kind of welcome did you expect when you first entered the classroom? They seemed pretty horrified of you at first, especially the girls. Was that your intention?
Gene Simmons: "I had a big job to do. I had to, in some cases, actually teach some of them to play an instrument they had never played before. While being a virtuoso on cello might impress people, it does nothing for you if you want to play drums or guitar. I also had to get them to write a song, which they had never done before. And most importantly, I had to teach them 'cool.' Individual cool. Which is to say, Jagger doesn't have to stick his tongue out to be cool. Everyone that gets up onstage has to figure out how to be cool in their own way. A sort of 'march to the beat of my own drummer.' So, the shortcut way of doing that was to be a drill sergeant. I was not there to be their friend, necessarily. I was there to get the job done. But, quite honestly, because they were so bright and charming little people, it also became an emotional experience. For them. For me."
NorthJersey.com: How did MOTÖRHEAD get picked as the band the students would open for?
Gene Simmons: "MOTÖRHEAD was picked by the production company. And a good baptism of fire it was."
Sanctuary, which operates a label group that controls a large back catalog, a management firm and a music publishing company, warned investors in June to expect a 40% drop in first-half cash flow, with full-year cash flow that would be "substantially less" than last year's.
In its statement Tuesday, the company said it has obtained waivers and amendments to its financial covenants and increased some of its bank facilities to 120 million pounds ($216 million). It also has obtained waivers and amendments to its outstanding 30 million pounds ($54 million) of convertible loan notes.
"Trading has remained difficult, which, together with the operational constraints placed on the business during this time, seems likely to result in a further deterioration of the results for the full year," the statement said. "Management is currently reviewing expectations against forecast for the key trading months of August and September and will update the market when appropriate."
Sanctuary said in June that there had been preliminary talks that could result in an offer being made for the business. Sources suggested that EMI Music Group, Warner Music Group and various private equity and venture capital groups had entered into discussions with the company.
In its latest statement, Sanctuary said: "The board now believes that the discussions with the particular party that resulted in that June 3 announcement are unlikely to lead to an offer at or near to the current share price. However, discussions are ongoing with a number of other parties regarding a range of possible transactions, including a possible offer for the company. The board will provide a further update when appropriate."
Analysts adopted a wait-and-see posture in regard to Tuesday's statement. "While we are relieved that Sanctuary has renegotiated some of its covenants, we believe the situation remains highly risky until Sanctuary provides some evidence of being able to pay down debt, perhaps through a disposal of some of its music catalog," the media team at Numis Securities said in a research note.
Kiss rules. Kiss reeks. You're either on this side or that side. Being on the fence means you've checked out. It means you listen to Enya.
After 32 years festooned in grease paint, chains, platform boots and yards of what might very well be tin foil, Kiss remains a great pop-culture polarizer, an easy critical bulls-eye and delicious guilty pleasure, the worst rock band ever and the greatest rock band ever. The Michael Bay and P.T. Barnum of rock 'n' roll showmanship — kabloom, suckers — Kiss is just a typo for kitsch. Kiss up. Kiss off.
A pair of upcoming shows spans this good/bad divide that Kiss has gleefully carved. The good is "Gene Simmons' Rock School," a droll and gimmicky reality show premiering tonight on VH1. The bad (wretched, ghastly, kill me) are multiweekend screenings of "Kiss Meets the Phantom of the Park," starting Aug. 26 at the Alamo Downtown (Austin, Texas). The professional hecklers of The Sinus Show are presenting the movie, lambasting it until it cries. Expect nothing less than a massacre.
"Gene Simmons' Rock School" is more proof Kiss will not die. Simmons — Kiss bassist, blood-spitter, boffo music mogul — crashes a classical music class of 13-year-olds at an English boarding school. Blustering and snarling with practiced disdain, a makeup-free Simmons arrives to tutor the rather stuffy kids in the ways of heavy-metal stardom. "To create little rock gods," he says.
Simmons, who is 55, roars, folds his arms and appraises the children through unbudging sunglasses. His scowly grimace suggests he has taken a whiff of the famous codpiece he dons on stage. "I wear more makeup and higher heels than your mommy does," he taunts the crisply composed class.
The pupils at first recoil. "I think he's really scary, because he's really in your face and stuff," says a girl. (Some of the children's accents are so thick that subtitles appear.) Declares another: "I don't like him at all."
But of course they soon will. As in the Jack Black comedy "School of Rock" and the recent documentary "Rock School," the show is about coming together for a collective purpose — in this case to open for metal band Motörhead — while learning how to cut loose and be yourself. Simmons even lets the kids in on a little secret: You can be a lousy musician and still rock hard and get preposterously rich.
He should know. Except for lead guitarist Frehley, a bona fide whiz, the players in Kiss are flaccid musicians, lazy tunesmiths and appalling lyricists. Some Kiss poetry: "If you wanna be a singer, or play guitar/ Man, you gotta sweat or you won't get far." Sounds like a pop quiz out of Gene's "Rock School."
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With "Kiss Meets the Phantom," Kiss nearly met the kiss of death. Premiering on NBC in October 1978, the band's first and last movie casts its members — Simmons, Frehley, Paul Stanley and Peter Criss — as rock stars with murky supernatural powers. The bandmates are sort of like superheroes, but the movie is so badly conceived you can't tell what they're supposed to be. You have to be acquainted with the special edition Marvel comic books that star Kiss to make any sense of it.
In the comics and the movie, band members become literal incarnations of their stage personas, going by the snickerable names Star Child (Stanley, who has a star over one eye), Demon (Simmons — lizard tongue, bat wings), Cat Man (Criss — painted whiskers) and Space Ace (Frehley — more silver sequins than a Broadway musical).
The evil scientist (Anthony Zerbe, who was in "Cool Hand Luke" and "The Matrix Reloaded" and probably wishes this article would go away) kidnaps Kiss, builds robot replicas of the band and sends the imposters on stage to change the chorus of the Kiss song "Hotter Than Hell" to "Rip, rip/Rip and destroy," which is supposed to incite fans to riot and ruin everything. That could be the lamest plan ever in the annals of mad scientists.
So disastrous is "Kiss Meets the Phantom" that even the bandmates, who are not known to criticize their splendiferous empire, disowned the movie. Fans reconsidered their allegiance. Critics drove in on bulldozers. And a camp masterwork was born.
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When the movie aired, Kiss was at the peak of their popularity, knocking out hit records like "Destroyer," "Love Gun" and "Alive II" and peddling mountains of Kiss paraphernalia, from trading cards and dolls to belt buckles and bed sheets. (Today you can even get yourself the $5,000 Kiss Kasket. Right, a coffin.)
The band has always targeted young boys, exploiting their fascination with science fiction and horror movies, comic books and fire. Forget childhood sports. Some of us were mesmerized by books and movies, the wide-open realm of the imagination, which happily accommodated the dual fantasy force of Kiss and "Star Wars." It's a few paces from a fire-breathing Demon to a growling Wookiee.
In 1978, my best friend brought "Kiss Alive II" to a sleepover. I knew Kiss only from "The Paul Lynde Halloween Special," an utterly weird thing that aired on ABC in 1976. I liked their makeup, wild costumes and the clouds of smoke. But the loud music and exciting photos of "Alive II" — "Calling Dr. Love," Simmons drenched in stage blood — hooked me. I dressed up as Simmons and Stanley, collected the trading cards, covered my walls with Kiss posters, bought every issue of 16 Magazine featuring Kiss gossip, owned the dolls and ordered all of the group's vinyl records from the Columbia House Record Club. I was 9.
And then came "Kiss Meets the Phantom." This was huge. My excitement was uncontained. Finally, my friends and I would see our favorite band in the whole world actually move and speak. We were too young for Kiss concerts, and this was way before MTV, so bad TV had to do.
Produced by kiddie-show kings Hanna-Barbera, the movie plays like a discarded "Scooby-Doo" episode. Robot werewolves kung fu fight the Kiss guys, who strike back with animated laser beams that shoot from Stanley's eye and cartoon fire that buzzes from Simmons' mouth. Stuntmen who look nothing like Kiss stand in for the band during the "action" sequences. There is mild genius behind this kind of awfulness.
While the movie was a ratings hit for NBC, it was a calamity for Kiss. The group's "street credibility, which had taken four years of nonstop work to develop, was undone frame by frame in just under 100 minutes," writes Kiss expert Ron Albanese.
This budding Kiss freak didn't care. Kiss ruled! Still, I think I knew the movie had failed us, that it was merely grotesque advertisements for the group and Magic Mountain, the California amusement park where it was filmed.
Today, the music of Kiss is hardly more than a cheap nostalgia trip for an older, wiser me. It sounds tinny and slapped together. And the band has changed. Frehley and Criss have been booted from Kiss — again — while Simmons' flamboyant greed metastasizes unchecked.
Yet something appealing remains. With an atavistic charge, Kiss blew me away at the Erwin Center in 2000. Kiss photos and concert footage pump my blood. My brain can't shake ancient Kiss trivia. I still have my Kiss dolls.
Straddling the great Kiss divide, I fend off mockery with the shield of original-fan pride. My arrogance wears a wink, my devotion is full of holes. I am not torn, but at peace with the contradictions. And if you ask me if Kiss rules or reeks, the answer is easy: both.
Stanley reportedly co-wrote the track with THE CLICK FIVE keyboardist Ben Romans at Stanley's home studio. The song also features a guest appearance by Elliott Easton of THE CARS.
"KISS is actually a big influence on us," THE CLICK FIVE frontman Eric Dill told The Plain Dealer. "Our manager talked to Paul and got him involved and interested in us from the very beginning. We had a chance to meet him, go to some [KISS] shows, get to know him on a personal level. He'd talk to me and say 'You look good up there, but try to connect more to the audience.' I had Paul Stanley, who's a master at it, willing to help me out and giving me tips. How cool is that?"
THE CLICK FIVE, which bills itself as a power pop quintet "on par with CHEAP TRICK and MATTHEW SWEET," had previously graced concert bills with the likes of ASHLEE SIMPSON, ALANIS MORISETTE, BARENAKED LADIES and ROD STEWART.
Most everything you read about Gene Simmons, founder of the theater-rock band KISS, suggests he's arrogant, obnoxious and insufferable.
But then you see him - onstage with KISS or now on the new VH1 series "Gene Simmons' Rock School" - and while all of the above may still be true, you have to admit:
The guy is good.
So, too, is "Rock School," the implausibly charming story of how Simmons invades the staid Christ's Hospital Academy, a British boarding school, and carves a rock band out of 10 young students whose prior training and interests all lie in classical music.
The final exam in Simmons' class - actually, that's spelled $immons - is to perform as the opening act for the hard-rock band Motorhead in front of 5,000 people.
It's not clear whether the proprietors of Christ's Hospital knew exactly what their visiting instructor had in mind when they hired him. A few elements, like the disapproving deputy headmaster, fall into place a little too perfectly.
But this is more a story about how the often sloppy and imperfect music known as "rock" can touch a chord even in young folks trained to appreciate much more sophisticated music.
Predictably - maybe again a little too predictably - Simmons chooses the misfit of the class as the band's lead singer, because he has the attitude.
As Simmons explains, almost all the top rock-'n'-roll singers were misfits in school.
This selection reveals some underlying tension in the class. But by now there's also a camaraderie and a fascination. When Simmons leaves, these kids may well go back to orchestras and live a long, happy life with Beethoven, but while he's here, this is an adventure.
Moreover, there's a challenge in creating a musical unit that can make a collective sound - however raw - that makes someone else get up and dance or turns an ordinary moment into a moment someone remembers.
Simmons at times intimidates the students, but he's never mean or unfair. He never plays them to show himself off.
This show will draw obvious comparisons to the Jack Black movie "School of Rock," which was pretty good. This is better.
Simmons' most recent venture has him turning some of England's most disciplined 13-year-old boarding school students into a band worthy of opening up for MOTÖRHEAD. "Even though the students could play two or three instruments, like cellos and oboes, and could read and write music, I had to teach them that everything they knew meant nothing in rock n' roll," explains Simmons of the VH1 series "Gene Simmons' Rock School", premiering Friday (August 19). "Almost without exception, popular music is made up of people who are pretty much unqualified to do anything except ask you if you want fries with that. None of us read or write music; we just sort of get by. The really great musicians are playing at Holiday Inns doing cover versions."
Charlie Benante: "The first time I ever heard KISS' 'Alive!', I was at a party at a friend's house. The only thing I'd head prior to that as far as KISS was concerned was 'Dressed to Kill'. I was already a fan because of that, but when 'Alive!' came out, it was a totally different thing.
"The thing that I remember most about it was just staring at the package — it opened out to a gatefold, and there was a huge booklet in it. I remember staring at it and being like, 'What the hell?!' Because you would listen to the record and you would visualize in your own mind how it was. You had all these different things.
"I remember early on, when I first heard KISS, I used to think that Paul Stanley's voice was Gene Simmons' voice. It was very weird when I saw them on a TV show called 'The Midnight Special', and I was like, 'Wait a minute... he's not supposed to be singing that!'
"I don't think I could say that any of [the songs] was my least favorite, because I loved every single one on that record. I remember just playing it continuously, over and over again. I loved the way side one would kick in — it was like the introduction was the beginning of the show. Then you get to the middle portions — sides two and three — and side four was the big ending; I'll never forget listening to 'Black Diamond' and being like, 'What the hell is going on? The explosions and everything. [The tracklist] is a little out of sequence — actually it's not even a live show; they totally re-recorded it. But who cares? It fooled me back then.
"I loved [Peter Criss'] drumming on 'Alive!'. I think he was one of the biggest influences as far as having a huge drum kit goes. It was like, 'Look at all these drums. What is he doing with all these?' Because at the time, you had like the 'five-piece-kit drummers out there, like John Bonham (LED ZEPPELIN) and Joey Kramer (AEROSMITH). After Peter, Neil Peart (RUSH) had the big kit also.
"The end of '76 was when I saw them for the first time — 'Alive!' prepared me. I was like, 'Dude this is fucking crazy!' I just couldn't believe it. Everything was going on. I couldn't focus on just one thing. It was just an assault on my senses. Because most of the bands at the time really didn't put on that type of a show the way KISS were doing; it was more or less getting up on stage and playing. It wasn't, y'know... KISS.
"KISS made me realize that this is what I'm going to do with my life. And the mindset just stayed with me; it never left. Before that, I wasn't really taking it as seriously as 'I'm going to make a living doing this.'
"I absolutely still listen to 'Alive!' I listen to it sometimes right before we play — it pumps me up. It puts me in a different state of mind."
Paul's very first public showing of his paintings took place at this same gallery on April 6. Stanley recently told KISS Kollector Online that he is also planning on art exhibitions throughout the USA soon.
In other KISS news, the long-awaited new DVD, "KISS Rock The Nation Live!", is now said to be a four-DVD set (instead of the previously announced two-DVD set), according to the band's label, Sanctuary Records. A release date still hasn't been set, but guitarist Tommy Thayer stated recently on KISS Kollector Online that the band is looking at an October release.
On Gilby Clarke:
Kathy: "I was friends with Gilby when he was in a band called CANDY — we go back for years and years. We live in the same neighborhood and we have always been in touch. In 1990, we did a tour together with a bunch of people called THE WILD BUNCH. We stayed in touch and he was actually the first person I asked to help me. I trusted him to be supportive. If it sounded bad then I wouldn’t be too embarrassed. Gilby is a great guy and I respect his input. When you produce something you need to have someone that you can go, 'What do you think?' There is an old joke that says, 'What makes a great producer?' The answer is, 'I don't know. What do you think?' I was one of those producers who needed reassurance."
On Ace Frehley:
Kathy: "Ace is very reclusive. That was really one of the first tracks that I did for the album. I met Ace because a friend of mine brought him to my birthday party. We hit it off. We were just hanging out and he was really such a sweetheart. He actually offered to do it. I told him that I was going into the studio in a couple of days and he offered to play on it. How often do you get a rock icon to appear on your record? I really like that he is playing on a track that is not anything like a KISS song — it is more like a BLONDIE song. He really did a great solo that is in a really different context than people are used to. Gilby and I were recording him and when he did this solo he said, 'Let me do another one.' We both said, 'No, that is the one. You got it.'"
Read the entire interview at www.classicrockrevisited.com.
"Light Years" is scheduled for release on September 6 through Valentine's All for One Music imprint via Redeye Distribution.
"There is a new 'KISS Test' and I talk a bit about the new equipment I am using to record the show. Also I mention the KISS events I will attent and I let you know why it took so long to release a new show."
Click here to download the show or listen to the show directly from your browser. Or subscribe to the show by way of our XML subscription feed (instructions to be found in the Marshall amp on the right).
Q: I love the costumes of the '70s tours that you've brought back and worn since the "Reunion" tour in 1996. Have you considered designing completely new outfits for an upcoming tour?
Paul Stanley: "Thanks for the question! Obviously, this isn’t the first time I‘ve heard this or thought about it. Although it might be fun to design new outfits, at this point I think the impact and history associated with what has come to be known as 'Klassic KISS' really says it all. Does Superman need a new costume? Probably not."
Q: With over 30 years of record releases, what's your favorite KISS album cover?
Paul Stanley: "With as many album covers as we've had, it's probably impossible for me to have a single favorite. I tend to divide the album covers into two categories — those with make-up and those without it. Of the make-up ones, I probably have to say my favorites are 'Hotter than Hell', 'Rock & Roll Over', and 'Love Gun'. But let’s not forget the double album inside of 'KISS Alive!' That one salutes you and all the other true believers who made this all happen. Thanks!"
Q: Back in the days when you were first learning to play guitar, what album influenced you the most?
Paul Stanley: "I would say the first two albums by American rock band THE BYRDS. There was great interplay between the two guitars and great melodies on top of it. I also loved the early WHO albums. A little later, the first LED ZEPPELIN album was the gateway to everything I aspired to for quite some time. There's so much great music that came out of the mid-'60s, it's [now] your time to check some of it out!"
Q: What's the status of your solo record?
Paul Stanley: "My solo album is sounding great! I'm really determined to make it everything I want it to be, and believe you also want. Full steam ahead! I'll see you at the finish line."
The upcoming KISS show isn't listed on the Nationwide Arena's schedule yet, although on the same date they have listed two Cirque Du Soleil shows. Also on September 10, Eric Singer is supposed to be playing with ALICE COOPER in Albuquerque, NM. So, the big question is who will be on drums with KISS?
And if you’re wondering why this unique KISS show will take place in Ohio, that’s because in 1977, Honda formed a partnership with Ohio that changed the face of the automotive industry. The Honda Motor Company today has nearly 16,000 employees in Ohio, which is two-thirds of Honda's total U.S. employment.
A vague message was posted on the KissWorld site in recent weeks ("after many months of discussions and negotiations, the store will no longer be proceeding as was originally envisaged"). At the Comic-Con International in San Diego last weekend, Simmons curtly deemed the store a misfire.
"It was autonomous, so it was their deal," Simmons said. "It is what it is. There's plenty of stuff to keep me busy."
Simmons was at the pop-culture conclave to promote several projects, including a comic book and an animated television series.
As previously reported, drumming on Stanley's upcoming solo CD was handled by Victor Indruzzo, who has toured and recorded with MACY GRAY, toured with BECK and appears on various recordings by the Matrix production team. Most of the guitars have been handled by Corky James, who also is heard on various recordings by the Matrix team, including AVRIL LAVIGNE. In talking about their contributions Paul raved, "Victor is just an amazing drummer who can bash with the best of them while keeping a great groove going." As for James, Stanley added, "Corky just blows me away with his parts and sounds." As far as bass..."I've always been a big fan of Bruce Kulick's bass playing so it's great to have him on some of the album." Keyboards have been handled by Russ Irwin who has toured with both STING and AEROSMITH. "I've known Russ for over 15 years before the KISS/AEROSMITH tour happened and his being a part of the project seemed like a natural". Of course all the vocals are handled by Paul. A few of the tracks recorded include "Wake Up Screaming", "Second To None" and "Live To Win".
Paul has been collaborating with Swedish songwriter Andreas Carlsson (BON JOVI, DEF LEPPARD), and for the first time in 15 or so years, Desmond Child (BON JOVI, AEROSMITH). "It's magic," Stanley said of the collaboration. Paul went on to add, "From the songs to the playing and singing, everything about this album is consistent without compromise. The album is exactly who I am now and what I want to be doing. It's got all the sides of what I do, so it's not surprising that it's got elements of everything I've done plus a leap into the 21st century. I don't need to hype it. I'll leave that to everyone else who's heard it."
"Gene Simmons' Rock School" has Master Simmons setting up court at one of the UK's top independent boarding schools, Christ's Hospital in West Sussex, south of London. The children who attend the 450-year-old school wear Tudor uniforms, march into the lunch hall accompanied by full brass band and know nothing about rock music. So, in just six weeks Gene must transform a class of classically trained 13-year-old musicians into little rock gods.
Some kids will make the cut, and some will have their hearts broken as Gene picks a band worthy of opening for metal legends Motorhead in front of 5,000 screaming fans.
Viewer's can log on to http://www.vh1.com to learn more about "Gene Simmons' Rock School."
As previously reported, Kulick will perform a benefit concert with his UNION project on November 25 at the Stadthalle Babenhausen (near Frankfurt / M.) in Germany. Proceeds from the shows will go to children suffering from cancer in Germany. Kulick is also expected to visit a hospital while he is in Germany.
UNION recently issued a live DVD, entitled "Do Your Own Thing Live!". The disc, which can be ordered from Kulick.net, includes two UNION concerts: a full one from 2001 (just before UNION's trip to Argentina), and one for ESP guitars at MI from January of 2000. Bonus material includes an unreleased UNION song called "Walking In Your Sleep", behind-the-scenes footage on tour with UNION, a photo gallery, and more links to all things UNION.
To celebrate his memory, KISS Kollector Online has posted highlights from the interview with his last girlfriend, Carrie Stevens, that appeared in the November 1992 issue of KISS Kollector magazine.
Carrie Stevens, now a Playboy playmate and actress, was born on May 1, 1969 in New York and met Eric Carr for the first time in Memphis on the 1987 KISS tour. She started dating him eight months later when she spent the summer in Carr's hometown of New York with her sister, and moved to Los Angeles in February of 1989 around the same time when Carr was recording the "Hot in the Shade" album there with KISS. Stevens and Carr were in a serious relationship by summer of 1989, but when KISS' "Hot in the Shade" album came out towards the end of that year it was time for the band to go out on tour again. Stevens travelled with Carr a lot on that tour.
"It's difficult to be in a relationship with someone who is on the road… it caused a lot of turmoil in our relationship… but being a rock star made Eric very happy, he loved every minute of it," she said. "He loved being a star, and there's a lot of things when you love somebody who's in that position, there's a lot of things you have to deal with and back then I was very young and inexperienced, and we fought a lot 'cause I didn't understand a lot of it… We loved each other as much as two people can, as much as is humanly possible, I think that being on the road caused a lot of problems between us, but we really stuck together through it… It's just not great memories for me."
Check out some other higlights from the interview at www.kisskollector.com.
In the week after seasoned performers entertained five billion people across the globe in the Live 8 concerts, however, students at the school, talking for the first time about their experiences, were unswayed by the promise of a rock 'n' roll lifestyle.
"At times I got really annoyed by him," said Rodney, a 14-year-old from east London. "He said, 'Money is the most important thing and if you don't have it, you have nothing' and I really don't agree with that."
"I still don't like rock music," he told The Sunday Telegraph, "but I do understand it more and I have become more confident and open as a result of taking part. He got us jumping up and acting more rockish when we were rehearsing and I surprisingly didn't find it that embarrassing. But I definitely don't want to be a rock star, I want to be a lawyer. It was all quite surreal really."
A classmate Dudley, or Dudders, from Alford, in Surrey, was equally circumspect: "He was in your face, bragging and boasting and that is not really our type of thing," he said. The 14-year-old, who "can play most things" but specialises in the French horn and the organ, was the band's drummer.
"A lot of us disagreed with his morals and challenged him during his reign over us," he said. "He would act like the big hard man — you could say he was like the Gordon Ramsay of the classroom."
Bruce Grindlay, Christ's Hospital's musical director, said he was impressed by the attitude of pupils at the school, which counts among its alumni the poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge, the journalist Bernard Levin and the comedian Mark Thomas. "It is very interesting that, often the quieter characters, were very self-assured and determined," he said. "They said, 'Yes, it was interesting', but they were not in awe of him and held a certain approbation that making money and financial gain was at the centre of his artistic outlay. The pupils stuck to their guns and that created conflict. They did get a lot out of it in terms of how to perform, which is just as important for the classical artist as it is for a rock star."
The program will be screened in the autumn on Channel 4.
Barondess handed me an advance copy. The cover reads: "Love is blind. But marriage can be a real eye opener." Plus there's this little blurb: "Marriage and divorce are very serious and expensive decisions (trust me, I know.) At $600 per hour, this hilarious but sobering book contains $44,000 worth of legal advice from one of the top lawyers in the country. If only I had read this first . . . Montel Williams."
A fellow named Trump — as in Ivana, Marla, now Melania — adds: "Marriage can be wonderful, but no question it is a complex situation. What's ideal and what's real do not always match up. Mark Barondess has written a book that shows us how to deal with the reality side of the ideal. Good, solid advice based on experience."
At dinner when he was in from L.A., the married author told me: "Big rewards come with large risks. Marriage — which 95 percent of us try at some point — is the biggest risk. Half will be divorced. You need to understand the consequences. My book is like pulling up a seat and having a candid conversation. No need to rush — the clock's not running. It's like me saying to people, tell me . . . what were you thinking???"
Chapter one: "The Primary Cause of Divorce: Marriage" has statements by Gene Simmons of Kiss and his longtime live-in Shannon Tweed — who are called "The Happiest Unmarried Couple in America." It says things like: "The only absolute guarantee of no divorce is if you do not get married. Nothing else works. Really." Husband of the Century Jack Nicholson weighs in with: "If there is any realistic deterrent to marriage, it's the fact that you can't afford divorce."
Chapter seven is Dr. Phil opining. Saying things like: "The key word is preparation . . . People spend more time planning their wedding than they do their marriage . . . Marriage is not an extended date."
For some reason, a chapter on adultery is built around G. Gordon Liddy who's "happily married for 47 years." You'll recall that five of those were spent in a federal can. G. Gordon advises: "The temptation to cheat is very strong. If a man wants to cheat, I would give him the same advice I would give a man who was tempted to try heroin. Don't do it. It is addictive."
"Rockin' The Corps" was held on April 1 at Camp Pendleton, a U.S. military base near San Diego, for nearly 50,000 U.S. Marines and their families. The concert featured performances by DESTINY'S CHILD, KISS, RICHIE SAMBORA, HOOTIE AND THE BLOWFISH, TED NUGENT and GODSMACK. The evening was hosted by Cedric The Entertainer, with celebrities such as Sharon Stone, Randy Jackson, Heather Locklear, Cindy Crawford, Alyssa Milano and Carmen Electra, amongst many others on-hand to introduce the performers.
On Memorial Day 2005, Yahoo! featured excerpts from the event on their site in a salute to U.S. armed forces around the world. The theatrical release of "Rockin' The Corps" premiered June 26 in Washington, D.C., at an event hosted by "Rockin' The Corps" founder Joseph E. Robert, Jr. On Monday, June 27, special screenings were held on 150 screens in 75 top markets throughout the United States at Regal, Edwards and United Artists theatres as part of their Big Screen Concert series through their national Cinemedia division. A one-year broadcast initiative began over the July 4th holiday weekend on the prominent HD Networks, iN Demand, with subsequent television broadcasts, both free and pay-per-view, which is expected to continue interest in this special enterprise.
Image Entertainment will release the "Rockin' The Corps" DVD and audio CD on September 6, 2005. The DVD will feature performances from the concert, as well as backstage footage and other exclusive content. The CD will feature an exclusive bonus DVD with content from the show and behind the scenes footage.
"There was a tremendous energy at this concert, with performances that brought down the house," said Barry Gordon, senior vice president of worldwide programming of Image Entertainment. "We're expecting a strong response to this DVD because it is a great show, and an even greater show of support for our troops."
The show was organized by Support The Corps, a non-profit organization founded by Joseph E. Robert, Jr., CEO of the J.E. Robert Companies and a renowned Washington, D.C.-based businessman and philanthropist. Mr. Robert reached out to legendary media leader Quincy Jones and Kerzner International executive Jerry Inzerillo who brought in music and film producer Spencer Proffer and music manager Doc McGhee to produce the event. The show was shot with 12 cameras in high-definition and was also transmitted to U.S. military bases around the world on the American Forces Network.
"Our team took an opportunity to put this together in order to support the continuing effort that our troops are making on all of our behalf," said producer Spencer Proffer. "The DVD and CD from Image Entertainment will let us share the magic, spirit and excitement of that evening with people all over the world."
A portion of the proceeds will be used to support the event and residual amounts will go to the charities via Support The Corps, Inc., a tax exempt, non profit corporation. The recipients will be those entities listed on the STC website, www.SupportTheCorps.org, which are Marine Corps Community Services, The Marine Corps Law Enforcement Foundation, The Marine Corps Scholarship Fund/Foundation, Spirit of America's Marines Fund and the U.S. Marine Corps Heritage Foundation.
Top 20 greatest American rock bands of all time, according to the readers of USA Today:
01. PEARL JAM
02. AEROSMITH
03. VAN HALEN
04. THE EAGLES
05. JOURNEY
06. GUNS N' ROSES
07. THE GRATEFUL DEAD
08. QUEENSRŸCHE
09. THE DOORS
10. R.E.M.
11. THE ALLMAN BROTHERS BAND and FLEETWOOD MAC (tie)
12. METALLICA
13. KISS
14. THE RAMONES
15. BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN AND THE E STREET BAND and CREEDENCE CLEARWATER REVIVAL (tie)
16. DAVE MATTHEWS BAND and LYNYRD SKYNYRD (tie)
17. THE BEACH BOYS
18. NIRVANA
19. THE REPLACEMENTS
20. BON JOVI
For a detailed explanation for each pick, visit USAToday.com.
KISS drummer Singer is currently touring Australia as ALICE COOPER's drummer and doing a few sideshows along the way.
Calico plays several roles in the current ALICE COOPER show including a nurse, a dancer and Paris Hilton during Alice's "I Wish I Were Born In Beverly Hills".
Guitarist Ryan Roxie introduced Calico at the Annandale Hotel as "from the loins of Alice Cooper." She joined the band to perform THE RUNAWAYS' "Cherry Bomb" and SWEET's "Fox on the Run".
Singer is performing his own show again tonight at the Corner Hotel in Melbourne. Tomorrow night, he will be back with ALICE COOPER performing at Melbourne's Palais Theatre.
Executive producer Stig Karlsen claims that the album will bring tribute CDs to a new level both musically and visually. The album consist of chart-topping and award-winning bands from Norway, including the million-selling ESPEN LIND, and "World Idol" winner Kurt Nilsen, who beat U.S. platinum artist Kelly Clarkson in last year's final. Billboard U.S. Top 100 artists STAGE DOLLS and members of TNT (Ronni Le Tekro and Tony Harnell) are also featured on the album. Norwegian superstars WIG WAM contribute a version of "I Was Made for Loving You", featuring a special guest appearance by former KISS guitarist Bruce Kulick. Gene Simmons' Norwegian favorites SHIRLEYS TEMPLE, the band behind the Simmons "solo" song "Asshole", appear on the album with a version of the KISS classic "God of Thunder".
For more information, click here.
Artist - Certified Units (in Millions)
1. BEATLES, THE - 168.5
2. PRESLEY, ELVIS - 116.5
3. LED ZEPPELIN - 107.5
4. BROOKS, GARTH - 105.0
5. EAGLES - 89.0
6. JOEL, BILLY - 78.5
7. PINK FLOYD - 73.5
8. STREISAND, BARBRA - 70.5
9. JOHN, ELTON - 69.0
10. AC/DC - 66.0
14. MADONNA - 60.0
21. U2 - 50.5
51. SPEARS, BRITNEY - 31.0
70. JACKSON, JANET - 25.0
109. KISS - 19.0
120. MCLACHLAN, SARAH - 17.5
121. STING - 17.5
135. NEW KIDS ON THE BLOCK - 16.5
136. DESTINY'S CHILD - 16.5
157. CROW, SHERYL - 15.0
211. LOPEZ, JENNIFER - 11.0
This chart was generated on 6/20/2005. To see the complete list visit here
Where Annandale Hotel, cnr Parramatta Road and Nelson Street, Annandale
When Tomorrow, 8pm
How much $28
Bookings 9550 1078
The odd experimental conga solo aside, it's not often drummers are given the chance to shine. Or speak.
Some might say there's a reason for that, but when Eric Singer, the drummer from Kiss, opens his mouth, it's as if he's speaking for every drummer that ever lived. The words race from his mouth. The man comes across less like a booze-addled glam rocker than a mobile-phone salesman in a hurry to meet his monthly sales target.
Which, in a way, he is. Singer is in Sydney to keep time for Alice Cooper. He will also be getting together with a few close friends such as Damon Johnson, who has rocked with Sammy Hagar, and Ryan Roxie of Slash's Snakepit fame. They'll play covers from the acts that made the 1970s such a glorious decade to be in the make-up industry: David Bowie, the Sweet, T-Rex, Cheap Trick and, of course, Kiss, for whom Singer has drummed since 1991.
Surprisingly, he seems intent on dispelling the rumours that accompany a list of names like that. The craziness, the debauchery, the excess.
"You know, I get asked about that all the time," Singer says.
"But by this stage most of these artists have been professionals for a long time. They've done the drugs, they've done the drink, but now they bring a workmanlike, professional attitude to their work."
Singer has named his group Eric Singer and Friends, but with all his talk of professionalism and workmanlike attitudes it sounds more like the musical equivalent of tennis player Wayne Arthurs: an efficient, unglamorous outfit that is a living tribute to "getting the job done". Perhaps a more appropriate name might be "The Journeymen".
"The reason people last this long in this industry is because they look after themselves," Singer says. "Sure, I've had my moments - I'm not going to pretend I've been a saint or anything - but now I take care of myself. I eat healthy. It might sound boring, but it's what you need to succeed."
Singer is understandably reluctant to dish the dirt on Cooper, his pay master. He says only that he is excited about the tour, for which he'll be on the road for up to six months.
"We're going to Australia," he says.
"We're also going to Tasmania."
Eric Singer 1, geography 0.
He says his band will eschew the traditional trappings of glam for their show in Sydney - the catsuits, the mascara, the tongues so long you could use them as pole vaults. Instead, the atmosphere will be "loose".
"This is more a T-shirt and jeans, grab-a-beer kind of show. The idea is to flex our legs, stretch our muscles and have some fun," he says, his words sounding less like a plug for a rock show than a campaign to raise awareness of the dangers of deep-vein thrombosis.
He claims the value of his show goes beyond nostalgia: "The bottom line is that a good song's a good song, whether it was written five years ago or 50 years ago. A lot of the music produced today is very disposable. There's this cookie-cutter mentality that's taken over the industry."
At the same time, he recognises that someone like Gene Simmons, the iconic lead singer of Kiss, has stayed afloat in the industry for so long because he has succeeded in creating "not just a band but a brand".
That brand has been built on the very myth Singer seems so intent on diluting: the drugs, the boozing, the floozing. So - that old story about Gene Simmons having slept with more than 5000 women: true or false?
"Well, Gene likes a lot of attention," Singer says. "He is very silver-tongued with the ladies, no pun intended.
"He's well spoken, intelligent and charming, and he can turn it on. I'm not being chauvinistic but a lot of women fall for that hook, line and sinker. So, yeah, there is a lot of myth surrounding Gene Simmons, but a lot of truth, too. Believe me, I've seen him.
"You'd think the guy just discovered his penis for the first time - every day of his life.
"They broke the mould with Gene Simmons."
The 10,000 square meter Melbourne store was to stock merchandise relating to the band and other music, sports, movie and television personalities. It was to include a museum of stage outfits, a cinema to show unreleased Kiss footage, a cafe and a wall of fame.
The directors of KissWorld, Peter Hoffmann and Robert Manuele, said, "It is devastating to see the project coming to an end, not only in terms of the financial loss to us but also the energy and passion that has gone into it." Hoffmann and Manuele did not discuss reasons for the venture's failure.
The sale will be stage at a warehouse in the suburb of Hallam and online at http://www.kissworld.net between June 22 and July 17. Items on display included Kiss guitars and surfboards, as well as a giant mural intended for the exterior of the store.
Kiss Revenge: Lydia, you show us the cover of your upcoming book called "Sealed With A Kiss" on your own web site, can you explain where this title picture (you kissing with Peter) was taken, who did it, when, where and... you both with Peter posed for this picture specially or picture was made casually?
Lydia Criss: "The picture of Peter & I was taken on the airplane just before we were landing in Japan for the first time 1977. It was taken by Bob Gruen (photographer for John Lennon & KISS album 'Dressed to Kill'). The picture was not posed for, Bob Gruen just took the picture without our knowledge.
Kiss Revenge: Your book called "Sealed With A Kiss". Can you explaine the title you gave your book, what sence you put in this title? What does it mean?
Lydia Criss: "'Sealed with a Kiss' is an American expression which means 'Completed With Love'. I am finally telling my story in its complete form and it has been a gratifying experience."
Read the rest of the short interview at this location.
Bret Michaels: "Let me tell you, on two levels. I been friends with Gene and Paul for a pretty long time and obviously I love KISS and here is what's great about it. Not only did they treat us great, as a band they treated us great, they were very respectful but what was also cool about it, to me, they were great to my little girl Raine, I had her out with me on the road for a couple of shows and they treated her great. I have the best picture of Paul Stanley and Gene Simmons picking her up and walking around with her in full makeup, and she has a KISS 'Destroyer' shirt and Gene and her are looking at each other and they both have their tongues out and the metal hands up. So on a personal level and a professional level it was great. But the most important thing, when POISON finished our set there wasn't one night I missed, I went up and watched KISS play every night and I was thinking, I would be paying to do this if I wasn't doing this. How many people can say that they get paid for watching their favorite band play?"
With a career spanning more than years, Simmons, 76, has certainly received her share of fan mail.
There was always the weird among the adoring and complementary.
Then came a letter from a 10-year-old boy.
"He said he loved it best when I spit blood out of my mouth,"recalls Simmons in a telephone interview from her home in Los Angeles.
Simmons rightfully assumed she was getting mail intended for flamboyant KISS front man Gene Simmons.
"It wasn't the first of his mail I had received and it hasn't been the last. I send them all on to him. He's never written back to say he's received them."
In Disney's American version of Hayao Miyazaki Howl's Moving Castle, Simmons provides the voice of Old Sophie who is really a beautiful young girl under the spell of a jealous witch.
"This whole process of dubbing a foreign animated movie was totally new to me. It's wonderful at my age to have such new and exciting experiences."
Simmons received an Oscar nomination in 1949 for starring opposite Laurence Olivier in Hamlet and another in 1970 for the drama The Happy Ending.
She starred in such screen classics as The Robe, Demetrius and the Gladiators, Guys and Dolls, Elmer Gantry and Spartacus and numbers among her leading men such screen giants as Richard Burton, Kirk Douglas, Victor Mature, Marlon Brando, Burt Lancaster and Gregory Peck.
"I've had an incredible life and an incredible career. I've been truly blessed and very, very fortunate.
"What's so rewarding is that people still think of me for projects like Howl's Moving Castle."
For more information, visit ItsOnlyRocknRoll.com.
Commented Kathy, "I met Ace through a friend, he came to my birthday party and then we had several occasions to socialize. I invited him to do a solo on my record and he was nice enough to say yes and then actually do it. I don't know much about him as a guitarist, but I love the solo he played on my song 'Bad Choice'."
According to Billboard.com, "Light Years" sports 11 originals, including "Getting By", "Shooting Star" and "Retouch Me", as well as a cover of GARY MYRICK's "Guitar, Talk, Love and Drums".
The album was recorded while Valentine was pregnant, and she admits, "It felt like I was making two babies at once. The night before going in for a scheduled delivery, I was putting vocal overdubs on a couple of songs, knowing it might be awhile before I got back into the studio."
Check out "Light Years" audio samples at CDBaby.com.
For dealer information or tickets, contact Jim Frangella at kissarmy3@sbcglobal.net.
The rock star who was known as The Demon during the height of KISS' fame during the '80s, is taking part in a second TV series of the show that sees him turning youngsters into stars capable of supporting one of the world's biggest rock bands in a major concert.
And Stratton Upper in Biggleswade is in the running to take part.
Headteacher Neil Bramwell said: "It is something that is potentially very exciting but, and there's a big but, we won't necessarily be chosen."
A former teacher in Harlem, Gene Simmons was sacked for replacing his pupils' Shakespeare texts with Spiderman comics.
The last series saw him teaching the ropes to youngsters from the 450-year-old Christ's Hospital school in West Sussex, a charity run boarding school, who went on to support MOTÖRHEAD.
Mr. Bramwell added: "They would like the school that's chosen to do everything and it would work extremely well with our enterprise learning scheme. It's not just being members of the band, it's everything to do with setting up a major event.
"It's a fantastic opportunity for some of our students. There are so many of them that have their own bands and are really interested in this area of future career or are passionate about music. It would be wonderful for them."
It is expected the program will have reached a decision about the chosen school by the end of June.
Gene Simmons met with an unfavorable reception during filming for a new reality show, featuring the long-tongued KISS bassist teaching classes at a posh English music school, Christ's Hospital.
Located in West Sussex, the school funds bright children from poor backgrounds.
A student-run blog was inundated with negative knocks aimed at the aging rocker. From his hair extensions to his arrogant swagger, no nuance went unmentioned.
The Guardian reports that in one entry, titled "The Barrel is Duly Scraped", the writer emphasizes how the rocker's constantly tired look spoke volumes of his burnt out career and the dark glasses he was donning were used more for hiding the bags under his eyes, rather than as a fashion accessory.
Another entry decried the musician's praises of money and stories of 4,136 sexual conquests as pathetic.
The entry states, "Yes, Gene, we have people like you in Britain too. They are locked away and given a healthy dose of medication."
The program, "Rock Star", finds Simmons as a music teacher, who invades the Christ's Hospital music school, in an attempt to turn classically trained students into rock gods.
In the end, ten students will be chosen as winners who will perform a show as the opening act for rock icons MOTÖRHEAD at London's Hammersmith Apollo.
Next month, the winners will travel to the states to perform with Simmons.
UNION recently issued a live DVD, entitled "Do Your Own Thing Live!". The disc, which can be ordered from Kulick.net, includes two UNION concerts: a full one from 2001 (just before UNION's trip to Argentina), and one for ESP guitars at MI from January of 2000. Bonus material includes an unreleased UNION song called "Walking In Your Sleep", behind-the-scenes footage on tour with UNION, a photo gallery, and more links to all things UNION.
This year's KISS Expo will take place on October 16, 2005. Doors open at 11:00 a.m. and the Expo runs until 8:00 p.m. Tickets are on sale now for $15.00 in advance and $18.00 at the door or you can purchase the VIP pass for $20.00 that gets the pass holder in one hour early and first in line for the special guest autograph session. For advance ticket sales please send payment to the Baltimore KISS Expo, 2849 Westminster St., Manchester, MD 21102.
This year's Expo will kick off Saturday night, October 15 at the hotel lounge with the Baltimore KISS party, featuring the KISS karaoke where you sing live with the band. The last few years we have been the only Expo to do this and it has become a main stay at the Baltimore Expo. The next day at the KISS Expo (October 16) will feature KISS dealers from around the country selling vintage and new KISS memorabilia. This year's KISS tribute band will be LOVE GUN with their full "Love Gun" stage set. Also available will be a KISS museum with KISS costumes and rare memorabilia a KISS face painter for the kids, door prizes and a KISS lookalike contest with first prize of $100.00. There will also be a food court so you can have lunch and not have to leave the Expo.
This year's special guest will be announced at a later date as soon as everything is confirmed and be on the look out for the Baltimore/Washington Expo web page coming soon with all of the updated ticket and guest info. Vendors can contact the Baltimore KISS Expo at pushband@adelphia.net.
The talks have been preliminary, no firm offer has been submitted and a deal is not imminent, the source added.
Sanctuary, home to artists including Beyonce, KISS, Iron Maiden and Elton John, said on Friday it was in ongoing talks with several third parties that could lead to a partial or outright sale of the company.
In addition to EMI and Warner, several private equity firms also have held talks with the company.
Shares of Sanctuary, the world's biggest independent record label and a major player in artist management, touring and merchandising, are up more than 20 percent since May 31.
Sanctuary, EMI and Warner all declined to comment.
The company's shares closed at 43-1/2 pence on Friday, giving Sanctuary a market capitalization of 161 million pounds ($293 million).
"I'm in the studio weekly working on my solo album. Mixing has started and the tracks sound tremendous. I couldn't be happier with the way it's turning out!"
Eric and his Cooper bandmates will be performing two exclusive shows in Australia on their days off in Sydney and Melbourne. The band will let loose with a set of their favourite songs by bands like KISS, DAVID BOWIE, SWEET, T-REX, CHEAP TRICK and many others — the music that influenced them.
Singer's band for these performances will consist of guitarist/vocalist Ryan Roxie (SLASH'S SNAKEPIT, ALICE COOPER, ROXIE '77), who has acted as ALICE COOPER's music director for all of his tours since 1995; bassist Chuck Garric, who has played with DIO, among others; and guitarist/vocalist Damon Johnson. Damon has done session work with the likes of SAMMY HAGAR, FAITH HILL and JOHN WAITE.
After the show, the band will be hanging around for a signing session to meet and greet the fans and will be making available some exclusive merchandise. Support for both shows will come from Melbourne act STAND. who have just recently completed a series of shows opening for PETER FRAMPTON, SUZI QUATRO and THREE DOORS DOWN.
ERIC SINGER & FRIENDS tour dates:
Jun. 25 – Sydney, AUS – The Annandale Hotel
Jun. 29 – Melbourne, AUS – The Corner Hotel
As an endorsee of one of SMC's (Samick Music Corp.) instrument brand, Silvertone, Stanley wanted to take part in the donation of another SMC's brands instrument, Hazelton, for placement in schools that are in need of assistance with continuing music programs. Stanley was instrumental in bringing SMC together with the Mr. Holland's Opus Foundation.
Stanley said, "School music programs, exemplified by the work of Mr. Holland's Opus Foundation, give young people at risk a road that can lead them away from the problems and temptations that surround and beckon daily, giving them a chance to avoid the roads that at best, lead nowhere. Knowing firsthand what music can make possible, I fully support these efforts."
The Mr. Holland's Opus Foundation's purpose, as stated on their web site, is to "support music education and its many benefits through the donation of new and refurbished musical instruments to underserved school and community music programs and individual students nationwide."
Check out a photo of Stanley with the donated instruments at Paul Stanley's Paradise.
As previously reported, footage from the concert will be shown as part of the one-time-only event being staged at select Regal, United Artists and Edwards Theatres across the country on Monday, June 27 at 7:00 p.m.
A spectacular night of music and comedy to support the families of troops that have been wounded or have lost their lives in our defense, the live private military event drew over 44,000 attendees. Nationally acclaimed musical artists and a variety of celebrities provided the entertainment, including Cedric the Entertainer (Master of Ceremonies), DESTINY'S CHILD, HOOTIE AND THE BLOWFISH, Jay Mohr, Louie Anderson, and Richie Sambora.
A portion of all net proceeds has been pledged to benefit the troops and their families through Support the Corps, Inc., a tax-exempt, non-profit charitable organization. Please visit www.supportthecorps.org to participate.
For more information or to purchase tickets, go to this location.
In other KISS DVD news, there is a (presumably bogus) report going around on the Internet that KISS, Sanctuary Visual Entertainment, Universal Music and VH1 have teamed up to deliver the ultimate KISS DVD package: "KISS: Beyond the Make-Up". According to the (fake?) press release currently making the rounds, this two-DVD set is scheduled to be released on August 16 and is set to include the VH1 KISS special "Beyond the Make-Up" along with three hours of extra footage culled from the KISS vaults.
"Many fans have been asking to purchase or pick up Kissworld product in person and whilst the fate of the store is still being discussed between the operators and KISS. Melbourne memorabilia and paper goods manufacturer, World of Stars, the owners of Kissworld have decided to make the Kissworld product available from its Head Office Showroom in Melbourne.
"From 25 May, 10.30am-5.30pm, Monday to Friday, direct sales can be made from the warehouse located at Unit 4/37-41 Hallam South Road, Hallam. You can also phone World of Stars on Ph 1300 657 277 (within Australia).
"Whilst this is NOT Kissworld, all of the lithographs, signed product, guitars and other fantastic rare and one off pieces will be available to view and purchase, many of which are not available on the website. World of Stars also has a substantial range of other music, film, TV and sporting memorabilia to choose from.
"Feel free to come down and check it out!"
KISS Army's Gods Of Thunder Festival and KISS Expo will be held on Saturday, September 10 at the Sentrum Scene in Oslo.
In other news, KISS Army Norway and Voices Music Entertainment will release a tribute album September 5 that will bring tribute CDs to a new level, both musically and visually. Ken Kelly, who did the legendary painting for the "Destroyer" and "Love Gun" albums, has painted his third KISS cover for this tribute CD. Ex-KISS guitarist Bruce Kulick salutes his Norwegian fans by joining glam heroes WIG WAM for the hottest version of "I Was Made for Loving You" ever recorded. The release will introduce you to KISSETTES, a Norwegian all-female KISS tribute act that will blow your mind.
RockEyes.com: Did you think that Gene [Simmons] and Paul [Stanley] would ask you back after Ace [Frehley] left again?
Bruce Kulick: "You have to remember Ace left in a very strange way. I'm real clear about it. It's as if Tommy Thayer has been Ace's understudy since the reunion tour teaching him the riffs. Tommy did a great Ace in the band COLD GIN years ago. Not all the KISS fans are aware that KISS had situations where they had to do some things with Tommy. They did not really announce it during a tour. A TV thing here… a private gig there. There was every intention for Ace to do it and Ace just didn't come. With Ace being such a part of the dysfunctional family being KISS, I think it really put the pressure on Gene and Paul to move ahead and figure out what to do. They usually took the path of less resistance.
"I never looked at me not having the opportunity to be Ace in KISS as a bad thing. It made sense to have Tommy do this. Like I said, Tommy was the understudy and obviously at one point it would happen. I know it is hard for KISS fans to understand. I know having the original members has more value for the promoters or at least it has been recently.
"The AEROSMITH tour was really important and when Ace wouldn't commit to that (which is crazy) and they had to move on. That would have been such a blast to play and hear AEROSMITH every night. But that is why Peter ended back in the band. Ace wouldn't commit. So Tommy is on guitar and Peter's on drums. That is a whole other thing then say, having Eric Singer playing the drums (who was earlier playing drums in KISS just prior to that tour down in Japan and Australia.) But by the time they were going to Australia to do the symphony tour, Peter didn't show up so Eric was now the drummer.
"So this past year they just gave up. Peter was useless and not interested and Ace was lost. So Eric and Tommy replaced Ace and Peter. It has nothing to do with musical talent or personality thing. It made more sense for Tommy to do that thing with KISS. Plus I have a really great gig now playing in GRAND FUNK. It's a terrific band, I love the guys and they pay me well. What if I was suddenly in KISS and there is no guarantee and Ace wants to come back next month? What am I supposed to do? I don't want to lose a good gig with GRAND FUNK. What happens during a month Ace needs some money and says, 'Hey, Gene, what's up this month?' You know they will take him back right away."
Read the entire interview at this location.
Besides being the hardest rocking man in rock 'n' roll, DANKO JONES' frontman/namesake is a big KISS fan and had a great KISS special on his radio show "The Magical World of Rock with Danko Jones" last year.
If you would like to be one of the girls featured in Couzin Ed's Babefest 2005, you will have to come down to 94 WYSP studios at 5th & Market during business hours and get photographed for their web site (voting will begin soon). And if you would like to get free tickets to Couzin Ed's Babefest you will have to listen to 94 WYSP, Philadelphia's #1 rock station.
The Kiss Underground Archives: What's going on in the world of KISS?
Gene Simmons: "What's going on is that obviously the best way for anyway to find out the latest, is to get online to KissOnline.com. Because when there's news and we're ready to talk about it, it gets posted. My site is a little different because I don't have to check with anybody, and do whatever the hell I wanna do. So there's all kinds of activity, all the time. Almost every day. Paul's [Stanley] working on his solo record. I know he's very, very excited by that. And I bet it's gonna kick ass. We were going to go overseas and tour, and I think wisely decided not to do it at this time. Between Paul doing a solo record, and all kinds of other stuff being worked on at the same time, there's just not enough time. Because before we can go out on tour, there's all the set-ups, rehearsals, we gotta build a stage — it takes a lot of work. So there will be a tour at some point, but right now, Paul wants to concentrate on the solo record, and who knows, maybe he'll wanna go out and tour in back of it. Which I think would rock. I remember the last time I saw him in 1989, and it was a real treat to be able to sit in the audience and watch, if not THE best frontman in the business, certainly one of the best."
The Kiss Underground Archives: The major thing that most KISS fans have been asking for is NEW KISS music. From what I've read, you seem to be pretty gung-ho about doing a record with the current lineup, where Paul seems to be more on the fence about doing another KISS album.
Gene Simmons: "Well, when you're in the middle of a party and somebody says, 'Hey, let's go to a party,' it's not the same discussion if you're not at a party. Whereas if you're not at a party, and somebody says, 'Let's go to a party,' (and then you would say) 'Great idea.' In essence, what I'm saying is that right now, Paul is in the middle of writing and recording his solo record, so the idea of recording MORE music with KISS isn't as appealing. Also, we all know the market place is completely different. It's different for us, it's different for the STONES. It's different for any band that has been around for an awful long time. As we all know, the new STONES record is gonna come out, but it's not going to get the attention that it would have got like when they first came out. But it doesn't dilute the fact that it's a very important group that you wanna go see, because they're legends. So, to be honest with you, it is less appealing to go and try to do new music because the market place is certainly different. I mean, Elton John came out a few years ago and said, 'I'm through making new music. I'm happy to just get up on stage and play songs that I love playing.'"
The Kiss Underground Archives: What do you have to say to the fans who complain about all of the compilation CDs?
Gene Simmons: "There are two points to make, once and for all. One, the compilations DO NOT come from us. They come from record companies who own the rights to do those compilations. Two, and this is a really important one, just because YOU have those songs, doesn't mean that new fans do. So every once in awhile I'll go out and buy a greatest hits album by THE SWEET. And when I look at the greatest hits section by THE SWEET, or SLADE, or any other of my favorite bands, there are TONS of compilation records. But hey, I didn't buy every SWEET or SLADE record. So when I buy one of those records, I buy a compilation. And there's going to be even more new (KISS) compilations. You're going to hear 'Detroit Rock City' and a million other songs A HUNDRED TIMES, and they (the compilations) may not be for you. It may be for a brand new fan who doesn't wanna buy 40 albums, who may just wanna buy a taste of KISS. So those compilations WILL continue, and if you don't like it, there's a simple rule in capitalism: don't buy it. But complaining about compilations and other issues about the band means nothing. You're not in control."
The Kiss Underground Archives: Do you think there will ever be a day when KISS would once again perform without makeup or do you think KISS should remain a makeup entity until the band stops performing.
Gene Simmons: "I've said this before, that we'd never put the makeup back on again, but there we are. We did put it on. I said that we would never play with Ace [Frehley] and Peter [Criss] and then we did. As I stand here now, I would NEVER get on the stage with Ace and Peter again. Put on the makeup, don't put on the makeup, but who the hell knows?! You never know. You live and you learn."
The Kiss Underground Archives: If KISS does decide to ultimately record a new CD, would you keep it to only the current lineup playing on it, or would you be open to bringing in former members to participate as well?
Gene Simmons: "I tell what is great is that you never know. But I will tell you from the bottom of my heart that it's a real treat to play with Tommy [Thayer] and Eric [Singer] because they're positive people. There are no dark clouds hanging over their heads. There's no agony, there's no chemicals. It's a pleasure to play with guys who really love being onstage. And nobody wants to hear this about their Mom and Dad. You don't wanna hear your Mom say bad stuff about your Dad, even if it's true. But I wanna tell you that the fans get really pissed off at me for telling the truth. It's been torture with Ace and Peter. Forget about the drugs and the alchohol and all that, it's just been sometimes beyond miserable. Trying to get along with guys who have a problem with life itself. They're just difficult human beings. That doesn't mean I don't wish the best for them, I do. I love 'em, but for years and decades, they couldn't even figure out a way to help themselves. You can only go so far, and we went so far OVER AND OVER again. And it's been miserable. It's been a REAL FUCKIN' TORTURE!"
Read Gene Simmons' entire interview with The Kiss Underground Archives at this location.
Now everything is finally revealed about one of rock music's most outrageous and enduring phenomena. In this definitive, official authorized biography, authors David Leaf and Ken Sharp were given full, unprecedented access to KISS and their inner circle.
Hear the true, uncensored stories from Gene Simmons, the fire-breathing Demon; Paul Stanley, the acrobatic Starchild; Ace Frehley, the axe-slinging Spaceman; and Peter Criss, the levitating Catman drummer. Chronicling the group's amazing story, this one-of-a-kind book also offers interviews with some of the biggest stars in rock music, including Pete Townshend, Alice Cooper, Ted Nugent, Ozzy Osbourne, and many others.
The only book that truly captures the inimitable and exuberant spirit of the fiery foursome who gave America its second national anthem, "Rock and Roll All Nite", "Kiss: Behind The Mask" is a must-have for the band's legion of KISS Army acolytes.
* Dozens of never-before-seen photos
* The band's story, told in their own words
* Exclusive album-by-album, song-by-song commentary
* In unique interviews, today's rock superstars tell why they love KISS
Hosted by Karina Huber, "Listed" features a weekly roster of top artists who live in the record books — and the tabloids. From themes including "Most Controversial," "All Time Classics," "Top Sellers" and more, this MuchMoreMusic original show backs up each edition with the latest in stats, current gossip and expert opinion.
"20 Baddest Boys In Music," according to MuchMoreMusic's "Listed":
01. Tommy Lee
02. Eminem
03. Gene Simmons
04. 50 Cent
05. Liam Gallagher
06. Jim Morrison
07. Axl Rose
08. Keith Richards
09. Johnny Rotten
10. Snoop Dogg
11. Ozzy Osbourne
12. Iggy Pop
13. Bobby Brown
14. Scott Weiland
15. Kid Rock
16. David Lee Roth
17. Jerry Lee Lewis
18. Robbie Williams
19. Rick James
20. Billy Idol
"This tape is absolutely authentic and has been in my possession since 1987 when I bought it from KISS's former manager's warehouse.
"I listened to it and it works and sounds just fine. This is a rare, one-of-a-kind, KISS collectible. Good luck bidding."
The current bid is $470. The auction ends on May 27 at 6:17 p.m. PDT.
A spectacular night of music and comedy to support the families of troops that have been wounded or have lost their lives in our defense, the live private military event drew over 44,000 attendees. Nationally acclaimed musical artists and a variety of celebrities provided the entertainment, including Cedric the Entertainer (Master of Ceremonies), DESTINY'S CHILD, HOOTIE AND THE BLOWFISH, Jay Mohr, Louie Anderson, and Richie Sambora.
A portion of all net proceeds has been pledged to benefit the troops and their families through Support the Corps, Inc., a tax-exempt, non-profit charitable organization. Please visit www.supportthecorps.org to participate.
For more information or to purchase tickets, go to www.BigScreenConcerts.com.
The VH1 Save The Music Foundation is a non-profit organization dedicated to improving the quality of education in America's public schools by restoring music programs in cities across the country and raising public awareness about the importance of music participation for our nation’s youth.
The auctions can be viewed at this location.
Singer recently completed a short European tour with ERIC SINGER PROJECT (ESP), the band featuring Singer, Bruce Kulick (GRAND FUNK RAILROAD, ex-KISS), John Corabi (ex-THE SCREAM, MÖTLEY CRÜE) and Chuck Garric (ALICE COOPER, DIO).
ESP's setlist consists mainly of KISS hits and obscure KISS songs that have never before been played live, along with selections from MÖTLEY CRÜE, GRAND FUNK RAILROAD, ALICE COOPER and other classic rock bands.
For more information on SHIRLEYS TEMPLE, visit their official web site.
The first 50 customers that buy the UNION "Do Your Own Thing Live" DVD from Perris will go into a drawing to win the gold record. The drawing will be held on May 31. You have a one-in-fifty chance of winning.
For a picture of the award and details regarding the DVD, go to www.perrisrecords.com.
ESP's short European tour kicked off last Wednesday (April 27) in Stockholm, Sweden. While Singer is on a tour break with KISS, and Kulick is in between tours with his current band GRAND FUNK RAILROAD, the two wanted to join forces for a tour of Europe after a handful of shows together as UNION (also with John Corabi in the band, but with Jamie Hunting on bass) in January.
ESP's setlist consists mainly of KISS hits and obscure KISS songs that have never before been played live, along with selections from MÖTLEY CRÜE, GRAND FUNK RAILROAD, ALICE COOPER and other classic rock bands.
As previously reported, KISS frontman Paul Stanley has collaborated with Boston-based THE CLICK FIVE on the track "Angel to You (Devil to Me)", which is set to appear on THE CLICK FIVE's debut CD, "Greetings From Imrie House", due on August 2 via Lava.
Stanley reportedly co-wrote the track with THE CLICK FIVE keyboardist Ben Romans at Stanley's home studio. The song also features a guest appearance by Elliott Easton of THE CARS.
ESP are in the middle of a short European tour, which kicked off last Wednesday (April 27) in Stockholm, Sweden. While Singer is on a tour break with KISS, and Kulick is in between tours with his current band GRAND FUNK RAILROAD, the two wanted to join forces for a tour of Europe after a handful of shows together as UNION (also with John Corabi in the band, but with Jamie Hunting on bass) in January.
ESP's setlist consists mainly of KISS hits and obscure KISS songs that have never before been played live, along with selections from MÖTLEY CRÜE, GRAND FUNK RAILROAD, ALICE COOPER and other classic rock bands.
In addition to being the frontman for CRISS on the "Bad Boys of KISS" tours (a double billing with Ace Frehley's band) Jason's credits also include playing guitar with Terri Nunn's BERLIN. This is Ebs' first solo effort following the reunion of KISS in the late '90s. Tour dates currently being booked for the summer.
Jason is currently recording another record called "Jason & Janea". It is an acoustic-based CD co-written by Janea Chadwick and due for a late summer release.
The bassist proved a triumphant success on the upcoming television series — which sees him teaching posh classical music students how to "raawk." The 13-year-old boffins eventually open a show for MOTÖRHEAD and a jolly good time is had by all.
U.K.'s Channel 4 were so chuffed with the results they have ordered a second series before the first one has even been broadcast.
But Gene could be forgiven for turning his nose up — as Channel 4's entertainment boss reportedly remarked, "If I said Simmons wasn't an idiot, I'd be lying."
'80S KISS made their live debut on the "Subliminal Verses Tour" Friday night (April 29) in Council Bluffs, Iowa.
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ESP's setlist consisted mainly of KISS hits and obscure KISS songs that have never before been played live, along with selections from MÖTLEY CRÜE, GRAND FUNK RAILROAD, ALICE COOPER and other classic rock bands. The band also performed at Plato in Helmond, Holland Friday night (April 29). Those photos can be viewed at KissKollector.com.
Setlist for ESP at at Plato in Helmond, Holland on April 29, 2005:
01. Do You Own Thing (UNION)
02. Love (I Don't Need It Anymore) (UNION)
03. Watchin' You (KISS) (Chuck on vocals)
04. Jungle (KISS)
05. Till Death Do Us Part (MÖTLEY CRÜE)
06. Black Diamond (KISS) (Eric on vocals)
07. Jump the Shark (BRUCE KULICK)
08. School's Out (ALICE COOPER)
09. I Walk Alone (KISS) (Bruce on vocals)
10. Man In the Moon (THE SCREAM)
Encore:
11. I Love It Loud (KISS) (Chuck on vocals)
12. (We're An) American Band (GRAND FUNK RAILROAD)
13. She (KISS) (Chuck and John sharing vocals)
ESP are in the middle of a short European tour, which kicked off Wednesday (April 27) in Stockholm, Sweden. While Singer is on a tour break with KISS, and Kulick is in between tours with his current band GRAND FUNK RAILROAD, the two wanted to join forces for a tour of Europe after a handful of shows together as UNION (also with John Corabi in the band, but with Jamie Hunting on bass) in January.
The show sees KISS bassist Gene Simmons turning classical music students into rock stars. After their training, the students, who wear yellow stockings and a 16th century frock coat as part of their school uniform, opened for MOTÖRHEAD.
The next series will see students from an inner-city state school being given the same treatment. It is not presently clear if Simmons will once again be involved with the show.
As previously reported, VH1 has partnered with British reality shop RDF Media ("Wife Swap") to reformat six episodes from the first series for American audiences, stocking them with new music and additional KISS footage from the MTV Networks library in time for a late spring/early summer premiere.
Joe Houlihan, prexy of RDF's U.S. operation, says the series shows a softer side of Simmons, who has recently popped up on primetime in "The Apprentice" and as a guest judge for "American Idol".
"Last August, the attorneys for KISS obtained an injunction against the sale of counterfeit KISS merchandise and seized bootleg videos of KISS concerts that were being offered for sale at a KISS Expo in North Carolina. Our attorneys (Ray Scott and William Randolph), following up on that seizure, obtained last week a permanent injunction against defendant Roy Damm and damages awarded to Kiss Catalog of $7,000,000, plus attorneys' fees.
"We hope that this judgment sends a clear message that KISS will not tolerate being ripped off by counterfeiters and bootleggers. This is also a rip-off of KISS fans who have a right to expect that when they spend their hard earned money for KISS merchandise and videos, they are getting high-quality, authorized KISS products. When you purchase bootleg videos, including bootleg DVDs marketed under the KissVision label, we ALL lose. This is our $7,000,000 warning to those who are selling counterfeit and bootleg KISS goods, that they risk the same fate as Roy Damm. We have directed the KISS attorneys to continue protecting KISS' rights as aggressively as allowed. No slaps on the wrist. We will find you and we will take you out."
The classically trained musician and director of residential programs at Franklin & Marshall College said she once hid her devotion to the pop-metal band KISS from her highbrow peers. Now, you could say she's an open book on the subject.
Shaw has published her first novel, "Won't Get Fooled Again," scheduled for local release June 1. It's the story of Suzanne Curtis, an executive who gets caught up in misadventures while trying to keep her professional life separate from her secret rock 'n' roll lifestyle.
The tagline for the book is "It's always the quiet ones who hide the biggest secrets."
"It's not really a book about KISS, and I'm not Suzanne," Shaw said. "But there's autobiographical elements to the story, sure.
"I think everyone has a secret they try to keep from people that's actually very harmless," she said. "The theme is universal, and I loved writing a book that might help others with dueling passions to explore their interests."
Shaw came out of the rock 'n' roll closet in 2003 as the subject of the documentary film, "Living the Fantasy," an exploration of KISS fan culture. She also has been documenting the writing of "Won't Get Fooled Again" on www.KISSfiction.com for about three years.
Shaw said one of her biggest hurdles was finding the right publisher - then getting a crash course in Media Law 101.
"Well, I had to clear all the KISS music I mention in the book," Shaw said. "That was pretty easy, but also a learning experience.
"Another interesting experience came about because one of the guys from KISS makes a cameo appearance in the book," she said. "Usually, legally protecting a writer who wants to use a real-life person in a work of fiction isn't that difficult, but there was a big legal case going on at the time that was slowing things up."
Shaw was referring to the legal battle between hockey player Tony Twist (former St. Louis enforcer) and Todd McFarlane, creator of the comic book "Spawn."
"McFarlane created a character named Tony Twist, and that happened to be the name of a real person," Shaw said. "The real Twist sued McFarlane."
Shaw's agent assured her that Twist would never win the lawsuit, based on similar cases in the past.
"And he didn't win," she said. "But then Twist appealed."
A St. Louis circuit judge overturned the jury verdict and awarded Twist $24.5 million for unauthorized use of his name. Naturally, the case made Shaw's lawyer a bit skittish.
"They sent me back to KISS for official permission, and my agent went about collecting information to protect me in the event of legal problems," she said. "Luckily, everything worked out, and I got the OK."
As Shaw was writing the book, she kept in contact with KISS' raunchy showman, Gene Simmons.
She said keeping Simmons informed of her progress was a way to show respect for the source of her inspiration.
"People were telling me, 'You don't have to talk to them.' But I'd keep saying, 'No, I'm not writing this book in bad faith'," Shaw said. "That would be like a slap in the face to the guys who got me through hard times with all those hard guitars."
Shaw went to her first book signing over the weekend at a KISS Expo in Cincinnati - her first "gig."
Next month Shaw will do another book signing at a KISS Expo in New York and later appear at the New York/New Jersey Expo. In between events, Shaw will take on another special project.
"I'm going to produce a show," said the thirtysomething who is originally from New York. "I'm doing a spoof of KISS when they recorded with the Melbourne Symphony Ensemble. I play a stuffy classical type.
"I figured a short film would be good for promotion," Shaw said. "It's better then just going out there and saying, 'Hi, I'm fun! Buy my book.' "
Shaw said she's a proud member of the "KISS Army" - the legions of KISS fans worldwide - and that "Let Me Go, Rock 'n' Roll" is still her favorite song.
"(KISS) got me through a lot of hard times," she said. "I can remember when I first conceived the book. It was the year my mom died.
"I was thinking about growing up, getting married, stopping the rock 'n' roll," Shaw said. "A year later I was so miserable. Then I began to realize the opposites in my life could coexist and not be at odds any more.
"I love higher education, but I couldn't imagine life without the rebelliousness of rock - which provides me with joyful release."
She said the guys in KISS proved to be inspirational when it came to her dreams of being a writer.
"They were so fearless," she said. "They became a model for me. When I started writing the book three years ago, I didn't eat and sleep much, I was totally focused."
She said she has outlines for other books and might possibly write a sequel to "Won't Get Fooled" in the near future.
Right now, Shaw's just thrilled to be living her fantasy.
Shaw will be selling advance copies of "Won't Get Fooled Again" after the screening of "Living the Fantasy" Wednesday, during a free film festival at F&M College's Roschel Center for the Performing Arts.
"One of the most recently penned Paul Stanley songs can be heard here on KISS Kollector Online. The track is titled 'Angel To You (Devil In Me)' and appears on THE CLICK FIVE's four-song sampler CD that they sold at the shows during their recent tour with ASHLEE SIMPSON (from April 21 onwards they'll do a couple of shows with AARON CARTER). According to a press release from the Boston-based teen pop/rock outfit — whose music is being compared to that of THE CARS and CHEAP TRICK — they sold over 10,000 copies of their EP.
"Paul co-wrote the song with members of THE CLICK FIVE, who also co-wrote two songs with Adam Schlesinger (FOUNTAINS OF WAYNE). 'Angel To You (Devil In Me)' features a guitar solo from Elliot Easton of THE CARS. THE CLICK FIVE's debut album, 'Greetings From Imrie House', will be [released on August 2 via Lava Records]. All songs on the album, produced by Mike Denneen (FOUNTAINS OF WAYNE, AIMEE MANN and HOWIE DAY), were written (and performed) by THE CLICK FIVE, with the exception, of course, of the Paul Stanley and Adam Schlesinger co-writes."
Visit the official Expo web site for updates on additional guests and directions.
The rock memorabilia expected to garner the most attention are a rare, ROLLING STONES' hollow body guitar and the BEATLES' "Magical Mystery Tour" album, each autographed by all respective band members, as well as autographed microphones by the hottest artists topping the Billboard charts: 50 CENT, CHRISTINA AGUILERA, BEYONCE, DR. DRE, EMINEM, ICE CUBE, JAY-Z, JENNIFER LOPEZ, NELLY and SNOOP DOGG.
Scheduled to close at 3:00 p.m. PDT on Monday, April 25, the online auction will also feature prized sports memorabilia from top athletes like Muhammad Ali's hand imprint and Joe Frazier's boxing glove, and framed movie posters signed by the actors who starred in them.
"Overstock.com is an ideal sponsor for our online auction, because it's a company that has experienced phenomenal success and applied that success to effecting positive change in the world," said Ken Margolis, director of events for Save the Earth Foundation.
"We are proud to partner with Save the Earth on this event," said Holly MacDonald-Korth, Overstock.com's vice president of auctions. "We continually seek ways to inform consumers about how to shop smarter and that includes being conscious of their impact on the environment. The Earth Day celebrity auction is the perfect medium for educating millions of people on the value of reusing and recycling."
What exactly is a Podcast?
Podcasts are audio files created to be distributed over the Internet. They’re available for free and usually encoded in MP3 format. But the cool part is the way they get to you. With the right software, you can subscribe to podcasts and have new shows downloaded automatically (and even transferred to your iPod) while you sleep. Once you tell the software where you want content from, it searches on a regular basis for updates and downloads what it finds for you. You can then browse the content at your leisure.
Enter The KISS Podcast...
Seemingly every day a new podcast is born. Because the shows are created by enthusiasts instead of the conglomerate corporations that we’re used to getting our media from, you get a lot of exclusive stuff such as for example “the KISS Podcast”. This podcast features one band and just one band only ... KISS. The KISS Army is provided with a great new source to listen to hand-picked audio all involving the hottest Rock and Roll band in the world. The show features KISS tunes from every era of the bands long and impressive career, performed live or recorded in the studio by KISS or other bands playing KISS and you can hear rare audio recordings such as interviews (done by us or done by the press) or demos from or with KISS. In no time you’ll have an iPod full of fresh KISS content any day of the week. Not only will you be better informed (or, at least, better entertained) you will have something to talk about the next time you meet fellow KISS fans.
“We feature just one band ... and just one band only ... KISS”
Head over to http://www.kisspodcast.com for more information!
The KISS demon has signed on to star in six episodes of VH1's Rock School, a reality series inspired by the hit movie, School of Rock, according to Daily Variety.
Only, instead of Jack Black instructing classically trained kiddies, the music net has tapped the fire-spewing, tongue-wagging bass player of the world's most outrageous glam band to offer up lessons in everything from how to don the monster makeup to presumably playing such KISS gems as "Lick It Up," "Calling Dr. Love" and "Rock and Roll All Night."
VH1 is teaming with Britain's RDF Media, the creators of ABC's Wife Swap and Spike TV's I Hate My Job, to produce Rock School for U.S. viewers. The company just finished shooting a British version of the series starring Simmons for the U.K.'s Channel 4 and has already ordered two additional installments.
For the American version, RDF and VH1 will tweak those episodes and include additional music and footage of KISS performing from past MTV specials.
Joe Houlihan, RDF's president of U.S. operations, said Simmons immediately sparked to the idea, especially since before forming KISS in 1972 and becoming a '70s rock icon and darling of groupies, he taught sixth graders in Spanish Harlem.
"Gene was genuinely interested in transforming the troupe of pre-teens into a rough-round-the-edges rock band," Joe Houlihan, RDF's president of U.S. operations, told Variety.
Added Houlihan: "We've been kicking this idea around for a few years. With the Jack Black film becoming a big hit, we feel like the timing couldn't be better."
For Simmons, the show is yet another opportunity to soften his own image from the brash rock 'n' roll playboy he's been tagged in the tabloids to a sort of professor of rock--something along the lines of Ozzy Osbourne rebranding himself America's favorite dysfunctional dad in MTV's The Osbournes. The musician has already appeared as a guest judge on American Idol and turned up recently on The Apprentice.
Rock School's opening session will reportedly find Simmons teaching his pupils the art of the grand entrance as he pulls up to an English boarding school in a limousine, drawing indifferent reactions from the kids who found him to be "arrogant" and "middle-aged."
"The cultural byplay between this American rock star and these plum English kids is really quite funny," added VH1 executive vice president Michael Hirschorn.
Talk about an education.
No word whether Simmons' fellow KISS mates Paul Stanley, Ace Frehley, or Peter Criss might be making any cameos.
VH1 is expected to debut Rock School in late spring or early summer.
This isn't the first time Simmons and company have tried to appeal to the kiddies. Aside from producing their own comic book series in the '70s and starring in a 1978 made-for-TV movie where they battle an evil scientist, KISS Meets the Phantom of the Park, the arena rockers also appeared in a cartoon short that was screened ahead of Nickelodeon's 1997 feature, Good Burger. Two years later, Kiss played themselves in Detroit Rock City, a feature-length teen comedy inspired by their classic hit of the same name.
"Hello everyone! Hope spring is treating everyone well. I know Los Angeles has finally dried out from all the rain this winter, if I can call it a winter. As you all know I have been busy with trips for GRAND FUNK, and also was able to appear at the Indianapolis KISS Expo with Eric Singer and John Corabi. Great event as we jammed and had some of our friends from Japan there as well to visit the U.S.
"You all know the UNION DVD 'Do Your Own Thing Live' has arrived and is in stock and please send in your reviews. Everyone is excited about the reaction, and I can't promise anything yet for UNION in the future, but over two hours of us on the DVD should help your curiousity!
"Coming up this month is a trip for ESP. In this case I don't mean the guitar company, I mean ESP the band. Eric Singer, John Corabi, Chuck Garric on bass (ALICE COOPER and DIO) and myself. We have booked 6 shows for Europe that begin April 27th, in Stockholm. We will be in Denmark, Holland, Germany and Spain. The night before the first show in Sweden, Eric and I will be at the Hard Rock Cafe, Stockholm for a meet and greet and some interviews. We will play songs from KISS, UNION, MÖTLEY CRÜE, and various covers of bands we love. So check out all the dates:
Apr. 27 - Stockholm, SWE @ Mondo.
Apr. 28 – Copenhagen, DEN @ The Rock.
Apr. 29 – Helmond, NETH @ Plato.
Apr. 30 - Babenhausen (near Frankfurt), GER @ Stadthalle.
May 02 – Barcelona, SPA @ Bikini.
"Regarding meet-and-greets, the band will do our best to sign and meet the crowd, usually AFTER the show. As our schedule with travel has not been completely worked out, I can't commit to how long etc, but we will attempt to get to meet our fans.
"Some of you may know that KISS recently was involved in a show for the troops here in the U.S. I do want to mention that the show in Germany which is in Babenhausen, near Frankfurt, we would like to invite any of the troops who are stationed there. We know how much they love KISS and rock music, so please contact hk@crazy-icecube.com. Tickets are 23 euros in advance or 26 euros at the door.
"The summer is really filling up with shows for GRAND FUNK, but I do want to mention that I will be at the Cincinnatti KISS Expo on April 24th. Looking forward to that event, and please know that I will have the UNION DVD with me for sale. The same for Europe, of course.
"So hope to see you all on tour this summer and fall. More updates coming after my trips."
Simmons said that they hope to open the first franchise in early 2006 in Peoria, Illinois. As for the menu items, Simmons said that is still being focused grouped but he is considering making KISS Burger the first kosher fast-food chain. Paul Stanley had no comment.
"Do Your Own Thing Live!" (view cover here) includes two UNION concerts: a full one from 2001 (just before UNION's trip to Argentina), and one for ESP guitars at MI from January of 2000. Bonus material includes an unreleased UNION song called "Walking In Your Sleep", behind-the-scenes footage on tour with UNION, a photo gallery, and more links to all things UNION.
The DVD features the following songs performed live:
01. Do Your Own Thing
02. Everything's Alright
03. Who Do You Think You Are?
04. Old Man Wise
05. Around Again
06. Heavy D
07. Star Spangled Banner
08. Jungle
09. Love (I Don't Need It Anymore)
10. Hypnotized
11. Pain Behind Your Eyes
12. Power To The Music
13. I Walk Alone
14. Man In The Moon
The DVD is in NTSC format - Region 0 (region free).
To order a copy, click here.
Howard began the interview using references from the books. He had them on his desk. Ace gave a signal to his manager and the manager told Gary that the interview had to stop using the excuse that Ace did not want to talk about KISS or his personal life. Howard got mad and said then why the hell did he come on his show if there were limits to the interview? What did Ace have to hide?
All hell broke loose when they went to commercial. Howard and Gary found out that Sal the Stalker tipped off Ace Frehley about Gordon Gebert on the phone. They got pissed when Sal acted like a freak in front of Ace asking for his photo and giving him demo CDs.
Chuck Zito tried to salvage the interview but it was a mess. Ace, Manager and Chuck Zito left very quickly. Gary vowed that Ace Frehley would never return to the show as long as he was Producer for Howard Stern.
Ace was a horrible guest. The funniest joke going around the office was who would make the best interview? Terri Schiavo, the Pope or Ace Frehley?"
Howard admitted that he doesn't know a lot about Ace or KISS, but said he seems like a really nice guy. Chuck Zito came in with him and Howard asked if Ace was scared that Howard might beat him up so he brought Chuck with him as a bodyguard?Ace just laughed and said, "Are you kidding???" Ace and Chuck are in a movie together called Remedy, now on DVD. Ace is not currently touring with KISS but said he has no hard feelings for Gene. He did say they have had their run-ins though. Ace still gets checks because he's one of the original "family" members of KISS. Ace revealed that he didn't want to talk about KISS today, just promote his movie. About 5 minutes into the interview, Gary came in and said Ace's manager wanted him to leave immediately because he didn't want him talking about KISS, so the interview was cut short. Sal the Stockbroker came in, in full Ace make up, to blow some smoke while he had his chance, and then all hell broke loose when Howard went to break.
SAL THE STALK-BROKER: During the break, Sal started badgering Ace with questions about KISS and asked Ace to take some pictures with him. Ace not only ignored Sal, but in the middle of a sentence, interrupted Sal, handed him his own personal camera and asked him to take a picture of Ace and Howard. When they came back from break, Howard had to explain to Sal that he was being a super fan and sounded like a crazy stalker. Howard told him that he couldn't do that to guests and that it was very unprofessional. Howard asked if Sal gave Ace a CD, which he did, of prank calls he made in high school. Sal said he gave it to him because Ace likes to take CDs of prank calls on the road with him. Howard laid down the law and said he is not to hand ANYTHING to ANYONE without Howard's approval first. Sal got defensive and brought Richard Christy into the conversation saying that Howard never yells at Richard for anything but Sal gets the brunt of everything. Gary came in and told stories of Sal's weirdness, including his criticizing Jon Stewart and asking porn stars to autograph blown up pictures of their genitals. Ronnie came in and said he's told Sal repeatedly not to interact with the guests, and Sal said he doesn't do that anymore, not since the first week he was there. Gary apparently made a face at Sal's response and Sal freaked out and yelled at Gary for making faces behind his back and rolling his eyes saying it happens all the time. Howard said that Gary makes weird faces all the time that freak him out but it's not on purpose. Gary and Howard both said he's paranoid and this stuff just doesn't happen. Everybody tried to convince Sal that they all like him and he doesn't need to be paranoid and consider Richard the favorite son. Richard said that Sal will always argue with him about who came up with ideas first and said that when they sit in the back office and Howard plays a bit that Sal wrote and somebody doesn't laugh, he catches it right away. Sal then called Richard a "serial killer," revealing that apparently nothing was learned from today's lesson.
TributeAlbums.com (TA.com): Where did the concept for "KISS Cover to Cover" come from?
R.E. Asbury (R.E.A.): I was talking to a friend of mine about starting TributeAlbums.com. We heard a story about a KISS tribute CD that was supposedly halted by Gene Simmons because the producers didn't have the proper licensing in place. I said something to the effect of "Wouldn't it be funny if someone put out a KISS tribute CD, but only did the songs that KISS covered so that KISS wouldn't get any royalties?" We had a good laugh, but after the conversation I checked into it a little bit and found that the songs for the CD were all cool songs and also that this was one of the only things that hadn't been done yet in terms of a KISS tribute album.
TA.com: Tell us how you went about recruiting for the CD?
R.E.A.: I didn't really have a plan for this, so I looked around online at bands websites, sent lots of emails, and told anyone I could that I was looking for bands to record these songs. I actually invited Jon Rubin, who recorded "Then She Kissed Me", to participate at the New York KISS Expo last year. I also put in calls to all kinds of recording studios, clubs, and anywhere I thought bands might hear about it. Once word got out most of the bands came to me.
TA.com: What kind of response has the project gotten thus far?
R.E.A.: It's been amazing! We've had to upgrade our website hosting twice since announcing it because the traffic was intense!
TA.com: Have you heard anything from KISS?
R.E.A.: We did get a call from the KISS office requesting review copies of the CD, and KISSonline.com, the official KISS website, featured the announcement on their main news page.
TA.com: Tell us about the style of the songs on the CD?
R.E.A.: There are a wide variety of styles on the CD. Heavy rock, acoustic guitars, and a little bit of everything. Marc Zouhar, who recorded "Tossin' and Turnin'", has a cool digital lounge sound that is really interesting.
TA.com: How did you decide on the track list?
R.E.A.: The track list is actually set up in the release order of the KISS versions of the songs. Jon Rubin gets the prize for noticing that first!! Tracks 3, 4, and 5 all came out at the same time on the KISS solo albums, so I put them in alphabetical order (Criss, Frehley, Simmons).
"KISS Cover to Cover", a tribute to songs covered by KISS, is set for release on April 5. Since the project was announced just over a month ago, KISS and music fans alike have been buzzing with anticipation due to the unique nature of the project. Most tribute albums contain cover versions of songs written by the band to which the tribute is acknowledging. In the case of "KISS Cover to Cover", the songs were all written and performed by artists other than KISS, but later covered by the masked monsters of the '70s. In some cases, these songs are more known for the KISS version! In addition, "KISS Cover to Cover" will be an enhanced CD with bonus features accessible through your computer. Pop "KISS Cover to Cover" into your CD-ROM drive and enjoy song histories, photos, artist bios, and more! Pre-order your copy now, and receive "Prophecy – A Tribute to Eric Carr" free with your order!
"We have a lot in store for the next few weeks," says Asbury, "and when you visit TributeAlbums.com on the 5th, there will be a lot of cool stuff!" R.E. Asbury is the driving force behind Lunar Moth Entertainment and TributeAlbums.com. His award-winning concepts and unique presentations are sure to peak the interest of many pop culturists!!
Lunar Moth Entertainment and TributeAlbums.com provide new and interesting products in various mediums. Keep an eye out for upcoming novels, comic books, CD-ROM adventures, CDs and DVDs.
According to the movie's official web site, "Remedy" is "film-noir in the fast lane — a darkly comic tale. It is the mystery surrounding the murder of one of a tightly knit band of friends. Extreme indulgences and the never-ending New York nightlife drive the group into realms of insanity. Eventually they destroy each other and themselves."
"Rock and Roll Fantasy Camp" includes sage advice from this year's world-class "camp counselors" including Kulick, Michaels, Roger Daltrey (THE WHO), Nils Lofgren (E STREET BAND), Dickey Betts (ALLMAN BROTHERS BAND), Jane Wieldin (THE GO GO'S), Jon Anderson (YES), Simon Kirke (BAD COMPANY), Jack Blades (NIGHT RANGER), Elliot Easton (THE CARS) and Colin Hay (MEN AT WORK).
Many "counselors", including Daltrey, Betts, Anderson, Hay and Michaels answer questions in the special submitted in advance by VH1 Classic viewers and asked at the camp by VH1 Classic host Lynn Hoffman.
Rounding out the two-hour block will be classic music videos by artists who served as "camp counselors" this year. Videos include "Down Under" by MEN AT WORK, "Sister Christian" by NIGHT RANGER, "Pinball Wizard" by THE WHO, "Owner of a Lonely Heart" by YES and "Hello Again" by THE CARS.
Launched in May 2000, VH1 Classic is a 24-hour network that presents music videos, concerts and music specials featuring classic rock, soul and pop artists from the '60s, '70s and '80s. Featured artists include THE BEATLES, THE ROLLING STONES, TINA TURNER, LED ZEPPELIN, MARVIN GAYE, THE WHO, STEVIE WONDER, THE POLICE and many more.
Hilsen, a former Upper East Side shrink, once owned millions in real estate but has done his all to duck his debt to his three kids and about $2 million more he owes his wife, Rita, The Post reports.
Hilsen has been at a federal lockup in Brooklyn for nine months awaiting trial, but he could get out if he offered to begin payments.
Rita's lawyer, Jacqueline Bukowski, has been hunting for Jesse's hidden cash, which he allegedly squirreled away in South Africa, Israel and Holland during his years on the lam.
His problems with paying up go back to 1988, when he agreed to give Rita $750 a week and each child $200 under a divorce settlement. He never followed through.
Hilsen, who used 10 aliases while hiding out in three countries, was busted in the Catskills last June after 10 years on the run.
Hilsen raked in $300,000 to $500,000 annually in the four years he managed KISS, but had filed for bankruptcy and refused to pay alimony to his ex-wife.
Rita lost her East Side apartment in the bankruptcy proceeding and has lived in an 8-by-12-foot room in a shelter for the last eight years.
KISS leaders Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley were served subpoenas by a private investigator in September 2003 before their performance at Chicago's Tweeter Center in connection with the case.
The purpose of the subpoenas was to determine what, if any, financial ties exist between Hilsen and the band, as well as whether any band members have been in touch with him since he became a fugitive. Hilsen had been Stanley's psychiatrist for several years before becoming the band's business manager. He and the band split in 1992.
In other news, it should be noted that while drummer Eric Singer (KISS) has apparently rejoined the ALICE COOPER band for the upcoming tour, Tommy Clufetos (COOPER's most recent skinsman) has actually recorded the album.
Gene Simmons, who takes extreme pride in how many women he has bedded, also takes extreme pride in the fact that he will be in it. In fact, were he not to be in it, he'd probably fire his agent. Anyway, Gene remembers how he did it, he just doesn't always remember where, when and to whom. Whereas any other human would hide, Simmons is, as we speak, about to advertise for those to whom he has Done It to come forth. His request for exposés on himself will be put up on his Web site.
No truth to the rumor that he will pay money to whomever does not also come up with stuff on Charlie Sheen.
The show recently started airing in the United States on the cable channel Nickelodeon, alongside animated favorites like Jimmy Neutron, Rugrats and the Fairly Oddparents.
It's a typical tale of pre-teen rebellion, complete with green hair, tattoos and screams of "turn that music down." Only in this case, dad's the rebel and his son is the one seeking a quiet, normal life.
Simmons, the cartoon's creator and executive producer, said the idea sprang out of a conversation about career day at his son, Nick's, school.
"So you had people coming in with scissors, you know, 'my mom's a hair stylist,' or a toothbrush, 'my dad's a dentist,' and my son came in with a poster of me spewing blood and spitting fire," Simmons said.
That got him thinking about how kids just want to fit in, and led to a deal with Canadian entertainment company Nelvana.
"There are enough social problems with kids trying to find out who they are and so on without having to depend on mom or dad to define who they are," he said.
The show follows Willy Zilla, a 12-year-old who has just moved to a sleepy suburb and is going to school for the first time after years on the road with his dad, rock mega-star Rock Zilla.
Willy doesn't want people to like him for his famous family, so he uses a fake name at school -- a plan that was destined to fail. He quickly attracts the attention of the school bully, but he does make a couple of friends in the process.
His family is pretty normal in a lot of ways -- he's got a loving mother and father and an older sister, Serenity, who insults him when she admits he exists at all.
But unlike most parents, Rock Zilla punctuates his parental advice with guitar solos and shouts of "Ahhh-oooooo!" and mom speaks in New Age cliches, and "of course nobody knows what the hell she's talking about," Simmons said.
Most families don't have a giant, purple-and-green-striped Komodo dragon and a British roadie puttering around the house, either.
Rock Zilla may resemble Simmons' on-stage persona, but he said the show isn't all autobiographical.
"I tossed some story ideas around, and one was that somebody tried to break into my home and steal some of the gold records, and I did notice that that wound up in one of the stories," he said.
Another episode centers around Willy's mom's decision to open a New Age center across the street from school.
"Well that's not a good idea, but that was close to reality, because my kids' real mom, Shannon Tweed ... was a former Playmate," Simmons said. "It's tough for a very young child to explain to the other school kids 'yeah, mom was on the cover of Playboy and dad's this wacky rock star who has a talking codpiece and spits fire.' "
"My Dad the Rock Star," has a choice time slot on Nickelodeon, airing after Spongebob, which is one of the most popular shows on cable television. It was already an international success, airing in several languages in Asia, Central and South America, Africa, Australia and Europe (the Dutch version features the voice of real-life rock star Barry Hay from Golden Earring).
"Nick had a been a fan of the show, some of the people there, and we found the right timing, and it's been really, really a big success out the door, and we think it's going to continue," said Martha Van Gelder, a senior vice president at Nelvana
Simmons describes himself as "very cornball" and said he drew inspiration from some of his childhood favorites, such as Superman, the Mickey Mouse Club, comic books and Disney cartoons -- "that was the subatomic nuclear particles that make up who I am."
"Looney Tunes are still classic. Roadrunner still works, Bugs still works, and Disney will work forever," Simmons said. "Good stuff is good stuff whether it's done for kids or for grown-ups."
The show is just one of the projects Simmons has on his plate. He's also working on two reality shows, three other television shows, a boxing venture with ESPN, a multimillion-dollar movie production deal, and a plan to build 3,000 condominiums and an arena for the Beijing Olympics.
"We should all do lots of stuff before we die, that's my philosophy."
His KISS fame has given him an opportunity to pitch his ideas to people who might not have listened otherwise, he said. But he's careful to keep his on-stage and off-stage roles separate.
"When I'm in KISS and I have the makeup on, that's what I talk about," he said. "When I'm off-stage, I try not to mix metaphors or apples and pears, it works better that way.
"When you look at Clark Kent when he's working at the Daily Planet," Simmons said, "he's a reporter. He doesn't fly through the air in his glasses and his suit."
Epiphone will produce a limited amount of "My Dad the Rockstar" Les Paul Special II Guitars featuring the main character "Rock Zilla".
"My Dad the Rockstar" cartoon series was created by legendary KISS bassist Gene Simmons and stems from Simmons own family life as a heavy metal dad. The Dutch version of this cartoon series features voice over by popular singer/guitarist Barry Hay from GOLDEN EARRING as the main character, "Rock Zilla".
"We are very excited to be partnering with Nickelodeon on such an inventive promotion," said Henry Juszkiewicz, Chairman and CEO of Gibson Guitar. "The legendary music of Gene Simmons and the sounds of our Les Paul guitar are the perfect match for 'My Dad the Rockstar'."
Check out a picture of the "My Dad the Rockstar" Les Paul Special II Guitar at this location.
"I am blown away by your letters and diary posts. No amount of thanks can convey our appreciation for the risks you take and the sacrifices you are making. You are celebrated here, not forgotten. You give us a direct link to you and your lives in every message we receive from you. I look forward every day to your updates. Keep safe AND keep in touch."
In other news, Canon.jp has uploaded a Japanese TV commercial for the Canon EOS KISS Digital Camera. Check it out at this location.
Although the tattoo was initially reported to be that of the original KISS logo, the photo appears to suggest otherwise. Check it out at this location.
In an official statement announcing their decision to remove Charly from the "Big Brother" house, RTL 2, the German TV station responsible for producing the "Big Brother" show, said, "'Big Brother' is family entertainment. When RTL 2 has reason to believe that wrong implications or inferences could be made in connection with this show, or that our viewers could be offended by the program, we have the responsibility to act."
In an official statement, RTL 2, the German TV station responsible for producing the "Big Brother" show, said, "'Big Brother' is family entertainment. When RTL 2 has reason to believe that wrong implications or inferences could be made in connection with this show, or that our viewers could be offended by the program, we have the responsibility to act."
To avoid being banned from touring or selling records in Germany, KISS were forced to change their logo on all German releases beginning with 1980's "Unmasked" so the lightning-bolt "SS" didn't resemble the Nazi logo, according to KISS fan site SKKK. KISS members Paul Stanley and Gene Simmons, both of whom are Jewish, took great offense to the allegations that KISS were Nazis. Gene was born in Israel and his mother spent some time in a Nazi concentration camp during World War II. Ironically, at a show in Milan, Italy on September 2, 1980, a group of skinheads stormed through some barricades and descended on the band believing them to be their allies.
A Spiegel.de article (in German) on the "Big Brother"/KISS controversy can be viewed at this location.
As previously reported, ESP will be embarking on a shrot European tour beginning in late April. While Singer is on a tour break with KISS, and Kulick is in between tours with his current band GRAND FUNK RAILROAD, the two wanted to join forces for a tour of Europe after a handful of shows together as UNION (also with John Corabi in the band, but with Jamie Hunting on bass) last month.
ESP's setlist will mainly consist of KISS hits and obscure KISS songs that have never before been played live, along with selections from MÖTLEY CRÜE, GRAND FUNK RAILROAD, ALICE COOPER and other classic rock bands.
Confirmed ESP dates:
Apr. 27 – Stockholm, SWE @ Mondo
Apr. 28 – Copenhagen, DEN @ The Rock
Apr. 29 – Helmond, NETH @ Plato
Apr. 30 – Babenhausen, GER @ Stadthalle
May 01 – Pamplona, SPA @ Artsaia
May 02 – Barcelona, SPA @ Bikini
According to Stanley, the album should be done and ready to mix by mid-May. Drumming on all the tracks to date is Victor Indruzzo who has toured and recorded with MACY GRAY, toured with BECK and appears on various recordings by the Matrix production team. Most of the guitars have been handled by Corky James, who also is heard on various recordings by the Matrix team, including AVRIL LAVIGNE. In talking about their contributions Paul raved, "Victor is just an amazing drummer who can bash with the best of them while keeping a great groove going." As for James, he added, "Corky just blows me away with his parts and sounds." As far as bass..."I've always been a big fan of Bruce Kulick's bass playing so it's great to have him on some of the album." Keyboards have been handled by Russ Irwin who has toured with both STING and AEROSMITH. "I've known Russ for over 15 years before the KISS/AEROSMITH tour happened and his being a part of the project seemed like a natural".Of course all the vocals are handled by Paul. A few of the tracks recorded include "Wake Up Screaming", "Second To None" and "Live To Win".
Paul has been collaborating with Swedish songwriter Andreas Carlsson (BON JOVI, DEF LEPPARD), and for the first time in 15 or so years, Desmond Child (BON JOVI, AEROSMITH). "It's magic," Stanley said of the collaboration. Paul went on to add, "From the songs to the playing and singing, everything about this album is consistent without compromise. The album is exactly who I am now and what I want to be doing. It's got all the sides of what I do, so it's not surprising that it's got elements of everything I've done plus a leap into the 21st century. I don't need to hype it. I'll leave that to everyone else who's heard it."
Lil' Kim, Eve, Fat Joe, Barenaked Ladies, Moby, Gene Simmons, Lil' John, Simple Plan, New Found Glory and Jadakiss were solicited by the 10 remaining candidates on Donald Trump's reality show to donate and auction off a personal experience live on Fuse.
"It was funny to watch them come in with very limited viewpoints about being a VJ and try to pull it off," said Fuse video jockey Steven Smith.
Smith, who was once made over on "Queer Eye for the Straight Guy," helped the street smarts Net Worth team tackle on-air VJ duties, interacting with Simple Plan, Barenaked Ladies and Simmons live. He said the suit-clad Apprentices were out of their element mingling with rock stars.
"It was literally three generations of rock," said Smith. "You've got Simple Plan, who are babies out of the gate; Barenaked Ladies, who've been doing it for awhile and have a great sense of humor; and then you got Gene Simmons, who started recording around the time Robert Johnson did."
The auction, benefiting the Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS Foundation, was broadcast as part of Fuse's "Daily Download" program. Smith was most dazzled by 37-year-old Net Worth team member Tana Goertz, who tackled hip-hop lingo.
"She was just killing me," said Smith. "She was hilarious talking in a faux-Snoop Dogg-izzle. She just went for it. It tickled me pink."
Smith wasn't the only one tickled. He said Kiss frontman Simmons "licked his finger and stuck it in the ear" of one of the female Magna team members. Gene, you're fired.
A six episode series that will culminate with a special two-hour finale, Mr. Romance won't be a typical Top Model-like elimination show. Instead, with none of its contestants eliminated until the broadcast of its live finale, Mr. Romance's first five episodes will feature the twelve men attending a "romance boot camp" and preparing to compete in the finale's The Swan-like "man-pageant."
Held in front of a live, all-female studio audience, the "man-pageant" will feature all twelve contestants being judged by a panel that will include Simmons, TV personality Tina Malave, and Fabio himself.
In addition to appearing on Mr. Romance's judging panel, Fabio will also appear throughout the first five episodes of the series, serving as a role model of sorts and sharing his "inside knowledge and know-how" about the profession. The one-time boyfriend of Average Joe: Hawaii star Larissa Meek won't be the men's sole mentor however -- in addition to Fabio, the men will also be tutored by Cindy Guyer. Guyer, a romance model who has appeared on over 2,000 national magazines and book covers, will serve as Mr. Romance's "headmistress of the romance academy."
"We love this show because it’s funny, affectionate and sexy -- all at the same time." explained Debby Beece, President of Programming for Oxygen Media. "We want to paint a portrait of the quirky world of male modeling competitions... giving women a glimpse into the absurd and the serious side of what it takes to get on the cover of a Harlequin Romance Novel."
While Singer is on a tour break with KISS, and Kulick is in between tours with his current band GRAND FUNK RAILROAD, the two wanted to join forces for a tour of Europe after a handful of shows together as UNION (also with John Corabi in the band, but with Jamie Hunting on bass) last month.
ESP's setlist will mainly consist of KISS hits and obscure KISS songs that have never before been played live, along with selections from MÖTLEY CRÜE, GRAND FUNK RAILROAD, ALICE COOPER and other classic rock bands.
Confirmed ESP dates:
Apr. 27 – Stockholm, SWE @ Mondo
Apr. 28 – Copenhagen, DEN @ The Rock
Apr. 29 – Helmond, NETH @ Plato
Apr. 30 – Babenhausen, GER @ Stadthalle
May 01 – Pamplona, SPA @ Artsaia
May 02 – Barcelona, SPA @ Bikini
Candidates join forces with music television network Fuse as they petition these 10 celebrities to donate a "personal experience" that will be auctioned off live on Fuse's popular "Daily Download" program. After enlisting each of the music artists for a donation, "Magna" and "Net Worth" select team members to pitch the auction items live on television. The team that brings in the most money will be declared the winner and the proceeds benefit the Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS Foundation.
The blending of the corporate and rock worlds spark some truly hilarious moments as candidates struggle to "vibe" with the artists and to speak their "language." One of the women encounters an overly flirtatious rocker and one of the men's sexist comments offends the women on his team.
"At TributeAlbums.com, we believe that presentation is everything," reads an official press release. "With that, a unique CD deserves a unique album cover. The concept for the artwork is centered around four topics: 1) a spoof of the 1981 album cover of the KISS album 'Music from the Elder' 2) a play on the phrase 'cover to cover' (having read a book all the way through) 3) images symbolizing the four characters of KISS 4) and a fitting Halloween color scheme. Visit us at www.TributeAlbums.com to check it out!"
"KISS Cover to Cover" spotlights songs originally recorded by the likes of THE ROLLING STONES, BOBBY LEWIS, and ARGENT. These classics were then updated by KISS, and are now being given a third dimension by today's up and coming artists. Performers include VH1/MTV regulars Capt. T & Ostronomy, intergalactic saviors SLACK, digital maestro Marc Zouhar, singer/songwriter Jon Rubin, and more. In addition to the musical content on KISS Cover to Cover, the CD will also contain computer-accessible bonus features. Pop KISS Cover to Cover into your computer and enjoy detailed song histories, photos, artist bios, and artwork. KISS Cover to Cover will be released on April 5 at TributeAlbums.com. Pre-order your copy now, and receive "Prophecy – A Tribute to Eric Carr" free with your order.
"KISS Cover to Cover" track listing:
01. "Kissin' Time" by NIGHTMARE
02. "Then She Kissed Me" by JON RUBIN
03. "Any Way You Want It" by PICTURE 21
04. "Tossin' and Turnin'" by MARC ZOUHAR
05. "New York Groove" by GREAT JONES
06. "When You Wish Upon a Star" by SYNTAX ERROR
07. "2000 Man" by CAPTAIN T & OSTRONOMY
08. "God Gave Rock n' Roll to You III" by V.O.G.
09. "Do You Remember Rock n' Roll Radio" by SLACK
Dan Foley, a 41-year-old police officer from Wyandotte, Mich., has been to dozens of these events -- and looked like it.
Dressed like Gene Simmons, an original member of the rock band known for its flashy outfits and makeup, Foley was donning leather, metal studs and face paint at the 2005 Indianapolis Kiss Expo Sunday.
Upon request, he performed Simmons' signature move -- unfurling a pointy tongue.
"This is just a dedicated love of the band," said Foley, whose Simmons garb cost about $6,500. "If I find something that I like, I stick with it all the way to the end."
Formed in New York City, Kiss hit it big in the 1970s with songs such as "Rock & Roll All Nite" and even performed without makeup for awhile.
The Expo, held annually in Indianapolis, is one of several Kiss conventions fans attend each year. An estimated 1,000 of them made their way to the Holiday Inn East, 6990 E. 21st St., on Saturday and Sunday.
Fishers couple Michelle and Keith Leroux promote the Indianapolis Kiss convention, along with Steve Stierwalt, of Indianapolis.
"It's a chance to get together with all of our Kiss friends that we've gotten to know over the years, and bring Kiss to the fans, I guess," said Michelle, 32.
The couple have other jobs but also support themselves by selling Kiss memorabilia.
"You wouldn't even believe what Kiss fans will buy, and want to buy, and collect," she said. "I know collectors that have warehouses just to store all of the Kiss merchandise that they have."
Vendors sold collectibles, including stuffed Kiss dolls and "Kissopoly" games. Two band members -- one current, one former -- signed autographs and posed for pictures, while fans mingled and traded rock and roll stories.
"Just as much as it might be cool for (the fans) to come out, it's also cool for me, too," said Eric Singer, the band's current drummer. "It's a fair exchange thing. . . . Things should be beneficial to everyone."
Former Kiss guitarist Bruce Kulick, now playing with Grand Funk Railroad, came to Indianapolis from Florida for the event.
The travel was tough, he said. But the fans' enthusiasm made up for it.
"It is a job to get up at 4:45 a.m. for a 5:45 a.m. pickup and take two flights after playing the night before. That's the job part of it," Kulick said. "Any musician will tell you the fun part is seeing your fans, performing, meeting them and them telling you, 'You don't know how much it means to me to meet you.' "
Those fans included Bill Starkey, a third-grade teacher for Indianapolis Public Schools.
To Kiss fans, however, he is the man who started a fan club, the Kiss Army, in the 1970s.
Starkey, who lived in Terre Haute then, said he couldn't understand why Kiss songs weren't getting any radio play on the local station he listened to. So, he and a friend began calling themselves the Kiss Army, and made it their mission to get the band's songs played on local radio.
Later, when the band sold out a Terre Haute show, the promoters asked why, and Starkey's Kiss Army was listed as the reason.
Starkey became a bit of a celebrity after that.
"I really enjoy talking to the people and the fans," Starkey, 48, said. "They treat me with so much kindness and reverence, and I get more attention than I could ever get from any third-grader."
Fans from across the country were on hand, and several arrived from Japan.
"We are huge Kiss fans and we really like to see whatever the members do," said Kumiko Yoshinaga, a publicist from Tokyo.
Jordan Stone, 31, traveled from Farmington, Mo., for the convention. The high school health and physical education teacher said he couldn't remember when he wasn't a Kiss fan.
"There is obviously a sense of brotherhood because Kiss kind of transcends what most bands are," he said. "Kiss fans . . . tend to sort of have a common bond of lifelong fanaticism. It's always fun to come and spend time with like-minded people."
Russell Dannecker, who has become a friend of the band members, is from New York City.
Dannecker said he remembers meeting the band when he was younger, getting autographed records, and telling members he planned to sell the records to make money to follow them to the shows. Instead, he said the band helped him get tickets.
"I grew up listening to them," said Dannecker, 34. "They have been around 30-plus years. They are great because it's like an allegiance. People connect onto it. All my friends . . . I met through Kiss."
DualDisc is an innovative music product that combines a CD and DVD on a single disc. In addition to a full-length audio album on the CD side, the DVD side offers many features including the full album in enhanced sound (such as Surround Sound and/or DVD-Audio or LPCM stereo), and a wide range of exclusive content such as music videos, "making of" documentaries, interviews, photo galleries, artist commentaries, web links, concert footage, lyrics and more.
DualDisc was first introduced to the American market in October of last year. Since then over one million albums have been sold, proving there is a demand by consumers for a fresh new way of experiencing music.
"I started writing this stuff a couple of years back, actually," Criss told Billboard.com. "I was procrastinating, that's the big thing with me. So I buckled down, we started building this studio, it's here, and we've been working on it. It's exciting — I've got a whole bunch of new material. It's going to be really good."
Regarding the musical direction of the upcoming album, Criss said, "It's kind of like a ballad album, but that doesn't mean it's FRANK SINATRA meets NAT KING COLE. It's kind of like maybe LED ZEPPELIN meets NAT KING COLE. It's like 'Rubber Soul' — THE BEATLES are a big influence to me. There's some of CLAPTON, some of HENDRIX."
Joining the drummer in the studio is guitarist Mike "Angel" McLaughlin, who previously played in Criss' early '90s eponymous band. Criss is also working closely with Charles Kipps (who has written for ARETHA FRANKLIN), as well as Tom Perkins, with whom he previously collaborated on Bill Cosby's animated series "Fatherhood".
Criss purposely decided to work with friends rather than big name rockers. "I had a choice of going out, and getting all these per se 'rock stars' to play on this record," he admits. "I chose not to because I really wanted this to be my baby. It's kind of an autobiographical album, because most stuff I write, I like to write about my life or things I believe we should have in life — not that I'm trying to save the world. I write things from the heart, and they're pretty much true things. Music should be enjoyed. It shouldn't be a task — it should be a lot of fun."
Peter Criss' new solo album is tentatively due this summer.
"Do Your Own Thing Live!" (view cover here) includes two UNION concerts: a full one from 2001 (just before UNION's trip to Argentina), and one for ESP guitars at MI from January of 2000. Bonus material includes an unreleased UNION song called "Walking In Your Sleep", behind-the-scenes footage on tour with UNION, a photo gallery, and more links to all things UNION.
The DVD features the following songs performed live:
01. Do Your Own Thing
02. Everything's Alright
03. Who Do You Think You Are?
04. Old Man Wise
05. Around Again
06. Heavy D
07. Star Spangled Banner
08. Jungle
09. Love (I Don't Need It Anymore)
10. Hypnotized
11. Pain Behind Your Eyes
12. Power To The Music
13. I Walk Alone
14. Man In The Moon
The DVD is in NTSC format - Region 0 (region free).
To order a copy, click here.
Segment: David Dingman-Grover conquered cancer and Ellen will be celebrating his 10th birthday (which is March 1st - day segment will air). David is a KISS fanatic and played KISS music during his treatements. Ellen will interview him, then say she wants to celebrate his birthday and KISS will bring out the cake.
Below is a news story about David and the eBay auction his parents did to raise money for his treatment. On February 15 David was declared cancer-free.
Couple goes on eBay for medical bill help
JANUARY 8, 2005 RICHMOND, Va. (AP) — David Dingman-Grover decided Frankenstein would be a good name for his tumor. The 9-year-old figured if he could get over being scared of a monster, he could get over being scared of this thing at the base of his skull.
"I conquered my fears," David said by telephone.
David is determined that Frank isn't going to beat him. To phrase it like his parents do, "Frank Must Die."
They even put those three words on a bumper sticker that they're selling on eBay to help pay David's medical bills.
They say if somebody would pay $28,000 for a grilled cheese sandwich thought to bear the image of the Virgin Mary, somebody might pay big money to help their son.
"It just spiraled out of control — it's been incredible," said David's mother, Tiffini Dingman-Grover. "If it can raise pediatric cancer awareness, oh my gosh, how incredible would that be?"
By early Saturday, the online auction site had received 33 bids for the "Frank Must Die" bumper sticker. The highest was for $6,000.
David was diagnosed in May 2003 with a grapefruit-sized malignant tumor called a rhabdomyosarcoma. The size and location of the tumor — most are in the limbs — made it impossible for doctors to take out, according to his mother in her ad on eBay.
Now, David needs a highly specialized biopsy to determine whether the tumor is still cancerous or if it has been reduced to scar tissue, his mother and doctor said.
Because David's carotid artery runs through the tumor, the biopsy is extremely risky. One way to perform the biopsy would require doctors to actually remove David's face to get to the tumor. The very thought set his mother off on a search for a less extreme biopsy method. She eventually discovered specialists at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles who can get to the tumor by going through David's nose.
"It's a very specialized thing within pediatric neurosurgery," said David's oncologist, Jay Greenberg. "There's only like five guys around the country comfortable doing this."
The family must pay 20% of the surgery bill, which also requires a $1,500 fee paid in advance, said Dingman-Grover, who does not yet know exactly how much the procedure will cost. Insurance has covered most of the $1 million in treatment expenses, but the family still shells out about $200,000 a year to cover their share of the medical bills, she said.
The family's income took a hit when Dingman-Grover cut back her hours at work to stay home with David. The local church donated money and she began auctioning personal items on eBay to help supplement the funds.
EBay closed the original auction Wednesday, citing numerous rules violations. Spokesman Hani Durzy said auctioneers are not allowed to advertise that money for their items will go toward a cause. The family amended the ad and had a new version up and running the same day.
Dingman-Grover said she hopes the ad will help raise public awareness of pediatric cancer and show people what an incredible person her son is.
"I don't want people to pity David because cancer is not who he is — it is just something he has," she said.
David's journey has been difficult. Within two weeks of his diagnosis, he lost the ability to walk, eat and see. Radiation left him with brain damage. His weight plummeted.
After multiple rounds of chemotherapy, his condition has improved. He's gaining weight, his tumor has shrunk to the size of a peach pit and he can walk and see again.
As his mother put it in her eBay ad: "He has the most positive attitude and never stops fighting no matter what it takes."
"You only had to hear Dime play to know his conviction and commitment to pursuing his passion without compromise. You only had to see his stance onstage, guitar in hand, hair flying, to know that he was the blueprint that all others who wanted to share his domain would have to follow. He did it his way. As always, when those who are truly weak seek to use force to destroy what they do not agree with, that which they try to silence becomes even louder, deafening the non-believers and blasting its way into immortality. Cheating one madman and death, Dime will live larger and louder than ever."
Rockin' the Corps is a patriotic celebratory concert for an audience of more than 25,000 marines and their families. Executive producers Quincy Jones and Joseph E. Robert, Jr. have joined forces with producers Doc McGhee and Spencer Proffer to create a high energy, patriotic celebration for the dedicated men & women of the United States Marine Corps in a show of appreciation.
Note: this concert is for the marines at Camp Pendleton and their families.... There will be no civilians allowed!
More information will be available soon.
While Singer is on a tour break with KISS, and Kulick is in between tours with his current band GRAND FUNK RAILROAD, the two wanted to join forces for a tour of Europe after a handful of shows together as UNION (also with John Corabi in the band, but with Jamie Hunting on bass) last month.
Additional dates in Denmark (April 28) and Holland (April 29) have already been confirmed, while dates for Spain, Sweden, Belgium and other countries are being finalized. ESP's setlist will mainly consist of KISS hits and obscure KISS songs that have never before been played live, along with selections from MÖTLEY CRÜE, GRAND FUNK RAILROAD, ALICE COOPER and other classic rock bands.
Confirmed ESP dates so far:
Apr. 28 - The Rock – Copenhagen, DEN
Apr. 29 – Plato – Helmond, NETH
Apr. 30 – Stadthalle - Babenhausen (bei Frankfurt), GER
May 02 – Bikini – Barcelona, SPA
The Expo will take place March 5-6 at the Holiday Inn Indianapolis East, 6990 East 21st St. For hotel rooms, call 317-359-5341 and ask for the special KISS Expo rate. Both days will feature a KISS costume contest and KISS trivia. KISS merchandise and collectibles will be on sale both days.
On Saturday, March 5 between 1 and 8 p.m., special guest KISS drummer Eric Singer will perform live in concert with Eric Dover (ALICE COOPER) and Stefan Adika (DEE DEE RAMONE). Eric will also answer questions from fans as well as sign autographs and pose for photos. KISS tribute band MR. SPEED will perform a set of classic KISS not usually performed live by KISS.
Saturday, March 5 ticket options:
1) Regular ticket with admission at 1PM. Advance orders include free sticker set.
2) Special Laminate with admission at 12 PM. Includes KISS Expo VIP Laminate and free KISS Pop Art T-shirt (available in L or XL).
On Sunday, March 6 between 12 and 6 p.m. special guest Bruce Kulick (ex-KISS) will perform several songs live with KISS tribute band MR. SPEED. Bruce will also answer questions from fans as well as sign autographs and pose for photos. In addition to their performance with Bruce, MR. SPEED will play a different set than Day 1.
Sunday, March 6 ticket options:
1) Regular ticket with admission at 12 p.m. Advance orders include free sticker set.
2) Special laminate with admission at 11 a.m. Includes KISS Expo VIP Laminate and free KISS Logo Stars T-shirt (available in L or XL).
Two-day option:
Special two-day pass — regular admission at 1:00 p.m. Saturday and 12 noon Sunday. Advance orders include free sticker set.
Visit www.KISSshop.com to purchase tickets.
A cover song is a song recorded by an artist other than its original artist. A KISS cover is a cover recorded with grease paint and seven-inch heels. KISS Cover to Cover celebrates the songs that KISS themselves chose to cover during their career. KISS Cover to Cover spotlights songs originally recorded by the likes of THE ROLLING STONES, BOBBY LEWIS, and ARGENT. These classics were then updated by KISS, and are now being given a third dimension by today's up and coming artists. Performers include VH1/MTV regulars Capt. T & Ostronomy, intergalactic saviors SLACK, digital maestro Marc Zouhar, singer/songwriter Jon Rubin, and more. In addition to the musical content on KISS Cover to Cover, the CD will also contain computer-accessible bonus features. Pop KISS Cover to Cover into your computer and enjoy detailed song histories, photos, artist bios, and artwork. KISS Cover to Cover will be released on April 5, 2005 at TributeAlbums.com. Pre-order your copy now, and receive "Prophecy – A Tribute to Eric Carr" free with your order.
"The idea was a joke initially," says Executive Producer R.E. Asbury. "With Gene's (Simmons) never-ending quest for more, I thought it would be funny to put out a KISS tribute album that would not generate any royalties for KISS. After researching the idea a bit, I realized that it would actually be a cool project." As an award-winning filmmaker, R.E. Asbury is known for solid concepts and interesting projects.
Lunar Moth Entertainment and TributeAlbums.com provide new and interesting products in various mediums. Keep an eye out for upcoming novels, comic books, CD-ROM adventures, CDs and DVDs.
Scheduled guests so far include:
KISS merchandise designer/artist and Official KISS Magazine writer/designer/photographer CHRISTOPHER FRANCHI
Former wife of original KISS drummer, LYDIA CRISS, promoting her new book 'Sealed With a KISS', featuring KISS memorabilia from the bands heyday, and more.
Original 'Destroyer' and 'Love Gun' cover artist, KEN KELLY
Author of "Into the Void... with Ace Frehley", and ex Ace Frehley personal assistant and girlfriend, WENDY MOORE
Publisher of the Official KISS Magazine, WARREN LAPINE
Author of the 'KISS Album Focus' book series, JULIAN GILL
Catalog consultant on the KISS: The Remasters CD re-issues, ROBERT V. CONTE
KISS Nation, the ultimate KISS tribute band
A special set by RICHIE RANNO'S ALL-STAR'S, featuring JOE DUBE and GEORGE D'ANA from STARZ
Also featuring KISS model STACY E. WALKER, a set by all-girl rock band JADED, and tribute band UNCHAINED (Van Halen, and much much more.
Please vist the official expo website for updates on additional guests and directions to the expo.
Tickets available in advance, with VISA/MC by calling 201-398-0150
The billboard material is thicker, more resistant to damage from ultraviolet light and designed to last longer than the FEMA tarps. Nearly 200 Ivan victims have contacted United Way, which is coordinating distribution locally, and there has been interest from other parts of Florida.
Lamar Advertising, based in Baton Rouge, La., has donated the coverings, which can be used facing up or down.
Dana Morris, a lawyer, resorted to the KISS billboard covering because insurance money he has received so far has been insufficient to repair all the damage at his Gulf Breeze home. He, his wife and their two children are staying in a Pensacola apartment until it can be fixed.
If the insurance doesn't work out, Morris mused about the possibility of using the billboard covering as a revenue source.
"When I get a new roof, I think I'm going to clean it up and sell it on eBay," he joked.
Dates in Denmark (April 28), Holland (April 29) and Germany (April 30) have already been confirmed, while dates for Spain, Sweden, Belgium and other countries are being finalized. ESP's setlist will mainly consist of KISS hits and obscure KISS songs that have never before been played live, along with selections from MÖTLEY CRÜE, GRAND FUNK RAILROAD, ALICE COOPER and other classic rock bands.
On Oct. 15, 2003, Kulick attended a concert by MÖTLEY CRÜE singer Vince Neil at the Key Club on Sunset Blvd., and left the with a friend at 1:30 a.m. As he walked down the Strip, he heard gunshots. He looked down to see a hole through his leather pants, right above the knee. Next thing he noticed, blood was coming down his leg.
Kulick heard a second bullet whiz past his ear and realized he'd been grazed in his head by it.
The EMS crews arrived immediately and took him to the hospital.
"I'm very grateful for the immediate response of both the crowd and the doctors, and — obviously — the EMS crews," Bruce said the day after the shooting. "I'm fine and very thankful to be alive."
"When I first got the songs, I was really excited — I mean, those guys are huge!" Lombardi exclaims to TV Guide Online. "But I was nervous, too, because I didn't wanna screw 'em up. I didn't want them to hear me singing their songs and think, 'Yeah, it sounds all right.' I wanted them to kick ass!"
Mission accomplished, and then some. On swinging singles-to-be like the star-crossed love song "Black Hole" and the kiss-off anthem "I'm Over You," the self-professed Mariah Carey fan distinguishes herself from TRL's brat pack by emitting a true rebel's yell. She's even got the stones to tackle Heart's classic "Barracuda" — and the chops to nail it.
"Of course, I had heard it a few times before recording it," Lombardi says. "But in the end, I think it was kinda good that I didn't know the song back to front [in its original incarnation], so I could put my own spin on it without doing it exactly how Nancy Wilson does."
Now, with her admission to the pop pantheon just around the corner, the soft-spoken, hard-wailing sometime songwriter has had to begin searching for a new goal, and she just may have found it. So don't be surprised if 20 years from now, you're reading about another up-and-comer, this one discussing the ecstasy and anxiety of covering a Lombardi original.
"That'd be incredible, to hear one of my songs redone when I'm an old granny," she says, adding with a laugh, "Or maybe before then! I'd love for someone to say a title of a song that I wrote in 20 years and just know that it was written by me! Yeah, I'd like to write my own 'Barracuda.' Actually, I hope to write five of 'em!"
For a preview of Take Your Pic, visit Lombardi's website.
ON THE ROAD They earned $13.1 million on their farewell tour.
ON THE SIDE The Kiss licensing juggernaut -- from T-shirts to band-theme coffins -- brought in at least $5 million.
Last year's rank: 26
Some of James' 15,000 images can be seen at www.fortunesicons.com where limited edition prints can also be ordered. Additional photos and artists will be added throughout the year.
James Fortune has been a photographer for nearly 40 years. Beginning in his college days in Los Angeles in the late '60s, he spent more than a decade photographing rock 'n' roll icons in the back stages and VIP sections of some of the west coast's biggest music events. He amassed over 15,000 images ranging from hippie riots in Hollywood to Gene Simmons and Cher sharing an éclair. From 1968-1970, his work spanned the Pacific to Vietnam where he served with the U.S. Navy Pacific Fleet Combat Camera Group.
Some of the songs UNION are expected to perform on their European tour include the UNION tracks "Old Man Wise", "Around Again", "Pain Behind Your Eyes", "Everything Is Alright" and "Do Your Own Thing"; the KISS songs "Jungle", "I Walk Alone" and "Black Diamond" (with Eric on vocals), as well as classic covers by THE BEATLES, CHEAP TRICK and others.
The Expos will take place at the Holiday Inn Indianapolis East, 6990 East 21st St. For hotel rooms, call 317-359-5341 and ask for the special KISS Expo rate. Both days will feature a KISS costume contest and KISS trivia. KISS merchandise and collectibles will be on sale both days.
On Saturday, March 5 between 1 and 8 p.m., special guest KISS drummer Eric Singer will perform live in concert with Eric Dover (ALICE COOPER) and Stefan Adika (DEE DEE RAMONE). Eric will also answer questions from fans as well as sign autographs and pose for photos. KISS tribute band MR. SPEED will perform a set of classic KISS not usually performed live by KISS.
Saturday, March 5 ticket options:
1) Regular ticket with admission at 1PM. Advance orders include free sticker set.
2) Special Laminate with admission at 12 PM. Includes KISS Expo VIP Laminate and free KISS Pop Art T-shirt (available in L or XL).
On Sunday, March 6 between 12 and 6 p.m. special guest Bruce Kulick (ex-KISS) will perform several songs live with KISS tribute band MR. SPEED. Bruce will also answer questions from fans as well as sign autographs and pose for photos. In addition to their performance with Bruce, MR. SPEED will play a different set than Day 1.
Sunday, March 6 ticket options:
1) Regular ticket with admission at 12 p.m. Advance orders include free sticker set.
2) Special laminate with admission at 11 a.m. Includes KISS Expo VIP Laminate and free KISS Logo Stars T-shirt (available in L or XL).
Two-day option:
Special two-day pass — regular admission at 1:00 p.m. Saturday and 12 noon Sunday. Advance orders include free sticker set.
Visit www.KISSshop.com to purchase tickets.
Commented Mr. Dark, "[Paul Stanley and Ted Nugent] aren't in the movie.
"I saw the first screening a couple of weeks ago, and the parts you noted that they're playing are played by other people. The gas station attendant is played by country star Travis Tritt. There is no Sheriff Howell character, the sheriff's name is Friedman. It's played by an actor with the last name of Stark, according to the IMDB. Never heard of him, but I do know he has short hair and is a good 20 years younger than Uncle Ted. Also, I didn't see any sign of [Matt] Sorum [VELVET REVOLVER, ex-GUNS N' ROSES] or [Lenny] Cordola being involved in the score. The new arrangement of the Herschel Gordon Lewis-penned theme to '2000 Maniacs' (which this movie is a remake of) has lots of heavy guitars, so I checked out the songwriting credits at the end, curious to see who did it. I saw director Tim Sullivan's name, but I definitely did not see Sorum or Cordola.
"I think someone is blowing smoke up your ass. :) What we saw was the finished version of the film, music and score complete, so I think the story is bogus from the top down."
Meanwhile, UNION the late '90s group formed by Bruce Kulick (GRAND FUNK RAILROAD, ex-KISS) and John Corabi (CARDBOARD VAMPYRES, ex-MÖTLEY CRÜE), played two gigs at a KISS Expo in Japan last weekend (Jan. 29-30). Joining the band during the concerts was current KISS drummer Eric Singer. Check out pictures from Rock and Roll All Nite: Jan. 29, Jan. 30.
Monday, Feb. 7 at 5:30 p.m.
Tuesday, Feb. 8 at 5:30 p.m.
Wednesday, Feb. 9 at 5:30 p.m.
Thursday, Feb. 10 at 5:30 p.m.
"My Dad The Rock Star", created by Simmons in collaboration with the Canadian animation company Nelvana, tells the story of a mild-mannered son of a Gene Simmons-like rock star who wanted to live a normal life, but whose wealthy and eccentric father make that goal near-impossible.
For more information on "My Dad the Rock Star", click here.
That was the dream that led Kiss fan Joey Fatale to create Mini-Kiss, a tribute band with a difference.
No matter how well this band plays, they will never fully measure up to the original 1970s rockers because each of them is not much over 4 feet tall.
"Whatever you do as a little person, people are never going to take you seriously," said the diminutive Fatale, who lives in a New York suburb with his wife and daughter and has been working in entertainment for more than a decade.
"People probably do think, 'Oh it's just a gimmick,' but when people actually see it performed and see how much we try to present ourselves as good as them ... that's what makes it cool," he said before a recent gig in a New York club.
"You see little people do all kinds of stuff on TV and it's always something corny or some stupid gimmick, but this is something where people enjoy what we're doing ... It's really cool to hear people chanting 'Mini-Kiss, Mini-Kiss."'
Kiss is known for outrageous stage shows in which the band members strut their stuff in catsuits slashed to the crotch, leather trousers hung with chains, bat wings and armor.
Kiss frontman Gene Simmons is said by fans to have the longest tongue in rock and roll, which he used to display for cheering crowds, leering and spewing blood. Fatale imitates his idol right down to the tongue.
"The lights go on and boom, you've got four little people dressed to a tee like Kiss ... We put on a really wild show," he told Reuters Television in an interview.
FROM FAKE GUITARS TO MINI GUITARS
The idea for the band came six years ago when Fatale was moving and sorting through old albums.
"I still have the first Kiss album. I was looking at it, and I thought 'Imagine four little people dressing up just like Kiss.' It just hit me. It hit me out of nowhere," he said.
The line-up has changed since the early days and the quality has gradually improved. Fatale said they used to lip-sync the songs and mime with plywood cutout guitars.
"Now we have real guitars. I went out and bought mini guitars," he said. However they're still practicing and for they moment they still rely on a backing track.
"I want to start playing for real; if we do that we're going to be phenomenal," Fatale said.
In another departure from the original all-male Kiss, two of the four in Mini-Kiss are women. Drummer Kerry Robinson, who takes on the persona of Peter Criss, says she is normally rather shy and retiring but the stage show liberates her.
"I just go for it," she said backstage at New York's Cutting Room club. "I feel like I have a mask on. It's not Kerry, it's mini-Peter."
After playing parties and bars for several years, Fatale says his proudest moment came when they were invited to play at a magazine launch party for original Kiss wildman Simmons.
"We got a call from a friend that I know that said, 'Do you want to play for Gene Simmons?'," Fatale said. "I was like 'Hell yeah -- the god of rock and roll, without a doubt."'
"He didn't even know, I don't think. He was surprised. We came out, we performed and he just loved it."
"He has probably seen tons and tons of Kiss tribute bands, but he's probably never in his life seen a little people Kiss tribute band," Fatale said.
"That's what's so cool about what we're doing. And I think also, in my head, we're keeping Kiss still going."
The crowd of around 100 at the Cutting Room evening of "mini" entertainment headlined by Mini-Kiss was appreciative.
"I thought they were great," said audience member Laurel Hartmann. "I was a little surprised because I didn't know what to expect. But they are very talented and confident. And it is encouraging and inspiring, I think."
Q: Who are you working with on your new CD?
Peter Criss: "I'm working with Tom Perkens with Nutmeg studios, also Charles Kipps who wrote some music for Aretha Franklin and now works with Bill Cosby and Charles just won an Emmy for his work on 'Little Bill' and he also wrote the hit film 'Fat Albert'. He is co-producing. Also some friends of mine Mark (Tallman) Montague on bass and Mike (Angel) McLaughlin on lead guitar...and some other surprise guests."
Q: What kind of music will it be like?
Peter Criss: "It's a love song/ballad album. Autobiographical, meaning songs dedicated to my Mom, down to the fans. All new originals and maybe a couple of cover songs as well."
Read the entire interview at this location.
A confirmation of your enlistment as a player in these KISS-opoly championships will be e-mailed to you as soon as possible. The organizers would love to see the players of the KISS-opoly game participate in KISS makeup, but of course you're welcome to participate if you don't want to appear in makeup. All finalists will be awarded with a KISS-opoly game afterwards, and the winner will even take a KISS "guitar case" Box Set home. And FAME will have a new batch of KISS merchandise available in the store, so you'll also be able to buy yourself some more KISS merchandise if you wish.
For more information, click here.
As always, former KISS lead guitarist Bruce Kulick attended NAMM, while another former KISS axe slinger, Mark St John, made a rare (unadvertised) appearance. He appeared in a small booth in the percussion area, hanging out with the drummer of the BEACH BOYS. Bruce Kulick signed in the ESP booth, and on Thursday night (Jan. 20) he joined former GUNS N' ROSES guitarist Gilby Clarke on stage at the Vault in Long Beach, CA, to jam on the KISS classic "Strutter" as well as a few other songs.
According to Billboard.com, this week's premiere of the fourth season of "American Idol" on Fox garnered a whopping 33 million U.S. viewers, according to preliminary figures from Nielsen Media Research. That total is an increase of about 14% from last year's season premiere, which drew 29 million U.S. viewers.
"Michael Schenker and Heavy Hitters" track listing (all cuts feature Michael Schenker on guitar):
01. All Shook Up
Vocals: Joe Lynn Turner (ex-DEEP PURPLE, RAINBOW)
Bass: Jeff Pilson (ex-DOKKEN, DIO)
Drums: Aynsley Dunbar (ex-WHITESNAKE, UFO)
02. Doctor Doctor
Vocals: Jeff Scott Soto (TALISMAN, ex-YNGWIE MALMSTEEN)
Bass: Marco Mendoza (SOUL SIRKUS, WHITESNAKE)
Drums: Brett Chassen (BRET MICHAELS BAND)
03. Hair of the Dog
Vocals: Paul Di'Anno (ex-IRON MAIDEN)
Bass: Phil Soussan (ex-OZZY OSBOURNE)
Drums; Vinny Appice (ex-BLACK SABBATH, DIO)
04. War Pigs
Vocals: Tim "Ripper" Owens (ICED EARTH, ex-JUDAS PRIEST)
Drums: Aynsley Dunbar (ex-WHITESNAKE, UFO)
Bass: Mike Inez (ex-OZZY OSBOURNE, ALICE IN CHAINS)
05. Money
Vocals: Tommy Shaw (STYX)
Sax: Edgar Winter (EDGAR WINTER BAND)
Bass: Tony Levin (PETER GABRIEL)
Drums: Mike Baird (JOURNEY)
06. Blood of the Sun
Vocals: Leslie West (MOUNTAIN)
Bass: Rudy Sarzo (DIO, ex-QUIET RIOT)
Drums: Simon Wright (DIO, ex-AC/DC)
07. Politician
Vocals/Bass: Jeff Pilson (ex-DOKKEN, DIO)
Drums: Brett Chassen (BRET MICHAELS BAND)
08. I Don't Live Today
Vocals: Sebastian Bach (ex-SKID ROW)
Drums: Eric Singer (KISS)
Bass: Tony Franklin (ex-THE FIRM, BLUE MURDER)
09. Out in the Fields
Vocals: Gary Barden (MSG)
Bass: Chuck Wright (QUIET RIOT, ex-ALICE COOPER)
Drums: Brett Chassen (BRET MICHAELS BAND)
10. I'm Not Talking
Vocals: Mark Slaughter (SLAUGHTER)
Drums: Aynsley Dunbar (ex-WHITESNAKE, UFO)
Bass: Jeff Pilson (ex-DOKKEN, DIO)
More information regarding the album's release date will be made available soon.
It wasn't Detroit Rock City, but a trip to L.A. to meet his music idol was the next best thing for a Red Deer teen. Fighting a deadly disease, Vaughn Tayler's dream of meeting his idol Gene Simmons came true, thanks to a foundation that grants kids wishes that are otherwise out of reach.
The 14-year-old was diagnosed with cystic fibrosis at birth.
He started suffering seizures 11 years ago, became a huge fan of the band KISS seven years later, and had one mighty wish come true last month when the Children's Wish Foundation of Canada flew Vaughn and his family to L.A. to meet the legendary band's bass player.
"When he came into the restaurant, I recognized him right away, so I ran up to him and shook his hand," said Vaughn.
"He was like a normal guy, but fabulous ... I wish I could've stayed down there."
Vaughn, along with his mother Yvette, his half-sister and stepfather, flew to L.A. on Dec. 13, for a one-week trip that included lunch with Simmons and an afternoon with the rock star.
Vaughn also had a chance to visit Universal Studios, Venice Beach and was given a tour of McGhee Productions, which has recorded names such as KISS, BON JOVI and AEROSMITH.
Yvette said Vaughn has devoted a large portion of his life to KISS and has read everything he can find about the band, and Simmons in particular. He even gets into full KISS regalia for Halloween, said Yvette.
And because Vaughn's second love is basketball, the foundation also made it possible for the teen to attend an L.A. Lakers game.
Vaughn's bout with cystic fibrosis means he needs daily medical care and must consume an immense amount of pills. His struggle has left him with severe stomach aches, impaired hearing and brain damage. Those stricken with the genetic disease rarely live to be 32.
One of Sweden's biggest daily newspapers, Expressen, reported in today's edition that CRÜE drummer Tommy Lee was quoted on the band's official web site as having stated during a recent radio interview that Kulick has already been confirmed as the replacement for Mars should Mick be forced to miss any of the dates on the band's upcoming tour.
Commenting on the rumors, Johannes Lindström, the publicist for the Sweden Rock festival, where CRÜE are scheduled to perform in June, said, "It's very possible that that [Mick will have to be replaced on the upcoming tour]. He doesn't look very well [based on recent photos]. But we have not yet received any information other than that Mick is on board for the tour."
Contacted directly by Expressen, Kulick shot down the rumors, stating, "I have not been contacted by CRÜE. I know Nikki Sixx [MÖTLEY CRÜE bassist] and if the plan was for me to jump in as the guitar player, he would have called me.
"I wish Mick all the best and I am convinced that he is well enough to play the shows," Kulick added.
A contest for the Harlequin romance books' next coverboy, "Mr. Romance" will feature twelve beefy guys competing in a "romance boot camp" for a $50,000 cash prize, learning how to kiss for the camera, walk the catwalk and strike seductive poses. The show will run for five, one-hour episodes and a two-hour finale. Fabio himself, Gene Simmons and TV personality Tina Malave will serve as judges, with no eliminations made until the finale.
"With our tongue firmly planted in our cheek, we are putting the man back in romance," Oxygen Chairman and CEO Geraldine Laybourne told TV critics gathered for the Television Critics Association tour in L.A.
"This is a wig for the top of Paul's head that he used in the 'Rise to It' video. His initials are on the inside of the wig. This wig was just a part of his head. It was on top over his real hair. This is the real deal!!!!
"My name is Alexx Michael from the band SHAMELESS. I've been known in the KISS world for many many years. You can ask KISS dealers like Frank Caraglio, Kissfanshop.de, Kissmuseum.com, Keith Leuroux from Kiss Asylum or members of the band like Bruce Kulick or Eric Singer about my person.
"I've been a KISS fan myself for the last 28 years. I still love the band but I just don't have the time anymore to take care of my collection. So here is a chance to get your hands on a few unusual, rare pieces of KISStory.
"All the stuff came from Manning/Butterfield's when me and a friend bought a big lot of items that didn't sell in the KISS Auction 2000. The lucky winner will get a copy of the Manning receipt for the lot.
"This wig was in a little bag along with various other hairpieces."
The starting bid is $150.00. The auction ends on January 17 at 12:11:44 PST.
Some of the songs the band will be performing both in the U.S. and in Japan include the UNION songs "Old Man Wise", "Around Again", "Pain Behind Your Eyes", "Everything Is Alright" and "Do Your Own Thing"; the KISS tracks "Jungle", "I Walk Alone" and "Black Diamond" (with Eric on vocals), as well as classic covers by THE BEATLES, CHEAP TRICK and others.
UNION will perform two shows in Japan on January 29-30 as part of the KISS Japan Expo. The first show (Jan. 29) will also feature the KISS tribute band KISS DOLLS, while the second concert will include the KISS tribute bands KISSIN' TIME and KISS JAPAN.
Bruce, Eric, John and Jamie will be available to sign autographs and take photos in the afternoons during the expos and KISS merchandise will be on sale throughout the day. Live performances from UNION and the tribute bands begin at 6:00 p.m. each night. These live shows will be UNION's first-ever performances in Japan.
Georgeann Walsh Ward, 53, of Chester, N.Y., says in court papers that a photo of her appeared 11 times during the report on KISS, shown on the network several times in July and August, while Simmons claimed to have had sexual encounters with 4,600 women.
In the documentary, "When KISS Ruled The World," Simmons commented that "there wasn't a girl that was off limits, and I enjoyed every one of them," court papers say.
Ward's papers say that because a photo of her with Simmons was shown during remarks about his sexual adventures, she was in effect portrayed as "wild" and "unchaste."
"The implication was that (Ward) was a prostitute and/or solicited prostitutes, and/or (she was) a sexually loose woman," court papers say.
Ward, married with a 21-year-old son, said she met Simmons at a concert in October 1972 when she was 21. For the next three years through fall of 1975, she says in court papers, they were in what she believed was "an exclusive, monogamous, romantic relationship."
During much of the time they were together, Ward's court papers say, Simmons was a college student and then a sixth-grade teacher "until the success of KISS propelled him out of the classroom and out of plaintiff's life."
Ward's lawsuit, filed Thursday, asks for unspecified damages from Simmons and from Viacom, VH-1's parent company, for alleged defamation and invasion of privacy.
Laura Nelson, spokeswoman for Viacom, said she could not comment on pending litigation.
No spokesperson for Simmons could be reached for comment.
Georgeann Walsh Ward, 53, of Chester, N.Y., says in court papers that a photo of her appeared 11 times during the report on KISS, shown on the network several times in July and August, while Simmons claimed to have had sexual encounters with 4,600 women.
The documentary, "When KISS Ruled The World", purported to chronicle the band's 30-year career, assess its impact on rock music, and expose the quartet's "wild" antics. The other band members were guitarist/singer Paul Stanley, drummer Peter Criss, and guitarist Ace Frehley.
Simmons says during the show, "There wasn't a girl that was off limits, and I enjoyed every one of them," court papers say.
At another point Simmons says, "I was a 24-hour whore. All I ever thought about was sex." This, court papers say, was shown and followed by a photo of Ward with Simmons.
Ward's papers say that because a photo of her with Simmons was shown during remarks about his sexual adventures, she was in effect portrayed as "wild" and "unchaste."
"The implication was that (Ward) was a prostitute and/or solicited prostitutes, and/or (she was) a sexually loose woman," court papers say.
Ward, married with a 21-year-old son, said she met Simmons at a concert in October 1972 when she was 21. For the next three years through fall of 1975, she says in court papers, they were in what she believed was "an exclusive, monogamous, romantic relationship."
During much of the time they were together, Ward's court papers say, Simmons was a college student and then a sixth-grade teacher "until the success of KISS propelled him out of the classroom and out of plaintiff's life."
Ward's lawsuit, filed Thursday in Manhattan's State Supreme Court, asks for unspecified damages from Simmons and his company, and from Viacom, VH1's parent company, for alleged defamation and invasion of privacy.
Laura Nelson, spokeswoman for Viacom, said she could not comment on pending litigation.
No spokesperson for Simmons could be reached for comment.
RockConfidential.com: I've seen you out and about with Gene Simmons a lot. Judging from our conversation today I think you and Gene have a lot in common, attitude-wise. How long have you known him?
Taylor Wane: "Gene's a very good friend of mine. I just saw him last week. We're embarking on a new business deal. I can't really discuss it right now but if it happens it's gonna be great.
"I originally met Gene 10 years ago. It was the month I was on the cover of Penthouse, so it was June '94. Hustler was having a party and Gene was there. That night I was hanging out with Glenn Danzig and some other people. Savannah was there and I think the Nelson twins were there. Gene walked up to me and invited me to dinner. I was with a group of people so I told him 'Thanks,' but I couldn't go. I didn't really keep contact with him until a few years later. My promotions manager sent my picture to 'Ladies In Waiting' on Gene's site. He put me on his site and Gene contacted me and said he wanted me to come to some of his launch parties and promotions. It was hard for me at first. I told him I was running my own business and I can't just take off and go galavanting. I'm not that kind of girl! I'm running a business. I thought about it for a couple of days. 'Gene Simmons from KISS is inviting me to go do these things and hang out and I'm turning it down because I have to work?' I have people that work for me — I can go galavant! I called him back and told him I'd do it. He flew me to New York. That was the beginning of the friendship. We've been very good friends for a couple of years now. Whenever he's doing a TV show or a launch party — I just did the cover of Dub magazine with him a couple of weeks ago. He did a show for the Travel Channel that's called 'Star Travel'. I was on that show with him. I did the A&E 'Biography' with Gene. I also did his music video. We're good friends and we talk on the phone a lot. He's a great guy. He's honestly a super-nice human being. If fans run up to him he'll take a picture just like that. He'll say hello to every one of them. He's not mean and nasty to anybody. He's nice and polite to everybody.
"I have to admit, I am in awe of Gene Simmons. I don't care who knows it. The man is really intelligent and I admire anybody that has a wealth of knowledge. He has knowledge about all kinds of stuff and he's street smart. You have to admire somebody like that. He's a great businessman. He's aggressive and he knows how to go after what he wants in life. That's something that I admire.
"It's a compliment to me when you say I'm similar to him. I strive to be business savvy and aggressive. I work hard and I want to be able to achieve all kinds of things. I like to say it'd be cool if I could do something. I never say, 'It'll never happen for me.' I just run head-first into the wall and see if I end up on the ground."
Read Taylor Wane's entire interview at RockConfidential.com.
It was difficult to narrow this year's crop down to so few, but here are our picks for the 10 best paint schemes of 2004:
1. Batman returns: Back in April, Mark Martin was one of several drivers who took a ride with a superhero at Talladega Superspeedway.
2. Red, white and chocolate: Elliott Sadler and the M&Ms got patriotic with a special Fourth of July paint scheme at Daytona.
3. D-Day remembered: Bobby Labonte commemorated the 60th anniversary of D-Day with an army green paint job at Dover in June.
4. Timber Wolf: David Green brought his vivid Busch Series paint scheme up to the Nextel Cup Series for the Chevy Rock and Roll 400 at Richmond in September.
5. Hemi power: Jeremy Mayfield got all bronzed up with a Dodge Hemi paint scheme at Kansas Speedway in October.
6. Wrangling the title: Martin Truex Jr. went old school with a Wrangler jeans paint scheme when he clinched the Busch Series championship at Darlington Raceway in November.
7. Lovin' it: Bill Elliott took us back a few years with a McDonald's paint scheme that he ran at Atlanta and Fontana in the fall.
8. KISS!: Kevin Harvick was ready to rock out with KISS colors run appropriately during the Chevy Rock and Roll 400 at Richmond.
9. Black, white and chocolate: Early in the year, Elliott Sadler ran an eye-catching grayscale scheme as a part of a clever M&Ms promotion.
10. Take a picture: Rusty Wallace caused us to do a double take when he raced the vibrant Kodak colors at Watkins Glen in August.
"[UNION drummer] Brent Fitz unexpectedly had to drop out of the Japanese KISS Expo. Seems Brent has a great opportunity to tour Canada and won't be able to drum with UNION. Bruce made a few calls and none other than KISS drummer Eric Singer came to the rescue. Eric will join Bruce, John Corabi and Jamie Huntington for the two Japanese shows on Jan. 29th & 30th. The lineup will perform several UNION songs and classic cover tunes, which will of course include KISS songs. Eric will also appear at the expos during the day to greet fans and sign autographs.
"Bruce is so relieved Eric is on board. He really wants these shows to be special for the Japanese fans and can't think of a better way then to have Eric Singer on drums! Eric was happy to be able to help out his friends Bruce and Brent, and to also make sure that the shows were not canceled. Eric said he was really looking forward to performing with Bruce again and thinks the shows will be a lot of fun for everyone!
"KISS Japan Expo Info: 2 great shows will take place at the Takadanobaba Club Phase in Tokyo with doors opening at 1PM. Bruce Kulick/Eric Singer/John Corabi/Jamie Hunting will perform at both shows. The first show is Saturday January 29th and also features KISS tribute band KISS DOLLS. The second day is January 30th and in addition to Bruce Kulick/Eric Singer/John Corabi/Jamie Hunting features KISS tribute bands KISSIN' TIME and KISS JAPAN.
"Bruce, Eric, John & Jamie will be available to sign autographs and take photos in the afternoons during the expos and KISS merchandise will be on sale throughout the day. Live performances from Bruce Kulick/Eric Singer/John Corabi/Jamie Hunting and the tribute bands begin at 6PM each night. These live shows will be UNION's first-ever performances in Japan!"
Madonna, who has enjoyed phenomenal success as a pop superstar, but whose efforts on the silver screen have been met with an icy response from both critics and fans, landed at the top of the Top 25 list, which was compiled by the music magazine Blender.
Ozzy Osbourne landed in 21st place, THE SPICE GIRLS at 19th, Mick Jagger at 17th, and Sting at 24th.
The top 10 is as follows:
01. Madonna
02. Bob Dylan
03. Mariah Carey
04. Jon Bon Jovi
05. Elvis Presley
06. Britney Spears
07. Vanilla Ice
08. Neil Diamond
09. Gene Simmons
10. Master P
As it's 13 years ago this year that Eric Carr passed away due to cancer, his mother Connie Caravello has now written 13 poems. All poems in Eric's honor written by his mother have been compiled in a heart-warming book, titled "Footsteps You Left Behind". Throughout the book, you'll also find several of Eric's personal photos.
Each book is custom-made and personally signed by Eric Carr's mother, and comes with a free Eric Carr guitar pick. Each book costs $21.99 plus shipping and handling (it only ships within the USA). For more info check out the official Eric Carr web site (www.ericcarr.com).
This year's poem by Eric Carr's mother can be read at KissKollector.com.
In an early November article published in the magazine, Rolling Stone quoted a concert-industry source as saying, "A lot of the heavy acts do that [use backing tapes] — they thicken up the guitar sounds when they play live. KISS has backing tracks galore."
In a letter to the magazine published in its latest issue, McGhee responded to the article with the following:
"During the nine-plus years that I have managed KISS, they have been adamant in their commitment to performing all of their more than 500 concerts without backing tracks, samples or any type of instrumental or vocal augmentation. The sole exception was when 'Beth' was sung by the drummer to a prerecorded tape, and the rest of the band left the stage to avoid misleading the fans. Having built their career on their bombastic live shows, KISS to this day believe that the demands of a high-energy show are neither a valid excuse or alibi for the use of canned music or prerecorded singing by any live act."
Disc two will feature an "excellent" 48-minute documenatary on the preparations for these shows and a host of bonus footage that take the viewer back to the days when KISS played clubs in the early '70s, including rare black-and-white footage of KISS in their prime at one of their first concerts as well as concert footage from the band's personal archives. Screenformat will be 16/9 on the documentary and 4/3 on the bonus features.
This second disc will mainly be a teaser for the upcoming "Kiss Archives DVD Series", to be released next year.
The Better Life Foundation, started by 3 DOORS DOWN earlier this year, is a collective effort to aid children and families in need and provide a positive influence in their lives.
The Mexican KISS museum and club are located 25 minutes from Mexico City, on the Toluca Highway (Kilometer 45.5), just 100 meters pass the "Los Encinos" Golf Club Entrance. The club is open from Tuesday to Saturday from 7:00 p.m. – 3:00 a.m. Live bands play every Friday and Saturday.
Rita Cosby: Gene, it's great to see you, my friend. I wish it was under better circumstances.
Gene Simmons: Thank you, thank you.
Cosby: Now, I understand there was something special. This just came down recently. Darrell Abbott's family requested something sort of special tied with your band. Tell us about it.
Simmons: Well, I wasn't really prepared to talk about it, but the family requested, as a personal issue between the family and the grieving people who are going to be there, to send a Kiss Kasket. We initially did it as a promotion. And you know, I think it meant a lot to Darrell when, you know — when he was alive, he gave lots of people great joy. I mean he had the band tattooed onto his chest. He was a major figure in rock and roll. He's going to be greatly missed. And the family wish — you know the one last wish they had was that he buried in a Kiss Kasket. And I think it's a private matter for the family and the fans actually.
Cosby: No, and I think that's beautiful that that's happening, too, because I'm sure, it obviously, as you said, meant a lot to him. How big of a shock was this? You know this guy really was a legend and so well respected in the industry. How big of a shock was it to you, Gene, when you heard what happened?
Simmons: You know it's about as shocking as it can get. The unfortunate thing is that the media will tend to sort of look at the visuals, you know, the flying hair and the crazy look and all of the over- the-top stuff, which is what performing is all about. But people forget that underneath all of that, actually, Darrell was a very, very sweet guy, very upstanding, very quiet in his own way, immensely talented. PANTERA was a very, very important band. And I'm sure all the fans are going to miss him very much. I know I do.
We — KISS played at the stadium in Argentina and we invited PANTERA to join us. And it was one of the highlights of any of the tours we have ever played. Darrell was just a sweet guy.
Cosby: Gene, how vulnerable are you guys to fanatical fans like this mad man who did this horrible act?
Simmons: You know people often forget that the word "fan" actually comes from the word "fanatical". Most people are very nice. Most people respect your privacy. But here's no secret, most celebrities check into hotels under pseudonyms and the reason is not because I don't love the fans but because you've got to be able to keep everybody at arm's length because every once in a while you're going to get a nut job. The only justice, as far as I'm concerned is that this nut case is no longer around to do this to anybody else.
The unfortunate thing about the judicial system, if you'll allow me, is that, if he were caught, somebody would bring up the point he had a troubled childhood and that we should rehabilitate him. And I'm not a fan of that, I have to say. Whether he was troubled or not, if you resort to violence and you kill somebody, you should be taken off the face of the earth.
Cosby: No, and it is — absolutely, I agree with you. How do you protect yourself, Gene? I mean you talk about this balance — you got so many wonderful fans, you in particular, you know, folks — and you want to have that access, you want to have that one-on-one. But then there's that wild one all of a sudden who does something horrible. How do you find that balancing act?
Simmons: You've got to be able to separate the fact from the fiction, the stage histrionics from the private life. When you walk down the street, you've got to be aware that everybody is not necessarily your best friend and then — you know, sometimes somebody is going to have an ulterior motive, which is why when you check into a hotel, you have to do it under an assumed name. And when you go some place big and public and where there are lots of people, you've got to take security with you both for legal issues. I mean if I did something with this fist to somebody who was getting in my face —- and I'm 6-foot-2. I'm not shy. If you get in my face, I'll take you out. You literally can't do that. You've got to be able to have a buffer, somebody else between you and somebody who's — you know who's being improper.
Celebrity is not everything that everybody believes it is. It is a precarious position in life. But, you know we do it because we love it.
Cosby: And Gene Simmons, we love you and thank you so much for coming here and talking about this. We appreciate it.
Simmons: I just want to say one last thing, which is.
Cosby: Yes, real quick if you could, Gene.
Simmons: Our hearts and our best wishes go out to the family. He was a great guy. He's going to be sorely missed.
Cosby: Thank you, Gene, very much, and he definitely will. And we appreciate you're coming here. Thank you, Gene, very much.
Gene Simmons: "Sad to report 'Dimebag' Darrell Abbott, formerly of PANTERA, has been killed in a club incident. Our best wishes to his family and friends."
Most of KISS' success hinged on its marketing savvy, from the ubiquitous kabuki makeup to dramatic stage antics such as breathing fire and spitting blood. But beneath the hype, KISS was a real rock band. Gene Simmons, Paul Stanley, Ace Frehley and Peter Criss had a knack for writing catchy pop rock songs.
KISS reached its creative peak with its 1976 album, Destroyer. Produced by legendary Bob Ezrin (Pink Floyd's The Wall, Lou Reed's Berlin), Destroyer is quintessential KISS--hard-driving arena anthems along with a melancholy ballad ("Beth") that dominated the airwaves for months.
Destroyer opens with "Detroit Rock City," the album's signature track. The first thing you hear is someone doing dishes while listening to the radio in his home. The radio reports on a head-on collision. Then the person leaves the house, gets in his car, starts the engine, flips on the stereo (which plays KISS' "Rock and Roll All Night") and takes off. The song kicks in next, telling a story of a guy speeding to make a "midnight show" and suddenly seeing a big truck coming at him ("I got to laugh/ because I know I'm gonna die"). The musically rich song (at least for KISS) builds to a crescendo when we hear, you guessed it, the skid and crunch of a head-on collision. Cheesy, perhaps, but well put together.
The artsy notions of "Detroit Rock City" are continued with the Sabbath-esque "God of Thunder," on which the long-tongued Simmons delivers a devilishly baritone vocal in which he promises, among other things, to "slowly rob you of your virgin soul." Probably the album's strongest song is "Shout It Out Loud," which holds up 30 years later, but "Great Expectations" and "Sweet Pain" are better off forgotten. I retain a soft spot for the album closer, "Do You Love Me?," which raises an age-old question from the perspective of a celebrity.
KISS produced a ton of crap over the years, but at least half of Destroyer confirms there was some talent behind the cartoon faãade.--Geoff Schumacher (Las Vegas Mercury)
Joining him in the studio will be former KISS lead guitarist Bruce Kulick, who worked on songs with Paul Stanley before. Before KISS did the Rock The Nation Tour earlier this year, Bruce Kulick had already heard some of the material Paul Stanley had been working on back then.
"We are starting to add on more KISS collectibles exclusive to KissWorld and few rarer are Paul Stanley's actual played on stage guitars from the Farewell Tour 2000/2001!! We have secured 6 of these direct from Paul and they come with signed certificates of authenticity and even detail of which city on the tour the guitar was used — there are even guitar picks still clinging to these! These are top-of-the-line Washburn Paul Stanley models and at this time, there are only 6 available so check them out.
"One of the most highly anticipated products that we have been preparing has been some cool items signed by none other than Vinnie Vincent! The survey page on the website showed many of you wanted Vinnie memorabilia — you wanted it — you got it! We spent some time with Vinnie back in August and he has kindly signed a stunning lithograph of himself live on stage during the Creatures of the Night 10th Anniversary Tour in full make up and costume. He has signed this lithograph in gold to match his Ankh make up design. This lithograph is numbered and limited to only 200 worldwide and is on top quality acid-free archival paper and is a heavy 300gsm in weight. This will look amazing framed and Vinnie's autograph is hard to come by with plenty of fakes out there. Come over to the website to see a photo of Vinnie taken after signing these items for us — this is the real deal! We also had Vinnie sign 4 different black and white 8x10's as well — 2 in make up and 2 out of makeup from his KISS time 1982-1984. There are only 100 of each of these 8x10's and like the lithograph they all come with a Certificate of Authenticity. If you are a fan of Vinnie's you wont want to miss these items and they are available NOW — and all are exclusive to KissWorld.
"Twenty years ago, 'Animalize' came out and was a return to platinum form for the band. With a new guitarist Mark St John, the band had a smash with 'Heaven's On Fire'. As everyone knows the tour started in the U.K. with Bruce Kulick filling in on guitar and ultimately becoming a full time member of the band later that year. 1984 — where has the time gone?! KissWorld has 100 promotional publicity black and white 8x10s of KISS from 1984 featuring Mark St John, hand signed by Mark available now and also 100 publicity promotional black and white 8x10s of KISS featuring Bruce Kulick, handsigned by Bruce available NOW on the website. Bruce has also given us a stunning full colour 8x10 of himself from the 'Revenge' era that he has signed exclusively for us — and there are only 50 of these available. All signed product sold through KissWorld comes with a Certificate of Authenticity and you can see photos of Bruce and Mark signing for KissWorld on the site.
"For those who missed out on the 'Kiss Symphony' lithograph or couldn't afford them when they were released, KissWorld has picked up a handful of these and they are available now on the website. They WERE retailing for $995 but are only $595 through KissWorld. These are very limited so get in early to avoid disappointment.
"Don't forget that the 2005 KISS Calendars are ON SALE NOW. These have been hugely successful and since they started shipping a couple of weeks ago, seems that the fans really love them! The 4 solo calendars come complete with a full-size reproduction of the 1978 solo album mural posters that came with the US pressings of the albums way back then. The group calendar is jammed full of the original line up with a couple featuring Tommy and Eric and they are all available now, don't forget the solo calendars are a limited print run, so don't delay! These are KissWorld-designed products!"
Ozzy Osbourne (BLACK SABBATH), Bruce Dickinson (IRON MAIDEN), Lars Ulrich (METALLICA), Kirk Hammett (METALLICA), James Hetfield (METALLICA), Jason Newsted (ex-METALLICA, VOIVOD), Dave Mustaine (MEGADETH, ex-METALLICA), Zakk Wylde (OZZY OSBOURNE, BLACK LABEL SOCIETY), Jonathan Davis (KORN), Sebastian Bach (ex-SKID ROW), Gene Simmons (KISS), Paul Stanley (KISS), Eric Carr (ex-KISS), Axl Rose (GUNS N' ROSES), Slash (VELVET REVOLVER, ex-GUNS N' ROSES), Duff McKagan (VELVET REVOLVER, ex-GUNS N' ROSES), Izzy Stradlin (ex-GUNS N' ROSES), Marilyn Manson, Nikki Sixx (MÖTLEY CRÜE), Vince Neil (MÖTLEY CRÜE), Tommy Lee (MÖTLEY CRÜE), Layne Staley (ALICE IN CHAINS), Jerry Cantrell (ALICE IN CHAINS), Sean Kinney (ALICE IN CHAINS), Mike Inez (ALICE IN CHAINS, ex-OZZY OSBOURNE), Bret Michaels (POISON), Eddie Van Halen (VAN HALEN), Steven Tyler (AEROSMITH)
Check out all the pictures: Page#1, Page#2.
BIOGRAPHY: Gene Simmons takes viewers along with Gene and KISS on tour in Australia and then back to Los Angeles to see Gene embroiled in the fast-paced world of a solo musician. Viewers also see the album cover being shot by internationally famed photographer David LaChapelle and sit in on radio shows and on top-secret business meetings. Then obsessive fans, musicians, and celebrities come out to celebrate Gene's solo album at the first, soon to be annual, ***hole party at the Sunset Strip Key Club. After getting to know Gene, viewers will be surprised by his work ethic, impressed by his energy, shocked by his opinions, and charmed by his playful spirit. They'll also be touched by the softer side of the blood-spitting "Demon"—who cherishes every second he spends with his family—Playmate Shannon Tweed and their two teenaged children, Nick and Sophie.
Wednesday, December 8 at 10pm/9C on A&E
The front man of Kiss, the band whose outrageous make-up, riotous shows and sex-crazed groupies made them the biggest American stadium act of the Eighties, has crossed the Atlantic to teach pupils at the oldest boarding school in England how to be rock gods, in a project echoing last year's hit film The School of Rock .
'Being in a rock band is an allegory for life. Good taste is academic and talent is overrated: mindset and perseverance are everything,' says the singer, 54. 'In a rock band, each person is out for themselves - within the context of the team.
'Children need to learn to be selfish, to put themselves first and not care what other people think. I have welcomed these children into the twilight zone and they have never seen anything like it.'
In a new six-part TV series to be screened on Channel 4 next spring, Simmons has been given a month to turn ten 13-year-old public school pupils who excel in classical music into stars capable of supporting one of the day's biggest rock bands in a sell-out concert at London's Hammersmith Apollo.
On the surface, pupils at the 450-year-old Christ's Hospital school in West Sussex - a charity-run boarding school for children from less well-off families - could not be less rock 'n' roll. The 840 pupils wear a uniform chosen in 1553 by their founder, King Edward VI - long blue coats, cotton shirts with rectangular neckbands similar to those of a lawyer, yellow socks and a leather belt.
More than half of their families have income of less than £20,000 a year, while another quarter earn between £20,000 and £30,000. Half are being brought up by single parents, and they all have reasons why they benefit from studying away from home - ranging from the death of a parent or trouble with a step-parent to an overcrowded home. Not quite the Little Lord and Lady Fauntleroys that Simmons, who boasts of having seduced more than 4,600 women, admits he was expecting.
The children greeted the rock god coolly and took time to be won over by him. 'We didn't really care who Gene was or that he was a rock star: when he drove into our school forecourt in his limousine and stepped out wearing his sunglasses and leather coat, we just thought he was really arrogant,' said the band's 13-year-old keyboard player, whose name is to remain secret until the programme is broadcast.
'It was only when we watched his DVD and saw the size of his audience and how they reacted to him that we thought he might have something to teach us,' agrees the band's manager. 'Now he has been here a few weeks, he is more civilised.'
Simmons, a former teacher in Harlem, who was sacked for replacing his pupils' Shakespeare books with Spiderman comics, has four central lessons for the pupils: how a rock star behaves, how he or she moves, the melodic structure of rock songs and the history of rock.
'But the most important thing for a rock star is arrogance,' he says. 'Arrogance is how you get the only two things that matter in the world: sex and money. Rock'n'roll is the sanctuary of all the misfits and the morons who are unqualified to do anything, yet we end up getting paid more and having more sex than any other person on the face of the planet.'
But while delighted to swing their microphones about, his pupils are not convinced. 'His claim about the women is really sick,' said the band's manager. 'Rock star or not, it is not healthy. It is just to feed his ego: it is really immature. On his website, you can see all these women, but they must be gold diggers - if you look at him, he is just a middle-aged man.'
The head, Dr Peter Southern, said: 'His lessons on false confidence may be more obviously useful in rock, but they can be key in an interview for university, a violin solo or a tricky moment in a rugby match.'
Simmons admits he may have learnt more than the children: 'They are much more caring about each other than I would be: when I chose the band members, some said they wanted to step down because another child wanted the place more than they did,' he said. 'They have taught me a degree of humility I didn't have before, which is not necessarily a good thing for a rock star to learn.'
If there's another thing Simmons loves, it's the sound of his own voice.
He barely pauses for breath as he embarks on a series of well-rehearsed lectures revolving around his twin passions: women and money.
Kiss still have the distinction of making the most money of any band out of merchandise.
And the band isn't Simmons' only source of income. He's tried films. He's written two autobiographies and is the publisher of the monthly entertainment magazine Gene Simmons Tongue. Earlier this year, he released Asshole, his second solo album.
Even with £100 million ($264 million) in the bank, Simmons believes that wealth is relative and there's always more to be made.
He's in a long-term relationship with the ex-Playboy model Shannon Tweed (previous girlfriends include Cher and Diana Ross), with whom he has two teenage children, but he rejects monogamy and claims to come out in hives at the mention of marriage. By his reckoning he has slept with more than 4600 women.
"My autobiography was going to be called Women are from Mars, Men have a Penis. Men and women have nothing in common; we're not built the same," he says.
"We have testosterone, you don't. You make one or two eggs a month, we make millions of sperm every day. The problem is this: that the female of the species has deluded herself into thinking that all those billions of sperm that he makes are just for her. Why not let us have a few hundred million to play with? I'll just take a million. But no, you want them all."
As he drones on, I wonder to myself why anyone would want to go near the Simmons seed.
Still, 32 years into his career, the women still queue up.
In our interview, he takes every chance to assert his manhood. He reads sexual tension into my body language (a twitching ankle is a come-on), making sleazy remarks about my clothes (I'm wearing too many) and two bone-crushing handshakes. A psychologist would have a field day.
Simmons now sees himself as an all-round entertainer. He was born Chaim Witz in Haifa, Israel in 1949. His father left the family when he was 9, after which his mother Flora moved with her son to Brooklyn in New York.
His musical epiphany arrived when, aged 13, he saw The Beatles perform on the Ed Sullivan Show. "They had long hair, they talked strange and yet everybody loved them. I saw that it was OK to be different."
Voices Music Entertainment have reportedly invested more money into the album cover than on any other releases in their 16-year history. Executive producer Stig Karlsen says that the music and the musicians obviously are most important, but that the package alone will be so special and historic that it will put all previous KISS tributes to shame. Posters and promotional sheets will be made of the album cover. The album might also be released on vinyl in a limited edition.
In Norway these bands need no introduction, but here's a short introduction for the international rock fans:
STAGE DOLLS: Platinum-selling and #1 chart-topping rock band from Norway who also climbed to #43 on the Billboard singles chart in 1989 with "Love Cries". STAGE DOLLS ironically worked with KISS producer Ron Nevison on their hit single "Love Don't Bother Me" in 1991. They have also toured the world with such bands as FASTER PUSSYCAT, WARRANT and MR. BIG.
TNT's Ronni Le Tekro and Tony Harnell: TNT are yet another platinum-selling and #1 chart-topping band from Norway. They are also one of the few Norwegian bands to have entered the U.S. Billboard chart. Believe it or not, KISS manager Doc McGhee was once their manager as well. TNT are the most sucsessful hard rock band in Norway and hard rock fans from the whole world should remember their album "Tell No Tales" and their hit single "10,000 Lovers In One". The band have done headlining tours in USA, Japan and Europe and have also toured with TWISTED SISTER and GREAT WHITE. The two most important members of the group, Tony Harnell (vocals) and Ronni Le Tekro (lead guitar), will record a song for this KISS tribute album.
SURFEROSA: A synth-punk band with two Top Ten hits on the Norwegian charts: "Saturday Night" and "Neon Commando". The band have a strong fan base and they always deliver energetic live shows. SURFEROSA recently toured USA and Japan.
ULVER: Nominated at the Norwegian Grammy Award twice (Spellemannsprisen 2002/2003). Strangely enough, ULVER are more popular outside Norway than in their own country. ULVER were originally a black metal band that has gone more into the direction of dark and mysterious electronica. They are also known to have done the sountrack for such Scandinavian motion pictures as "UNO", "Svidd Neger" and "Lyckantropen".
More information, including an interview with executive producer Stig Karlsen, is available at this location.
Programme One - 25th November:
Kiss are the greatest American hard-rock institution. Taking their inspiration equally from the theatrical menace of Alice Cooper, the glam stomp of Slade, and the melody of the Beatles, the bigger than life cartoon rockers were soon a powerhouse money-making machine, churning out classic albums along with increasingly daft merchandise by the truckload. Like the Corvette Stingray or the Fender Stratocaster they are now seen as an American design classic, consistently cited as a huge influence on everyone from Garth Brooks and Lenny Kravitz, to Van Halen and The Darkness. Includes a new interview with Gene Simmons.
The brainchild of Valley rock memorabilia collector Michael Dunn, the gallery will open with an exhibit by Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee Grace Slick, the former JEFFERSON AIRPLANE and STARSHIP singer who abandoned the music business in 1988 and has since concentrated on painting.
Slick's portraits of rock stars like Janis Joplin, Jerry Garcia and Jimi Hendrix, along with "Alice in Wonderland"-themed paintings and brush-style nudes, will be on exhibit Friday through Sunday.
Slick will attend a grand-opening reception 7 to 9 p.m. Saturday.
Dunn, who has been collecting rock memorabilia for more than 20 years, clearly recalls the first piece he ever acquired.
"It was a LED ZEPPELIN bootleg on vinyl," Dunn says. "I bought it at the old Roads to Moscow store on Mill Avenue. When I snagged that, a light went on. Sometimes there's a collector in us and we don't even realize it.
"It just started gaining momentum from there. Unlike something like sports collecting, which is very structured, with music collecting you get it when you can, while you can."
The biggest-selling items were Lydia's collection of personal scrapbooks which went for over $10,000, a Peter Criss "Destroyer"-era silver cross which went for almost $5,000, and truck rental receipts from 1973 signed by Paul Stanley which went for almost $4,000. "The fascinating thing about the whole collecting business," explains Backstage Auctions founder/owner Jacques van Gool "is the wide range of items collectors will pay top dollar for. Paper goods personally signed by a big artist are notoriously popular, and the bidding can go into the thousands. You might expect that from record awards, vintage guitars or handwritten lyrics but the reality is that often the smaller pieces end up being the most popular and desirable. It's often not what people would expect."
Although the live auction season has ended for this year, there are always items available at the Backstage Auctions online store which is found at their web site, www.backstageauctions.com. Prior to the Lydia Criss auction, other 2004 major auctions were from original KISS tour manager, Sean Delaney, the widow of MÖTLEY CRÜE's first manager, Barbara Coffman, and legendary producer Eddie Kramer. Jacques, and wife/ partner Kelli, are already preparing for 2005. "We are scheduling a couple of big auctions to kick off next year with major artists," explains Kelli, "and will be announcing the first one before the end of 2004." In addition, the company is planning to put together several "theme" auctions that will run in between their big-name artist auctions throughout the year.
About the episode: Simmons is the co-founder of KISS, one of the biggest and most successful rock 'n' roll bands in American history. "Biography: Gene Simmons" reveals how Simmons has managed to outlast, out-think and out-play most other rock stars. He parlayed his rock 'n' roll success into books, movies, real estate development, TV shows, magazine publishing, merchandising and his latest project, his first solo album in 25 years, "Asshole".
"Biography: Gene Simmons" takes viewers along with Gene and KISS on tour in Australia and then back to Los Angeles to see Gene embroiled in the fast-paced world of a solo musician. Viewers also see the album cover being shot by internationally famed photographer David LaChapelle and sit in on radio shows and on top-secret business meetings. Then obsessive fans, musicians, and celebrities come out to celebrate Gene's solo album at the first, soon-to-be-annual, "Asshole" party at the Sunset Strip Key Club. After getting to know Gene, viewers will be surprised by his work ethic, impressed by his energy, shocked by his opinions, and charmed by his playful spirit. They'll also be touched by the softer side of the blood-spitting "Demon" — who cherishes every second he spends with his family — Playmate Shannon Tweed and their two teenaged children, Nick and Sophie.
Nov. 18 2004:
KISS Expo with Bruce Kulick & Dirty Dogz as Special Guest
Where: LA GABBIA, Strada Statale 47, Valsugana, Uscita POVE
Location: Bassano del Grappa, Italy
Doors open: 21.30
Bruce will perform acoustically at this event.
Nov. 20, 2004:
Bruce Kulick Guitar Clinic
Where: Werk Stadt, Mannesmannstr. 6, 58455 Witten, Germany
Tickets: € 6,-
doors open: 15.45
More information from chris@chris-alive.de
Nov. 20, 2004:
KISS Expo with Bruce Kulick as Special Guest
Where: Werk Stadt, Mannesmannstr. 6, 58455 Witten, Germany
Tickets: € 9,-/ € 12,-
Doors open: 16.00
Nov. 25, 2004:
Bruce Kulick Guitar Clinic
Where: La-Chaux-de-Fonds, Saal des l'Ancien Stand, Rue Alexis-Marie-Piaget 82 (Switzerland)
Doors open: 18 Uhr
Nov. 27, 2004:
KISS Expo with Bruce Kulick as Special Guest
Where: Rock city club, Nottingham
Tickets: 14 Pounds
Doors open: 13.00
More information at: Tel:(+) 07971/984144
Panalpina, which launched a U.S. domestic service earlier this year, was chosen by the Hard Rock Cafe for its service, capabilities, reliability, and security. "Hard Rock owns the world's largest collection of music memorabilia and its safe and secure transport is a priority," said Brian Siemienas, Director of Marketing for Hard Rock International. "We are thrilled that Panalpina will help us ensure that these priceless pieces of music memorabilia are protected. Their U.S. domestic service enables us to use one provider globally throughout our promotional tour."
"We are excited to be a part of this unique Hard Rock Cafe awards program," said Cary Dittmann, Executive Vice President of Sales and Marketing for Panalpina North America. "Our U.S. domestic service strengthens our ability to satisfy the needs of our customers, such as Hard Rock Cafe, by providing them with a one-stop service."
The two prized pieces of memorabilia from Hard Rock Cafe's collection, Jimi Hendrix's white Gibson SG played during his 1969 appearance on the "Dick Cavett Show" and Ace Frehley's specially designed signature series Gibson Les Paul smoking guitar are transported using special hard case roadie boxes. The items have been displayed in the Hard Rock Cafes in Dubai and Boston to kick off the "Top of the Rock" awards program.
Pupils are to get the shock of their lives when their normal music master is replaced by the Kiss frontman Gene Simmons.
Simmons, known for his demonic black and white make-up and extra long tongue, will teach the kids how to rock.
In the series at Christ's Hospital in Horsham, West Sussex, the class will be turned into a band.
Channel 4 chief Andrew Newman is thrilled to have signed the US legend and said: "The culture clash will be hilarious."
Simmons, 55, a primary school teacher before he formed New York-based Kiss in 1972, once said: "Anyone who tells you they got into rock 'n' roll other than for girls, fame and money is full of s***."
He claims to have slept with 4,600 women.
Rock School will be screened next year on a new Friday night line-up.
Simmons and Stanley also discuss the goals the band had when they first started and how they arrived ... "There was innocence and a naïveté about us when we started. We were innocent in the same way a baby piranha is. It's gonna get the job done. But it does it with a smile," said Stanley.
Stanley and Simmons also talk about how their love for the music held them together all these years despite many changes. "It's interesting that off-stage the differences popped out," said Simmons. "The more years there were between us and the beginning, the more the differences were ... usually heightened by drugs and alcohol. That affected some of us and sent some of us into the twilight zone. So far I haven't succumbed. But at least two of the members have gone there and back many times."
The second half of "Headline Act" will feature KISS videos including "Rock n' Roll All Night", "Forever", "Heaven's On Fire", "I Love It Loud", "Tears Are Falling", "Lick It Up" and "Shout It Out Loud". The episode will re-air on Saturday, October 30 at 3:00 p.m. and 3:00 a.m.
Launched in May 2000, VH1 Classic is a 24-hour network that presents music videos, concerts and music specials featuring classic rock, soul and pop artists from the '60s, '70s and '80s. Featured artists include THE BEATLES, THE STONES, TINA TURNER, LED ZEPPELIN, MARVIN GAYE, THE WHO, STEVIE WONDER, THE POLICE and many more.
The highest bidder will receive a first class ticket to either New York or Los Angeles, hotel accommodations, and will be picked up from their home in a limo to be driven to the airport. While in either New York or Los Angeles, the lucky winner will have dinner with Gene Simmons and be his personal guest of honor to his ginormous CD release party for his massive box set featuring one hundred never before release Gene Simmons songs from over the past three decades.
Go to www.fuse.tv/auction to bid!
Lydia met Peter in 1966, and the two instantly became a couple and eventually married in January 1970. While Peter was struggling with KISS (and before that in bar bands) to make it, Lydia became Peter's full support system. She was behind him in every way imaginable, from making some of the earliest KISS stage apparel, to providing financial and emotional support while he pursued his dream. This continued until KISS finally became successful, and in late 1975 Lydia began enjoying life as a homemaker and playing the role of the 1970s rock star wife. In 1978, Peter and Lydia divorced, and Lydia eventually became a professional photographer seeing her work appear in major publications, biographies, calendars, tour books, etc.
Lydia Criss' collection contains over 1,000 pieces, including posters, rare handbills, photos, personal notes and letters, pins, vinyl, tapes, promotional goods, t-shirts and even the wedding dress she wore when she married Peter. Highlights include handbills from KISS' New York club days in '73, original artwork, vintage tour memorabilia and a number of personal items from her 12-year relationship with Peter Criss.
The auction is not primarily aiming at KISS fans/collectors, as Lydia's collection also features items from some other very notable classic rock bands like LED ZEPPELIN, THE WHO, QUEEN, THE ROLLING STONES and THE BEATLES. Backstage Auctions will be highlighting selected items from this auction in their Auctions Preview Gallery soon, but in the meantime KISS Kollector Online is already exclusively displaying some of the KISS items from the upcoming "KISS: The Vintage Years" auction, including the first ever KISS handbill (for the April 13 and 14, 1973 gigs at the Daisy in New York City) and the handwritten lyrics for KISS' first mega hit "Beth" (which Peter Criss supposedly wrote for his then-wife).
Yes, lots of you hard rock fans have done a big old word search on Bella for the hottest band in the world, and I am here to deliver my knowledge of the band which changed the world, after The Beatles did. KISS.
Beginning way back in 1972, KISS was the brainchild of young Gene Klein and his mate, Stanley Eisen. They started out under the name 'Wicked Lester', based in NYC.
Huge admirers of The Beatles, they began by busking old Beatles tunes in their hometown, little did they know they'd have the same effect on the world of music as they're idols did. Wanting to be a four-piece, they searched for members worthy of their fledgling band and, after countless auditions, they finally found Paul Daniel and Peter Criscoula. They took the wise decision of changing their names, and from that day forth, they were known as Gene Simmons, Paul Stanley, Ace Frehley and Peter Criss.
It all seems pretty normal so far, but the guys decided to do something no other band has ever tried, and they've got their stamp all over it. Wicked Lester became KISS, after side-tracking the frankly rubbish names 'Albatross' and 'F***'. They became near strangers to the boys they once were, as they transformed themselves into the ultimate Glam Rockers and near Superheroes to a generation of 1970's teenagers. They chose alter-egos under masks of make-up.
Obviously, they needed a drastic change to the whole idea of performance. Their masks took up the rest of their bodies in the form of outrageous costumes. 10" platforms, (as a girl who is a fan of 4" heels, this thought still terrifies me, how on earth can they even walk in those things?) Paul admits himself that they're tricky to manouvere and they took some practice, but after years now of wearing them, i'm sure they could run for a bus, might look stupid, but they probably could.
Anyway, the full regalia of their outfits is a sight to behold. Paul has a catsuit slashed to the crotch which shows of his highly toned body which made him the Sex-God of the band all the 'chicks' fancied, even though he's more camp than Christmas on stage.
To this day, he still looks incredible, a flat stomach any man would be proud of and the obligatory 70's hairy chest. Gene, however, looks like the devil which added to the paranoia of the parents of KISS fans back in the day. I doubt if they had much problem with guitarist 'Space' Ace Frehley, who chose silver make-up to match his space-age costume, or drummer Peter Criss who became The Cat.
Many parents of the fans thought that KISS were playing 'the Devil's music', but with catchy tunes like 'Rock And Roll All Night', 'Deuce' and Peter's lovesong, 'Beth', they were clearly not listening to their lyrics, but concentrating more on the dazzling, yet somewhat disgusting, stage acts. Gene is mainly to blame for this, not only does he look the most frightening, but he also added fire-breathing and blood spurting to the performance, which is GREAT! He also owns the longest tongue in Rock & Roll history, used to good effect on hundreds of groupies, along with Diana Ross and Cher who Gene ended up having relationships with. I think I need to have a word my my Mother too, as i'm the only one in my family who has a tongue I can touch my nose with. Hmm. I'll have to find out what she was up to around '77.
They now were headed for legendary status as their followers became known as KISS Army, look at the skin of any self-respecting KISS fan and you're bound to find the logo there somewhere. The KISS Army is made up of over a million members and regularly attended concerts in the make-up of their favourite member, the best ones being the little kids dressed as Gene, they obviously have the coolest parents.
The band got through all that, but still suffered problems within the group. The original line-up in the hearts of many is still the best, but that's not to say their replacements haven't been any good, they're just not the same. Gene and Paul have always been at the front, but both Ace and Peter have yo-yoed in and out of the band over the years. After the release of Dynasty in 1979, Peter left the band in 1980 to pursue a solo career.
Eric Carr was his replacement just in time for their legendary 1980 World Tour. Eric was the only new member who had his own mask of make-up, he became 'The Fox'. But Peter was clearly very missed by fans as 'Unmasked' was the first album since 'Destroyer' in '76 which didn't reach platinum status. Their first recorded album with Carr failed to reach even Gold status, which led to Ace departing the band, only to be replaced by Vinnie Vincent in '82. 'Creatures of The Night', the first album with the new line-up couldn't get past no45 in the US charts, although it did much better than the previous 'Music from The Elder' of '81 which limped in at no75.
The KISS Army world was shocked in '83, as the band decided to take the massive step of taking off the make up. A brave decision when considering the effect their alter-egos had on the world. KISS were considered as mysterious and enigmas as they were never seen in public without make up, questioned by many an interviewer on TV as to what they really looked like, KISS never revealed their true selves, that was until they needed to boost their image again. A brave decision considering the millions of dollars they were making in merchandise alone, from KISS dolls to make up kits, would this step lead to the end?
No, because 'Lick It Up' in '83 hit platinum and the success went on to '84s Animalize. Vinnie Vincent then departed the band, to be replaced by Mark St. John. Sadly his stay with the band was cut short as he was diagnosed with Reiters syndrome, a form of bacterial arthritus. This led to Bruce Kulick joining the band in 1984 which meant the band could go on churning out best-sellers, including my personal favourite, 'Forever' in 1990, which became the band's biggest hit since 'Beth', from way back in '76.
Tragedy hit the band when drummer Eric Carr became ill with cancer of the heart, which later spread to his lungs. It led to his untimely death, at the age of just 41, in 1991.
Eric Singer became his replacement in 1992, he is the only member of KISS I have been honoured enough to have seen performing on stage, when he played with Alice Cooper on his UK tour a few years back. Needless to say, we all bowed down to him and he got the same rapturous applause as Alice himself. Eric's first album with KISS was 'Revenge', which was their long-awaited release since 1989.
They played an MTV unplugged special in 1995 and this was the long-awaited return of the original line-up. Peter and Ace joined Paul and Gene especially for this one-off special, the old magic was still there and it led to the band reforming with the original line-up, including full make-up and fireworks, for their international tour of 1996.
And so to recent years. KISS played their farewell tour in 2000, but financial disputes between Gene and Peter led to Eric Singer being re-drafted for the Australian and Japanese legs of the tour, this led to Ace going off aswell to be replaced by Tommy Thayer, much to the disappointment of KISS Army down-under who expected their last chance of seeing the original KISS together for the last time.
In 2003 we were given the awesome KISS Symphony - Alive IV, performed with the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra, which saw 2 worlds of music merged spectacularly in a blaze of Rock with Classic which always sends goosebumps to parts other music can't reach, much like Metallica's S&M when they played with the SF Symphony in 2000.
Sadly, the world of KISS as we know it has come to an end, as they refused to renew Peter Criss' contract. Paul and Gene considered him as too old and were unhappy with his unhealthy lifestyle as he is known to have battled with alcoholism and drug addiction. Eric Singer replaced him once again when they played a summer tour with fellow legends Poison. Apparently another tour was scheduled for September, but promoters appear to have lost faith in KISS because they didn't stump up the cash the band have asked for.
I guess all good things have to come to an end eventually, but there will never be another band quite like KISS. The musical rollercoaster the band have been on through more than 3 decades have left their dents permanently on the music world, we have some amazing albums to look back on and who knows what will happen in the future? Gene, for now, is concentrating on re-launching himself once more as a solo artist 'A**hole' featuring a brilliant album cover mixed with babes of many generations and the title track is a slightly different direction, but it works. Along with a history of producing movies, such as 'Detroit Rock City', Gene is still out there making what makes him happy, MONEY. As for the others, we'll have to see what happens next.
* About the Author Wendy Moore was born in Hollywood and grew up in Thousand Oaks, California. Between 1998 and 2000, Ms. Moore was Ace Frehley's girlfriend, confidante and Personal Assistant. Between KISS' worldwide blockbuster Reunion Tour and their Psycho Circus Tour, Wendy was privy to all that went on between Ace Frehley, Gene Simmons, Paul Stanley and Peter Criss and reveals all in her book - Into The Void... With Ace Frehley.
* From the Publisher The latest, most informative inside information, on the rock band KISS. This book will appeal to all KISS fans as it delves into the private lives of the most secretive rock band on the planet - KISS. Behind the masks, behind the scenes, between the sheets, you can not get any closer than - Into The Void... With Ace Frehley.
The book centers mostly around the author's close relationship with Ace Frehley and there are pages upon pages of interaction between Gene Simmons, Paul Stanley, Peter Criss along with Bruce Kulick, Eric Singer and Tommy Thayer.
240 pages
Chapter details:
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Prologue
Part 1 - Christine
1. Nothin' To Lose
2. Dirty Livin'
3. Almost Human
4. Crazy Nights
5. Two Sides of the Coin
6. Got To Choose
7. Room Service
8. "Oh My God, No Time To Turn"
9. Hard Luck Woman
10. Two Timer
11. Snow Blind
12. Parasite Lady
Part 2 - Ace's Profile
13. 2000 Man
14. Interplanetary Girl
15. Let Me Go, Rock n' Roll
16. Farewell
Epilogue
Book includes over 70 UNRELEASED photos.
Into the Void... with Ace Frehley
"This past Sunday night (Oct. 10) Peter, myself and Gigi [Peter's wife] went into NYC to see one of their friends bands play at CBGB's.
"The band's name is SHEER TERROR. The band consists of the following members, Paul Bearer-vocals, Chickie-bass, Mark Neuman-guitar, Pat-drums.
"They started back in the mid to late '80's in NYC. They put out a bunch of indie records, then got signed to MCA in '95. Soon after the band fell apart and after not speaking to each other for almost 9 years reformed for two sold out shows at CBGB's this past Saturday and Sunday nights.
"Peter and Gigi are good friends with Mark Neuman the guitarist in the band.
"Now I have seen shows at CBGB's before but, this place was packed, I mean you could not move but, the crowd was amazing, singing the songs, mosh pit...It was really very cool to see.
"Also in attendance was Marky Ramone amongst others. Marky too is good friends with Mark and came out to show his support.
"The band filmed both shows and will be editing them over the next few months for a future DVD release on Thorp Records sometime in early '05.
"Pictured
are Peter, Mark Neuman and Marky Ramone after the show."
"The sale includes original album cover artwork, handwritten lyrics and musical instruments from METALLICA, ANTHRAX and other heavy metal groups. Many of the METALLICA items are from the collection of Jon Zazula, founder of Megaforce Records," said Darren Julien, President of Julien Entertainment of West Hollywood, California.
The sale contains over 100 auction lots of awards, instruments, lyrics, artwork and documents from artists such as ALICE COOPER, ANTHRAX, GUNS N' ROSES, OZZY OSBOURNE, VAN HALEN, MÖTLEY CRÜE, KISS and many others. This historic offering gives fans an opportunity to obtain a piece of heavy metal music history from one of their favorite bands.
"Hard Rock Cafe was built on ground-breaking music, and we are thrilled to host the first-ever heavy metal memorabilia auction," said Don Bernstine, Hard Rock Cafe Manager of Acquisitions/Artist Relations. "The Hard Rock has the world's greatest collection of rock 'n' roll memorabilia, so we are a natural venue for this historic event that gives music fans the chance to own these artifacts that helped develop a new genre of music."
Auction highlights include:
* The original album covers artwork for METALLICA's 1986 "Master of Puppets" (pre-sale estimate of $5,000 to $7,000);
* A Guild electric bass guitar played by Cliff Burton, an early METALLICA member who was killed in a 1986 bus accident ($7,000 to $9,000);
* Handwritten lyrics by Burton and METALLICA founder Lars Ulrich to songs recorded on the group's first album, "Kill 'Em All", in 1983 ($1,000 to $3,000);
* An original METALLICA 1983 early "No Life 'Til Leather" demo cassette tape recorded in Jon Zazula's New York-area home ($2,000 to $3,000);
* The 1989 MTV music award presented to GUNS N' ROSES for best heavy metal video, "Sweet Child O' Mine" ($3,000 to $5,000);
* OZZY OSBOURNE "Blizzard of Ozz" platinum sales award ($500 to $700);
* KISS frontman Paul Stanley's two-piece 1980s stage-worn costume ($200 to $300);
* A grey cotton jumpsuit with embroidery, "Van Halen 1984", that was worn by guitarist Eddie Van Halen for his group's "1984" album and number-one single, "Jump" ($2,000 to $3,000).
The sale also includes other music memorabilia from AC/DC, AEROSMITH, ALICE COOPER, CHEAP TRICK, JOAN JETT, JUDAS PRIEST, KISS, LED ZEPPELIN, MÖTLEY CRÜE, OZZY OSBOURNE, QUIET RIOT, SKID ROW and TWISTED SISTER.
The auction will be conducted online and in person at the Hard Rock Cafe, 221 West 57th St., New York, New York, starting at 11 a.m. on Saturday, November 6.
Celebrities and other Who's Who in Southern California will take a 'walk on the wild side' at the Playboy Mansion Saturday, October 16, in support of The Wildlife WayStation, a haven for the rescue and care of wild and exotic animals who have been abused, injured, abandoned, orphaned or are ill. The event is the major fundraiser of the year for the privately funded, 501(C)(3) charitable organization/facility located in the Angeles National Forest.
In addition to the star-studded guest list, Montana, an 8-year-old White Tiger who calls the WayStation home, will be in attendance along with additional wild and exotic animals. A presentation of Paws of Fame awards to legendary environmentalist and paleo-anthropologist Dr. Richard Leakey and international film star Sharon Stone will highlight the event. Dr. Michael Nobel, great grandnephew of Alfred Nobel, founder of the Nobel Prize awarded annually since 1901 for achievements in chemistry, physics, medicine, literature, and peace, and chairman of the family society's board of directors and chairman of the Appeal of the Peace Prize Laureates Foundation, will present the International Lifetime Achievement Award to Dr. Richard Leakey.
WHEN: Saturday, October 16 -- 11:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
Best Photo Opportunity -- 1:00 p.m. to 2:00 p.m.
WHERE: Playboy Mansion at 10236 Charing Cross Road
(between S. Mapleton and Sunset)
Beverly Hills
WHO: Martine Colette, Founder of The Wildlife WayStation
Honorees: Sharon Stone, Dr. Richard Leakey, Dr. Jack Stephens and Rebecca Solomon
Partial List of Celebrities (subject to change):
Jillian Barberie, co-host of Good Day L.A.
Michael Clarke Duncan, The Green Mile and more
Mick Fleetwood, co-founder of Fleetwood Mac
Dennis Hopper, Easy Rider and Speed
Bernie Kopell, Dr. Adam Bricker of the Love Boat
Constance Marie, ABC's The George Lopez Show
Mike Marino, Comedian
Michael Nobel, great grandnephew of Alfred Nobel, founder of the Nobel Prize award
Courtney Peldon, HBO's hit Entourage
Stefanie Powers, ABC's Hart to Hart
Nicollette Sheridan, ABC's Desperate Housewives
Gene Simmons, bass guitarist for Kiss
Betty White, TV star seen on The Golden Girls
ACTIVITIES: Pop MusicFest for the Animals produced by Grammy Award winning producer Rodney "Darkchild" Jerkins featuring Stephen Bishop, Joy Enriquez and singing sensation Jamia Simone Nash recently seen on The Tonight Show; Silent, Super-Silent and Live Auctions; much more.
MEDIA: Exceptional visuals and interview opportunities are available to a limited number of media. For additional information or to confirm your attendance, please contact Terry Wills or Jessica Roswell at 310-524-0200. Contact Terry Wills at 310-877-1458 or Jessica Roswell at 310-227-9234 day of.
The cost for the two-hour flight, five minutes of which will be spent weightless, hovering above Earth, is approximately $190,000.
While details have yet to be finalized, space tourist will undergo six days of medical preparation, G-tolerance training, talks with space experts and simulator training.
On the actual flight day, the Virgin Galactic aircraft will travel down a runway, rather than a launch pad for a two-hour flight. Read more.
Stanley was asked by Davis' husband to perform at the party, according to a posting on KISS' web site. Having known Cheryl since the '70s, Paul felt it would be fun and a great surprise.
Paul commented, "I had originally been asked to do it with the party band but told them I didn't want to do it without Eric and Tommy. It was awesome and rocked big-time."
Stanley, Thayer and Singer played five songs: "All Right Now" (FREE), "Whole Lotta Love" (LED ZEPPELIN), "You Shook Me" (ZEPPELIN version), "Lick It Up" (KISS) and "Comunication Breakdown" (LED ZEPPELIN). Eric added that "Paul and Tommy sounded really good and it was a blast playing with them!"
"Woke up at 2:30 am Monday morning, drove out to the Mojave desert to be a guest at an historic event. Was invited to attend the fantastic second launch of SpaceshipOne by Bob Lorsh. This is the commercial venture that successfully went into 'outer space.' The first launch was a few weeks ago. This flight was the qualifier that won the crew a $10 million dollar price.
"The private sector once again kicked Gov't and NASA in the butt and showed them how to do something for $25 million dollars — compared to the hundreds of millions/billions Nasa routinely spends on similar ventures.
"But, this is an old story. In various TV and print interviews I did at the site (I was ACTUALLY on the field...very exciting), I was reminded of an astonishing fact. It has always been the American Individual — the American Entrepreneur, not the Government who created the life we all enjoy today. Think about it. Alexander Graham Bell and the telephone. Edison and the light bulb (and phonograph...and hundreds of other inventions). The Wright Bros. and the first airplane. And all of it invented right here in America.
"It DOES all come down to one person. It always does. SOMEONE has a dream. And that person either keeps it to himself, or he spreads it to others — like a virus. And, if others start believing the dream, anything is possible. Anything. I'm living proof. If you've read my books or heard the lectures (yeah, I know. They SOUND like lectures) in America, you can do anything. You can come from another country (like myself, like Gov. Schwarzenegger, like lots of others) and scale the heights. Because America lets you go after your dreams. Like no other country in the world. Not the country I was born in. Not the country Schwarzenegger was born in. This is a tough one to swallow for all the other countries of the world. But look at it this way: While all the countries in the world discuss the glories of their past, America is walking on other planets."
The flight marked the third time that the rocket, built by aircraft designer Burt Rutan and financed by Microsoft Corp. co-founder Paul Allen, had reached space.
Commented Nichols: "Along with my sister and my cousin we are the executors of our late uncle's estate.
"In the months leading up to my uncle's death, he had been working with a man named Brian Kinnard on what was to be an intimate story about his life and the truth behind his time with the rock group KISS. Brian wrote this book with my uncle and has released it as a final tribute. This way my uncle's final wish was to let everyone know who he was and what he did.
"Some have said that it is all lies and others have tried to talk us out of having it published. All I know is from the time my uncle died until now this book has been stopped from being published 3-4 times. I am not sure who or what were the reasons — all I can think of is someone or something wants to hide.
"I have read many postings that talk about the gay issue [Delaney led an openly homosexual lifestyle]. This is not a book promoting or putting down. It is a book that gives you the opportunity to hear for yourself what it was like and what really happened to my uncle in the '70s and '80s.
"So in closing I would like to say thanks to Brian and all of the KISS fans for your remarks and prayers. I hope that this will lay to rest any confusion surrounding my late uncle and 'Hell Box'.
"I would think that any person who accually met my uncle would know right away if this book is worthy of being in their collection. And for the rest of you, I can only say that if you are a true KISS fan then you can not pass up the opprotunity to find out what has been silenced. No one who is associated with the band KISS has any ties to this and they never will.
"My sister and I are in the process of putting a web site together that will let you view some never before seen photos and also talk between yourselves. God Bless."
Delaney, a songwriter and producer, died on April 13, 2003 after suffering a stroke in Orem, UT.
He was partially responsible for signing KISS to their first six-month contract with business partner Bill Aucoin. Delaney was KISS' first road manager and has often been called the band's fifth member.
"Sean Delaney was there at the beginning with us. He believed when few others did. He was a pivotal figure in KISS' formation and we miss him," Gene Simmons said in a statement shortly after Delaney's death.
"He was responsible for helping to choreograph the band's legendary stage show, lending his unique creative vision in the development of the four larger than life characters of KISS," said a release from Kayos Productions, which represents KISS member Ace Frehley.
Delaney also co-wrote a number of KISS songs including "Rocket Ride", "All American Man" and "Living In Sin".
In other news, Bruce will join forces with Rolando D'Lugo to offer the double-headliners-bill concert, "Kulick/D'Lugo: A Tribute to KISS (1984-1996)", in Puerto Rico in early October. Bruce and Rolando will be performing '80s and '90s KISS classics such as "Lick It Up", "Heaven's On Fire", "Unholy" and "Forever". They will also perform songs from Bruce's solo albums, "AudioDog" and "Transformer", as well as D'Lugo's current single, "Esperando". Bruce recorded an "awesome" guitar solo for "Esperando" and also made a special appearance in the video, according to a posting on Kulick's web site. Dates for the shows are:
Oct. 07 – Coaches - San Juan, PR
Oct. 08 - Boggler's – Ponce, PR
Tickets for the shows are available at Music Zone, Plaza Las Américas (787) 282-6764 and Boggler's, Ponce (787) 844-2199. Tickets cost $10 and doors open at 9:00pm. A limited amount of VIP passes are available for $15 and include: early entrance to venue at 7:00pm, exclusive access to KISS merchandise, and an exclusive meet-and-greet with Bruce and Rolando D'Lugo. More information on the event and Rolando is available at www.rdlugo.com.
Simmons, known for spitting blood onstage and dalliances with thousands of women off-stage, is considering three different reality-show pitches that will revolve around his life.
"People want to follow me around," he said. "I publish magazines, and I have a bizarre lifestyle. I can be up on stage and wear more makeup and high heels than your mommy did. And off stage I wear suits."
What also makes Simmons intriguing to producers is his personal life - he refuses to get married, though he lives with former Playboy playmate turned soft-core star Shannon Tweed, and he's made no qualms about squeezing every penny he can from Kiss fans.
In fact, which reality show he chooses - if any - will be based on the paycheck.
"There are three on the table," he said. "And I'm no different than the whore on the street corner: For the right price, I'll do it."
For now, however, Simmons can be seen on Friday's 9 p.m. season opener of NBC's "Third Watch."
It's the third part of a story arc that began at the end of last season. He plays a creep whose kid was killed by the cops. He's now out for revenge.
The producers called last season, and it turns out Simmons was already a regular viewer of the John Wells-produced series.
"It's an ensemble cast, it's not based around the stars, most people don't know who's on the show," he said. "It's very riveting. I find the show well-written. I did it because I was a fan of the show."
Simmons said he is called frequently for similar roles. The success of Kiss, which recently ended a tour, allows him to be choosy. Most of the roles he gets, however, are similar.
"I have certain looks," he said. "I'm sort of big and dark. If you take a look at the history of television characters, and motion picture characters, you have to get off the ground, then you get some flexibility. ... It takes a while before you can break out of the bad guys and break into comedy."
Besides "Third Watch," Simmons will also be seen in an upcoming edition of "American Idol" and may do more.
He's also working on launching a production company to produce movie and television fare.
"I appreciate not having to work for a living," he said.
Which is, of course, exactly what makes him a draw for reality producers.
"I refuse to abide by the rules of society. Life's too short to make society happy," he said. "I have to say that every day of my life has been wonderful."
"Just a quick note to let those of you who may have read the TV Guide online interview I did recently: I disavow the interview and the context the quotes attributed to me. In simple terms, the writer decided to paraphrase my quotes and take them out of context. As an example, if you said, 'I really hate people who come up to me and think they're all that...,', you might be surprised if there was a quote attributed to you that said 'I really hate people.' Anything taken out of context can effect meaning.
"I'm surprised at the decision by TV Guide to allow their writers to paraphrase interviews. I will always stand by what I say. But, I will never stand by what someone PARAPHRASES what I say.
"An amateurish example of reporting."
Midway through an eight-city audition tour, the show came to New Orleans to survey local talent for the first time.
Casting producers whittled thousands of contestants down to about 50, and the star judges arrived to send about half of those remaining "on to Hollywood" for the contest's next round.
Simmons was asked to share his first impressions of the process.
"The first thing is the amazing amount of courage it takes to get up there — no music, no drums, no nothing — and stand in front of four people you've never met in your life, who maybe are larger than life because they're on television or make records or whatever, and just give," Simmons said. "They're all winners in that sense.
"Now, having gone through the bullshit part, most of them suck."
In other news, Morning Call is reporting that Simmons (photo) came to Richmond International Raceway on Saturday (Sept. 11) to watch Kevin Harvick drive a car sponsored by his band, KISS.
Gene admitted he doesn't have the guts to even get inside a racecar ("I drive like a grandma," he said. "I'm embarrassing."), then made a case that NASCAR is what America is all about.
"This is the biggest slice of America,'' he said. "Why isn't the story of 100,000 people watching cars go around 100 mile an hour front-page news? As far as I'm concerned, this is the true American story where Americans come to watch stock cars made in America race around."
Says Franchi: "This story is bogus. I should know, I am the subject of the article that featured designs for potential KISS Destroyer figures, and let the magazine KISS Kollector publish the photos of the figures that will never see the light of day.
"The images were featured in an interview with myself, about my work for KISS, and more so to show some rare stuff that fans have never seen. Those package designs were featured in print and someone somewhere didn't read the caption and ran with the rumor.
"Simply not true, however, let's see if rumor has an power of suggestion, and McFarlane DOES make them."
You want to talk about NASCAR?
Of course, I do.
You're a NASCAR fan?
Very much so.
Why is that?
When we were all little boys growing up, most American boys, what did we do? We bought cars and we put them together and we painted them. There's a great love affair with America and cars. Where else but in America is there this kind of love affair between -- we're talking about the masses -- and cars. And NASCAR pretty much brought the notion of everyman racing up to the front. Remember, these cars aren't built by Porsche or by some high-falutin' expensive notion. You go to the Indy 500, by the way, and you'll see gorgeous cars running around the track, but nobody can buy 'em. The great appeal in this is, this is really a people sport, which is why it's so massive. And the other thing is that it's a real family event, you can bring your kids here. It's real Americana, it really is a slice of American pie.You're into family events?
Of course. When we first started out 31 years ago people used to think that KISS was synonymous with devil worship and cannibalism and all this kind of stuff, but so was Elvis.
Do you have any favorite drivers?
Well, imagine there are 10 girls, and they're all equally gorgeous, and three of them have your face on their T-shirts.
So do you like [baseball and football], too? Do you like them for their Americana?
I do, but the thing about sports that's missing is something called sportsmanship. I know these are semantics, and I don't mean to be anti-semantic, because I know you're not. And I'll give you a little pregnant pause there.
I've seen you use that line before.
I also tell every girl she's the only one. We all use the same lines. You use the same lines, too. . . . What's missing with hockey -- and basketball to some degree, but a lot in hockey -- is there used to be sportsmanship. What's missing is sportsmanship. In hockey, which is a great sport, with great champions, you can actually hit a guy on the head, and the [official] on the ice is gonna watch while you're battling it out. And I understand it sells tickets, but I find it, I don't know, repelling. . . . I like cornball things. I like the flag being raised. I like a moment of silence. Used to happen in baseball games. I like that stuff because as an immigrant, America has given me everything that no other country on the face of the planet could ever give me.
So you think that NASCAR celebrates that more than other sports?
Yes, I think there's sort of innate middle-American values about it. . . . The point is that there's a tendency for the more well-read of the populace to think they're above certain things.
Have you driven these cars?
You know, they've gotten me into them, and you have to sort of scroll up like a sardine. They won't let me go around the track. They've got me insured for $10 million; the insurance guys would go out of their minds.
For example, Jeff Gordon won the Pepsi 400 this season with his Pepsi car.
Kevin Harvick, who entered Saturday's Chevy Rock and Roll 400 in desperate need of a top-five finish, decided to see if he could pull a Gordon.
So Harvick put the rock band KISS on his No. 29 car, and lead singer Gene Simmons attended the race.
After all, you can't get much more rock and roll than KISS. You also can't get much more entertaining than Simmons.
The rocker had line after line that kept the press corps in the media center laughing and shaking their heads.
"You guys are lucky to be in here," Simmons said as he walked into the air-conditioned room. "It's frying out there. I already broke my water."
Simmons said NASCAR should be front-page news all across the country.
"This isn't just a toy," he said. "You've got modern knights in shining armor going around the track at over 100 miles per hour. If cars had wings, they'd take off like jets."
When asked about Harvick's chances, Simmons corrected a reporter who used the driver's first name.
"As far as I'm concerned, he's Mr. Harvick," Simmons said. "The truth is I get to get up on stage and wear more makeup and high heels than your girlfriend. That stuff is kids stuff. I don't risk my life on stage, and I don't do it year round."
Simmons was queried as to the craziest thing he's ever done in a car.
"Bought a dealership," he said. "I drive like a grandma. You get in a car with me and you just want to run alongside so you can get there before I do."
Lastly, Simmons went on a tangent about why he became a rock star: to attract women.
"I'm a corny, square guy," he said. "I get a chance to make a spectacle out of myself on stage. I stick my tongue out and I hump my guitar and all that.
"It's going to help me get girls, too, which is very important."
There were more rock themes at Richmond as well. The band Collective Soul gave an hour-long pre-race concert.
Simmons joined Harvick for driver introductions and shook hands with Rumsfeld. Then Simmons turned to the crowd and flexed his biceps like Popeye.
Despite the silly macho performance, Simmons conceded that he wears more makeup and feminine attire than a phalanx of racing femmes. He also minimized his huge rock reputation.
"That stuff is kids' stuff," Simmons said. "I don't have to risk my life.... One mistake and they're toast."
He remains fascinated by the small window hole through which drivers climb into their seats and doubts that he could make it, physically or temperamentally, behind the wheel of a roaring Cup car.
"I think of myself as a big man," he said. "When I get close to one of those things, I feel like a 12-year-old girl. I drive like a grandma."
Richmond was no place for grandmas last night, unless they drove home at 4 mph.
Read the full article here: http://www.journalnow.com/servlet/Satellite?pagename=WSJ/MGArticle/WSJ_ColumnistArticle&c=MGArticle&cid=1031777887978
In the season premiere, the action resumes from last year's finale as an obsessed mob leader (guest star Gene Simmons from "KISS") continues to unleash his fury over his son's death by trying to kill scores of cops -- especially Detective Cruz (Tia Texada). As the NYPD reels from his attacks, four masked gunmen scythe through the hospital jammed with the wounded. The gun battle rages over multiple floors and Bosco (Jason Wiles) is critically wounded -- causing Cruz to wonder if a fellow cop is in league with the mobsters. Meanwhile, Kim (Kim Raver) is repulsed by the carnage despite some exciting news. Coby Bell, Eddie Cibrian, Nia Long, Molly Price, Anthony Ruivivar and Skipp Sudduth also star.
I drive like a grandma," he said. "I’m embarrassing. You get into a car with me and you just want to run alongside so you can get there before I do. I drive like a turtle. I’m always in the slowest lane."
Busch Race
Ron Hornaday #2 Chevrolet ACDelco/KISS
Start- 30
Finish- 21
Nextel Cup Race
Kevin Harvick #29 Chevrolet GM Goodwrench
Start- 27
Finish- 12
The official opening performance of "We Will Rock You" at Paris Las Vegas was attended by a number of rock legends, including Steve Vai, Kevin DuBrow (QUIET RIOT), Nuno Bettencourt (EXTREME), Glenn Hughes (DEEP PURPLE, BLACK SABBATH) and Eric Singer (KISS). Also in attendance was co-producer Robert De Niro.
Following the premiere, a VIP post-party was held on the Paris Las Vegas pool deck where May and Taylor gave an electrifying performance of rock favorites with principal cast members and several of the attending musicians including Meatloaf, Vai, Bettencourt, Chad Smith (RED HOT CHILI PEPPERS), Hughes, Simon Phillips (TOTO) and Steve Lukather (TOTO).
The "We Will Rock You" production has been playing to sold-out shows since 2002 in London and will open in Toronto in 2005. The extended engagement at Paris Las Vegas marks the first run of the show in North America and the first time a musical of this caliber will debut in Las Vegas.
"For me, the fascination with the previous books was in getting all the behind-the-scenes detail on how the bands functioned," Garry said in a press release. "From the many letters from SABBATH fans I received, it just seemed obvious to apply that detail to the songs themselves. With 'Complete Recording History' I'm tackling each album song by song. Where the ideas came from, how they were recorded, evolved and what impact they had."
Garry's previous works received unanimous glowing praise from the SABBATH community. "Even Tony Iommi rang me to say he thought I’d done a good job!" Sharpe-Young said. Exclusive interviews included more than 50 related musicians including, among many others, Ronnie James Dio, Geezer Butler, Ian Gillan, Tony Martin, Glenn Hughes, Rob Halford, Geoff Nicholls, David Donato, Eric Singer, Rudy Sarzo, Bob Daisley, Lee Kerslake, Carmine Appice, Tommy Aldridge, Bobby Rondinelli, Dave Spitz, Bernie Torme, Brad Gillis, Phil Soussan, Jo Burt, Terry Chimes and the late Cozy Powell, Randy Castillo and Ray Gillen.
“Right now I’m looking for comments from other musicians on these classic songs," Garry explained. "I'm asking well-known rockers about their favorite SABBATH tracks, what they mean to them, how these songs impacted upon them as musicians and their own musical analysis of the songs themselves. I think its befitting that BLACK SABBATH's legacy should be honoured by those prominent in the heavy metal community. After all, which metal guitarist has not at some stage played a Tony Iommi riff? Even my 12-year-old son is blasting out 'Symptom of the Universe'!"
"Black Sabbath – The Complete Recording History" is slated for a late 2005 publication. Any musicians wishing to contribute should contact Garry through the Rockdetector.com web site.
TV Guide Online: On your new DVD, you are honest about your unconventional views about relationships.
Gene Simmons: I pretty much tell the truth: I love women. Gene Simmons the public person and Gene Simmons the private person are exactly the same guy. The reason the rags [tabloids] are in existence is because people have Jekyll-and-Hyde lives. I don't.
TVGO: How many women have you been with?
Simmons: I'm getting close to 4700. I know that by counting the photos, which I keep in books. I have names, cities and dates on the back of each picture. It's difficult to remember them all.
TVGO: You've been in a long relationship with Shannon Tweed. Could you ever love just one woman?
Simmons: Every man loves more than one woman — don't kid yourself. Nobody would ever ask a mother if she could love more than one child. Why can't a man love more than one woman? Everyone should read the book The Myth of Monogamy.
TVGO: You've dated some pretty famous women, like Cher and Diana Ross. Were they cool with your views?
Simmons: Cher was the best kind of modern woman. She didn't define herself by a man; she doesn't need a man's last name.
TVGO: You hang with a lot of famous folks, too. You even wrote a song with Bob Dylan on your latest solo album. How did that come about?
Simmons: I picked up the phone and said, "Do you want to write a song?" And Bob said, "Sure, Mr. KISS." He came over to my house and we strummed acoustic guitars. And a half hour later we had the guts of a song. Just two Jewish guys who assimilated and took on gentile names.
TVGO: Besides Dylan, you are also a big fan of the Beatles.
Simmons: The first time I saw the Beatles it was an epiphany. They were so different, they might as well have come from another planet. And I immediately thought, "Hey, these guys are cool!" I like to think KISS is just the Beatles on steroids. But we couldn't shine their shoes.
TVGO: KISS has become an amazing money-making juggernaut.
Simmons: KISS was the first band that was shameless in shilling itself. I prefer to be a whore. I want to be paid for my time. Who cares about artistic integrity? I'm enormously rich.
TVGO: Rich from those thousands of KISS products. You think you'll be buried in the officially licensed KISS casket?
Simmons: No, I don't want to take up any space in the ground. But do remember that the casket can also be used as a cooler for beer.
TVGO: I see — it can store cold bodies or cold beers. I wanted to ask you about TV.
Simmons: TV was the biggest influence on my life. As a kid I was fascinated with Superman, starring George Reeves. Superman was an immigrant like me, but he didn't just come from another land. He came from another planet. And I saw myself as Superman.
TVGO: You still wear a costume like Superman. Ever get tired of the KISS getup?
Simmons: Ah, I've worn more makeup and high heels than your mother ever did.
TVGO: True. Thanks for taking the time to chat.
Simmons: It's been my pleasure. I like talking about my favorite subject — me.
ACDelco crew chief Butch Hylton is a card carrying member of the KISS Army, the fan club for the band. He has every album (yes, album) the band has ever released including several rare imports. "This is one of the highlights of my racing career," said Hylton. "Growing up, KISS was my band. I joined the KISS Army and bought all of the collectables, from action figures to lunch boxes. To have them on the side of our car and to meet them and see how big of racing fans they are is super cool. It's hard to put into words the excitement they have given to this race."
Hylton is not the only KISS fanatic on the team. Chief engineer Paul Flurry has been a fan of the band since his youth and says that their music hits home with his entire family. "I have a cousin that dresses up like Gene Simmons every time he goes to a big concert, no matter what band is actually playing," said Flurry. "He has the whole outfit complete with the platform boots and everything. He went to a Styx concert a while back and Tommy Shaw (Styx guitarist) saw him dressed like Gene in the front row and actually gave him a pick and held the guitar down for my cousin to play. He was the hit of the show!"
While some may say that the band seems a little edgy for the veteran Hornaday, he says don't let age fool you. "KISS and I have a lot in common," said Hornaday. "We are both labeled as aging stars, but there is nobody in rock music that gives the fans all they have for an entire concert like KISS. They put on a show that has so much energy; it blows away all these new bands. They rock just as hard on their first song as they do on their last. I like to think that I race that same way."
Points of Interest...
* RIR Track Stat...Ron Hornaday's best NBS finish at Richmond International Raceway is seventh (Spring 2004). He has one pole (1997) in the NASCAR Truck Series at the .750-mile D-shaped oval. He has completed 94% of the laps and has one DNF (2000).
* Last race at RIR....The spring race at RCR was very disappointing for the ACDelco Monte Carlo. Hornaday qualified 24th and battled a tight race car all weekend long. It was obvious that the "drop-snout" chassis the team had unloaded was the wrong car for the weekend. Despite the cars bad push, Hornaday raced his way into the top-10 in the early stages. A cut left front tire while running ninth sent the "blue deuce" to the back of the pack. Hornaday charged his way into the top-10 once again only to get caught up in a crash involving Michael Waltrip and J.J. Yeley. The "Real Car Guys" crew fixed the damage and the ACDelco Chevy came home 12th.
* You have to first finish...At Bristol Motor Speedway last Saturday; Hornaday extended his NASCAR Busch Series record for consecutive races without a DNF. The ACDelco Chevrolet has been running at the end of 64 straight races. The last DNF for Hornaday was an engine failure at Kansas Speedway in 2002.
* What ya' Haulin'...The ACDelco transporter will unload chassis No. 033R at RIR. It is a brand new car that has never been raced. ACDelco crew chief Butch Hylton told Hornaday of the new car, "You wanted the best, you got the best!"
* Green-White-Hornaday...Ron Hornaday scored seven of his NASCAR Truck Series record 26 wins via green-white-checkered (G-W-C) finishes. He has the most wins of any driver in NASCAR under this finishing format. He won 70% of all G-W-C finishes he was involved in.
No. 2 ACDelco driver Ron Hornaday on Richmond International Raceway...
You have KISS on the car this weekend. Does that add to the excitement of this race?
"Are you kidding? This is awesome. Everyone in the shop is excited for this race. KISS brings amazing energy to the stage and we hope that same energy will be in our ACDelco Chevrolet. I can assure you the fans are going to love this car and I plan on racing it as hard as KISS rocks it."
What is so special about night racing?
"Everything. It's what every driver did rising through the ranks. The night brings out the sparks and you can see flames from the fuel burn-off when we get off the gas. The fans love it and to be honest it is easier on the driver too. The conditions are cooler even on a hot night. Plus you have had all day to think about the race. So you are extra pumped up just because you have that long anticipation. I wish nearly every race was a night."
We always hear about paybacks when we get to the short tracks. Do you expect rough racing this weekend?
"You have rough racing at Richmond, whether it's nighttime or not. Short track racing is up on the wheel, in your face racing. You have to rout and gouge. You have to use the chrome horn. It's part of that style of racing. But as close as the points are, I don't think you will see any paybacks or deliberate contact among the top-10 drivers. Maybe somebody back in the points with nothing to lose may do something like that. But for the contenders, you can't afford to be playing those kind of games. I'm sure everybody has been roughed up this year at one time or another, but I think it's too late for paybacks now. It's not worth it."
ACDelco crew chief Butch Hylton on Richmond International Raceway...
What are your thoughts about racing at RIR this weekend?
"We are bringing a brand new car, so I hope we can turn things around. Our finishes lately are not an indicator of how well we have been running. Hopefully having KISS on the car will change our luck. But this is Richmond and anything can happen."
"KISS has been involved with NASCAR since the fall of 2001," explains lead singer, Paul Stanley. "It is a great American sport and it has been great for us to be involved with Chevrolet. We couldn't be more pleased to continue our partnership with a company like Chevrolet and be affiliated with Richard Childress Racing and Kevin Harvick, Inc. We will be represented in all three series, which is something we have never done before, so we intend on going out there to win and expose more people to racing and rock n' roll, which go hand in hand. We are really proud to be a part of this."
"This is awesome," adds Crafton. "I met Gene (Simmons) and Paul (Stanley) at our Chevrolet unveiling of the KISS paint schemes and then got to see them in action when they came to play at Charlotte. It is an honor to have such a legendary rock band supporting us this race. In high school, I used to listen to them quite a bit so it's kind of weird to have a one-off paint scheme with a band you were a fan of and listened to for so long. I have always liked the one-off paint schemes that teams come out with and now I get to be a part of one."
Crafton's record at Richmond is discouraging with two DNF's and a 14th place finish in three attempts. However, the Tulare, Calif., native is coming off his career-best finish of third at Bristol (Tenn.) Motor Speedway and continues to lead the series with the most top-10 finishes with 13. His sights are set on keeping consistent and chipping away at his first NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series win.
"This has been my best year ever in the Truck Series," further comments Crafton. "And when I approach a track that has not been too good to me in the past, I just put it in the back of my head. I am confident that Wally (Rogers, crew chief) and all the guys at KHI have worked hard to give me what I need. So far this entire year I have overcome tracks that I struggled with in previous years and that is what I plan on doing Thursday night behind the wheel of the No. 6 KISS/GM Goodwrench Chevrolet Silverado. Hopefully we can continue to be consistent and run up front to give KISS and all our GM Goodwrench employees and fans a good show."
Points of Interest...
* Runnin' It...Team GM Goodwrench will take chassis No. 007 to Richmond International Raceway for this weekend's 150-mile race. This chassis is brand new and was just tested at Caraway (N.C.) Speedway on Monday.
* Career-Bests...In 2004, Crafton has seen his career-best start and career-best finish take place. His career-best start of fourth came in May at Lowe's Motor Speedway and he most recently tied that mark at Nashville Superspeedway. His career-best finish of third came at Bristol Motor Speedway one race ago.
* Sights are set...Crafton's series leading 13 top-10 finishes in 2004 surpasses his total top-10 finishes in 2003 and with 9 races to go, his sights are set on knocking down his top-5 finishes and capturing that first win.
* Movin' on up...In 2004, Crafton's average starting and finishing positions have decreased substantially since he began in the series in 2001. He has improved his average starts from 17.0 to 11.8 and his average finishes have improved from 16.3 to 9.6.
* Birds eye view...Veteran NASCAR driver Rick Carelli has been on the spotter stand since Texas in June and has helped steer Crafton to three of his four top-five finishes and nine of his 13 top-10 finishes.
* All in the family...Crafton's father works at Michael Waltrip Racing (MWR). Danny Crafton has worked at MWR for the last two years and his shop duties include mechanical and electrical work.
* Start time...for Thursday's Kroger 200 is scheduled for 8:00 p.m. EDT. TV coverage of the 200-lap event on SPEED starts at 8:00 p.m. EDT, with radio coverage on MRN beginning at 7:30 p.m. EDT. Remember times and dates of the race may change, so check your local listings.
No. 6 GM Goodwrench driver Matt Crafton on Richmond Int'l Raceway...
Describe your last three attempts at Richmond.
"Richmond hasn't been too good to me, but I do like the racetrack a lot. I blew a right front tire my first year that put us out. The second year I got turned around in turn 1 and hit driver-side which ended our night, and last year we were running in the top-10 when I hit the fence coming off of turn 4 that pushed in the wheel causing a really bad vibration. I ended up a lap down under a long green flag run, but managed to get the lap back and finish 14th."
What is the racing like at Richmond?
"Richmond is an awesome track. It is really fast and really racy, but I just do not have any results to show that I like the place. In the past, it has been a multi-groove racetrack when they sealed it and then the sealer began to wear away causing you to go search for new lines. They have re-paved the track this year so it will be interesting to see how the new surface will come in to play. The Cup and Busch cars ran there this year and seemed to get back to two-wide racing once some rubber got laid down, so I think you are going to see another exciting Truck race. Beating and banging under the lights always adds some energy."
No. 6 GM Goodwrench crew chief Wally Rogers on Richmond Int'l Raceway...
What is the key set-up to get around Richmond?
"You have to get the truck to turn really well in the center to be able to carry your drive up off. The key is not getting too loose getting into turn 1. I have always run well at Richmond, but haven't been able to finish well so hopefully our brand new KISS/GM Goodwrench Chevy and Crafton can change that. I was involved in the Looney Tunes truck last year, but other than that, I have never been involved with the special paint schemes. I'm definitely a fan of KISS so I am really looking forward to Thursday night's race. I would love to get my first win with KISS on our truck."
"Gold Sound+Vision" track listing:
Disc One:
01. Strutter
02. Nothin’ To Lose
03. Firehouse
04. Deuce
05. Black Diamond
06. Got To Choose
07. Parasite
08. Hotter Than Hell
09. C'mon And Love Me
10. She
11. Anything For My Baby
12. Rock Bottom Live
13. Cold Gin Live
14. Rock And Roll All Nite (live)
15. Let Me Go, Rock ‘N Roll (live)
16. Detroit Rock City
17. King Of The Night Time World
18. Shout It Out Loud
19. Beth
20. Do You Love Me?
Disc Two:
01. I Want You
02. Calling Dr. Love
03. Hard Luck Woman
04. I Stole Your Love
05. Love Gun
06. Christine Sixteen
07. Shock Me
08. Makin' Love Live
09. God Of Thunder Live
10. Tonight You Belong To Me
11. New York Groove
12. Radioactive
13. Don’t You Let Me Down
14. I Was Made For Loving You
15. Sure Know Something
16. Shandi
17. Talk To Me
18. A World Without Heroes
19. Nowhere To Run
20. I’m A Legend Tonight
The Gene Simmons Remix Contest challenges remixers to put a new spin on "Sweet and Dirty Love" — a Gene Simmons-penned song full of the band’s famous pump and swagger.
Contestants will have access to loops created from the masters of "Sweet and Dirty Love", as well as ACID® Xpress, a free version of Sony Media Software's award-winning loop based music composition tool. ACIDplanet.com provides all content and tools needed to enter the Gene Simmons Remix Contest.
The Gene Simmons Remix Contest runs from August 24 through October 5. The winning remix will receive Sony® Vegas® 5 software, ACID PRO 5 software, and five Loops for ACID™ loop libraries, as well as merchandise from Gene Simmons and Sanctuary Records.
ACIDplanet citizens compose original music, remix major label artists, and collaborate on a wide range of audio and video projects. ACIDplanet.com is the destination site for multimedia creators and their fans.
All contest details can be found at www.ACIDplanet.com/contests.
Gene Simmons , the tongue-wagging bassist of Kiss, is considering an appearance on the Bravo reality show. On his web site, Simmons says that producers for the show have asked him join the Fab Five for an episode.
"They called me and asked me if I would do it. I'm a fan of the show. We may shoot on the 28 of September," Simmons says.
Bravo did not immediately return calls seeking a comment.
"Queer Eye for the Straight Guy" is in its second season, airing on Bravo at 10 p.m. (EDT) on Tuesdays.
As previously reported, KISS taped several concerts on their summer tour for a forthcoming DVD release. The band's performance in Mexico City on August 17 as well as their shows in Washington, D.C., and Virginia Beach in late July are expected to form the basis for the as-yet-untitled project.
KISS' most recent DVD was "Kiss Symphony", released last September via Sanctuary, which chronicled the group's performance with the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra. The title debuted at No. 1 on Billboard's Top Music Video chart.
"We just finished the KISS Rock The Nation 2004 tour last night in Mexico City and what an incredible four-month journey it was!
"I feel like we covered a lot of ground this year from Australia to Japan, to the U.S. and onto Mexico.
"The KISS Army was in top form and supported us from start to finish, which is amazing considering some tried and true fans have been attending shows religiously for 30-plus years.
"The new and future KISS Army was there too, kids as young as three years experiencing the magic of KISS for the very first time and loving every minute of it!
"It was great for us to play a longer show in 2004 with such a wide variety of KISS classics from the entire KISS catalog, even though I know some of you die-hards are never satisfied with the set list!
"I'll keep you posted as things evolve from here because there is more to come!
"We all know that KISS fans ROCK like no other!"
In 1966, a young hippie named Sean Delaney arrived in New York City and checked into the YMCA with two dollars in his pocket. Years later, he became one of the top ten record producers in the music industry, and was in part responsible for signing a little-known band to their first six-month contract. The band was KISS, and the rest became history that had forgotten his presence until the day he died. In the highly anticipated new book, "Hellbox", author Bryan J. Kinnaird chronicles Sean Delaney's journey, a pilgrimage that epitomized a radical lifestyle, and spanned over a broad spectrum of events leading to the creation of KISS.
The book "reveals previously untold tales from behind the mystical veil that shrouds KISS, painting a fascinating portrait that depicts their formation while it follows the life of Sean Delaney," according to a press release. In addition, "Hellbox" "hints at a formidable tale of betrayal and gives unique insight into a secret alliance — and quite possibly a conspiracy — that corrupted the partnership of the people who originally guided KISS to superstardom."
"Hellbox" proposes a theory that conspiracy may have rocked the business that became the most lucrative rock-and-roll dynasty in music history. Littered with intimate trysts from his openly homosexual lifestyle and destructive relationships, Sean's story mends damaging and apocryphal truths that he claimed had been published over the years. It finally gives a collection of facts that have never been accounted for, and rewrites an erased volume of missing history, which was the void that sent Sean to his self-imposed exile from the music industry for more than fifteen years.
Read an excerpt from the book at this location. To order a copy, click here.
KISS opened and closed the first song of the show, "Lovegun," with a blast of fire and piercing sonic boom only befitting of glam rock’s pioneers in front of 5,500 screaming fans Friday night at Dodge Arena in Hidalgo.
"Those blasts were so loud, they sent me jumping out of my own skin," said Dodge Arena’s director of marketing, Jeff Schumaker. "They actually brought in their own sound system that puts out half the power of this arena for those blasts, and this place generates a lot of power."
Rabid members of the KISS Army began lining up to get in long before their heroes took the stage. The earliest arrivers received free KISS T-shirts outside the arena.
Cesra Moncada, 34, arrived before 7 p.m. for his fourth KISS outing. Moncada was fortunate enough to catch KISS’s coheadlining tour with Aerosmith last year in San Antonio.
The McAllen native brought his 7-yearold son, Cesra Jr., along to get his first look at the members of KISS in all their garish face-painted glory.
"The pyrotechnics, the music — it’s great," the elder Moncada said. "I’ve loved KISS since I was 9 years old. My son’s almost 8, so I wanted to take him to see them at least once before they retire."
And KISS didn’t disappoint.
The revved-up show’s extravagant pyrotechnic display featured gouts of fire shooting up in columns to both sides of drummer Eric Singer and fireworks-like giant pink sparklers firing to the beat overhead Paul Stanley.
From the moment KISS’s approach from backstage was broadcast on the giant Dodge Arena screen, the crowd’s energy and excitement was palpable, and KISS fed on it like Ozzy Osbourne might feed on a bat.
Gene Simmons loped back and forth across the stage in his disco-era platforms and batwing cape relentlessly, making sure to wag his legendary tongue at every inch of the arena.
Ty Taylor, a 37-year-old C.P.A. based in McAllen, took in the sight from one of Dodge’s box suites overlooking the action from the left side of the stage.
Taylor, who didn’t hesitate listing "Black Diamond" as his favorite KISS tune, was taking in his first show after 25 years of loyal KISS Army membership.
"It’s just good ol’-fashion rock ‘n’ roll — it hasn’t changed," Taylor said. "Down in the Valley, you don’t get to see too much rock ‘n’ roll, so this is great."
This was the 59 th stop on KISS’s Rock the Nation 2004 World Tour, their farewell salute that kicked off in May in Perth, Australia.
The U.S. leg of the tour began in Texas with a June 10 show at San Antonio’s Verizon Wireless Amphitheater and concluded with Friday night’s show. The Rock the Nation tour wraps up with three more dates set for Monterrey and Mexico City.
Friday night’s set included fan favorites "Psycho Circus," "Thousand Years," "Detroit Rock City," "I Was Made For Lovin’ You " and a rousing rendition of "Lick it Up" that would have had House of Hair host Dee Snyder in a frothing frenzy.
But nothing could compare to Simmons’ fake blooddrenched, Friday the 13 th version of "Unholy," played from a platform high above the stage.
The three-member band ZO2 kicked the night off just before 8 p.m., playing to the rapidly filling crowd at Dodge Arena. Their 45-minute set filled the void left by fellow glam rockers Poison, who helped KISS kick off the tour.
ZO2’s set didn’t feature the exaggerated guitar solos or firework displays, but their straight ahead, hard-rocking style provided a satisfying appetizer for the all-out sonic assault of KISS.
They’ve done that — for more than 30 years. The masked monsters of rock continue their legendary careers tonight when they, along with the KISS Army, invade Dodge Arena in KISS’ Rock the Nation Tour. It will be the last stop for the tour in the United States. The four-man band will wrap up the tour in Monterrey, Mexico on Saturday and Sunday and then in Mexico City on Tuesday.
It has been an amazing life, there’s no question about it,” bassist Gene Simmons said in a phone interview recently. This tour has been amazing — it’s tourist season, there are entire rock festivals going on, people are canceling shows left and right and female singers are complaining about broken knees — but people are still coming out to see us.
As for the biggest reason generations are still flocking to see KISS live — it’s usually one heck of an energetic show.
Fans are going to get an audio and visual assault,” Simmons said. “If it’s just about music, it sounds better at home on headphones. When it’s live, you’re being bombarded — in our case — by a monstrous sound system. You bring your eyes and ears to a rock concert and we assault them both.
The band, makers of 23 consecutive gold albums — placing them third behind the Rolling Stones and the Beatles — comes to Hidalgo without two of their original members, guitarist Ace Frehley and drummer Peter Criss. The group, as Simmons put it, decided “at the end of the day they just didn’t belong on the road. Maybe they’re happier at home. The road is not easy and it’s not for everyone.
Frehley and Criss have been in and out of the band more than once (“fired or let go — whatever you want to call it,” Simmons said) but as most KISS fans — commonly referred to as the KISS Army — know, it’s Paul Stanley and Simmons who are the heart and soul — and possibly the most controversial members — of the band.
It’s a preconceived notion about originals in a band,” Simmons said. “Does it apply to the Beatles? Ringo wasn’t an original. Great bands have changes members — AC/DC, Van Halen, The Who, Metallica. I guess it doesn’t apply to anybody. Take a look at a band that does well over a long period of time and the rule seems to be change your original members, you’ll do better.
For football teams, if the number on the back isn’t doing the job, take him off the field.
Simmons doesn’t plan on being taken off the field anytime soon. The 54-year-old Simmons, who was born Chaim Witz, in Israel, according to the Web site www.genesimmons.com, said that at a young age he decided he wanted to be a rock star. When he reached that plateau — as early as 1973 when the band was formed — it was something he was gonna stick with for a long time.
And, yes, he did think he’d be doing this gig 30 years later.
When you’re a teenager you never imagine anything else would ever be anything different — ‘Yeah, I can go forever.’ You dream big, without limitations. But there’s always a scrooge around you. The one that says ‘What, you being president? Never gonna happen.’ You know what? It’s gotta happen to someone. It may as well be me.
Simmons is quick to compare his rise to that of Arnold Schwarzenegger. The current California governor probably wasn’t the ideal person for any of the goals he set for himself — Mr. Olympia, super action hero actor and then governor. It didn’t stop him, though.
He was a wimp when he was a kid but decided to build his body and ends up being Mr. Olympia and all that …” Simmons said. “Then he wanted to go into movies and here was this guy who couldn’t act, he couldn’t speak and nobody could spell or say his last name. Then he does it and the next thing he does is say ‘I think I want to be governor.’
I was born in Israel, had a funny last name and couldn’t speak English. Everyone has something to say about a dream you have — screw them and just do it. Nike has a good idea. It doesn’t matter if you fail. Think of one of those guys with a big club at a fair who has to hit those beavers coming out of a hole. Just keep swinging. You’ll hit a few. You don’t have to be good. Just shut up and swing. You will hit something. The idea is to hit those beavers.
According to his Web site, Simmons moved to the United States with his mother when he was 9 years old, where he learned English by reading comic books and watching television. His love for music came during The Beatles’ first appearance on the Ed Sullivan Show. He first met Paul Stanley, then they recruited Peter Criss and Ace Frehley. In 1973 KISS was officially born.
And nobody else has been quite like them — something that’s rare in today’s music industry made up of many copycats, Simmons said.
It just feels more comfortable for groups to copy others — like a white rock band that sticks rap in the middle of a song and suddenly they feel relevant. We never wanted to be relevant. We wanted to be unique.
Part of the reason we’ve been successful is that we were in the right place at the right time. KISS is an anomaly. We don’t look like the friendly next door neighbor band. We’re not in style or in fashion. That has nothing to do with it. Be an individual. Be who you are.
We’re KISS.
DISC ONE
1. STRUTTER 3.10
2. NOTHIN’ TO LOSE 3.27
3. FIREHOUSE 3.18
4. DEUCE 3.06
5. BLACK DIAMOND 5.11
6. GOT TO CHOOSE 3.54
7. PARASITE 3.01
8. HOTTER THAN HELL 3.31
9. C’MON AND LOVE ME 2.57
10. SHE 4.09
11. ANYTHING FOR MY BABY 2.35
12. ROCK BOTTOM live 3.40
13. COLD GIN live 6.55
14. ROCK AND ROLL ALL NITE live 4.23
15. LET ME GO, ROCK ‘N ROLL live 5.20
16. DETROIT ROCK CITY 5.17
17. KING OF THE NIGHT TIME WORLD 3.21
18. SHOUT IT OUT LOUD 2.49
19. BETH 2.45
20. DO YOU LOVE ME? 4.57
DISC TWO
1. I WANT YOU 3.04
2. CALLING DR. LOVE 3.44
3. HARD LUCK WOMAN 3.34
4. I STOLE YOUR LOVE 3.04
5. LOVE GUN 3.18
6. CHRISTINE SIXTEEN 3.14
7. SHOCK ME 3.48
8. MAKIN’ LOVE live 3.13
9. GOD OF THUNDER live 5.16
10. TONIGHT YOU BELONG TO ME 4.40
11. NEW YORK GROOVE 3.03
12. RADIOACTIVE 2.46
13. DON’T YOU LET ME DOWN 3.43
14. I WAS MADE FOR LOVING YOU 4.30
15. SURE KNOW SOMETHING 4.01
16. SHANDI 3.36
17. TALK TO ME 4.02
18. A WORLD WITHOUT HEROES 2.40
19. NOWHERE TO RUN 4.33
20. I’M A LEGEND TONIGHT 4.00
Rinse and repeat?
Shaun Micheel wishes it were that simple.
With no warning, Micheel went from bit player to star of the 85th PGA Championship. His reign as PGA champion will end this week at Whistling Straits in Haven, Wis., unless he can accomplish something that he hasn't done before or since he emerged from Oak Hill with the Wanamaker Trophy in hand.
Win.
Micheel's first PGA Tour victory came in the 164th start of his career. In 23 starts since, Micheel has one top-10 finish.
"In a way, I think maybe I'll be excited to get my year over," said Micheel, whose best finish this year is ninth at The Players Championship. "If I don't win, turn the reins over to someone else because there have been parts of my life that have been very difficult for me the last year."
Unexpected fringe benefit
Micheel isn't angling to kiss and tell about the perils of hitting the golfing lottery.
Even if Micheel proves to be a one-hit wonder, he'll always have his cherished KISS stories. The day after one of the great clutch shots in the history of major-championship golf — a 7-iron from 175 yards that stopped two inches away from the 72nd hole — polished off a two-stroke victory over Chad Campbell, Micheel broke away from doing laundry to take a congratulatory phone call from KISS lead singer Paul Stanley.
The next thing Micheel knew, he was backstage at a concert of his favorite band. Micheel used to dress up in KISS regalia on Halloween and eventually struck up a friendship with road manager Paco Zimmer. The latest issue of Golf Magazine features a photo shoot of Micheel in the 1976 costume Ace Frehley wore.
Shout it out loud: Micheel accepted invitations to attend the president's State of the Union address and play in Tiger Woods' silly-season tournament.
The $1.08 million winner's check was more than Micheel, 35, has earned in any season since he broke on to the tour in 1994.
The resulting five-year tour exemption meant he could shed the yearly ritual of sending an application to qualifying school just in case he didn't finish among the top 125 on the money list.
With relative security comes a desire to prove he's not the tour's answer to the Starland Vocal Band.
"In hindsight, I felt like I just really needed to one-up my PGA," Micheel said. "How can I one-up the PGA? I would probably never hit a shot like that again on the 18th hole.
"So there are times when I get on the golf course and it gets frustrating, and I just go back and I think about that shot and I think about what that tournament means to me and my family and it just kind of puts me in a quieter place."
Game same, goals not
Micheel is 61st on this year's tour money list ($794,874). He has made 14 of 18 cuts without truly contending anywhere.
He is pretty much the same player as he was before Oak Hill — a solid ball-striker (44th on tour in greens in regulation) who is about as comfortable on the greens (161st in putting) as a student driver at rush hour. One difference is in the expectations. Another is that he and his wife, Stephanie, an attorney, are parents of an 8-month-old son, Dade.
"I have gone back and looked at some of the video of what happened to me last year," Micheel said. "And I know that really from day one through day four, I walked the same, I pretty much reacted the same, my mannerisms were the same and the bad shots really didn't affect me that much.
"And this year, I notice my attitude has changed a little bit. I'm not out there throwing clubs or anything like that. But I think you can tell when we are not playing well."
Micheel's predecessor as PGA champion, Rich Beem, sure can relate.
Two years ago at Hazeltine, Beem captured the Wanamaker Trophy by outdueling Woods. Beem hasn't won since, finishing 71st on the 2003 money list and free-falling to 166th this year. When David Duval admitted to an is-that-all-there-is? reaction to winning the 2001 British Open, it resonated with Beem.
What do you do next?
"I sit there and every once in a while, I'll take the Wanamaker off the wall or my little niche that I've got it sitting in and I'll just sit there and look at it, like that's pretty cool," said Beem, who has yet to finish higher than 33rd in an event this year. "But ... what do you do after that? Do you keep grinding and go try and beat your head against the wall and win a bunch more or do you enjoy it?
"Guys like me are not of the purebred like the David Duvals and Ernie Elses and (Phil) Mickelsons. Those guys, they have more talent in their left pinkie than I do in my entire body, but I've got to work at it. It's easy for them."
Micheel got where he is the hard way, toiling in the Nationwide, Buy.com, Hooters and Asian tours. He won the Sons of Confederate Veterans Award for Bravery a decade ago, diving into the water to help save two people from a sinking car after a practice round at a mini-tour event.
Those were the days when he was a household name only in the Micheel household. Now he's trying to stop the world from kissing him off as a one-hit wonder.
"I think we are our own worst critics at times," Micheel said. "But I just have enjoyed myself. I really have.
"I mean, how many times do you get a chance to defend in a major championship?"
There are some things a dad should do for his daughter, but I began to doubt that chasing the gods of thunder through a Pennsylvania rainstorm was one of them.
The gods of thunder are, of course, the '70s rock band KISS and Pennsylvania is a long drive from home. But my daughter and I were on a mission to see the iconic band.
I am a 51-year-old family man with an unimpressive knowledge of rock music. Lexi is my 14-year-old daughter who is a late but fervent addition to the KISS army. She knows their history and all their songs. She reads about their shows online and was disappointed they won't play Canada on this tour.
She is mostly silent and sensitive. She is centred between two extroverted sisters whose bedrooms are filled with sports trophies. Her hot-pink room is decorated with a leopard skin duvet, a feathered lampshade and her bass guitar. They don't give trophies for the things she likes ... she never asks for much.
My life lacks spontaneity. I can plan my week by the shifts I work and the soccer, basketball and music lessons I drive to.
A new adventure, like attending a KISS concert six hours away from home seemed like a good idea. I even agreed to paint my face like Gene. Hey, once I committed to go, I might as well go all the way.
My doubts on that Friday afternoon in July, were not just about the driving conditions. The concert was to begin in four hours and the Keystone State's Endless Mountains seemed to stretch almost back to my youth.
Unfortunately, my youth was pretty much KISS-free.
I do know that Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley wear horror makeup and super-size-me heels; everyone knows the songs "Rock' n Roll All Nite," "Shout It Out Loud" and "Beth. You don't have to live in "Detroit Rock City" to know all that.
I've never been to a KISS concert however. Do fans still paint their faces and smoke dope? Do women — now middle-aged moms, I guess — still expose their breasts like they once did or just encourage their daughters? Is there a mosh pit and how do I stay away from it? Would Lexi be embarrassed attending with me?
I tried to focus on the highway ahead hoping the wipers would take these doubts along with the rain. This expedition was obviously not my idea. I didn't even think it would be my idea of fun but there are too few opportunities when a child invites a parent onto their turf.
Montage Mountain is a winter ski hill and summer outdoor concert venue deep in the coal mining hills of Pennsylvania, near Scranton. The long lines of traffic were accorded lanes — left for the baseball game and right for the KISS show.
No one driving near us had their faces painted.
Some were riding Harleys; some were driving SUVs with baby seats and a shrieking minority popped their heads and booze through a limo sunroof, but no one else had their faces painted.
I needn't have been so neurotic. There were a few other painted faces: a 70-year-old grandmother; a woman in earth-tone capri pants and a pearl necklace; and kids about 8 years old.
Our makeup must have been good because an inebriated 40ish woman told us, "Awesome makeup man! No f------ s---."
The crowd was primed first by a local band whose name I forget. Then by Poison, an '80s hair band, I'd never heard of.
By the time we heard the traditional intro, "You want the best. You got the best. The hottest band in the world ... KISS," much of the crowd was thrusting the devil-horn salute through a pungent cloud.
From the first note of "Love Gun," their opener, Lexi was in her own world.
She sang every song, she took in everything on stage. She danced in the aisle. She was consumed — she either didn't mind or didn't remember her dad was next to her waiting for another song he recognized and searching for his earplugs.
A pulley wheel hung over a platform in the centre of the audience and a rope drooped from there to the stage.
Lexi figured Paul Stanley would ride the system from the stage to the platform — about 50 metres from us. She wanted to run down to it.
"Lex, we can't get through the line of security," I said.
She grabbed my hand and we ran through the security line and underneath the platform as Paul began his ascent. Others fans followed — too many to remove.
Paul sang "I Was Made For Loving You" from about 10 metres away. He seemed to be singing to us.
At the song's end, my little girl turned to me and smiled — her eyes filled with tears.
I turned away quickly. My makeup was starting to run.
I tried to understand why she had become so emotional. This was bigger than shows she had seen; the loud music, the flashpots, the songs of love, and the still very sexy and shirtless Paul Stanley were a potent mix.
Then I remembered a summer 40 years ago. Lexi would not have recognized her mother then. She was crying and screaming for the Beatles with 10,000 others at the Toronto airport.
On the drive home we listened to KISS CDs and talked about the show. She said she likes them because their fun, loud and "so unreal."
Maybe it's the kids' lives that have become so unreal.
Their lives are often over-structured in a too-competitive society. They feel they have to conform to others' high expectations.
Maybe three hours of over-the-top shock from KISS lets them know they are still real.
Lexi thanked me as we neared the Lewiston-Queenston bridge — the border crossing to our regular life.
"Thanks you sooooo much for taking me," she said.
Sharing this with you was my privilege, I thought.
Most lots drew a lot of attention and fierce bidding. A BOSTON/Tom Scholz recording demo sold for nearly $1,700.00, a pair of 1970s David Bowie acetates sold for $1,980.00 and a ROLLING STONES live recording from Canada went for almost $5,000. Not surprising was the aggressive bidding for a 1977 KISS Japan tour jacket, which received over 24 bids alone and finally sold for $4,950.00 to a private collector. The performers with the most bids were, in this order: LED ZEPPELIN, JIMI HENDRIX and KISS. Details of a lot with several LED ZEPPELIN tapes are being kept confidential at the request of the buyer.
"It was a long and exciting day," stated Backstage Auctions' Jacques. "We eventually had to force the auction to end or the bidding might still be going on." Although the auction was scheduled to close at 3:00 p.m. EST, it remained open in 15-minute intervals to allow for final bids to come in. However, by 10:30 p.m. EST, two KISS collectors were still competing for several items. Jacques van Gool, a longtime KISS collector and historian himself, happened to know the two customers who were bidding on these items, and finally called them both and asked them to compromise and divide everything up between them. "I was exhausted just watching the two of them go at it," Jacques admitted. "These guys are serious collectors, they'd have stayed up all night fighting over one last item if it was something they really wanted."
Results of the 2004 Classic Rock Auction can be found on the web site www.backstageauctions.com. Backstage Auctions will announce their next big auction in the upcoming weeks. "We are exited about the next auction," Kelli said, "and are confident that classic rock fans will be equally excited."
DROWNING POOL singer Jason "Gong" Jones recently told The Hartford Courant that he is slowly finding a place among DROWNING POOL devotees despite the fact that some fans are still clamoring for the days when Dave Williams fronted the group (Williams died of a heart defect in August 2002).
"For the most part, it's been positive," Jones said. "Every now and then you get somebody who's flipping out about it, but for every one person who has something negative, there's 10 people who basically tell him to shut up. I think people are just happy to see the band doing something."
The band are also happy to be doing something, and drummer Mike Luce says Williams will always be a part of DROWNING POOL.
"Dave was with us in the beginning and he'll always be with us in the end," Luce said. "We want to make sure that we're working within the framework that Dave helped us all build, and I think we're doing that, and we're getting a good response and people are digging it and I think it's just going to get better and better."
According to VH1, KISS has played more than 3,500 concerts over more than 30 years, in front of 78 million fans around the world.
On KISS' current "Rock the Nation" tour, you can expect greasepaint, costumes and fake blood, but never will you find lip-synching. There are no "extra" keyboardists or tracked backing vocals, either.
It's just KISS the way they've always been, four performers giving their fans the music loud and right between the eyes - no compromise.
After seeing an original KISS concert (before they removed their makeup) and a few concerts without their makeup, we are confronted with the stark reality that KISS is now a finely tuned, well-lubricated money-making machine. To witness a major mistake at this band's show truly would be a rarity.
Gone are the days of bass player Gene Simmons setting his hair on fire or singer Paul Stanley failing to break his guitar at the end of a show.
Lead guitarist Ace Frehley has not shocked himself in a while, either. Well, we really don't know what Frehley has been doing, because he has been replaced for this tour by Tommy Thayer. Drummer Peter Criss has been replaced by Eric Singer.
Thayer and Singer wore the traditional "man from outer space" and "alley cat" make-up and costumes. Even with these two replacements, it was possible to rock to the music and enjoy the overall experience of this colorful, well-orchestrated (almost too orchestrated) show.
As any true KISS fan knows, Stanley and Simmons have always been the primary freaks in this psycho circus of music and theatrics.
Tuesday's concert always delivered, having something visual to catch anyone's attention, be it the camera pans of the front-row "women of KISS," the synchronized presentations on walls of video screens built into the amplifiers and speakers, the close-ups of the band members playing or the incredible, colorful stage lighting.
A look back at retro, vintage KISS videos on the high-resolution flat screens was well orchestrated with the show and rather touching at times. Oh, and let's not forget the fire and fireworks. The evening was filled with pyrotechnic delights.
Another visually stimulating spectacle was the costumed concertgoers who proudly painted their faces and dressed to pay homage to one of the most recognizable bands of all time.
A major highlight of the show was, of course, the song selection. KISS choose to reacquaint us with some of their more obscure classics, such as "100,000 Years," "Got To Choose" and "Makin' Love." But several perpetually revisited tunes adorned the set list, including "Love Gun," "Shout it Out Loud," "Detroit Rock City," "I Was Made For Lovin' You" and "Rock and Roll All Nite."
Usually crowd participation at a KISS show is fun and entertaining. But this time, the crowd at the nearly full amphitheater felt a little overworked and underpaid as they were asked to sing over and over again.
Still, we would advise you to see at least one of KISS' concerts during your lifetime. They are proof of the American dream, like it or not.
They have made a lucrative career out of doing what they love, and from the turnout Tuesday night, it's apparent that as long as KISS keeps selling tickets, they'll have no problem filling the seats.
In a conference call Tuesday (August 3) from Palm Beach, Fla., singer Paul Stanley said the band would tape their August 17 show in Mexico City. Tickets for the concert at the Palacio de los Deportes sold out quickly.
Stanley didn't indicate when the DVD would go on sale, but said it would be distributed internationally.
As previously reported, KISS filmed two shows in late July for possible inclusion on the DVD. A performance outside Washington, D.C., and a show in Virginia Beach, Va., are expected to form the basis for the as-yet-untitled project
Based on the set lists for the two shows, fans can expect to see such classics as "Detroit Rock City", "Deuce", "I Was Made for Lovin' You" and "Shout It Out Loud" alongside more obscure tracks like "Love Her All I Can", "All the Way" and "War Machine".
KISS' most recent DVD was "Kiss Symphony", released last September via Sanctuary, which chronicled the group's performance with the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra. The title debuted at No. 1 on Billboard's Top Music Video chart.
It was 1972—the year after the Beatles split—and rock was transitioning away from a political vehicle of protest, and farther away from its African-American roots—toward the post Vietnam generation of the mid-1970s. Gene Simmons, born in Israel as Chaim Witz, was a 6th grade teacher in Spanish Harlem at the time, and when he wasn't reading comic books or watching Dracula movies, he was practicing his bass guitar—hoping to someday become a rock star. After meeting Stanley Harvey Eisen, now Paul Stanley the other co-founder of Kiss, Simmons' mother pleaded with him to plan his career conservatively—and not leave his teaching job—in the event that his rock idea failed. Thirty-two years later, and many millions of dollars later, Gene Simmons' rock idea is still thriving as his band has been indelibly etched into American culture, even affording the group an encyclopedia entry.
With all its fire and smoke—and very loud Marshall amplifiers—Kiss came to the Nissan Pavilion this past Saturday with its basic rock power chords and theatrical show. Although the band's energy and soul is not what it was at its height in 1976—when the band toured the world over with its mysterious Japanese influenced kabuki makeup—the group still delivered an amazing set list spanning their over 30 years in rock and roll.
The band opened with Love Gun, a track from its smash platinum 1977 album, and then launched into Deuce, one of their earliest songs from the first 1974 album simply titled Kiss, an album cover influenced by the Beatles. Simmons' bass playing was flawlessly smooth, as was Tommy Thayer's guitar work. Thayer replaced original lead guitarist Ace Frehley in 2003 after Frehley struggled with alcohol and substance abuse, an affliction that has unfortunately plagued the gifted guitarist's adult life. After one more mid-seventies hit, Makin' Love—and a fairly flat mid-eighties hit titled Lick It Up—the band brought the crowd to its feet with All The Way, a tight hard rock track from the 1974 vinyl release Hotter Than Hell. Stanley and Thayer's guitar work was perfectly timed during the song, with Simmons stalking around the stage fingering his bass, and drummer Eric Singer surgically pounding his drum kit. Singer replaced drum legend Peter Criss for the 2004 tour, a move that has now left the band with only two original members, Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley.
The replacement of Frehley and Criss has been a source of controversy for some, with many die-hard Kiss fans arguing that the band's energy has waned without the original lineup. But Singer's and Thayer's contributions to the band have been phenomenal, as both have proved their musical ability to be professional and clean, with Thayer following Frehley's original cord changes and lead guitar solos perfectly. On Deuce and Got To Choose, Thayer—who dons Ace Frehley's original makeup and costume from the 1975 era—appeared to never miss a single note during Saturday's performance.
For those who have never witnessed a Kiss concert—and witness is the perfect word for the experience—the theatrical surreal rock opera paired with its hard-hitting sound is an unforgettable memory. It would be wise, young or old, rocker or not, to go to a Kiss concert at least once. Timed intermittently throughout the act, the band releases huge plumes of yellow and orange explosions of fire, warming the faces of the first 100 rows of audience members. The band seems oblivious to the loud interruptions of heat and fire, never missing a bass note, or guitar chord, or the beat of a drum.
Toward the middle of the show, Simmons blew fire from his mouth on the darkly lit center stage, making the feat look as though he was breathing fire. Simmons too drooled and spit fake blood during the band's Unholy performance, a stunt that has aroused the ire of fundamental Christians for three decades, who say Simmons is an agent of Satan—an allegation he finds amusing and silly. Simmons, who once seriously considered rabbinical studies to become a full-fledged Rabbi, wrote in his autobiography in response to the charge; "Have you ever seen the devil? Do you know what he looks like?" Regardless, the fire and blood troupe is an interesting window into Simmons' complex psyche as his mother is a Holocaust survivor, a period of her life that Simmons says she rarely discusses.
The band closed Saturday night's performance with its 1975 theme song, Rock and Roll All Night, from its Dressed to Kill studio album, a performance that energized the crowd.
The genius and energy of Stanley and Simmons—even for rock stars in their 50s—appears to be ready for another 20 years, maybe even with Peter Criss and Ace Frehley by their side.
In other news, Bruce will be appearing at the 4th Annual Baltimore/Washington KISS Expo on Sunday, October 17 at the Pikesville Hilton in Baltimore, Maryland. Doors will be open from 11:00 a.m. until 8:00 p.m. Tickets are $15.00 in advance and $17.00 at the door. VIP passes (limited to 100) are available for $20.00. For tickets mail payment to: The Baltimore KISS Expo, 2849 Westminster Street, Manchester, MD 21102.
"Two days ago I appeared on 'Fox & Friends' in the early morning talking about our Instant Live CDs that available at the end of each night's concert. In the Green Room, I chatted with former New York Governor Mario Cuomo. He has a new book out, which he was there promoting. We both shook hands and started lightly talking politics — economic politics. In short, Gov. Cuomo thought the present is a half-empty glass of water. And, I believe it's half full.
"The following day, Spike television execs came up to my hotel room to discuss a variety of projects we plan on doing with each other. More news as it develops. Then, met with the new President of Marvel Comics for, (you guessed it) a proposed new KISS comics series...as well as a brand new generation of toys and games.
"At the Jones Beach/New York concert, I ran into promoter/manager David Fishof, who has a new business venture we may do together — it encompasses live events with a television window.
"Was offered a role in an independent movie that shoots at the end of August, but I am not available. So, I passed.
"Director Damian Lichtenstein ('3,000 Miles To Graceland') called to talk about his new movie, which shoots at the end of August as well. May not be available. We will see. In the meantime, I am scheduled to shoot the debut episode of the new season of NBC's 'Third Watch' on August 19th and 20th. I will be appearing in the recurring role of the Crime Lord.
"I guess I don't look Swiss..."
The highlight of the auction will be the original layout pencil drawings for the official KISS "pop art" illustrated and signed by Christopher Franchi. Each individual drawing will be custom matted and framed with a smaller full color final art print and custom nameplate describing the piece. Any questions regarding any of the items available in this 15-day event, or a photo preview of any items can be obtained by sending an e-mail to: PopRoxGallery@aol.com (attn: Megan Marx).
01. Love Gun
02. Deuce
03. Makin' Love
04. Lick It Up
05. All The Way
06. Got To Choose
07. I Love It Loud
08. Love Her All I Can
09. I Want You
10. Parasite
11. Psycho Circus
12. War Machine
13. 100,000 Years
14. Unholy
15. Shout It Out Loud
16. I Was Made For Lovin' You
17. Detroit Rock City
Encore:
18. God Gave Rock N Roll To You
19. Rock N Roll All Night
Based on the set lists for the two shows, fans can expect to see such classics as "Detroit Rock City", "Deuce", "I Was Made for Lovin' You" and "Shout It Out Loud" alongside more obscure tracks like "Love Her All I Can", "All the Way" and "War Machine".
KISS' most recent DVD was "Kiss Symphony", released last September via Sanctuary, which chronicled the group's performance with the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra. The title debuted at No. 1 on Billboard's Top Music Video chart.
And if you look really hard, you might even be able to see people under all that get-up. But don't look too hard, that would ruin the fun that comes from seeing life-size cartoons prancing around stage, sending light metal riffs careening through the amphitheater.
Kiss and Poison, two bands, who a decade apart, were among the most popular bands in the country, will bring high energy faux metal nostalgia to Montage.
Though neither are touring to support new material, both bands seemingly have enough hits in their oeuvres to keep the faithful in a constant state of rawk.
While Poison sports its original recording lineup (singer Brett Michaels, guitarist C.C. DeVille, bassist Bobby Dall and drummer Rikki Rockett), Kiss contains only half of its original members.
Just bassist Gene Simmons and singer/guitarist Paul Stanley remain from the band that first burst into the public consciousness in the '70s. Original drummer Peter Criss and lead guitarist Ace Frehley left the band in the '80s (Mr. Criss in '80 and Mr. Frehley in '82). Both returned in 1996 for a wildly successful reunion tour, but a few years later things began to fall apart again.
Mr. Criss left the band after its 2000 farewell tour in early 2001, rejoined for a tour with Aerosmith last year and then left again. He was replaced by Eric Singer, who had previously been the band's drummer from 1991 to 1996.
In 2002, Mr. Frehley bolted after Mr. Simmon's autobiography featured disparaging remarks about the guitarist. He was replaced by newcomer Tommy Thayer, formerly of hair metal band Black 'N' Blue.
Kiss built a rabidly faithful "Army" of fans based on modestly successful albums and wildly theatrical concerts in the mid-'70s, which culminated with 1975's double live set "Alive!", the band's first top 10 album. The decade found the group laying down a stream of hits including the rollicking "Detroit Rock City," the power ballad "Beth," the disco hit "I Was Made for Loving You" and, of course, the ultimate party anthem "Rock and Roll All Nite." The band's most recent album, "Kiss Symphony: Alive IV," was released a year ago and features the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra.
While the music might have been part of the band's success, the mystique that surrounds the band has certainly played at least an equal hand. From the band's inception until a great unveiling in 1983, the band members were never seen without makeup. The band went on sans the black and white kabuki-style makeup until the 1996 reunion tour.
Each musician has an alter ego he becomes thanks to the costume and makeup. Mr. Simmons is "The Demon." Mr. Stanley is "The Starchild." Mr. Criss was "The Cat." And Mr. Frehley was "The Spaceman." Though the initial replacement members portrayed different characters, the newest replacements, Mr. Singer and Mr. Thayer, have made waves by wearing "The Cat" and "The Spaceman" costumes.
From its initial rise to fame, Kiss has been known for putting their faces on anything that will sell including comic books and the 1978 TV movie "Kiss Meets the Phantom of the Park." More recently, Kiss has provided its fans with not just the typical T-shirts and stickers, but also Kiss Kondoms (a different type for each band member) and the $4700 autographed Kiss Kasket. And if you're interested in using the Kiss Kasket before you've, you know, died, you should know it doubles as a waterproof cooler.
In another "big bucks" endeavor, Kiss has teamed up with Clear Channel Entertainment's Instant Live to produce CDs of each show on its tour, which will be available about five minutes after the show.
Kiss and opening act Poison provided over 30 years worth of glam metal to an assembled throng of 9,250 fans fully prepared for the sensory overload in store.
Because Kiss didn't give a concert so much as they put on a show. It was all about the style. It was about the makeup, the costumes, the prancing, the flashing lights, the fireworks, the fire breathing, the blood spitting, the bursts of flame and countless other bits of ridiculousness.
Midway through the set the band tore into "I Love It Loud," and the army of fans certainly must.
Everything was cranked to nearly painful decibels, including the between-bands music.
But it was all worth it to the fans, because they got to see the life-size comic book characters that are Kiss. From the opening riff of "Love Gun" the crowd was at its feet, hands thrust into the air in the devil-horn sign of rock.
Backed by a stage setup that included 19 video screens of varying sizes and a literal wall of amps, Kiss gave the fans exactly what they shelled out the dough to see. They played hits such as "Deuce" and "Christine Sixteen," and got the fans all riled up with between song banter.
"You aren't going to let the big cities upstage you now are you?" shouted singer/guitarist Paul Stanley as he encouraged the crowd to sing along to "I Want You."
And as much as the crowd expressed love for the band, the musicians showed it was a mutual appreciation.
"Scranton you may just be the rock and roll capital of Pennsylvania," Mr. Stanley said.
As much as the band leapt around stage, it was not hard to tell that they are the godfathers of style over substance. Nearly all the songs sounded the same and, although the instrumentation sounds fine live, the band seems to lack a good singer. Instead what we get is either Mr. Stanley's screeching or bassist Gene Simmons' guttural growl.
Those are minor complaints, though, because who really goes to see a Kiss show for the tunes?
It's the killer stage show that draws the black-shirted masses.
And Kiss surely gave them all they could handle.
Poison, meanwhile, got the crowd ready for the headliners by playing a boisterous set full of their '80s hair metal hits.
In fact the band closed their set with its five most popular songs: "Something to Believe In," "Unskinny Bop," "Nothin' But a Good Time," "Every Rose Has Its Thorn" and "Talk Dirty to Me."
The band careened around stage with reckless abandon and guitarist C.C. DeVille played one of his so-sloppy-its-good solos in nearly each song.
But even though the crowd stood and sang along, Poison knew who the stars of the night would be.
"I am fired up right now," Poison lead singer Bret Michaels said. "You're looking at four of the biggest Kiss fans right now."
He, meanwhile, was looking at nearly 10,000 more of them.
With 2,500 licenses for Kiss products, images of the band's greasepaint-splattered faces have been emblazoned on everything from condoms and caskets to Visa cards and ceramic wall tile.
Kiss, which was on the cover of Forbes magazine in 1996, has sold more than 80 million albums worldwide since it played its first concert in 1973 in the New York borough of Queens.
Simmons, in 2001, told The New York Times: "Music was never the point.
"I believe that music and inspiration and creativity are all way overblown and overemphasized and overvalued. Everybody who is in the 'arts' likes to emphasize the romantic because it makes good copy. If you're in the arts for a paycheck, that's supposed to be pathetic. The guy who works and digs the ditch for money is noble, but if an artist wants to get rich and famous, then that's pathetic.
"Well, I don't believe a word of it. I have a little bit of advice for all the new rock stars and all the new artists. If you're uncomfortable and queasy about all the money you've made, here's the answer: Sit down and write a check to Gene Simmons for your entire net worth."
Simmons - born Chaim Witz on Aug. 25, 1949, in Haifa, Israel - moved to New York when he was 8 with his mother, Flora Klein, a Hungarian Jew and concentration-camp survivor.
Today, he lives in Beverly Hills, Calif., with actress Shannon Tweed, his partner of 20 years, and their children: Nick, 15, and Sophie, 11.
Kiss these days is bassistsinger Simmons, with guitaristsinger Stanley and Kiss company employees Eric Singer (drums) and Tommy Thayer (guitar) - replacements for original members Peter Criss and Ace Frehley, who were sacked or forced to retire for incompetence and drug and alcohol abuse.
Simmons called from the road to promote the band's "Rock the Nation 2004" tour.
Q: How was the show last night? Was it any different from the thousands of other shows Kiss has played?
A: Without giving anybody a sound bite, it's a real privilege. It's a fun idea - you get to go onstage and live out your dreams.
You know when you win the lottery or you're a girl and you get to be Miss America and you get to walk down the aisle? I get to do that many times every week.
Q: So the question "Why is Kiss touring again?" is going to be a silly question?
A: Only white people have these kinds of notions. Nobody ever asked Ray Charles until the day he died why he continued playing until he dropped dead. It's a fascinating idea why people keep complaining about Mick Jagger and everybody else: "Why don't they retire?"
Whereas black people see it as a source of pride that B.B. King is 80 years old and right now is playing someplace in the world.
Q: Will the members of Kiss play when they're 80?
A: We'll both find out together. Either you're in this and you're serious, or this is a parttime job, and you know what? The last time I checked, we're pretty damn good.
Q: The set list for this tour has changed a lot since . . .
A: The set list this time has a lot to do with being flexible because Eric and Tommy have added new blood into the band and because we have more musical muscle than we've ever had. This lineup shows up on time, does the work and doesn't complain and moan and is straight. As much as people want to talk about the original lineup, it couldn't have pulled this off.
"We're so proud of how we're playing and looking and everything that people can actually, at the end of show, pick up a double CD of the actual night's event."
(For information at the concert, look for the Instant Live booths.)
Q: Are these songs you wanted to play for some time?
A: That's exactly right. This lineup knows all the material, so in the middle of the set you can say, "Hey, why don't we do that?' " In the past we had to rehearse - I'll be blunt - Ace and Peter.
Tommy Thayer, who's been with us a few years now, had to teach Ace his own parts because Ace just couldn't remember them, and Peter as well. I'd have to sit there just reviewing the stuff because they just couldn't maintain the information.
That doesn't mean we don't love Ace and Peter and that they're not sweethearts. They were every bit as important to the formation of the band as anybody else. But truth is an important issue. After a certain point, the kids grow up and have to find out about Mom and Dad.
Q: There was never any talk about bringing those guys back for this tour?
A: How many times, you know? How many times are they gonna leave and come back? The road is not good for Ace and Peter. They need to be home so they can be happy. They both deserve happiness, and so does Kiss. The road is not for everybody.
Q: Why didn't you ever drink or use drugs?
A: It was a personal decision for me in my life. My mother's gone through the German Nazi concentration camps of World War II. I'm an only child, and life is precious. So, the idea that I would voluntarily hurt myself is the height of lunacy.
Q: Did having kids at all change the way you lived?
A: In only one way: I've been happily unmarried for 20 years to the same girl. Marriage is out of the question. As we all self to answer to, and no one had the right to comment.
Actually, my kids do have a right to comment. It doesn't mean I have to agree, but they are voices that I listen to.
Q: How is touring now versus the 1970s?
A: The '70s were very difficult. We were in a dysfunctional band.
I've saved Ace and Peter's lives, literally; from drowning in pools and all kinds of things. But also we were trapped. We couldn't show people who the know, the only thing wrong with marriage is one of the two is a man.
I thought having kids would prevent me from working and being as ambitious as I am. The opposite is true: Because I have kids, I work harder than I ever have - not because I have to but because you want to leave a legacy or something. There's a greater idea.
Finally, I thought, every decision I ever made I only had mypeople were under the makeup because there was a price on our heads. . . . I tell you, 30 years on, we're just having the times of our lives.
Q: What's the most frustrating part of life for Gene Simmons?
A: I really don't have any frustrations. All the headaches have been cut out of the band. Every day's a party. We really do rock and roll and night and party every day - sometimes with your sister and sometimes with your mommy, too.
After all, Neff is the resident KISS expert in Cadillac and the person behind the band's visit to Cadillac in 1975.
The story of KISS' visit has been magnified to mythical proportions over the years, sometimes into a tiny, "po-dunk" town that had a down and out football team and after playing KISS music won a state football championship. While that story has the makings of a movie, Michigan did not have state football championships in 1975, according to Neff.
Instead, the Cadillac High School football team went 9-0 in 1973. In 1974, the football team lost its first two games. Knowing the team needed a boost, then-head coach Dave Brines handed the task over to Neff, then the assistant football coach.
Neff was a rock-n-roll fan and decided to begin playing KISS music to pump the team up.
The 1974 football team ended up winning its last seven games. So in 1975, the team's defense was called the KISS defense and KISS music continued to blare before games and practices and after games.
Neff wrote to one of the KISS managers asking the band to make an appearance for the team's homecoming, explaining how the music had elevated the football team's play.
Not only did KISS end up visiting Cadillac for the 1975 homecoming but spent two days in town, visiting with students, community members, city officials and city staff, and playing a concert on the stage of the gymnasium.
Many of the residents, including city officials, painted their faces white and added black eye makeup like the band. The football team won the homecoming game and ended the year with a 6-3 record.
Since that visit, Cadillac has been part of KISStory and has always been mentioned in KISS specials on MTV and VH1 and in KISS books.
VH1 is airing its series of "When ... ruled the world," featuring KISS Saturday and Neff was flown to Chicago to be interviewed for the special.
Cadillac will be featured about two-and-a-half minutes and Neff's comments are sprinkled throughout the show, according to Neff.
"It's pretty cool that our town is always brought up and featured when specials are done. It's thought of as a special place," he said.
While VH1 has aired specials about KISS in the past and featured the Cadillac story, this is the first time Neff has been interviewed to tell the story of when Cadillac was KISSed.
VH1 producer Sarah Girgis said she has never heard of a story like the Cadillac KISS visit before.
"I've never seen it happen. I've never seen fans like KISS fans. They are the true meaning of fanatical," she said.
Girgis said Cadillac's story is meaningful and probably the reason it is featured every time there is a KISS special because it is unique.
"For a whole town to turn out and put on KISS makeup is significant. Plus there is cool footage," she said.
Girgis added KISS fans will be interested to know it is the first time all four original band members of KISS have been featured in an hour-long documentary in six years.
Next year will be the 30th anniversary of the KISS visit. While Neff said it would be a treat to have KISS come back to Cadillac, the logistics of getting the band into town and having a place for them to play that accommodates thousands of fans would be tough. When KISS visited Cadillac in 1975, the band was not as popular in northern Michigan as its now world-wide appeal, Neff said.
Poison played a tight, energetic set highlighting hits from throughout their extensive career. Kicking off with the title track from 1986's Look What the Cat Dragged In, the band played hit after hit, including "Nothing But a Good Time," "Every Rose Has Its Thorn," "Your Mama Don't Dance," and of course, "Talk Dirty to Me."
Poison has always been known for its extensive stage show, featuring pyrotechnics and a dazzling light show. There was none of that here, though, which actually turned out to be quite refreshing. The band played with a rawness possibly not seen in years, visibly having a good time in the toned-down setting.
The Brett Michaels-fronted group did its job well - warming the crowd up for the evening's main attraction: veteran rockers KISS.
Hitting the stage with a spray of sparks, KISS kicked off their set with 70's hit "Love Gun." The band - once again playing with only two original members after the recent Farewell Tour - performed a variety of songs from their self-titled debut through to 1998's Psycho Circus.
Overall, the group provided the over-the-top rock show the KISS Army has come to expect - flames, explosions, fireworks, confetti, fire-breathing, and blood spitting were all included. Gene Simmons (a.k.a. "The Demon") and Paul Stanley (a.k.a. "Starchild") even flew, to the delight of the crowd.
KISS was enjoyable - especially while playing such heavier tracks as "War Machine," "I Want You," "Lick it Up" and "Detroit Rock City." But something just didn't seem right. It felt as if the band has become caricatures of the personas they created so brilliantly in the '70s.
And to be blunt, the Demon's blood spitting wasn't anywhere near as scary as it should have been, and Paul Stanley's voice showed signs of wear, especially when he reached for some high notes.
But in the end, who cares?
As the final notes of "Rock 'N' Roll All Night" were driven home with a storm of confetti, it was a reminder of what makes KISS a good band: catchy, memorable songs and a killer stage show.
And KISS always manages to deliver that.
Some bands have a charismatic lead singer. KISS has two.
Some bands have a big bright band logo hanging over the stage. KISS has two.
Some bands, though probably none other than KISS, might have a member actually fly during the concert. KISS has two.
Some bands might have a video screen on stage. KISS has 18.
Some bands have a stack of amplifiers on stage. KISS has more than 60.
KISS brought all of this - an arsenal of bombs, pyro, and power chords - to the Ford Pavilion at Montage Mountain on Friday, rocking the crowd of 9,200 with the biggest and brightest show to hit the venue since, well ... KISS played there four years ago.
Still, it isn't flash and glitz that has helped KISS sell some 100 million albums, it's great rock songs, and the band kicked them out in fine fashion and dished out gems such as "Love Gun," "Deuce," "Makin' Love" and "Lick It Up," with pounding authority. They also dusted off the gem "Got To Choose" - a tune they haven't played live in more than 25 years.
Rhythm guitarist and vocalist Paul Stanley was, as usual, the perfect host and ringmaster. Some bands might acknowledge the name of the town they're in once. Stanley did it more than a dozen times, and acknowledged Scranton and Wilkes-Barre.
Ultimately, what makes KISS such a cool hard rock band is its ability to write songs with driving chords, snarling licks and catchy grooves. This was most evident during numbers such as "I Want You," "War Machine" and "100,000 Years."
They've also got a gift for anthems and inspired the crowd with sing-along favorites such as "I Love It Loud," "Shout It Out Loud" and "God Gave Rock & Roll To You," the latter of which was accompanied by a video montage of some of rock's all-time great acts.
Throughout the show, bassist and vocalist Gene Simmons was his delightfully nasty self, breathing fire, spitting blood and flying to the top of the rafters during "Unholy." Not to be upstaged, Stanley also flew about 150 feet out into the crowd and sang "I Was Made For Lovin' You" amid the audience.
"Step up!" shouted Stanley during "Psycho Circus," and the crowd responded by answering his energy. Even in the seated area of the amphitheater, no one ever sat.
Original members Ace Frehley and Peter Criss were missed, but only because of their personas. Drummer Eric Singer and guitarist Tommy Thayer played perfectly, giving KISS perhaps its best musical lineup since the early '90s. Despite all the pomp, KISS can play, and they played well. And Stanley, now in his early 50s, can still sing as well as anybody in rock.
(He says he hopes to eventually return to his starring role in the stage production of "Phantom of the Opera.")
KISS' pacing was simple: start and don't stop. Save for some chat from Stanley, most songs just slammed into one another. The group's always been good at putting together a strong set list, and this show was no exception. If you were looking for a "rest song" to take a breather, you were out of luck. Just try taking a seat during "Detroit Rock City" or "Rock & Roll All Nite," which was accompanied by more confetti and more fireworks than most Fourth of July celebrations.
With KISS bigger is definitely still better, and they are still rock's premiere live band.
One of the most influental bands of all time, KISS' anthem "Rock and Roll All Nite" remains one of the most-played tracks on radio today. The band's other hits - "Detroit Rock City," "Beth," "Shout It Out Loud," "Lick It Up" and many others - have sold millions of albums. The band has more gold records than The Beatles.
Lead singer/guitarist Paul Stanley and bassist/vocalist Gene Simmons still front the band that no longer features troubled members Ace Frehley and Peter Criss. In are guitarist Tommy Thayer, a former guitar tech for KISS who blazes on stage, and longtime drummer Eric Singer, who can hit the drums harder than Criss ever dreamed of.
With dolls, pinball machines, action figures, comic books, condoms and coffins, no band has ever been marketed like KISS. Thirty years later, the band remains one of the best concert draws in the world. On this tour, KISS is also selling Instant Live CDs of the concert you attend for $25. The CDs, complete with full packaging, must be purchased before the concert and will be available minutes after it ends.
Stanley took the time to talk about KISS - past and present - in a candid interview.
Q: Paul, this tour has really been a nice surprise for KISS fans since you're changing the set around and playing songs you haven't played in 30 years. Is it cool to play songs like "Makin' Love," "C'Mon and Love Me," "Love Her All I Can" and "Shandi" after all these years?
A: It's awesome to hear these songs being played the way you wrote them so long ago. We get so fired up by the energy of the crowd and the music, it's unbelievable. They hear these songs, and they're louder than the band. It's what KISS is all about. The response to the songs every night is just relentless and deafening.
Q: What song did you really push to get back in the setlist?
A: "Got to Choose" - it just sounds great, it kills. The communication during that song with the audience is exceptional, even for KISS. This time out, we've really upped it. The bar is raised.
Q: But is it nice to do it with the music this time around and not just the pyrotechnics - even though that's still there?
A: Anybody can do a KISS show. Anyone can buy a KISS show. All you need is money. But you can't be KISS. That being said, it had to be more than that this time around. We can add more bombs and special effects, but the show is infinitely more powerful this time around because the band is more powerful.
Q: Was it hard for Eric and Tommy to get up to speed?
A: (Paul laughs.) No. Tommy's been with the band forever, and Eric was in the band before. They guys know more songs than ... other people that you think should know them.
Q: Like Peter and Ace?
A: I didn't say that. For me, this is never about taking pot shots. It doesn't make me any bigger. This band is about smiling and appreciating where we've been and also being excited about where we're going.
Q: Where are you going?
A: Forward. All I can say is that the response in Australia and Japan and the first 20 shows in America has been incredible. We have never been in better form. To be able to change the set nightly and play these songs as tight as they're being played - and as faithfully - is a tremendous treat, but a blessing, too.
Q: Why didn't you do this sooner?
A: The truth is the only thing that bothered me about the past tours is that we made ourselves prisoners to our own setlist. But that was self-imposed. We can't blame anyone but ourselves. We realized there is no reason we can't play the KISS classics and still leave room for other gems that have been put on the back burner - "Makin' Love," "She," "Parasite." It's tremendous. The thing is that I'm not only a member of the band, I'm a fan of KISS. So this is a plus for everyone. I have diehard fans coming to me nightly telling me this is the best tour so far.
Q: What do you think about Gene's new solo album?
A: (long pause) No comment. Let's just say, I hope it's what he wanted to do. He reaps the benefits or takes the ... criticism. If this is the album he chose to make, then he deserves what he gets, either way.
Q: You had the best solo album all of those years ago. Don't you have the itch for another one?
A: It's been in the works for a while; I'm just not on a soap box talking about it. It's half done. I'm not about selling sizzle. My album's about delivering a steak. It won't matter who's involved or what color the cover is. That's what it's not about. I want to release it sometime around the New Year.
Q: I know you did theater work, particularly "Phantom of the Opera," will there be more theater for you?
A: Absolutely. I was recently asked to do "Phantom" for Broadway. It's not a matter of if it will happen, it's when.
Q: You always read about Gene's girlfriends and Gene has books and everything, why don't we hear that stuff about you? Is that a choice, or don't people ask?
A: Most people don't ask. You put it out there if you
want to talk about it. Stuff starts because you keep talking. I've chosen not to. If I tell you I came in last night on a flying saucer with Elvis, I would have to wonder why you would believe it. But people do believe stuff. My private life is private. It's not for public consumption as a rule, and I try not to embellish on that.
Q: How does your voice sound better than ever?
A: I've been doing it for a long time, and you develop technique. With technique, you don't have to sound like Pavarotti. You use it and don't abuse it. My voice is way better than it was when I was younger. It's stronger, and I know how to use it.
Q: It's amazing to me that you and Gene - after all these years - don't seem to take shots at each other publicly like most other bands. Is there a vow you made to each other to keep your fights private?
A: I cannot control what other people do. I am just not interested in making someone else look smaller to make me look bigger. Ultimately, it says I am a dwarf.
Q: Will there be another KISS album?
A: It's possible. There's nothing in the works.
Q: Are Peter and Ace done for good?
A: Yeah. No question. I wish both of them the best, but they don't belong in the band. You can't have members coming and going and we don't know what to expect and the fans don't know what to expect. It's unacceptable at some point. It's just better for everybody. I hope they pursue what makes them happy. Meanwhile, the band continues because it should. The team and the army is about making sure the athlete or the soldiers believe in the cause. That's what makes for a victory. When people no longer share the same drive or focus, it's neither fair to the band or the fans.
Q: Any advice for a KISS fan who wants to be a rock star like you?
A: Don't listen to advice.
KISS concerts embody all the elements of the quintessential rock show: Flying. Flash. Pyro. Fake blood. Hydraulics. Video.
Now add Catalyst to the list.
High End Systems’ Catalyst Pro v3.0 Media Server is helping LD Bryan Hartley enhance the KISS touring stage set with moving graphic elements. Catalyst is the fusion of lighting effects with digital media – and Catalyst Pro v3.0 software allows the designer to render up to four layers of digital media and real-time rendered effects. Tour lighting contractor is Mark Coleman of Fourth Phase Burbank.
For this set design, Manager Doc McGee and Video Director Jonathan Beswick replaced some of the speakers in the set with square LED walls in a checkerboard fashion.
Says Hartley, “I’m splitting up the video area with the Video Director Jonathan Beswick. He runs most of the show and I do the other part of the show with Catalyst. It allows me to play movies on the little LED screens and use movie graphics and other images.
"Catalyst allows me to be in sync with the lights. I can have the graphic in blue and change the lights to red as well as the LEDs to red as well.
"Interestingly, the only people that seem to want to know why you've come back are the people that wish you wouldn't," Stanley said with a chuckle. "It's been an amazing response, and the turnouts have been incredible. I couldn't have wished for anything this good. Not only big crowds, but huge, boisterous approval of the show. The only thing louder than the band is the audience."
According to Stanley, keeping the re-formed original line-up together for just five years was challenging.
"I don't think a lot of people know the half of it," he said. "It was very difficult. Ace and Peter ... sometimes the problems that are there from the beginning don't really go away. They may recede into the background, and then they rear their ugly head again.
"Ultimately, the most important thing has always been KISS, and KISS is a tradition, a legend and something that the public wants on no uncertain terms," he said. "The band has never been better. ... The set that we're playing and the flexibility we have now is amazing, and the crowd response — and I mean, to the die-hards — is fanatically positive. People are coming over after the show and saying 'This is by far the best I've ever seen the band and by far the best show I've ever seen.'"
With regards to the band's decision to give new members a new costume and new makeup character in the early '80s after Frehley and Criss first left the group, Stanley said, "The fact is that those original notions — ours or anyone else's — were a mistake. We spent 30 years building KISS into the icon that those images are. You could take a picture of KISS arguably anywhere in the world, and people would know that it is in fact KISS, but they wouldn't necessarily be able to name all of the members. That's the point. To dilute what KISS has built with a lot of hard work — and not always from the same people, mind you — by having to come up with 'giraffe-boy' or 'ant-man' is ridiculous. It ultimately compromises the fan, and the fan — and I mean the vast, vast majority of fans — want KISS and want KISS as those four iconic images."
Though Stanley chose not to comment on the musical abilities of Frehley and Criss, he did say playing with the new band has been liberating.
"I would rather talk about all of the positives over the years and let the live band, and everything that we are and everything that encompasses us, speak for itself," he said. "'We virtually became prisoners of our own set list, and that was also because of some of the internal problems. To now be able to celebrate all that we are and all that we've accomplished is glorious, and it's what we should be doing."
When asked about his upcoming solo album, Stanley said that he plans to unveil it early next year but wouldn't reveal any details.
"Talk is cheap, and the last thing I want to do is sell sizzle," he said. "I'm more about selling steak. It's very easy to razzle-dazzle people with a tap dance and all kinds of stuff, and then afterwards they kind of wonder what they actually got. I'm spending time making sure it's a great album with great songs, and I'll let it speak for itself."
GENE SIMMONS…MOTIVATIONAL SPEAKER? CATCH HIM AS YOU’VE NEVER SEEN HIM BEFORE WITH THE DVD & CD RELEASE OF “SPEAKING IN TONGUES” ON AUGUST 10
New York, N.Y. – Simmons Audio Visual/Sanctuary Records Group is proud to announce the DVD & CD release of GENE SIMMONS’ SPEAKING IN TONGUES, on August 10, 2004.
SPEAKING IN TONGUES chronicles GENE SIMMONS’ first ever, no holds barred “lecture tour” of Australia, shocking and tantalizing his audiences by speaking his mind on his favorite topics – Money, Success, Fame, KISS & of course - Women! Other highlights from SPEAKING IN TONGUES include a fascinating in-depth look at one of rock ‘n roll’s most legendary icon’s private life including his home, his family and his various business dealings. Additionally, the DVD & CD includes for the first time anywhere, over ten unheard and never-before-released Gene Simmons songs from the seventies through the nineties.
SPEAKING IN TONGUES, is an intimate and revealing portrayal of SIMMONS’ personal philosophies of life. SIMMONS (arguably the most opinionated man in music) states, “I decide things for myself, convention in society says I’m supposed to get married, I’m supposed to do this…I refuse. I’m a contradiction to all this stuff…I’m willing to bear all the criticism and I’m willing to take all the rewards. All the blame, but all the credit.” A brave statement from a man unafraid of pushing the envelope and dealing with the consequences.
Most recently, SIMMONS co-founding member of KISS, America's No.1 Gold Record Champions Of All Time (RIAA - Group Category), released his highly anticipated second solo effort, A**HOLE, revealing yet another side to the multi-talented artist. Like his 1978 self-titled solo album, A**HOLE is a diverse forward thinking, genre splitting effort and features a number of musical luminaries which include Bob Dylan, Dave Navarro and the Zappa Family.
KISS, who has rock and rolled all night and partied every day for over three decades and broken box office attendance records set by Elvis Presley and the Beatles, continue to conquer audiences with their current 2004 “ROCK THE NATION ” worldwide tour.
Jeffrey Smittle, 44, of Ceraso, Mich., was sentenced Thursday in Pittsburgh federal court. He pleaded guilty in April to unauthorized trafficking in recordings of live musical performances.
Federal prosecutors said a November 2002 search of Smittle's former home in Canonsburg, a Pittsburgh suburb, turned up more than 11,000 pirated recordings, which they said he sold to music dealers, at record shows and over the Internet.
Federal prosecutors said the case was rare for western Pennsylvania but mirrored efforts nationwide by the recording industry and law enforcement to curtail bootlegged recordings.
The Recording Industry Association of America, the Washington-based trade group that represents the major recording companies, has set up offices with detectives, hired private detectives and worked with law enforcement to crack down on pirated recordings.
The RIAA says the millions of pirated CDs routinely sold coast to coast are costing its members $300 million domestically and $4.2 billion worldwide in lost sales and royalties.
For the first time in nearly a decade KISS band members Gene Simmons, Paul Stanley, Peter Criss, Ace Frehley come together on VH1's "When KISS Ruled the World," premiering July 24 at 9:00 PM* as they intimately chronicle the band's successes and downfalls as well as the group's influence on their fans, and the entire music community through over-the-top looks and wild antics.
During the hour-long episode VH1 reveals the greatest moments in "Kiss-tory," including the band's performance at The Diplomat Hotel, their first Top Ten single, "Beth" and group's 1996 reunion tour.
"The kids liked us. They might have been flabbergasted and unbelievably stunned, and maybe they didn't know what the hell was going on, but they went for it right away. The first time we played in a club there was nobody there. The next night there were lines around the block, said KISS front man, Gene Simmons."
This is the sixth installment of the VH1 original series, "When __ Ruled The World" which charts the rise and fall of cultural trends. Upcoming episodes include, "When X Rated Ruled The World" and "When Partridge Ruled The World."
The group will take over Riverbend Music Center on Sunday with two of its original four members (Paul Stanley and Gene Simmons), and all the hard-rock anthems, black-and-white face paint and onstage antics with fire and dry ice that landed KISS biggest-band-in-the-world status in the '70s.
This isn't the same old show, though, says Stanley. (He's the guitarist and vocalist with the black star painted over his right eye). Along with monster hits such as "Detroit Rock City," KISS will rock 'n' roll all night with songs that haven't been performed live in decades or, in some cases, ever, he says.
"The tour has a whole renewed energy to it," he says. "The songs are fresh and played with a lethal precision."
The revamped show is designed to allow the whole crowd to catch the explosive (sometimes literally - these dudes still love their pyrotechnics) action. Twenty-one video monitors will be mounted on the main stage. A second stage will be positioned in the middle of the audience; mid-set, Stanley will swoop above the crowd on cables to the small platform and play from there.
Stanley, who plans to release a solo album early next year, says the members of KISS are in peak form, and they're definitely not ready to unlace their platform boots just yet.
"There's no denying that KISS is better, stronger, tighter and purer than it's ever been," he says.
Here's Stanley's take on the current tour, the proliferation of KISS merchandise and how to cop the band's classic style.
Why was '80s hair-metal band Poison chosen as the opening act for the tour?
Poison is a band that gets up there and has fun and gives the audience a really good time.
What's the coolest special onstage effect?
Oh, me. When I get a chance to fly over the audience and play from a smaller stage and give the people in the back a front-row seat, that's an awesome experience.
What's the strangest merchandising request the band has received?
Toilet paper was pretty low, no pun intended, on the list.
KISS's songs have been covered by indie rockers, string quartets and even country star Garth Brooks. What's your favorite cover?
I like the ones that are a little more challenging and offbeat. There's a great version on "Rock and Roll All Nite" by Toad the Wet Sprocket that actually sounded more like Jackson Browne than KISS.
Do you have any fashion tips for fans who want to emulate KISS's look?
Cheap hairspray, cheap lipstick and lots of attitude.
ABC Trust will be hosting a charity event in Los Angeles on July 18 at the Beverly Center Hard Rock Café, sponsored by Gibson Guitars. Other rock stars donating memorabilia include Jimmy Page and former KISS guitarist Bruce Kulick.
All proceeds will benefit the nonprofit foundation, based in Santa Monica, which provides funds for prostate cancer research.
On Saturday, an audience of 11,500 experienced that and more (without even mentioning the rain that arrived during the concert's encore).
Beyond the expected blood, fire and dry ice, 29-year-old Kiss delivered a music-based performance -- one that supplied substance in equal measure to showmanship.
The larger-than-life rock franchise, which embarked on its first "farewell" tour in 2000, can offer more than gimmickry these days because Eric Singer is playing drums and Tommy Thayer is playing guitar.
It's easy to criticize mainstay members Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley for treating original band mates Peter Criss and Ace Frehley like hired hands and nudging them toward their eventual exits from the group.
Nevertheless, the current lineup's abilities make a compelling argument against loyalty.
Thayer and Singer were sturdy and competent enough to make the evening something new, even if Kiss played zero songs recorded after 1992.
Singer hammered -- a verb rarely associated with Criss -- the intro to "Got To Choose," a 1974 tune brought out of the archives for this tour.
Thayer was allowed to jam at the conclusion of "Christine Sixteen," earning a strong crowd response for his gritty, minor-key riffs.
Stanley portrayed his customary role of cheerleader. He also sang every note without a hint of wear or tear, perhaps sailing highest on "I Stole Your Love," a 1977 souvenir that featured a refreshing pop backbeat.
It's Simmons, of course, who's on a tenacious mission to keep the Kiss machine rolling. He's every bit the hard-working man described in "Deuce," which showcased his bullhorn voice early in the show.
He likely made the brilliant choice of booking Poison as the tour's opening act.
Although vocalist Bret Michaels and guitarist C.C. DeVille rarely acknowledged each other's presence, Poison played a catalog of hits written primarily about having fun.
"Nothin' But a Good Time" gave way to "Every Rose Has Its Thorn," which was followed by "Talk Dirty To Me." What more could be asked of a warm-up band?
As previously reported, an encore presentation of Peter's guest appearance as inmate Martin Montgomery on HBO's "Oz" in episode "#41 Visitation" has been scheduled for July 8 at 11:00 p.m. EST on HBO Zone. Criss will also be guest-starring on the new animated show called "Fatherhood", based on Bill Cosby's best selling book of the same name. Peter's episode will be airing in July on Nick at Nite.
Given that a typical Kiss concert rivals a post-baseball-game fireworks show, how can that be?
"The bombs last night were the loudest I've ever heard them," Kiss singer/guitarist Paul Stanley said the morning after a recent show. "And it takes a lot for me to say something like that."
The pyrotechnics are fun for the fans, but Stanley is enjoying this tour more than any in a long time because of the music. After playing virtually the same block of songs for too long, Kiss has exhumed some gems not heard live in many years.
"The last six years," Stanley said, "we've played virtually the same set list. We'd almost become prisoners to the Kiss classics.
"There's no reason we can't play some of those songs every night and still give the audience that part of the band. But now we're at the point where, any given night we can shift in or out eight different songs. We're doing some songs that we haven't played live in 20 or 25 years, and some we've never played live, and that's what makes this show better."
In San Antonio, and in Australia and Japan earlier this year, Kiss has played several songs that were staples in the mid-'70s "Alive" era, like "C'Mon And Love Me," "Parasite" and "She." The band brings its show to Hi-Fi Buys Amphitheatre in Atlanta on Aug. 8.
Also making Stanley happy is the way Kiss is playing the songs. Original band members Stanley and singer/bassist Gene Simmons are joined on this tour by Kiss semiregulars Tommy Thayer on guitar and Eric Singer on drums. Thayer, as he has done off and on in the past, replaces original lead guitarist Ace Frehley, and Singer, as he also has done before, takes the seat of original drummer Peter Criss.
Frehley reportedly is struggling again with substance abuse.
"I haven't spoken to Ace in probably a year and a half, maybe two years," Stanley said, "so I really don't know what's going on. And, you know, we created so much together and accomplished so much together, I can't say too much negative about him. I just want to focus on the great things we did together."
Criss' situation, Stanley said, is different, but he became a liability because he is unable to produce what Simmons and Stanley want from their drummer.
"There were some issues on the last tour," Stanley said, "but I'd rather not get into them."
Told that The Orange County Register's review of a December 2003 show labeled Criss' playing that night as "average," Stanley responded, "Well ..." and after a moment's silence, "at the end of the day, the most important people in this whole life experience are the fans. We owe them the best Kiss we can be. That's why Eric's back in the band."
So, if this Kiss has only half the members from the band's prime years - when it sold more than 80 million albums and launched an unprecedented merchandising campaign that includes everything from Kiss condoms to Kiss caskets - is it really Kiss?
"Is it really THE Yankees out on the field these days?" Stanley replied. "The team and what the team believes in is way bigger than anybody that is on the team.
"Look at it this way: If you want vanilla ice cream and instead you're given chocolate, isn't that better than having no ice cream at all? The audience will choose if they don't want Kiss anymore, but they're telling us, resoundingly, that they still do."
Stanley, 54, said he is not sure how much longer there will be a Kiss, and how much longer he will be part of it.
"I'll stop when I decide to stop," he said. "The audience, sure, that's part of the equation, but the only person who will decide when it's time to hang it up is me. Not the crowd, not the crowd size - me.
"Hey, if there are only 5,000 people there to see me play, that's still 4,999 more than most people will ever play to. Some people see the glass as half empty, some see it as half full. My glass is overflowing."
Perhaps Stanley's relationship with Simmons is half good, half bad.
When asked what he admired most about Simmons and what about Simmons drives him crazy, Stanley declined to describe his relationship with his business partner of more than 30 years.
But he gave some hints as he reacted with surprise when told that Simmons recently credited Stanley for coming up with the band's name and logo.
"He's rather frugal with that, giving credit to someone else," Stanley said. "Gene can be rather liberal when it comes to interchanging the words 'I' and 'we.' "
Stanley claims the "we" that is Kiss these days, and on this tour, is, as the band's famous onstage introduction goes, "the hottest band in the land."
"The band has never sounded better," Stanley said, "and the show has never been better."
Cleveland Free Times: Your Terry Gross interview on NPR caused quite a stir a while back. What was the big deal?
Gene Simmons: "It was the largest audience they've ever had. Ms. Gross, I thought, came off rude. I give as good as I get. I'm as polite as anybody is to me. I asked, 'Tell me about NPR, which sounds like a disease.' Who gives a shit about NPR? It was very much a case of people in positions of power who believe that they're beyond recourse. Rude behavior is rude behavior. I said I'm happy to be in a band and welcomed her with open arms and open legs. She didn't appreciate it. She was taken aback."
Cleveland Free Times: She kept saying you were being obnoxious — she must not interview many rock stars.
Gene Simmons: "Being obnoxious means you're not willing to put up with rudeness. I thought she came off as self-important when, as far I'm concerned, she's done nothing with her life."
Cleveland Free Times: Have you talked to her since?
Gene Simmons: "I have not, but they keep asking me for the right to rebroadcast. The answer's no. If anybody's making money off it, it will be me first."
To download an MP3 file containing the 27-minute interview, which originally aired on February 4, 2002, click here (file size: 25 MB). A transcript of the exchange can be viewed at this location.
When Kiss resumed touring back in the late 1990s, it alerted everyone that the band was hitting the road to say farewell once and for all.
No one knew then that the sayonara/au revoir/danke schoen tour would become a process of attrition that would exceed five years. Apparently Kiss will retire and say farewell when everyone in the band has died or decided he has something better to do.
Sunday night the Kiss that took the stage at the music garden in Bonner Springs featured only half the original band: Paul Stanley, the lead singer who wouldn't wear a shirt on a cold day in Alaska; and Gene Simmons, the singer/bassist with a camel's tongue.
So was the Kiss half-empty or half-full? Void the question: Ace Frehley and Peter Criss are gone — Tommy Thayer and Eric Singer were the stand-ins — but to this crowd on a crisp summer evening, Kiss was still Kiss, even with “Beth” off the set list.
On a band Web site, Simmons rationalized the roster changes by noting that the Beatles weren't really the original Beatles either because Ringo Starr replaced original drummer Pete Best — so there. Whatever. When your band plays music as primitive as Kiss', you don't need John Bonham or Jimi Hendrix in your lineup. Just lather on the makeup, strap on the platform shoes and start banging out three major chords.
Kiss is calling this chapter of its never-ending farewell the worldwide “Rock the Nation Tour,” an odyssey that will take the band far and wide, from Kanazawa, Japan, to Scranton, Pa., and beyond. For the most part, everyone sees the same 100-minute show. None of it is fresh or contemporary, but on Sunday night it was enough to provoke a few fits of mock hysteria and several prolonged states of bemused nostalgia.
To justify the steep ticket price ($70), Kiss hired Poison to open/co-headline this tour. Poison these days is clean, sober and shorn of its big-hair glam-metal shtick; still, it can still throw enough hard punches to fill a one-hour set.
Bret Michaels' voice could use a lift and a tuneup; otherwise the band's big-hook pop-metal anthems and ballads — “Unskinny Bop,” “Look What the Cat Dragged In,” “Something to Believe In” and “Every Rose Has Its Thorn” — sounded surprisingly fit.
Kiss responded with a show that was more visual than visceral. They opened with “Love Gun” and “Deuce” and the more the show rolled along, the more it seemed as familiar as a rerun, even when they dusted off “older” material, like “100,000 Years,” which sounded a lot like their most recent material. Kiss has gotten older and richer over the course of four decades, but no one can accuse it of evolving.
The night was full of all the usual tricks, gimmicks and highlights: flashpots, smoke, fireworks, bared breasts, big hair, fire-breathing, blood-letting.
Toward the end of the evening, the 20-plus video monitors all showed an image of the American flag, and Stanley went on a rhetorical binge about how some people out there hate the greatest country in the world because (to paraphrase) we like to rock 'n' roll and party.
Then the monitors flashed old images of Kiss with images of the Beatles, the Stones, the Who, the Doors, Springsteen and (no kidding) footage from a Michael Jackson concert (?) while the band played “God Gave Rock 'n' Roll to You II.” It ended with a rockets-red-glare version of “Rock and Roll All Nite” and said goodbye, promising it would return again. But we all knew that.
"Richmond International Raceway, we're ready to rock and roll!" said a jubilant Doug Fritz, president of RIR. "We have the leaders of the industry with Chevy, KISS, Warner and Performance Action."
For the second year in a row, the fall NASCAR race at RIR will be called the Chevy Rock & Roll 400. Last year's race mixed rock and pop stars with the drivers of NASCAR's Craftsman Truck, Busch and the then-Winston Cup (now known as NEXTEL) Series. Frankie Perez, Hootie and the Blowfish, Sugar Ray, Trapt and Uncle Kracker rocked the racetrack before and after the races. The lineup for the next Chevy Rock & Roll 400 will be announced later this summer.
Come September, members of the KISS Army will be happy to see their heroes circle the track on top of the No. 29 GM Goodwrench, driven by Kevin Harvick; the No. 2 ACDelco Chevrolet Monte Carlos, driven by Ron Hornaday; and the No. 6 GM Goodwrench Chevrolet Silverado truck driven by Matt Crafton.
"It's exciting for me," Hornaday said. "I'll take you guys to victory lane."
Also revealed Tuesday was the official pace car for the Chevy Rock & Roll 400. The KISS paint schemes were designed by artist Sam Bass, who grew up in nearby Hopewell. This is the second time Bass has worked with Simmons and Stanley.
"There's not two nicer people in the world," said Bass, an admitted member of the KISS Army. "This is a dream come true to me."
Stanley and Simmons, who flew into Richmond Tuesday after playing a sold out show at the UMB Pavilion in St. Louis Monday night, were both gracious to the throngs of media on hand at RIR, posing for pictures and chatting with track employees and sponsor representatives.
"This is really exciting for us. KISS has been involved with NASCAR since the fall of 2001," Stanley said. "It's a great American sport and it not only brings out fast cars and hot woman but it also brings out hot cars and fast woman."
Tickets for the Chevy Rock & Roll 400 will go on sale on July 17 and track officials expect the race to become their 26th straight NASCAR sellout. Tickets for the Craftsman Truck, IROC and Busch Series races are currently on sale.
My whole time clock is the opposite of what it’s supposed be,” explains Thayer, shortly after a mid afternoon nap. So, it takes a little bit of time to get readjusted. Your body thinks its daytime and it’s really night.
Sitting at home in Los Angeles, Thayer has a little more than 48 hours to sync back up before launching the American leg of Kiss’ Rock The Nations Tour in San Antonio. Starting with three consecutive nights in Texas, the tour is set to carry the band into early August.
Much of the talk surrounding the new tour centers on two topics. The first is the fact that Kiss’ line-up has changed up a bit and no longer features all four original members – bassist Gene Simmons, guitarist Paul Stanley, guitarist Ace Frehley and drummer Peter Criss – and the other is that the set list is pulling from a broader base than the group has drawn from on the past couple of tours.
According to Thayer, the reason that the set list has been able to expand is directly related to the new incarnation of the band. With Frehley and Criss in the band, material for the show was pulled almost exclusively from the albums the group released in the ‘70s. Even with Frehley’s absence in recent years, the band still held to tracks from the first third of its history and didn’t vary the song selection too much in its shows.
After unceremoniously dropping Criss from the band earlier this year, Simmons and Stanley brought back Eric Singer, who held Kiss’ drummer slot through the first half of the ‘90s. Along with Thayer, who stepped into Frehley’s position officially in 2003, the new version of of Kiss started working on a show that included songs that the group didn’t perform while Frehley and Criss where in the band.
Obviously, up through last year, with Peter in the band and everything, the whole set list was very stagnant...pretty much because it had to be,” explains Thayer. “It was just hard to work up new tunes and have that flexibility for reasons I don’t want to go in to. That’s just the way it was.
”Now, with Eric Singer playing drums and the line-up as it is now, we have flexibility and the opportunity to completely rework the set list and do a lot of things that Kiss hasn’t done in a long time or haven’t really ever done.
Shows in Japan and Australia saw the inclusion of songs like “God Gave Rock 'N' Roll To You Pt. 2,” “Tears Are Falling” and “Unholy,” all of which the band has ignored in recent years, and the group says that the U.S. tour will feature similar material with six to eight songs moving in and out of the show on a nightly basis.
The path that led Thayer to take the stage as a part of Kiss started more than 20 years ago when the Beaverton-native was a member of Black ‘N’ Blue, Portland’s major contribution to the ‘80s metal scene. Although, Thayer admits that his hometown wasn’t conducive to launching his band’s career.
We couldn’t get arrested,” laughs Thayer. “Back then, the club scene for rock bands was just covers. The idea of somebody playing their own music was kind of foreign.
Aware of a growing scene in L.A., the 20-year-old Thayer and the rest of his band headed south on I-5 to find their place amongst the other bands crowding the Sunset Strip. Within six months of setting up camp, the band was signed to Geffen Records and working on its debut album, which was released in 1984.
The following year, the band returned with Without Love and was asked to tour with Kiss, who were on the road supporting Asylum. By the end of the outing, knowing that it was about to go back into the studio, Black ‘N’ Blue asked Simmons if he’d be interested in producing the upcoming project and to which he simply replied, “I’ve got a big mouth. I’ll tell you what I think.
Not only did Simmons go into the studio to produce 1986’s Nasty Nasty, the group’s third album, but he returned to man the controls for its follow-up, 1988’s In Heat, as well. Working with Simmons, Thayer cowrote a number of songs and built a relationship that would pay off in the future.
By the close of the decade, however, Black ‘N’ Blue had run out of steam and Thayer went out in search of new opportunities. What he found was a series of one album bands and no permanent situations.
One band that did work out well was a Kiss tribute band called Cold Gin that he formed with former Black ‘N’ Blue vocalist Jamie St. James. In an act of foreshadowing, Thayer took on Frehley’s role in the band and the group built a fan base that eventually included both Simmons and Stanley.
An admirer of Thayer’s work ethic, Simmons asked the guitarist to come work for Kiss. Happy to have a job that he enjoyed, he took the position even though it meant doing menial tasks.
I came in and started bottom rung of the ladder and worked my way up,” says Thayer. “Essentially, when I first started working for those guys...for Gene and Paul...over 10 years ago, I was doing anything that needed to be done, whether it was running errands, getting the coffee or doing, well, anything. I did it and I did it with a great attitude and I worked really hard, long hours. I just established myself like that.
Thayer moved on to other, more significant jobs within the Kiss organization and, when the four original members came together for 1996’s reunion tour, he was asked to work with Frehley on relearning guitar parts.
After the immensely successful reunion tour, Criss and Frehley remained around to record Psycho Circus but chinks in the armor started becoming visible. It wasn’t overly surprising when the group announced in 2000 that it would do a farewell tour and call it quits. Of course, even that tour didn’t make it to the end with the band intact and Singer had to be brought in to cover Criss’ vacancy.
In time, Simmons and Stanley started saying that they weren’t ready for Kiss to end and believed the fans weren’t, either. When the band returned, Criss was back on-board but Frehley decided to opt out for personal reasons and Thayer assumed the role.
When you imagine being a new member in a huge band, you imagine auditions and a decision making process and that kind of thing but it couldn’t be nothing more the opposite.
I was working with the band and, over the years, especially since the reunion tour, I’ve done an awful lot of rehearsing, sound checking and, even, recording with Kiss. So, when Ace decided he didn’t want to do this anymore, it was just a natural thing for me to just step in and start doing it.
Although he had filled in for Frehley on a couple of shows in 2002, Thayer’s debut as an official member of Kiss came when the group traveled to Australia to perform with the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra in February 2003. Looking back on the experience, Thayer says that it was a little intimidating because he was working with an orchestra and the show was being recorded but, since then, he’s been comfortable in his new situation.
Not everyone, however, is comfortable with Kiss’ current line-up and one of the most vocal about it has been Criss. In an interview with New York’s Q104.3 last month, the drummer called the current incarnation of Kiss a “cover band” and labeled Thayer and Singer “impostors.
They’re comments that Thayer’s aware of but seems genuinely surprised to hear. When the topic is brought up, Tommy sidesteps the issue out of respect to Criss.
I can’t say anything bad about him. I really can’t. I like him and I guess I don’t understand why he said some of the things he said.
At this time, Thayer says that Kiss doesn’t have any definitive plans to go into the studio to record but says that it’s “not out of the question.” Currently, he’s prefers to focus on the tour, after which Stanley is slated to release a solo album to follow Simmons’ just released solo attempt.
One thing that will continue is the make-up and Thayer says he’s proud to continue donning the look that Frehley made famous. The band’s current attitude is that the characters are bigger than any of the musicians and that the band is better served by continuing on with the group appearing as it did in the beginning. Thayer believes there’s no reason for him to develop an original charter and certainly sees no reason to remove the make-up altogether.
Non-makeup...I don’t believe that’s the answer and, at this point, I don’t know if the original four guys is the answer, either. You can see what’s gone on with that.
But, I’m not trying to put anything down, either. It’s just, this is the natural evolution and I’m sure there’s good reasons why things are the way they are. I’m sure it’s the best...I believe it’s the best road the band can possibly take. I try to say that without being too biased.
I’ve been on the inside of this thing and seen the inner workings of it for years now. I can’t go into the details or explain why, specifically, on certain things but, trust me, I believe this is the best path the band can be taking.
"We're still KISS. If you want to talk about original members, you can't talk about THE BEATLES," Simmons told the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, pointing out that Ringo Starr was not an original member of the Fab Four. "You can't talk about the STONES, because they only have three of their original members. You can't talk about AC/DC. They've had different singers. You can't talk about VAN HALEN. You can go right down the line.
"I used to think the rule was you had to have original members to make the band, but now I think the opposite is true. The only ones that survive are the ones that don't have original members."
Simmons says he doesn't even think fans care about the changes.
"I don't see signs held up (for original members Peter Criss or Ace Frehley)," he says. "I don't see anything but people."
According to Simmons, Criss frequently complained about being on tour. During the band's trek with AEROSMITH last year, "The entire tour he kept saying, 'I've had enough of this, I have enough money and I want to go home.' And I respected that."
Simmons was thus surprised at Criss' alleged shock at not being invited back to tour.
"I'm not going to play that game," Simmons said. "You better be careful what you wish for. The truth is, Peter and Ace are sweethearts who helped make the band what it is. But not everybody should be on the road. The road is not kind to everybody.
"The band [right now] is what it always should have been," he said. "I can't say the original lineup always delivered."
"With Ace and Peter, we never did 'Unholy', 'War Machine', 'God Gave Rock and Roll to You', a lot of stuff, because they didn't have the musical muscle to do it," he said.
In the case of Kiss, they also seem to want badly to be included among the pantheon of legendary rock artists, including the Who, whose musical and artistic ambitions far outreach their own. That seemed evident when, during the final song of the not-quite-two-hour evening -- as Kiss performed the Russ Ballard-penned "God Gave Rock and Roll to You" -- the band's video screen backdrop showed concert footage of the short-list hard-rock and pop bands that always will matter.
Mixed in with snippets of Led Zeppelin, the Doors, the Rolling Stones, the Beatles and the Who were nearly self-conscious clips of live Kiss through the years. Although the band has sold millions of records, made millions of dollars and played before millions of people the world over -- and despite the fact that it would be a charter member of any rock and roll hall of fame devoted to marketing -- Kiss' always-limited musical skills and by-the-numbers songwriting that was never better than mediocre do not allow the group access to the privileged club of rock legends that flashed before the eyes of a sold-out Orange County crowd.
Maybe it's a self-esteem thing, or maybe Kiss really does think that such bar-band-level songs as "Love Gun" and "100,000 Years" belong on a list with the Doors' "The End" and Led Zeppelin's "Stairway to Heaven." They don't, but it's amazing what some face paint, fake blood, lots of pyrotechnics and lowest-common-denominator songs will do for a band's career.
Still going strong 31 years into an admittedly amazing career, Kiss' cartoon-characters-come-to-life persona appeals not only to old fans but also to a new generation that was out in full force on this night. Perhaps proclaiming allegiance to Kiss has become a birthright for people to pass down to younger generations, much as fans keep season tickets to sporting events within their families.
Loyalists will howl in protest, but sitting through a two-hour Kiss set is a mind-numbing experience. The songs are, overall, weak; though some have their catchy, sing-along moments, they ultimately sound like carbon copies of one another. The playing is nothing special -- nothing that countless musicians the world over couldn't replicate -- and the theatrics seem a bit tired these days.
Gene Simmons in particular seemed to be going through the motions -- but really, how can spewing a bit of fake blood and snacking on fire keep one motivated through the years, especially as both bits are as toned down as ever? Paul Stanley was the most energetic of the bunch -- but dude, come on, put on the full costume. Who wants to look at a 52-year-old man's hairy chest all night?
Stanley's between-song screeching also became a bit intolerable, taking away whatever momentum Kiss generated. Even the pyro seemed dated, tired and, worst of all, predictable. The audience ate it up nonetheless, but amid the band's relentless quest to become an unstoppable marketing machine, Kiss itself has become a faceless, corporate entity, akin to the McDonald's of rock 'n' roll: You pay your money, you get your product, and you know exactly what to expect. The casual fan probably doesn't even know that drummer Peter Criss and guitarist Ace Frehley no longer are in the band because their exactly costumed replacements -- Eric Singer and Tommy Thayer, respectively -- make those original members replaceable parts and keep things business as usual for Kiss Inc.
Hilsen, 64, once a top East Side shrink, was busted in the Catskills Saturday night after 10 years on the run, the feds said.
Hilsen, who used 10 aliases while hiding out in three countries, was arraigned in White Plains Monday on charges of violating a new federal law against evading court-ordered child support. He was held without bail.
Hilsen raked in $300,000 to $500,000 annually in the four years he managed KISS, but has filed for bankruptcy and refused to pay alimony of $950 a month to his ex-wife, Rita, 62, the mother of his three children.
Rita lost her East Side apartment in the bankruptcy proceeding and has lived in an 8-by-12-foot room in a shelter for the last eight years.
"He complied with nothing. He laughed in the judges' faces," the angry ex told The Post. "His own children were on welfare and food stamps. We didn't have food. We had to go to food pantries." Read more.
KISS leaders Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley were served subpoenas by a private investigator last September before their performance at Chicago's Tweeter Center in connection with the case.
The purpose of the subpoenas was to determine what, if any, financial ties exist between Hilsen and the band, as well as whether any band members have been in touch with him since he became a fugitive. Hilsen had been guitarist Stanley's psychiatrist for several years before becoming the band's business manager. He and the band split in 1992.
"The 'Speaking In Tongues' DVD (which chronicles my lecture tour of Australia about a year and a half ago) is done and will be in stores sometime in August. The A&E 'Gene Simmons Asshole 24/7' TV special is also done and should be on A&E by summer's end.
"I am circling three new acts for Simmons Records. One is a 14-year-old girl singer/songwriter, the other a hardcore band, and the third a pop/alternative group. In addition, we are close to finalizing an Aussie female singer/songwriter and of course, our very own BAG...who, I believe will pleasantly surprise you.
"Still on tour. Still having the time of my life. Still crazy after all these years."
But some would say the band's smooch isn't what it used to be. Just don't count Simmons among those folks. Kiss no longer features guitarist Ace Frehley or drummer Peter Criss - half of the core four. Marching in the Kiss Army now with bassist-vocalist Simmons and guitarist-vocalist Paul Stanley are drummer Eric Singer and guitarist Thomas Thayer. Singer played with Kiss during the early to mid-'90s. Thayer, who toured with Kiss last year, was once the band's tour manager.
"We're still Kiss. If you want to talk about original members, you can't talk about the Beatles," says Simmons, who in a less-than-fair comparison points out that Ringo Starr was not an original member of the Fab Four. "You can't talk about the Stones, because they only have three of their original members. You can't talk about AC/DC. They've had different singers. You can't talk about Van Halen. You can go right down the line.
"I used to think the rule was you had to have original members to make the band, but now I think the opposite is true. The only ones that survive are the ones that don't have original members."
Simmons says he doesn't even think fans care about the changes.
"I don't see signs held up (for Criss or Frehley)," he says. "I don't see anything but people."
In fact, in Simmons' estimation, not only is Kiss still Kiss, but it's a better Kiss than before. Of his former bandmates, Simmons says, "We wish them the best, but truth is part of life."
In an interview with the Post-Dispatch last year, Simmons was candid in talking about Frehley and his drug problems, and how those problems will keep Frehley out of the band forever. He said Thayer used to teach Frehley his guitar parts and often filled in for him.
"We've kept quiet about the self-abuse for decades," Simmons says. "After a certain point, you have to be responsible for who you are and what you've done to yourself."
Drummer Criss frequently missed whole tours, Simmons says. During the band's trek with Aerosmith last year, "The entire tour he kept saying, 'I've had enough of this, I have enough money and I want to go home.' And I respected that."
Simmons was thus surprised at Criss' alleged shock at not being invited back to tour.
"I'm not going to play that game," Simmons says. "You better be careful what you wish for. The truth is, Peter and Ace are sweethearts who helped make the band what it is. But not everybody should be on the road. The road is not kind to everybody."
This newest lineup with Simmons, Stanley, Thayer and Singer is more flexible than before, Simmons asserts.
"The band is what it always should have been," he says. "I can't say the original lineup always delivered."
As a result of the fine-tuning, Simmons says, Kiss can now play material that hasn't made the set list in many years. While the band could easily play hits such as "Rock and Roll All Nite," "Detroit Rock City" or "Strutter" before, they couldn't handle the more obscure material.
"With Ace and Peter, we never did 'Unholy,' 'War Machine,' 'God Gave Rock and Roll to You,' a lot of stuff, because they didn't have the musical muscle to do it," he says.
What won't be part of the show is material from the singer's new solo CD, which carries an explicit title and features a snarling, clean-faced Simmons on its cover. Of the solo CD, he says, "I care not to talk about it, because Kiss casts such a big shadow. Think of it like when Superman appears on top of a building saving the world. He tends not to talk about Clark Kent."
Is Simmons angling for a post-Kiss solo career?
"Anything's possible," he says. "But I couldn't see leaving Kiss for any reason. Maybe I'll do everything at once. Why can't you have your cake and eat it, too?"
Kiss With Poison
When: 7 p.m. Monday
Where: UMB Bank Pavilion, Earth City Expressway South, Maryland Heights
Kiss seems to thrive on pleasing their devoted following and they did so Friday night by giving fans a night they wouldn't soon forget.
Roaring out of the gate with "Love Gun," the quartet, which included original members Paul Stanley and Gene Simmons, and replacement guitarist Tommy Thayer and drummer Eric Singer, dazzled fans with an arsenal of eye candy that is rarely seen on the road these days. Of course, the band was geared up in their outlandish costumes, platform shoes and face paint, but it's what's behind the band that really sets their show apart from any other on the tour circuit.
Pyrotechnics burst into the air so hot that whenever it went off the first 20 to 30 rows felt like they were blasted with a hand-dryer. An array of amps, screens and lights filled the stage as the band churned through a set list that included fan favorites like "Detroit Rock City," "Shout It Out Loud" and "Lick It Up" and rare gems like "Parasite" and "Unholy," which featured a blood spewing Simmons ripping through a metal-horn pumping bass solo, all the while wagging that famous tongue of his.
Stanley is the consummate showman. He is the perfect mix of show-off, shaking his booty to the delight of the numerous female fans and gracious host, thanking the band's adoring fans time and time again.
The Kiss Army, the affectionate name coined for the band's legions of fans, was well represented at the show, which lasted just over one hour and forty minutes. Kiss tattoos, vintage concert tees and yes, folks in full costume could be seen throughout the pavilion.
Though still on their loosely named "reunion tour," the band showed no signs of slowing down. Simmons and Stanley, who are both in their mid-fifties, rocked with more gusto than some acts that are half their ages and expected the crowd to reciprocate their enthusiasm throughout the show as well.
Stanley repeatedly asked the crowd to get louder and they didn't disappoint as they offered the singer mind-numbing screams each time he asked.
Sure, the band proved it has one of the best stage shows around, but did they have the musical chops to back it up? They did indeed. Though original drummer Peter Criss and guitarist Ace Frehley are no longer with the band, Singer and Thayer along with Simmons and Stanley sounded just as amazing as they looked.
The quartet closed out their encore with their biggest hits, "God Gave Rock And Roll To You II," which featured a montage of Kiss' live shows throughout the years and "Rock And Roll All Night" much to the rabid crowd's approval.
Kiss' live show is just as over-the-top, epic and loud as it was in their heyday and that's exactly why hundreds of thousands of Kiss soldiers still pack into arenas around the globe, including here in Phoenix, to revel in all the decadence.
Kiss
When: 8 p.m. Tuesday
Where: The Amphitheater at Clark County, 17200 N.E. Delfel Road, Ridgefield, Wash., 360-816-7000
Tickets: $27.50-$75 advance, Ticketmaster, 503-224-4400
Did you know? Although Ace Frehley is credited on the 1998 Kiss album "Psycho Circus," much of the guitar work actually is by Tommy Thayer. "That's basically true," Thayer acknowledges. "Though it's never been said officially, I did come in and record most of the guitars on that."
From the very beginning, the members of Kiss wanted to be more than just four guys playing rock 'n' roll.
They wanted to be mythic.
They weren't just Paul Stanley, Gene Simmons, Ace Frehley and Peter Criss. They were the Starchild, the Demon, the Spaceman and the Cat -- fantastic characters from some luridly imagined world where comic books, Kabuki and rock dreams collide and explode.
They wanted to be larger than life, and to make their fans feel that way, too.
So perhaps it's fitting that when Kiss plays the Amphitheater at Clark County on Tuesday night, one of their biggest fans will be there -- no longer in the audience but in the band.
Portland native Tommy Thayer is living large these days as lead guitarist for Kiss, taking over for original member Frehley, even donning the famous Spaceman makeup and costume. It's a career peak for a self-described "geeky kid from Beaverton" who fell under the Kiss spell when he was 13.
That first Kiss sighting was in a rock magazine Thayer bought at the grocery store, he recalls, talking by phone from a recent tour stop. "There were live photos, and it immediately appealed to me -- the theatricality, the uniqueness. For Christmas of '74, I asked for the first Kiss record and I got it."
He remembers seeing some of the group's earliest concerts in Portland . . . at the old Paramount Theater, opening for Savoy Brown and soon after headlining a bill with Rush. Thayer liked the band so much that he wore Kiss makeup for Halloween when he was 14. A budding guitarist, naturally he chose Frehley's silver-and-white Spaceman look. "I've literally been playing Kiss songs for 30 years," he says.
"He's very much like we are," says Stanley, Kiss singer-guitarist, in a separate phone interview. "We started Kiss because we love rock 'n' roll and we weren't seeing the kind of band we really wanted. So, I'm not only in the band, but I'm a fan of the band. And so's Tommy."
Rock 'n' roll resume
Thayer's elevation to rock titan might seem unlikely from the outside. But it's quite different from, for instance, the story of Tim "Ripper" Owens, the fledgling singer plucked from a Judas Priest cover band in Akron to join the real Judas Priest. Thayer already had an arena-rock resume from Black 'N Blue, the '80s metal band he founded with a bunch of Portland-area pals, whose four albums for Geffen Records sold more than a million copies combined. But he hardly took a direct route to his current job.
He first met Kiss in 1984, around the time Black 'N Blue's first album came out. Thayer's band then opened for Kiss on a 1985-86 tour. ("They were just a lot of skinny guys in spandex, with huge hair," Stanley recalls of Black 'N Blue. "Like pretty much everyone then.")
Black 'N Blue asked Simmons to work with them in the studio as producer, which he did for two albums. As Thayer recalls, "He said, 'I've got a big mouth. I'll tell you what I think.' In turn, he asked if I wanted to come and write with Kiss. So I've had a few songs on their albums over the years."
When Black 'N Blue called it quits, Simmons and Stanley offered Thayer part-time work. "Bottom of the ladder," he says, "whether it was running errands or whatever."
Over the years, his duties grew: photo-editing the band's mammoth biography "KISStory," developing and managing the touring Kiss convention of the mid-1990s, producing and directing the "Second Coming" DVD, creating the opening montage for the Kiss-themed movie "Detroit Rock City."
When the four original members reunited in 1996, Thayer became a de facto coach and musical director, charged with bringing the musically out-of-shape Frehley and Criss up to speed on their own back catalog.
The reunion tour, and the return to the famous costumed characters, reinvigorated Kiss's popularity. But Simmons and Stanley -- who'd founded the band, crafted its image and kept it running successfully -- didn't bring Frehley and Criss back as full partners. Both have since left.
"Ace seems like he's only really happy when he's doing his own thing," Thayer says. "He's not that into taking direction and being on a team."
In early 2002, Frehley opted out of a couple of performances, so Thayer subbed. When the band was preparing to record a live album in Australia with the Melbourne Symphony, as Thayer puts it, "it became clear that Ace wasn't around . . . so they just said, 'You're in.'
Some fans get cranky
Thayer feels his transition has been a success. But it hasn't been without controversy.
Check the message threads at the Kiss Web site (www.kissonline.com) and you'll find enthusiastic Thayer support. "From what you hear, he is a great guy, never forgets his fans, a very talented guitarist and gorgeous to boot! How could I not be a fan! TOMMY ROCKS!" writes an Australian woman who goes by the online handle "thayer."
But a debate rages over the propriety of Thayer's adopting the Spaceman costume (and of current drummer Eric Singer's wearing Criss' Cat get-up). "Most (fans) simply aren't happy when the band puts two guys up there who are fakes, pretending to be the originals," posts a New Jersey fan. "If they bothered to create new personas for Tommy and Eric, MOST fans wouldn't say a word."
In the early '80s, the first replacements for Criss and Frehley, Eric Carr and Vinnie Vincent, did have their own costumes/identities; Carr was the Fox; Vincent had an ankh painted over his nose and forehead. But since then, the bandleaders have become more adamant about brand identity.
"There's no way we're gonna dilute the image by putting Chicken Man, or whatever, onstage," Stanley scoffs. "By this point, you can go almost anywhere in the world and show someone a picture of Kiss and they'll know who it is. But you'd be hard-pressed to find all that many people who know the individuals. Kiss is a philosophy, a way of looking at the fans as well as the band."
The Jersey fan jokes online about creating a character for Thayer called the Gopher, a dig at his humble first job with Kiss. But it's clear that he's earned the respect of his bosses.
"He's proved himself to be solid," Stanley says. "Not just as a musician, but in many respects, as a person. Hot players are a dime a dozen. There are a whole lot of slimebags and drug addicts who can play guitar really well. That's not what it takes to get up there.
"You gotta remember that the first major show he played with Kiss was in a huge stadium with a 70-piece orchestra. If you can handle that, you can handle anything. It was his turn to get off the bench and start hitting home runs."
You know what you're going to get with a Kiss show before the first flashpots explode.
Greasepaint cartoon characters. Platform heels and glammy costumes. Gene flicking that tongue nonstop. Paul prancing and dancing and flying over the crowd.
But c'mon, who needs or wants new tricks when the old ones still work so amazingly well?
Certainly not anyone at Irvine's Verizon Wireless Amphitheater on Saturday for the only Southern California stop on Kiss' Rock The Nation Tour.
From the opening power chords of "Love Gun" through the final sing-along chorus of "Rock and Roll All Nite," the near-capacity crowd was on its feet for each of the 17 songs in the 100-minute show.
"We're not singing about the desert and the beautiful sky," singer/guitarist Paul Stanley shouted three songs in. "We're singing about partyin' and gettin' crazy! That all right with you?"
Are you kidding? That's the point and always has been.
You don't go to a Kiss show hoping to hear something that will touch your heart or open your mind. Leave the Belle & Sebastian T-shirt in the closet, son. Kiss isn't for sensitive souls.
And maybe you'll feel guilty for loving it the next day. But like drinking too much or sleeping around - essentially the A-to-Z of all Kiss lyrics - it sure is fun while you're at it.
The show opened with a bang - the first of many deafening rounds of fireworks blasted from the stage - and Stanley singing the classic "Love Gun," his ode to his, uh, favorite weapon. Quick switch to stage left and singer-bassist Gene Simmons singing "Deuce," his heartfelt plea for who knows what - the piggish idea that guys deserve more than girls?
Simmons and Stanley, who dreamed up Kiss way back in 1973, are the only original members on tour this time out, which from the standpoint of the music is probably a plus.
Though original lead guitarist Ace Frehley inspired a generation or two of wanna-be metal heroes, he's reportedly struggling with substance-abuse problems again. Behind Frehley's spaceman makeup, replacement Tommy Thayer struck all the requisite guitar poses.
Original drummer Peter Criss, long dissed for his lack of drumming chops, has been replaced in the cat makeup by Eric Singer, who laid a solid foundation for the fundamentalist pop-metal tunes that Kiss plays.
But let's face it, you go to the Kiss show for Stanley and Simmons, always the visual and vocal focus of the act.
Stanley, shirtless at 52, seemed remarkably fit, skipping and dancing from one side of the stage to the other, never wobbling on the towering platform heels he wore. On songs like "Lick It Up" and "I Want You," he played the frontman as cheerleader, urging the crowd to sing along and sing louder. On the group's 1979 disco-metal hit "I Was Made For Lovin' You," he flew on cables over the audience to a platform halfway up the amphitheater to give the fans in the cheap seats a better view.
Simmons, at 54, still plays the Kabuki demon, flashing that ski-jump tongue of his nonstop. On "Unholy" he unleashed his trademark bit, spitting up fake blood and flying to a platform above the stage.
They played most of the hits a Kiss fan would want to hear - "Detroit Rock City," "Christine Sixteen," "Shout It Out Loud" among them. But this time out, they're also playing a few oldies out of their back catalogue, treating the faithful to numbers not heard in a long time, like "Got To Choose" and "Parasite."
And of course, with fireworks and explosions blowing confetti throughout the amphitheater, they wrapped up the night with - what else - the song that will be remembered long after they're gone, "Rock and Roll All Nite."
Which if you think about it, is sometimes really all you need or want to do.
The KISS and Poison show scheduled for tonight at White River has been cancelled. Gene Simmons, the vocalist for KISS has been fighting a sore throat and a fever. Under doctor’s orders, he has been advised not to perform tonight. Gene feels the fans deserve only the best and he looks forward to returning to the Seattle area another time. Refunds for the performance are available at place of purchase.
Ticket purchases made through KISSONLINE can email tickethelp@fanfire.com to start the refund process.
The 30-year-old band made the 13,134 Kiss Army members shout it out loud Friday night at Smirnoff Music Centre.
The stage was filled with monitors and speakers, and the pyrotechnics were as plentiful as they were in the band's '70s heyday. Original members Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley -- the CEOs, if you will, of the Kiss empire -- seem to be unwilling or unable to let the Kiss party end.
And why should they? The fans were as eager as ever for the bombastic theatrics. This tour, which started Thursday in San Antonio, will take the band all over the nation this summer. Big crowds will surely greet them everywhere.
The band played mostly hits from the '70s, including the show opener, Love Gun. The pyrotechnics were fired up instantly and felt like a blow-dryer in the face as far as 30 rows back. Simmons, swaggering in his vintage black-studded, bondage-leather costume, spat blood, breathed fire and, yes, wagged his tongue. Stanley, shirtless in black tights, with his Starchild logo on his fanny -- which he shamelessly shook all night -- constantly begged the crowd to make noise.
A few surprises on the set lists were Parasite and Got to Choose, two songs from the band's second album, Hotter Than Hell, from 1974. Of course, they played Shout It Out Loud and Detroit Rock City, and they ended with Rock and Roll All Night.
During their rendition of God Gave Rock 'n Roll to You, a montage of clips featuring bands from the Beatles to Bruce Springsteen played on the big screen at the back of the stage. Spliced in were moments from Kiss concerts past. It was sort of a nod to the artists that inspire Kiss.
Throughout his 30-year career, Eddie Kramer has been behind the boards for the biggest names in music. But he is probably best known for his three long-term associations in which he created some of the most important music in rock history: JIMI HENDRIX, LED ZEPPELIN and KISS.
The entire Classic Rock collection up for auction includes a mind-blowing 2,200 pieces. Highlights include: recording reels (mostly from the legendary Electric Lady Studios), acetates & test pressings, vintage t-shirts, documents, set lists, artwork and backstage passes. Most represented are the classic rock bands from the '70s but there will also be an impressive range of jazz, heavy metal, rhythm & blues, pop and classical.
Earlier on, Backstage Auctions hosted the successful Sean Delaney Auction. Sean Delaney, of course, was KISS' first road manager and of the very first true believers in the band. Sadly, Delaney passed away in April of last year.
For more information on the 2004 Classic Rock Auction, visit the Backstage Auctions, Inc. web site at this location.
To celebrate the hottest band in the world, the following drivers will be sporting KISS themed rides:
Kevin Harvick in his #29 GM Goodwrench Chevrolet in the Nextel Cup series.
Matt Crafton in the Craftsman Truck series in his #6 GM Goodwrench Chevy.
Ron Hornaday in his #2 A/C Delco Chevy in the Busch series.
On how POISON was selected to open the summer tour: "We wanted a fun band for the summer. And honestly there's not that many bands around who are entertaining and can deliver something other than getting up on stage and singing about how unhappy they are. I just have no patience for guys who are making millions of bucks by making albums where they sing about how miserable they are. If you're so damn miserable, give me your number, I'll give you a call, give me your money."
On his upcoming solo album: "My album's about half done and it should be out around January. I'll work it around KISS and when the time is right, it'll be out. It's pretty awesome.
"The difference [between doing a solo album and writing a KISS record] is… I mean, it's very easy for me to do a one-man KISS album, 'cause in the past, there's been a lot of times where I've come in with finished demos and we would just wind up copying them. But in doing a solo album, instead of writing songs with a band in mind, you put together a band with your songs in mind — you do it backwards. So it's a lot more fun, because you just take people in the studio that you want for a particular song as opposed to writing a song because you have certain people."
01. Love Gun
02. Deuce
03. Makin' Love
04. Dr. Love
05. C'mon On And Love Me
06. Cold Gin
07. Got To Choose
08. War Machine (Gene breathes fire)
09. Lick It Up
10. Parasite
11. She (Tommy guitar solo)
12. I Want You
13. I Love It Loud
14. 100,000 Years
15. Unholy (bass solo, blood, Gene flies)
16. Shout It Out Loud
17. I Was Made For Lovin' You (Paul flies)
18. Detroit Rock City
Encore:
19. God Gave Rock And Roll To You II
20. Rock And Roll All Night
According to KISS frontman Paul Stanley, fans get their money's worth when they come see the band perform in concert.
"People know when they pay to see KISS they're going to get something to see," Stanley recently told the San Antonio Express-News. "When KISS first came on the scene, I think we were a wake-up call to audiences that they were getting cheated. The idea of us coming out and sitting on stools on a Persian carpet or something isn't gonna happen. KISS remains KISS. It's walls of amplifiers, video screens built into the amps."
SPIN 66 — singer Heather Gasaway, bassist Joey Monosmith, drummer Kyle Cunningham and guitarist Meatt — are currently promoting their sophomore album, "Digital Self", which is getting airplay on Mix 96.1 and other Clear Channel radio stations. Audio samples are available at www.spin66.com.
Question: Do you sometimes forget where you are when you are onstage? Like in the middle of a solo, your eyes are shut, you open then and, WHAM! you think to yourself, "Whoah! I am in KISS!"
Tommy Thayer: "Yeah that's actually happened! It was last year and we were playing in New York. I had to pinch my ass for a second I was thinking, 'OH MAN, I'm onstage in makeup and costume at the historic Madison Square Garden! I am flailing through 'Black Diamond' with KISS!"
Question: I am sure you are tired of being asked about wearing Spaceman makeup but was there any consideration to create anything new? Even for a minute?
Tommy Thayer: "No not at all. It's fair for people to ask the question but if you really think about it, why change something about KISS that is so traditionally classic? I consider it an honor to wear the space makeup and I'll always do so with a high level of integrity."
Question: What is the next album going to be like? I loved your work as a ghost on 'Psycho Circus'!
Tommy Thayer: "Presently there are no plans to record a new KISS record, but if and when we did, it will be a killer, I assure you that. 'Psycho Circus' was a great record that had its moments in the classic KISS sense, but it could be bettered."
A photo of Thayer with his KISS bandmates, Paul Stanley and Eric Singer, strolling the streets of Tokyo and doing some shopping on a day off during the recent Japanese tour has been posted online at http://www.tommythayer.com/img/ESPSTT.jpg
Disc One:
01. Strutter
02. Nothin' To Lose
03. Firehouse
04. Deuce
05. Black Diamond
06. Got To Choose
07. Parasite
08. Hotter Than Hell
09. C'mon And Love Me
10. She
11. Anything For My Baby
12. Rock Bottom Live
13. Cold Gin Live
14. Rock And Roll All Nite Live
15. Let Me Go, Rock ‘N Roll Live
16. Detroit Rock City
17. King Of The Night Time World
18. Shout It Out Loud
19. Beth
20. Do You Love Me?
Disc Two:
01. I Want You
02. Calling Dr. Love
03. Hard Luck Woman
04. I Stole Your Love
05. Love Gun
06. Christine Sixteen
07. Shock Me
08. Makin' Love Live
09. God Of Thunder Live
10. Tonight You Belong To Me
11. New York Groove
12. Radioactive
13. Don't You Let Me Down
14. I Was Made For Loving You
15. Sure Know Something
16. Shandi
17. Talk To Me
18. A World Without Heroes
19. Nowhere To Run
20. I'm A Legend Tonight
Simmons and the boys of Kiss — the poster band of 1970s glam rock — are back.
OK. Stop. That's not completely true.
Simmons is back. So is front-man Paul Stanley . But if you look closely, very closely, it's possible to notice that the cat guy playing the drums and the silvery spaceman guitarist aren't Kiss originals Peter Criss and Ace Frehley.
So, technically, Kiss is only kind of back. But never mind, says Stanley. Kiss is greater than the sum of its individual parts.
"What we have built over the past 30 years are four icons. They're bigger than any one of us," he told The Associated Press backstage before playing a not-quite sold-out performance at Tokyo's Budokan arena.
Led by Simmons and Stanley, and joined by guitarist Tommy Thayer and Eric Singer on drums, the revamped band is on a tour that has already taken them through Australia and Japan. Next up is San Antonio, Texas on June 10, where they will begin the "Rock the Nation" tour, an ambitious series of dates at arenas across the United States.
For those who remember the band circa 1978, it's a familiar show.
The pyrotechnics are as flashy as ever, and the set list is heavily laden with such Kiss classics as "Rock And Roll All Night," "Love Gun" and "I Was Made For Loving You." Stanley bares his chest, preens and sometimes flies. And Simmons, wrapped in his trademark bat wings, is still stuck in the oral stage of development.
To keep the vintage Kiss image intact, the two newcomers have been carefully coifed and grease-painted to fill the cat and spaceman roles of their predecessors. Completing the Kiss menagerie, Stanley is a starchild and Simmons a bat-demon.
"Kiss is these four images," Stanley said. "This is what we built. We're not going to change."
"We've never considered a change," agreed Singer.
Change, however, is what has kept Kiss going.
Two years ago, Stanley said, the band was sputtering. Ready to call it quits, they embarked on a farewell tour.
"We thought that we had done it," he said. "We thought that we were finished. But then we went home, and after 2 million people said, `Don't go,' we decided that maybe what we needed to do was change some of what was going on inside the band."
Meaning replace Frehley and Criss — a decision that hasn't sat well with the two ousted musicians and many of their devoted fans.
But Simmons, 54, and Stanley, 52, don't entertain any second guessing.
"You start your band, and you can call the shots," Simmons said. "We've got it figured out. We've got 30 years of history."
"With Kiss we have a bench, like a sports team," Stanley added, noting that Thayer and Singer had been associated with the band for years. "We go, `You, you're in.'"
Thanks largely to Simmons' business savvy and outlandish antics, and Stanley's expertise as a spokesman-promoter, the band has compiled some pretty impressive stats over the past three decades.
According to their Web site, Kiss has played 3,500 concerts to a combined audience of 78 million. In the process, they've smashed 3,400 guitars, used up 4,362 gallons of fake blood and worn "enough platform boots stacked end to end to circle the globe."
In Tokyo, fans ranged from small children to near-retirement die-hards, dozens of whom came in full Kiss makeup and regalia.
"This is our world," Simmons said. "These are our people."
We couldn't say whether Gene Simmons lives up to the title of his new CD. But we know this: He's no dummy.
For 30-plus years, the fire-breathing bassist has been the brains behind KISS; a shrewd huckster and master manipulator who seldom misses a chance to bag a buck. But like a lot of rich artists, Simmons sometimes seems to confuse the size of his wallet with the breadth of his talent. And we end up with high-aiming misfires like Music From the Elder, the first KISS solo albums and ***Hole, Gene's first non-band recordings in more than 25 years.
Unfocused and misguided, this 13-song vanity project finds the God of Plunder vainly trying yet again to escape his arena-rock straitjacket by pinballing between styles with a determination bordering on desperation. One minute he's belting out sophomoric metal and Sabbathy thrash; the next, he's sincerely crooning shimmery Beatle-pop and syrupy love ballads. And that's just a start -- Gene takes a stab at everything from thrash to electronica and hip-pop during these 45 minutes.
Despite (or perhaps because of) the amount of stuff tossed at the wall, little sticks. His revamp of Prodigy's Firestarter is kinda neat, but far too slight; the breezy folk-hop of Whatever Turns You On falls flat; and the superstar collaborations (a wishy-washy soul-pop ditty co-penned by some hack named Dylan and a boogie-rocker using Frank Zappa samples) seem more geared to establishing Simmons' musical credibility than his creativity.
Anyone old enough to recall the '70s might find it all familiar -- from the calculated eclecticism to the VIP guest list, it's the same approach Simmons took on his KISS solo album in '78. Back then it worked mainly because most of his bandmates' offerings were even worse. If Gene wants history to repeat, he better pray Peter Criss and Paul Stanley return to the studio pronto.
Track Listing:
1. A**hole
2. Carnival of Souls
3. If I Had a Gun
4. Weapons
5. Waiting for the Morning Light
6. Whatever Turns You on
7. Sweet & Dirty Love
8. Beautiful
9. Dog
10. Now That You're Gone
11. Black Tongue
12. I Dream a Thousand Dreams
13. Firestarter - Dave Navarro
As co-founder, bassist and co-vocalist of rock group Kiss, Simmons belongs to one of the most commercially successful acts in history. Kiss' 24 gold-certified albums place it at the top among American bands, according to the Recording Industry Assn. of America.
Amid his Kiss career, Simmons has kept busy as an entrepreneur. Last year he reactivated Simmons Records, which, along with the Kiss Records imprint, has teamed with Sanctuary Records Group for new releases.
Simmons says he is developing a premium-cable entertainment channel, although he could not reveal details. He also has an A&E TV documentary in the works.
On the literary front, he has formed Simmons Books in a joint venture with New Millennium. One title due under the deal is "Kiss & Tell," an autobiography from Simmons' longtime romantic partner, Shannon Tweed. (The publication date is yet to be determined.)
Simmons also is reviving his long-dormant career as a solo artist. On June 8, Simmons/Sanctuary releases "Asshole," Simmons' first solo album since his 1978 self-titled solo debut. "Asshole" features collaborations with Bob Dylan and Dave Navarro. Simmons says he also wants to release a 100-song boxed set of solo material he has recorded through the years.
Q: Why did you wait all these years to do a new solo album? And why do you want to put out a 100-song boxed set of your solo material?
A: It's finally time. Over the years, when we'd do a Kiss record, I would write 15 to 30 songs per album to get the four or five that might be used. Most of those songs were sitting around, and a lot of them didn't make sense in the context of Kiss. I want to put out a boxed set because I owe it to the songs. It's not fair that they're just sitting around.
Q: What do you consider your greatest accomplishment?
A: On a corporate level, having more gold albums in America than any other band. On a personal level, I have to give the cornball answer and say getting up onstage with people going out of their minds and seeing different generations of people in Kiss makeup. It does put a lump in your throat, and it's heartwarming.
Q: How do you respond to people who say the band isn't really Kiss unless it consists of the original members: you, Paul Stanley, Ace Frehley and Peter Criss?
A: I used to believe that.
Any rules we have for the band are rules we decide for ourselves. There are lots of bands that have lost members who people might have thought were irreplaceable, but the bands got replacements and the bands got bigger: AC/DC, Van Halen, the Rolling Stones, the Who.
I love Ace, Peter and Paul. They helped me get to where I am. I hate myself for not standing up to Ace and Peter sooner when they were destroying themselves.
Q: Last year, Ace Frehley told billboard.com that it was deceptive of you and Paul Stanley to tour as Kiss without him. He asserted at the time that he was "into a health kick" and fit to play. What would you say to Ace right now?
A: I hope you're happy, but you're not allowed to be in the band. There's no way we'd let you onstage and subject people to your erratic behavior. It doesn't matter if you're an original member. If you mess up, you're an ex-member. And that goes for me, too.
Q: There's a perception that you are the business brains behind Kiss. What are your thoughts on that?
A: Artists always forget the meaning of the word "business" in the music business. It means you sign your own checks. It means the record company works for you, not you for the record company. Once you delegate authority, it means you're diluting who you are; someone else makes business decisions for you. I don't like handlers, assistants and bodyguards, because they can't do things as well as I can.
Q: Why didn't you assume the management of Kiss?
A: Paul has a lot to do with Kiss' ideas. He's one of the best frontmen ever. There's a friendly, brotherly rivalry with us. If one of us goes a little too far, the other one wants to pull him back. So if I'm managing the band, where does that leave Paul? The thing that keeps this band going is the continuing and abiding respect that Paul and I have for each other.
Q: If Paul Stanley wrote his autobiography, what do you think he would say about you?
A: He would say that I'm a workaholic and that I've got the biggest ego he's ever met. And I think he'd say, and rightfully so, that I get a lot of credit for ideas he came up with.
Q: Can you give some examples?
A:. I didn't think of the name of the band. Paul did. I didn't design the Kiss logo. Ace did, and then Paul actually drew the original version, which is used today.
Q: You did some reality-show segments with your family on "Extra" in 2002 that were similar to "The Osbournes." Would you still want to do a reality series now, considering the problems that Kelly and Jack Osbourne have experienced?
A: The main problems with the Osbournes had to do with drugs. I'd still want to do a reality show about me, but not with my kids involved. Doing a reality show with them wouldn't be fair to them, because they wouldn't get a chance to be kids.
Q: Can you explain why Kiss keeps touring even after your so-called final tours? Why call it a farewell tour when most people know Kiss will probably keep touring?
A: We did a farewell tour when it was clear that Ace couldn't continue. But after the tour was over, it became fairly obvious from fans that they wanted us to continue. Rock bands are a lot like football teams: If a guy is on drugs and messes up, get someone else who's proud to wear the uniform and be part of the team.
Q: What are the biggest mistakes artists make in their careers?
A: Drugs, this time and every time. I wish more journalists would confront stars with drug problems and ask them, "Don't your fans think you're an asshole for getting high?"
Q: What's your response to people who say there's too much Kiss merchandise?
A: Actually, we haven't put out enough, because a lot of it sells out. So whoever says there's too much Kiss merchandise is not a marketing expert.
Q: How would you describe yourself in one sentence?
A: I love money, I love women, I like to work hard and I don't use drugs.
Gene Simmons: Career Highlights
2002: Three Rivers Press publishes Simmons' autobiography, "Kiss and Make-Up"; his financial advice book, "Sex Money Kiss," appears the following year.
1996: Kiss' original lineup reunites for a tour and returns to wearing its famous makeup and costumes in concert.
1988: Launches Simmons Records.
1984: Makes his theatrical film debut in "Runaway."
1983: Kiss begins performing without its trademark makeup and costumes.
1976: "Destroyer" becomes Kiss' first U.S. platinum album. "Beth" becomes the band's first top 10 song on The Billboard Hot 100. Simmons discovers Van Halen and produces the band's demo.
1975: "Alive!" becomes the first Kiss album to reach the top 10 of the Billboard pop albums chart.
1974: Casablanca releases Kiss' self-titled debut album.
1972: Kiss forms with a lineup of Simmons, co-vocalist/guitarist Paul Stanley, guitarist Ace Frehley and drummer Peter Criss.
"People know when they pay to see KISS they're going to get something to see," said Stanley. "When KISS first came on the scene, I think we were a wake-up call to audiences that they were getting cheated. The idea of us coming out and sitting on stools on a Persian carpet or something isn't gonna happen. KISS remains KISS. It's walls of amplifiers, video screens built into the amps. New KISS is about as necessary as new Coke. It's still KISS, but the blade's been sharpened."
According to Stanley, KISS are digging deep into their vast catalog to unearth long-hidden gems to perform on the upcoming trek.
"Not only did we shake up the set list, but we also did two small shows (in Australia recently) in theaters where we virtually played a slew of songs that either never have been played or haven't been played in 25 years," Stanley said. "We did a two-hour set without the benefit of special effects or pyro that consisted of 'C'mon and Love Me', 'Goin' Blind', 'Makin' Love', 'All the Way', 'Got to Choose', 'Hotter than Hell', you name it. We're really fired up, because at this point on any given night we can throw in whatever we feel like playing."
With regards to the absence of drummer Peter Criss from the current tour, Paul said, "We created some great things together and I'd rather think about the positive things we did than start airing dirty laundry. The fact is, it's easy for somebody to portray themselves as a victim when they don't want to take responsibility for their position. For all the good we accomplished, I will always wish Peter well. It wasn't working anymore for a lot of reasons and it was best for the band and the audience to bring Eric [Singer] back."
As for Frehley, Stanley said, "Ace, for years, had an ambivalence, to put it mildly, about being in the band because he felt it was keeping him from his solo project. Ultimately, Ace opted out. The door doesn't swing both ways. At some point, you can only walk through that door so many times and then the lock gets changed. This is hallowed ground and you're expected to give a hundred percent. If you don't, I have a problem with that."
Simmons and Stanley also discuss the goals the band had when they first started and how they arrived ... "There was innocence and a naivete about us when we started. We were innocent in the same way a baby piranha is. It's gonna get the job done. But it does it with a smile," said Stanley.
Stanley and Simmons also talk about how their love for the music held them together all these years despite many changes. "It's interesting that off-stage the differences popped out," said Simmons. "The more years there were between us and the beginning, the more the differences were ... usually heightened by drugs and alcohol. That affected some of us and sent some of us into the twilight zone. So far I haven't succumbed. But at least two of the members have gone there and back many times."
The second half of "Headline Act" will feature KISS videos including "Rock n' Roll All Nite", "Forever", "Heaven's On Fire", "I Love It Loud", "Tears Are Falling", "Lick It Up" and "Shout It Out Loud". The episode will re-air on Tuesday, June 8 at 3:00 a.m. and Friday, June 11 at 8:00 a.m., 4:00 p.m. and midnight.
"My Dad The Rock Star", created by Simmons in collaboration with the Canadian animation company Nelvana, tells the story of a mild-mannered son of a Gene Simmons-like rock star who wanted to live a normal life, but whose wealthy and eccentric father make that goal near-impossible.
"Hello! I want to start out by thanking everyone for the amazing number of e-mails and letters I've been getting as of late from all of you. Your words show that the caring devotion to the 'Hottest Band in the Land' runs deep and I'm proud to be a part of it.
"As the Rock The Nation 2004 tour winds through Australia and Japan, I can only say that the response has been overwhelming and true KISS fans are out of their minds! The special theatre shows in Melbourne and Sydney were standouts because of the raw stripped-down approach. Everyone seems to love raw rock & roll. I'd like to do more of these in the future.
"We are also playing the same stage where KISS made their Japanese debut in 1977. Three packed night nights at the historic Budokan Hall in Tokyo, it's mind-boggling.
"The highly anticipated USA summer tour is going to be awesome. KISS high-octane 2004 style is the best way to describe it. As you probably already know, a whole new approach to the song list is something we've all been waiting for years to see. I'm enjoying playing so many different KISS tunes now that have never seen the light of day on the sacred KISS stage.
"Keep being the amazing fans that you are, and remember... It's all for the love of rock & roll!"
"I've been up to my neck with activity in Australia — where, after the KISS dates, I flew into Sydney for three days of interviews for my solo album, 'Asshole'... sixty interviews in all!!! I DO love the sound of my own voice, but after the tenth interview, I could almost hear myself saying, 'Shut up.'
"During that time, Rina Ferris, my PR person there, introduced me to a new Aussie recording artist I immediately took to. I went down to the recording studio where she was working and we connected. She is charismatic, talented and quite stunning. Unfortunately, and for the moment, her name will be kept out of this site until the legal machinery can clear up some legalities... and then, and with great fanfare, we will introduce her to you.
"She has got 'it.'
"I also met with some people in Sydney about a prospective Aussie edition of Gene Simmons Tongue... which, as you know by know, is on hiatus. I am simply too busy with all the other activities to do the magazine right.
"Allen Tuller and I are proud of our first five issues, which can be viewed at the upper left hand corner of this page. Allen is off on vacation. The Sterling MacFadden publishing entity has been sold. However, I still own GS Tongue.
"BAG, our first signing to Simmons Records/Sanctuary Music Group is busy working on new material for his debut release. Very exciting stuff. Wait and see.
" 'Asshole' will be released on June the 8th in North America. It has already come out in selected markets. Norway debuted first, apparently. It entered at number 22. You will soon be seeing the debut video for the first single, 'Firestarter'. Lest anyone think this is a signal of anything new in my life, it is not. I'm simply having a bit of fun with my image — and with the beautiful girls in the video. What else?
"Our Chinese real estate developments are progressing very nicely. These are billion dollar deals we are talking about. And, I'm proud to say I'm a part of it.
"Our new television cable network will soon be launching. Cannot at this time mention the name of the entity, nor give much detail. But soon enough, you will be hearing about this big event. Everywhere.
"Our Korean DVD/CD manufacturing plant purchase is progressing as well. Papers to be signed shortly. Again, cannot be more specific about details just yet.
"Our motion picture company is very close to being fully funded. We have already met with other producers and directors, searching for our first product. More details later.
"Miss Shannon Tweed's book is finally done. You will be surprised by her no-holds-barred directness. I have to say, I am proud of her. She gives a good kick in the pants to a lot of girls out there, who live a fantasy life. She is more grounded than almost anyone I've ever met. She also happens to be gorgeous and that doesn't hurt much, either.
"Our new boxing venture (yes, you read it right) is about to be launched. It will include the most prominent and respected names in boxing. More news as it develops.
"And, I am proud to be a member of a group, that also happens to be my favorite group: KISS. We have a lineup that can play anything, at any time... at the drop of a hat. No moaning. No complaints. No self-abuse. No excuses. Everyone sings in pitch. Everyone plays in time. It rocks. And, Paul Stanley? The best I've ever seen him. We have a ball every night.
"Doubt me? Ask the fans who have seen and heard: 'God Gave Rock and Roll To You', 'Unholy', 'Parasite', 'C'mon and Love Me', 'Got To Choose', 'All The Way', 'Love Her All I Can', 'Goin' Blind' and lots more. We've done a sold out Australian and Japanese Tour (almost done — two more to go).... and America is next. We'd love to see you."
"Firestarter" is the first single off Simmons' highly anticipated sophomore solo album, "Asshole", due on June 8 through Simmons Records/Sanctuary Music Group. The video was filmed late last month in Los Angeles with directors Mark Klasfeld and Tony Perossian.
Like Gene's 1978 self-titled solo album, "Asshole" features a number of outside songwriting contributions and guest appearances. Bob Dylan and Gene co-wrote the album's "Waiting For The Morning Light". Frank Zappa and Gene share co-writing credit on "Black Tongue" and the Zappa Family, Dweezil, Ahmet, Moon, Gail and Frank Zappa himself sing and play guitar on the song. Other guests featured on the album include Dave Navarro, ex-KISS members Bruce Kulick and Eric Singer, new Simmons Records/Sanctuary Music Group signing BAG, as well as Gene's longtime live-in Shannon Tweed and their two children, Sophie and Nicholas.
"I was asked about extremists," he said Friday in an interview with The Associated Press. "And that's what I was talking about — only extremists."
Kiss began a five-concert tour of Japan this week.
Simmons sparked outrage when Kiss toured Australia earlier this month with comments seen as attacking Islam.
"This is a vile culture and if you think for a second that it's willing to just live in the sands of God's armpit you've got another thing coming," Simmons said during an interview on Melbourne's 3AW radio. "They want to come and live right where you live and they think that you're evil."
Angry Muslims flooded the radio station with calls.
Highlights of the interview include Gene discussing his brand new solo album, his many business ventures and the fanaticism of the Kiss Army.
Producer/Interviewer,Dave Forrester said "it was an honour to have met one of the most successful people in the music business and we feel very privileged that Gene would give up his valuable time to appear on our show".
Part one of the interview will air nationally on Saturday June 5th at 10am on the Nine Network. Part two will air the following week on Saturday June 12th at 10am.
The full interview will be posted on the show's website ninemsn.com.au/sofresh in upcoming week's.
Laser light shows were a staple at the museum's planetarium in the 1980s, but the high cost of maintaining the projection system brought an end to those shows in 1990, said Susan Cerbone, museum communications manager.
Advances in technology have brought the laser "concerts" back. The music shows will be at 3 p.m. Tuesdays through Saturdays, beginning this Tuesday and running through Aug. 7.
Upcoming laser music shows include:
* June 22-26 — "Fright Light" featuring 14 songs including "Iron Man", "Monster Mash", "Purple People Eater", "Frankenstein" and "Devil Went Down to Georgia".
* July 27-31 — "Laser Vinyl" featuring classic arena-band songs by AEROSMITH, KISS, QUEEN, VAN HALEN, AC/DC, JOURNEY and others.
DM) On your recent album you've co-written songs with a number of notables, one of which was Bob Dylan.
GS) The story behind, “Waiting for the Morning Light”, really happened years ago. About eight or nine years ago, I picked up the phone and called Bob and said, “Hi It's Gene Simmons, would you like to write a song?” I knew fully well that he could say yes or no. Fortunately, he responded [spoken in full Bob Dylan accent] Yeah, Mr. Kiss.
He came over to my house. He had an acoustic and I had one. I thought he would come up with the melody and the lyrics or at the very least the lyrics, because he is Bob Dylan, but the truth is that he came up with the chords that I used and then I wrote the lyrics and the melody.
The album also features a co-write between myself and Frank Zappa. The history behind that is that Frank, later on when he was not feeling well and was actually quite ill, called me over to his house. I spent time with him and his family and we got to know each other pretty well. Then he took me downstairs and played me some material that had never been released. After the fact, after Frank passed away I thought, wouldn't it be great to play a 30 second snippet and some chords that Frank hadn't used before and that's exactly what I did. Gayle, his wife, sent over a 30 second chord pattern that Frank had and I wrote a song around it called “Black Tongue”. It's the first time that the entire Zappa family appears on a recorded work, Dweezl, Moon Unit, Ahmet and Gayle Zappa as well as Frank Zappa.
DM) With all of these guests, you must be pretty proud of this album.
GS) I'm very, very happy with the record. The first single, Firestarter, has Dave Navarro on it, of Jane's Addiction. It also, has the song “Carnival of Souls” which has my son Nick singing the choruses with me. Also, Shannon Tweed is singing the background on “Whatever Turns You On (Turns Me On)” with her mother Louise.
DM) When did you get the idea to release a solo record?
GS) Oh, about a year ago. Sanctuary Records approached me with revising the Simmons record label, and I said that I was interested because there was a Canadian act that I wanted to sign called Bag. They also said what about a Simmons solo record and actually the thought never occurred to me before they said that. I said, “Yeah sure, why not.
DM) You never thought about it before that?
GS) Well, I've been busy. Acting in movies, producing other acts and managing other acts and producing movies, and also I'm in a band. And KISS is busier than most bands.
DM) I would have thought that at any of the given peaks that KISS hit, somebody would have approached you about the idea?
GS) Everybody talks out their ear, but you have to ignore that. They're not qualified to ask a question. Their opinions are based on nothing. Everybody thinks that everybody's opinion is worth the same. They're actually not. There's a crowd of people standing by a skyscraper, and everybody says, “That's a great skyscraper.” But one guy says, “No, that's not a sound skyscraper, it's not a good skyscraper.” And the guy's an architect. His opinion is actually valid and the rest means nothing.
DM) In your position, I assume that you've gotten lots of people's comments on KISS and your music.
GS) But without qualification. They've never done anything, it's just opinions, that's why, “Asshole” is a good title because everybody's got one.
DM) Just like everybody has opinions.
GS) That's precisely the point. Now you're getting it. And because of that, I'm going to be holding, on the off days of the KISS tour, I'll be holding Asshole parties. You'll be able to go only if you're an asshole and once you're inside you'll get a card which certifies that you're a real asshole. Just in case, you're friends ask if you're some kind of asshole, you can respond, “Why yes I am. Here's my certificate.”
DM) What do the other guys think of this solo project?
GS) Oh, everybody's thrilled, everybody's very supportive within the band. Paul's [Stanley] going to be doing his right after the tour. Once you reach the heights where you have more gold records than any group in recorded history in North America, what do you have to prove to anybody? Now you can just go and have fun.
DM) Is your relationship with the band better now, than before?
GS) Now that Peter [Criss] and Ace [Frehley] are not in the band, Yes. To be quite honest, because there's no drama. There's no unhealthy behavior. I don't want to talk about that stuff ,because fans get really upset. Like when Mom tells the kids what dad's really like, they don't want to hear that.
DM) Was the recording process and making of this record that different from a KISS record?
GS) Completely different, because the basic notions of recording is to go into a recording studio with a band and stuff like that. The truth is that a lot of this was recorded in living rooms, and I took it into the studio and beefed it up. So Bag, my artist, has a small bedroom in his apartment and he has some computerized equipment right there and we did two tracks right there in that bedroom.
DM) It seems that this album is a bit more intimate having the friends and family.
GS) It has both. It's gotten friends and family and it's got some real ballsy stuff on it. The first few tracks will shed a few pounds. There's a song called “Sweet and Dirty Love” and a song called “Weapons” which is also a really hard song.
Instant Live, owned by radio and concert promotion behemoth Clear Channel Communications, can reportedly print off dozens of discs — selling for around $15 either at the venue or later — in response to orders from concertgoers. Launched in February of 2003 in Boston, Instant Live will be expanding to cities across the country by year’s end. An added feature will give fans the ability to pre-order Instant Live CDs when purchasing concert tickets.
For more information on Instant Live, click here.
King of the Nightime World
Deuce
Makin Love
I Love It Loud
Christine Sixteen
Tears Are Falling
War Marchine
Lick It Up
Dr Love
I Want You
100,000 Years
Unholy
Shout It Out Loud (with Symphony)
Love Gun (with Symphony)
I Was Made For Lovin You (with Symphony)
Detroit Rock City (with Symphony)
God Gave Rock and Roll To You II
Rock And Roll All Nite (with Symphony)
On why he isn't playing with KISS anymore:
"[We] finished the tour [with AEROSMITH] last December. [We went] home. The holidays came. We actually finished the last show on my birthday, December 20th, which was really a gas — it was a great way to finish the tour. Especially with the great AEROSMITH — I was really honored to be on a stage with such Hall of Famers. Man, talk about greatness — it was really cool.
"The tour ended, to get back to it, and I got home. Time went on, time went on… My attorney tried to reach them, no one got back to him.
"The word I'm hearing on the street [is that] they were trying to get in touch with me. Well, they have my phone number. It seemed like the phone never rang. I was kind of hoping it would. It didn't ring.
"Time went by again, all of a sudden the day finally came when the contract ran out. There was now no more contract, no extension… anything nothing. So I posted on my site what I posted on my site, which I can't right now, I guess I can't remember word for word, verbatim, but it was kinda, 'No one called me, no one got in touch with me.'
"To get right to it, I got a call from Paul [Stanley] the following day after I posted what I had to post on my site, because I was flooded by [e-mails from] a ton of people. And it got to be that they wanted to start a 'new' KISS. And I'm like, 'What do you mean 'new' KISS?'
"It really got down to… He almost said I was too old to cut it, I couldn't play two hours anymore, they felt that their camp wanted some younger blood, that they wanted to do new stuff… between you an me, a bunch of bunk. I didn't buy it for one instant. I'm listening to this — that I'm too old, I can't play this anymore, I was complaining…
"If I complained about anything… I complained about a lot of things, and I have a reason to complain about anything I complained about — I don't just complain about everything. But the idea [and] the audacity that I, a founding member of the band that would not be here today…
"There is no more KISS. There is only one KISS, and that's Peter, Paul, Ace and Gene. There's nobody else that could ever replace any of us. I don't take nothing away from those two guys [Paul and Gene] — they are the men, they are the guys — but so are Ace and I, and we're just as important to the party. To be told I can't cut it is an insult to me and my fans — meaning my KISS fans, THE KISS fans — who have made my life the best life I've ever had on this planet.
"I always say to the guys, 'If not for you guys, I wouldn't have a wonderful life. I have a wonderful life.' But [Paul's] attitude [on the phone] was pompous. 'We're gonna do new stuff. We're gonna do two hours. You don't wanna play two hours. It didn't seem like you really wanted to stay on the tour anyway.' And I mentioned [to Paul], 'You know what? I really wasn't happy 100 percent of the tour 'cause Ace wasn't there.'
"To be really honest with you, to me, without Ace, it just wasn't KISS, as far as I'm concerned. It wasn't the KISS that I helped make KISS today."
"It was tough for me [during the last tour]. Again, I said to Paul, 'Look, I missed Ace, it wasn't the same.' And his reply was, 'Well, that's the old KISS.' You know something, man?! If there was no old KISS, there would be no 'new' KISS.
"What is the 'new' KISS? The KISS of the 20th century was Ace, Peter, Paul and Gene. So now the KISS of the 21st century is Paul, Gene, Eric and Tommy? Still wearing the makeup, still playing the same songs? Maybe they're not playing exactly the same songs that we played when we were together, so they're playing maybe some songs we didn't do… That makes it different? That's a 'new' KISS? I don't buy it. And I've heard, actually, and I'm here for the very reason, that the fans are just getting ripped off — it's breaking my heart.
"If you go, OK, be the 'new' KISS. I'll take that. Take the makeup off, put new songs out there, put a whole brand-new show up, put new lights, new sound, new bombs, whole new vibe, brand-new look. I'll buy that. I'll take Eric, Tommy, Gene and Paul for the brand-new KISS. But it ain't the 'new' KISS, man. And that's what galls me — it's still the same old KISS that I was told on the phone, 'We ain't the old KISS anymore.' Then what are you?
"You know, Paul was like, 'We showed Peter the door.' Gene is, 'Well, we kept trying to get in touch with Peter.' I wish the two of them would get together in a room and talk, since I know they don't talk to each other anymore and have not spoken to one another for quite awhile — they DON'T talk, they don't feel like they wanna talk to each other. This is a very true fact.
"For Gene to say about me that I had to ice my elbows, which is terrific, my hand's terrific... I had a pinched nerve to start that tour out with with a trainer they hired to get me in shape. The guy worked me hard… Nothing against the guy, I like to work hard, I like to train hard, I like to play hard. I pinched a nerve in the back of my neck — right off the tour. Pain in the damn ass. I didn't like it, they didn't like it, but I didn't like it… I mean, I really didn't like it because I was the guy in pain. Got a doctor, had an epidural in my spine so I could get up there every night and kick ass on that tour. Days off, Gene's complaining that I'm in my room icing myself down. What am I supposed to do? I have a pinched nerve. The doctor tells me, 'You got a day off, take it easy, put some ice on your…'
"You know what, guys in sports, guys who play football, guys who play, take a day off put their hands in ice, put their necks in ice, put their legs in ice. I play drums, it's a physical instrument. It takes a lot of endurance, I'm 58 — I'm not a kid anymore — so it takes a little more. It's called pacing. So I figured, you got a day off, get a little room service, get a movie to my room, put a little ice on my neck, go out tomorrow night, kick ass.
"What I did my days off… I didn't even care what Gene did on his days off. As a matter of fact, Gene didn't even fly with us. Gene didn't travel with us, Gene stayed in separate hotels. To say that I needed to do all this and that, so they let me go because I complained…
"I complained for a lot of facts that I had to, when we would drive together, I had to sit in a car alone with my wife because they wouldn't ride with me, or they'd let Gene sit with me 'cause Paul and Gene didn't talk to each other. So I'm in a car, and Tommy Thayer and [manager] Doc McGhee and Paul Stanley and all the other guys are together on their car, and I'm privy to nothing. I'm a founding member of this band — I founded KISS as much as Gene and Paul and Ace did, and I love 'em all. But I founded this band as much as they did. To be so disrespected... OK, so they put the other guy up there in my makeup, it's disrespectful. Take the damn makeup off and be who you are and quit using us. If you are the 'new' KISS, then be the 'new' KISS. Get off the old track and be the 'new' KISS. To tell the fans that is wrong. And I'm here to put that straight tonight.
"I'm tired of hearing about this. I'm not old. I'm in the best condition I've probably ever been in in my whole life. They didn't even sit and have the respect to have a meeting with me or my attorney, to sit and let's talk about it.
"You know, there was a time that we sat together back in the day when we were really a band, THE band, ate the same crap, shared rooms, Holiday Inns, dyed our hair blue, black in a bathtub, walked to Greenwich village, got hit with eggs, never got any airplay, never got anything great, we were like the worst band considered in the world, but we hung in tough, we went through it, we hung tight and we became whatever we became today. And I'm really proud of that. And I don't wanna see it tarnished. And it breaks my heart to see it where it's going."
On where things went wrong following the band's "Reunion" tour in 1996:
"It got back to the controlling issue. Controlling issue is a big thing for Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley. Always has been. Love to control everything. Like I said, if I had a day off and I took that day off to rent a movie, have a little room service, take a little rest, make sure I'm ready to kick ass the next night, it's my business. If one guy wants to go to a strip joint, that's his business — I don't really care. One guy wants to go have dinner, fine. One guy wants to go shopping, terrific. We had no problems with that on the 'Reunion' tour — anybody could do whatever they wanted on days off, everybody was happy.
"I was so happy to be back. It was such a great thing to get a second chance, I felt, in life. Because that's what it was to me — a great second chance to maybe fix what was broken when we first just burst, when we first kind of went our own way, when I left, when Ace left. It was not the best way, I feel, a band of our caliber and our legacy should ever go. We should have never left on such…
"It happens… We know we're in a crazy business — bands break up, bands wanna go their own way. I was hoping in, you know… fantasy, hoping that it would all be so great… Maybe I'm delusional, but I was hoping that we'd really all get back, we'd be brothers again, we're all sharing again, we're all gonna be great.
"The minute the 'Reunion' was over and it got to 'Psycho Circus', it all changed again. It all got… Now here comes an album... I was really excited, I was like, 'Wow, we're finally gonna do a studio album together, as a band.' And I think the fans felt the same way, 'Wow, KISS is finally gonna do a studio album, a great studio album.'
"The album came, [producer] Bruce Fairbairn, rest his soul, great guy. All of sudden, they're like, 'It's all up to Bruce. Anything that comes in, any kind of material is up to Bruce.' Well, I wrote a lot of pretty good stuff. [But I was told that] it wasn't good enough. 'So you're gonna sing this ballad Paul wrote.' It got right back to that thing again, 'I control. You're gonna do this, you're gonna do that. We'll pay you for the record and we'll say you played on it, but we don't want you to tell the world you didn't play on it. We want you to tell the world you played on it.' I couldn't live with that. I've gotta look in the mirror every day. And I sure wasn't gonna let my fans think I'm playing on something I'm not on — I won't do that. So that started it. And as far as Ace goes, if Ace didn't get anything on the album, he was gonna… again, 'I'm outta here.' So he got one song, and he made sure I sang.
"[The only song on 'Psycho Circus' where all four of us appear together is 'Into the Void'], which was great. That was about the only moment for a minute there it felt, wow, like the old days again — we were back in the room. But my songs got rejected. It hurt, it really bothered me. I was like, 'Let's work on it maybe, like we did with [previous producer] Ezrin. Nothing got rejected with Bobby. Everything we did we did as a team, we did as a group. That's why I think 'Destroyer' was so huge. I think it was the best album we ever did, because we were a band when we did it. When this came along, these two guys again, as far as I was concerned, they took over, it was another controlling issue, 'We're gonna control the issue, you're gonna do what we tell you to do, you're gonna play what we want you to play, we're gonna put our songs on it.'
"As far as I was concerned, that album ['Psycho Circus'] was trash. I don't it was the best thing we... they ever did, because I had nothing to do with it. Then we had to go out perform that album. I was against it because I wasn't on it and I had to learn these songs from whoever else played on it, and it was kind of like I was a sideman.
"I felt like in the beginning of 'Reunion', I was Peter Criss The Catman. By the time 'Psycho Circus' started again, I was Peter Criss The Sideman. Ace was Ace Frehley The Sideman. By the time we got even lucky enough to get to 'Farewell', it was a nightmare. It wasn't going well."
On his belief that money and greed is the sole reason Paul Stanley and Gene Simmons are continuing to tour as KISS:
"I really believe that. Flat-out. If it wasn't about the money, if it was for the fans, for KISS fans, then Ace and I would be up there — we'd be playing right now. Because that's what it was all about with the 'Reunion'. Let's get back together, let's show the world really who was who at one time, let's show the people who've never seen us but really should see what it's all about… By then, guys had kids, they had their own families, they wanted to bring them to the show — we were so excited about all this. It was like, 'Here comes KISS 1996.' We were all so high on that idea. And of course, yeah, the minute the Benjamins come into scene, the minute the jets and the money and the big mansions in Beverly Hills, yada yada yada… I really see, to me, the cancer, I call it.
"I don't pray to money, I pray to God. I love people. I don't get up and have to think about, 'How can I make another buck?'
"They've got a lot of money, these guys [Paul and Gene], but yet… it should've definitely ended on the 'Farewell' tour. I would have been happy to walk away with my head held high and said, 'Man, we did the best we did, we left with our heads held high. We did the [Madison Square] Garden sold out four nights. We did Tiger Stadium, we did all this greatness. And at least we left with class, and we left with pride.
"To me, [the current KISS] a cover band. It's not KISS. I think Eric's a great guy and he's a good drummer. But as far as Tommy goes, I see a guy who used to order my food after my concert, for what I wanna eat when I'm done playing, who, as far as I'm concerned, paid no dues, paid nothing compared to what we paid through our careers — as far as what Ace and I, and Gene and Paul, went through, with the ridicule and the no airplay, got thrown off shows, and eventually almost got thrown off the label. I mean, no one liked us back in the day. We really paid our dues to who we were today and who we are today. This guy is now my road manager ordering my plate of spaghetti after a concert, next minute I'm looking over and he's wearing, literally, an icon's boots, and it ain't Ace. And I'm lookin' over every night lookin' at this guy waving a guitar around playing Ace's leads, Ace's licks, acting like Ace, becoming Ace, being Ace. You know, be careful what you wish for, you might get it.
"Ace put more blood, sweat and tears into this band than anybody else will because he's an original member, a founding member of KISS, and so am I. If anybody has a right to knock him, we do, I do, but to go up there with a road manager, I think it's degrading. I think it's even wrong… The fans shouldn't even deserve that. To go backstage with an album that I recorded on that I made famous and get a Tommy Thayer autograph and an Eric Singer autograph over a Peter Criss, Ace Frehley, Gene Simmons, Paul Stanley album, it's wrong — it's downright wrong. And to pay money to go back and take a picture with two impostors and two originals is wrong. And I don't care what I get for this or what comes back at me, I'm talking from my heart. It's just not right for my fans.
"Maybe I'm the only voice coming out for them [the fans], saying this. I know they feel the same way, because they're paying all their hard-earned bucks.
"I remember Doc McGhee telling me when I first met him, 'I will not handle this band unless it's Gene Simmons, Paul Stanley, Ace Frehley, Peter Criss in makeup, in boots, in full makeup, full warpaint.' He's still handling the band — the band that ha two impostors, two originals and is still playing. Why? What would be the reason? It must be money. I can't think of any other reason."
Hello everyone.
Lately, comments that have been attributed to me in the press have been printed. They are false. Please use your own logic and best judgement when reading media. Sometimes media is responsible and sometimes, it is not.
You know me. And, I believe your instincts will guide you in determining what is real and what is not.
Deuce
Strutter
Cmon and Love Me
Parasite
Love Gun
Christine 16
Makin Love
Got To Choose
I Love It Loud
Love Her All I Can
She
All The Way
I Want You
War Machine
100,000 Years
Hotter Than Hell
Shout It Out Loud
I Was Made For Lovin You
Dr Love
a few second of the The Oath
a few bars of I
Cold Gin
Detroit Rock City
King of the Nightime World
Shandi - Paul alone
God Gave Rock and Roll To You II
Rock and Roll All Nite
Paul Stanley praised the talents of the MSO tells fans they should listen to "good music no matter who is playing it. That is what tonight is all about" he said.
Stanley thanked conductor Kevin Levinson telling the crowd that when they decided to do the first symphony show and searched for an orchestra most were too snobby to work with Kiss. He said there are snobby rock bands as well and that the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra is the best in the world and Kiss were honoured to work with them.
Instead of the full 60 piece orchestra, a smaller chamber orchestra, all made up in Kiss makeup, were welcomed on stage to the finale of the main show. They performed 'Shout It Out Loud', 'Love Gun', 'I Was Made For Loving You' and 'Detroit Rock City' with Kiss and came back in the encore for 'Rock and Roll All Nite'.
Kiss opened the show with 'Creatures of the Night' and are performing some songs like 'Pledge Allegiance To Rock and Roll" for the very first time on this tour.
Kiss Live at Rod Laver Arena, Monday, May 13, 2003 performed:
Creatures of the Night (from Creatures of the Night, 1982)
Deuce (from Kiss, 1974)
Pledge Allegiance to Rock 'n' Roll (from Psycho Circus, 1998)
I Love It Loud (from Creatures of the Night, 1982)
Christine Sixteen (from Love Gun, 1977)
Tears Are Falling (from Asylum, 1985)
War Machine (from Creatures of the Night, 1982)
Lick It Up (from Lick It Up, 1983)
Calling Dr. Love (from Rock and Roll Over, 1976)
I Want You (from Rock and Roll Over, 1976)
100,000 Years (from Kiss, 1974)
Gene bass solo
Unholy (from Revenge, 1992)
Shout It Out Loud with the MSO (from Destroyer, 1976)
Love Gun with the MSO (from Love Gun, 1977)
I Was Made For Lovin' You with the MSO (from Dynasty, 1979)
Detroit Rock City with the MSO (from Destroyer, 1976)
Encore
God Gave Rock and Roll To You II (from Revenge, 1992)
Rock and Roll All Night with the MSO (from Kiss Alive, 1975)
Got To Choose
Makin' Love
Parasite
She
Anything For My Baby
Rock Bottom
Two Timer
Strange Ways
Comin' Home
Goin' Blind
Kissin' Time
Cold Gin
Mr. Speed
I Stole Your Love
Creatures Of The Night
The Oath
I
"This is a vile culture and if you think for a second that it's willing to just live in the sands of God's armpit, you've got another thing coming," Simmons said during an interview on Melbourne's 3AW radio Thursday. "They want to come and live right where you live and they think that you're evil."
The western world is under threat from extremists and a culture that treats women worse than dogs, he claimed in a segment of the interview that touched on the war in Iraq.
"You can send your dog to school to learn tricks, sit, beg, do all that stuff - none of the women have that advantage," the 54-year-old said.
Angry Muslims flooded the radio station with calls, furious over Simmons's comments.
Susan Carland, Australian Muslim of the Year, rejected what she saw as his stereotype of Muslim women. She has two university degrees, she said, and "I certainly do not walk behind my husband."
"Mixing the entertainment world with the political and religious world is a minefield," said Yasser Soliman, chairman of Victoria state's Islamic Council.
"I think it would be good for overseas speakers and commentators to be given some sort of advice in regards to our vilification laws here," Soliman said. "They leave and go back to where they arrived from, but they leave behind a big mess that we have to live with."
Chrissie Camp, who is in charge of publicity for Kiss's Australian tour, said Simmons was unavailable for comment Friday.
The band was due to perform in Melbourne on Friday night and Saturday before shows in Sydney and Brisbane.
Melbourne, Australia is about to become the first city in the world to open its doors to a retail Mecca like no other, KISSWORLD!
Over 18 months in planning, KISSWORLD is a place for all KISS fans to find rare, limited and exclusive KISS products, check out museum pieces on display that will be regularly changed that have come direct from the band, watch never before seen KISS video in the theatrette, find the entire range of KISS merchandise and many other surprises, in-store activities and events.
KISSWORLD is 100% official and KISS are totally involved in the store from the stocked items to the colour of the walls.
KISSWORLD will be opening its doors in August, 2004 and this website will be constantly updated as new information comes to hand. Of course there is going to be one helluva party for a grand opening and we have plenty of exciting plans that will be revealed over time.
For now, we’d like to get your feedback on what you want YOUR KISSWORLD to be and you can sign up for updates so you can know first hand what is going on.
KISSWORLD wants to hear what you have to say and we can make the store even better with your feedback, so head on over to the survey page and register your details now!
We will be revealing photos of the building (which is currently under construction) and other plans as the opening draws closer on this site – so keep checking in!
Melbourne is no longer just another Rock City – it is soon to be KISSWORLD!
Visit http://www.kissworld.com.au
It's no more true now than it was 30 years ago, but on the other hand the spectacle that is Kiss live now is no more ridiculous than it was then.
Like it or not, Kiss has stood the test of time. Six of the 19 songs played in the 90-minute set referred to the power of loud rock 'n' roll, and even withstanding the pomposity of titles such as I Pledge Allegiance (To the State of Rock 'n' Roll) and God Gave Rock 'n' Roll To You II there remains a simple belief in this message that rings true for band and audience alike.
If rock's greatest fear is not growing old but being seen as a shadow of one's former self, Kiss are better placed than most to carry on as long as they can stand on their stacked heels. How could something become a caricature when it was cartoonish to begin with?
Paul Stanley commanded the stage, although slightly hoarse. At 52, he is impressively fit, and regularly shook his still-tight buns with an energy that should have scared many performers half his age.
Towards the end of the set Stanley said "we aren't perfect, but we try" as a statement of fact. They never were and never will be the most fashionable band in rock but among the explosions, fire bombs, flying foxes and soaring drums risers there is an honest attempt to deliver value for money.
Gene Simmons, Stanley's Kiss partner all of these years, was content to look menacing while playing second banana – a second banana who spits blood and breathes fire.
The group is rounded out by drummer Eric Singer and lead guitarist Tommy Thayer, who have rejuvenated the band, suggesting they are undergoing something of a second wind.
Stanley and Simmons remain a formidable team. Cranking out favourites to the faithful like Christine Sixteen, Rock And Roll All Nite, I Was Made For Loving You and Detroit Rock City, they gave exactly what was expected of them. It is no wonder they can still draw a crowd three decades on.
Kiss. Western Australian Cricket Association ground, Perth, May 8. Touring nationally. Information: (07) 5526 2922.
God Gave Rock and Roll To You II
Rock and Roll all Night
Still basking in the euphoric "Friends" finale glow, NBC was unable to pull another win out of its hat on Friday night, but it did manage to tie for first in households with CBS, each network taking a 6.2 rating/12 share. ABC was third with a 4.7/9 while FOX (2.5), UPN (1.7/3) and The WB (1.8/4) trailed.
There was another tie among 18 to 49-year-olds, this one for second place. NBC took first with a 2.9, while both ABC and CBS snagged a 2.3. FOX was fourth with a 1.3, leaving UPN (1.1) and The WB (1.0) in fifth and sixth.
CBS started the night off at 8 p.m. with "Joan of Arcadia," 5.7/11, while NBC went the two-hour "Dateline" route (5.9/12 average from 8 to 10 p.m.). ABC was third with back-to-back episodes of a "George Lopez" averaging a 4.3/9. FOX gave over its night to the movie "Spy Kids," and The WB stuck went with "Reba," 2.3/5 and the season finale of "What I Like About You," 1.9/4. UPN also took the movie route with "Shaft."
At 9 p.m., CBS was still the leader with "JAG," 6.6/13. NBC maintained second place and ABC held on to third with back-to-back episodes of "Hope & Faith" averaging a 4.5/9. FOX stayed in fourth with its movie while "Shaft" moved UPN up to fifth. The WB rounded out the networks with "Grounded for Life," 1.7/3, and "Run of the House," 1.5/3.
NBC took over at 10 p.m. with Gene Simmons' second appearance on "Third Watch," 6.8/13. CBS slipped to second with "Cold Case," 6.4/12. ABC maintained third with "20/20," 5.4/10.
Ratings information provided is from fast national data. All numbers are preliminary and subject to change.
Ask him why Kiss have thundered down to Australia twice before, claiming to play their final tour – the last was only 14 months ago – and he sighs as an irritated school teacher would. "Why is that a problem for you, if fans keep demanding that we provide them with two Christmasses?" As the sharp and articulate Stanley explains, some Kiss members weren't firing, and they genuinely thought it'd be the long Kiss goodnight. "This Kiss lineup (with Eric Singer on drums and Tommy Thayer on guitar) is one of the best ever. We've just come off a spectacular tour with Aerosmith, we did 75 dates doing an average of 18,000 to 22,000 a night. The crowds just went wild, at seeing rock and roll history by two of the longest lasting legendary American bands together. It vindicated that Kiss still be out there, because it proves you're doing something right. Doing a tour that grosses $75 million speaks volumes."
On this Australian tour, Kiss are doing arena and theatre shows, supported by a 12-piece string section, from the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra, whom Kiss played with in Melbourne last time. Stanley says that their set will be revamped. There are songs, he says, like Creatures Of The Night and God Gave Rock And Roll To You which they haven't played live and might get aired.
If this is one of the best Kiss lineups yet, and it's firing after the Aerosmith tour, doesn't it make sense to go straight into the studio? "I have mixed feelings about doing a new Kiss album. The songs everyone loves are markers in peoples' lives. When they hear that song, they remember what they were doing. No new music can compete with that. Even if it's a brilliant record. I'm not sure I want to compete with those. You just can't win."
Although in recording terms, Stanley is currently working on a solo album. “It'll be me singing great songs and pushing the envelope beyond what I'd do with Kiss. It'd be too easy to do a one-man Kiss album. What's the appeal for me? The idea is to retain the emotion and power I bring to Kiss and make it in a slightly different environment."
Will it reflect his interest in Broadway (Stanley performed in the Toronto run of Phantom Of The Opera)? "Broadway's greatness is the drama of good musicals and plays. The drama of Phantom Of The Opera accentuates what could be brought to music. I'm not a rock singer, I'm a singer who sings rock."
Did he take acting lessons before Phantom of the Opera? "I'd taken acting lessons for years. But the idea has been to do what I want and when I want. I don't need to get my name out there. I choose carefully. To do eight shows a week and get standing ovations was something. Especially since many in the audience thought I'd be a liability! Me in a show like that had them scratching their heads. That soon stopped and they started tapping their feet!"
Does he hang out with rock and roll types away from the band? "I don't know rock and roll types. Most of them have no outside interests, they lead sheltered lives and they're boring or ignorant. They don't take advantage of their fame or success to better themselves beyond having a nice house."
So, on the Aerosmith/Kiss tour, did the two bands hang out? "Oh yeah, backstage, and occasionally Steven and Joe would hop on our private plane or vice versa."
And at the other end of the scale, what was his highlight of the show with the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra? "It was glorious to break new ground and it was unique even for Kiss. Many thought it was a disaster waiting to happen. I'm sure many in the orchestra wanted to be part of an event but had no faith in the music. But after the first rehearsal, everyone was all smiles. Anyone who was there, or experienced the DVD, would say it was spectacular and very emotional. The marriage of black tie and black leather – quite incredible."
Stanley does a lot of work with the association About Face. Is this because, when he was a kid, he got hassled a lot because he was deaf in one ear? "It wasn't because I was deaf. I had a malformed ear, and every time a child has a difference, it is dreadful for that child because they're made well aware of that difference. Adults and children can be cruel. The more you educate people they're then less prone to be hurtful."
Speaking of things that can lead small-minded folk to be cruel, is it true Stanley wears a wig? "No. But it's interesting when I hear things like that. It goes back to a superficial sense of what makes rock credible. That's why the Kurt Cobains and Keith Richards are so appealing to a critic. They think they're the real thing. You lie vicariously through them until they kill themselves. So if someone is bald and wears a wig, they can't be the real thing. Or you can't play great rock if you're rich. These are creeds started by frustrated journalists!"
Kiss play two shows at Rod Laver Arena, with special guests Grinspoon, Machine Gun Fellatio and 12 members of the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra for the special 30-minute encore performance, The dates are May 13 and 14. And just announced is a third and final show, a one-off theatre show at The Palais, with no interval or support, on Saturday May 15. Tickets on sale thru Ticketmaster7.
We announced this piece some time back, but now have photography to share and, boy, is it spectacular. This boxed set features all four members of the band and a beautifully crafted stage base. Together, the set virtually re-creates the classic Love Gun album in three-dimensional detail. The band members' poses, their facial expressions and positions on the stage, the, uh, extra eye candy on the base itself, it's all here.
This latest KISS set will be available in August. Until that time, put Love Gun on your turntable and rock out while you enjoy the photography.
Simmons, who has occasionally guest-starred on TV as himself, will first appear in the "Higher Calling" episode on April 30 (along with fellow guest stars Henry Winkler and Kate Jackson) and returns on the following Friday, May 7. He portrays a drug kingpin whose son, also involved in the family business, is killed during a car chase with Bosco (Jason Wiles) and Yokas (Molly Price).
In "Higher Calling," the officers find a headless torso and have no idea that one of their own will later share in the worst kind of grief. Meanwhile, Yokas (Molly Price) is appalled when she uncovers evidence of child abuse, and suspects a dysfunctional mother (Jackson, "Charlie's Angels") and father (Winkler, "Happy Days) of the crime.
In the second episode, "Monsters," a murderous father (Simmons) is on a mission to kill the cops responsible for the death of his son. Cruz (Tia Texada), Bosco (Jason Wiles) and Yokas (Molly Price) are his main targets. As the cops are lured to their fates in different destinations, Yokas (Molly Price) gets some startling family news, and the new paramedic Grace (guest star Cara Buono) turns some heads with her take-charge street savvy.
Simmons - the son of a Hungarian Holocaust survivor -- co-founded KISS in the mid-1970s as the group wore heavy makeup and outrageous costumes to accompany their equally incendiary antics on stage. The band is America's #1 gold record champions of all time (RIAA-Group Category). Reunion tours and an avalanche of merchandising products have won a new generation of fans for the foursome. In May, Simmons will unveil his first solo album in 26 years from Simmons Records/Sanctuary Music Group.
Among Simmons' feature films are "Wanted: Dead or Alive," "They New Guy," "Detroit Rock City" and "Runaway." He made his TV acting debut on a 1985 episode of NBC's "Miami Vice."
"Third Watch" is from John Wells Productions in association with Warner Bros. Television. John Wells, Christopher Chulack, Edward Allen Bernero and Brooke Kennedy are executive producers. Bernero and Wells are co-creators.
You wanted the best, you got the best! The hottest magazine in the world... KISS: The Official Authorized Quarterly Magazine! DNA Publications, Inc. proudly announced today that they have reached an agreement with the legendary super group, KISS to publish the official magazine of the band. The premiere issue will appear on newsstands in late June and will be published quarterly thereafter. Along with KISSonline.com, KISS: The Official Authorized Quarterly Magazine will be the official source for the latest KISS news, photos and tour information.
“I’m very happy and extremely excited to be adding this magazine to our stable,” said Warren Lapine, publisher and long-time KISS fan. “KISS is the only band in the world with a broad enough fan base to have their own magazine and I’m very much looking forward to bringing KISS: The Official Authorized Quarterly Magazine to their fans.” DNA Publications, Inc., was founded in 1993 and is currently the second largest publisher of genre magazines in America. The magazine’s cover price will be $5.95 and one year subscriptions will be $18.95. Ordering information can be found at KISS’ official website, www.kissonline.com.
KISS was founded in 1972 by original members, Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley and have been awarded more gold records than any other American band in history. Having sold more than 80 million albums worldwide, KISS continues to break concert attendance records and merchandise sales records leaving all other bands in their wake. Immortalized in official KISS comic books and KISS action figures and toys, the original lineup reunited in 1996 (in full makeup) to begin a new era in rock history unequalled by any other group.
“The Greatest Rock and Roll Show on Earth” will embark on a new World Tour that begins on May 4th in Australia and will bring their all out pyrotechnic assault to North American shores in June of this year. Celebrating over 30 years of KISStory, the Rock The Nation 2004 World Tour will feature a new look, new stage and a new set list consisting of rarely heard gems spanning the entire KISS catalog.
From the Streets of New York City to the heights of Mount Olympus, KISS continues to rewrite KISStory and KISS: The Official Authorized Quarterly Magazine will document the next chapter in their legacy. The legend’s growing as the story’s told...
"You know, last time we were here I never, ever, thought we'd come back. But you make it hard to stay away."
So hard to stay away, in fact, that Kiss will once again hit Australia next month for a national tour that comes three years after they bade us all goodbye on the Farewell Tour. By 2002, the band were well on the way to organising the Kiss Symphony show with the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra, as well as completing preparations for the co-headlining tour of the US with Aerosmith, which dominated the summer concert tour market in the States last year.
It seems to be a rock star's prerogative to change his mind. Then again, we all have done it.
"All I can try to do with my life is be honest to myself," Stanley says down the line from his home in Los Angeles. "Whatever I do at any given time is with integrity and with a full sense of it being fact. But one of the things in life is that life brings changes in view.
"Thinking that Kiss were done was something that, towards the end of the Farewell Tour, I really began to wonder if that, in fact, was so. Between the audience reaction and the fun I was having, at some point I had to reassess it and think that as long as I can have fun doing it in top form, then there's no reason I should stop. Hence, there's no reason Kiss should stop."
And so it goes that Kiss haven't stopped and will not stop for the foreseeable future. The Australian visit is followed by dates in Japan, then the Rock the Nation tour of the US with special support guests Poison.
While it looks similar, this is a different Kiss. With lead guitarist Ace Frehley fully replaced by long-time Kiss associate Tommy Thayer and Eric Singer back behind the drum kit now that Peter Criss has again been shown the door, Stanley and bassist/vocalist/businessman Gene Simmons are leading the 30-year-old outfit into another new era.
Out there in cyberspace, there are diehard fans - known in Kiss circles as "The Few" - who are crying foul.
"Things do change and if there are some diehard fans who cry foul, then they need to realise that there is no tooth fairy," Stanley says firmly. "There's no Superman. As much as we might like to believe in fantasy and fable, a band is four people and . . . it seems odd that when faced with Kiss or no Kiss, well, I would think they'd opt for Kiss.
"Not to put those people down, because everybody is entitled to their opinion, but if that opinion becomes too vehement, then to me it's not that different to a child who wants vanilla ice-cream and when he gets chocolate decides he's not going to have any ice-cream at all.
"Again, if a member goes home or if a member can't do it or chooses not to or isn't up to it, the game's not over. I'll be damned if anybody tells me how I should treat the band that I started 30 years ago. They can tell me what they prefer but it's sure as hell not gonna stop me if a handful of people don't like it. It's insane.
"The proof of that is that whatever tour we've done, whatever the changes, the truth is it's Kiss. Quite honestly, there's been times when the line-up has been different to the original line-up and it's been better. This isn't about perpetuating fantasies, it's about delivering reality. And Kiss is a reality."
Fans will be pleased to know that Kiss reality will include a re-evaluation of the concert set-list and the staging, both of which have been tied down somewhat by the band's own tradition in recent years.
"What makes this tour exciting is the idea of really changing the set around in terms of music," Stanley explains. "Really shaking up the set-list and the stage and being more free with ourselves in terms of what songs we play. At times, we've had a mindset of what we 'have' to play. With our catalogue of songs, at some point you really have to put some of those songs aside because there's a lot of great material. Otherwise it really does become a bit repetitive."
While some fans have been screaming for set-list overhauls for some time, it seems the band were not only cornered by audience expectation but by the trademark effects that were deemed to belong to specific songs.
"Sometimes I think that some of those, shall we say, effects of the show have become a bit safe, in the sense that they're expected and predictable and may have lost their teeth," Stanley says.
"We can't be held prisoner by obligatory moments in the show because I don't think anything is obligatory.
"For a while now our set has been pretty much the same, with maybe three or four songs changed. It's because of the fact that we don't want to disappoint people by not doing what have become the quote/unquote Kiss classics. But there are loads of them. Like I said, it's time to shake things up a bit."
While both Stanley and Simmons have solo LPs due (Simmons is called Asshole and will be out in June, Stanley's early next year), Kiss is their main driving force. All original or not, they're intent on blowing us all away.
"On the Kiss/Aerosmith tour - which was a massive success where we literally went down a storm every night and blew the place apart - there wasn't one person who said 'Why is Tommy there?'" Stanley says. "It just doesn't enter into the realm of things. Once we hit the stage, it's very clear within the first 10 seconds who we are. We're Kiss."
Kiss perform at the WACA Ground on May 8 with support from Allegiance, Machine Gun Fellatio and Grinspoon. Tickets available through Ticketmaster7.
Although with Simmons' famously long tongue, that might hurt.
At any rate, his "Third Watch" appearances will mark Simmons' first live-action TV acting in several years. His last TV acting gig, as himself, came on the short-lived ABC sitcom "Talk to Me" in 2000. He's also appeared in a handful of feature films and done voice work on "Family Guy" and "King of the Hill."
He'll be playing a mob boss on the NBC series, beginning with the Friday, April 30 episode. When his son is killed in a car chase involving cops Bosco (Jason Wiles) and Yokas (Molly Price), Simmons' character goes looking for revenge.
His storyline will wrap the following week as he lures Bosco and Yokas, along with fellow cop Cruz (Tia Texada), into a trap.
KISS AND POISON TO TOUR U. S.
2.5 tons of greasepaint……. 4,362 gallons of fake blood…. 3,400 smashed guitars, tons of explosives and lights… and enough platform boots stacked end to end to circle the globe……… for more than thirty years, “The Greatest Rock ‘N’ Rock Show on Earth” has played more than 3,500 concerts in front of 78 million fans around the world. And it’s not over yet.
You wanted the best, you got the best!! VH1 Classic presents KISS - back this summer with a new show, new stage and a set list featuring rarely heard gems from the entire KISS catalog along with more fire, more screaming guitars and more spectacle than ever with their ROCK THE NATION tour. And if that isn’t enough, POISON, the most glam of all the glam-rock bands will be joining KISS for the tour that is sure to put the sweat back into Summer!! It all begins in San Antonio, TX on June 10.
Purveyors of decadence and excess since the Seventies, KISS invented stadium rock with their sci-fi Kabuki costumes, explosive theatrics and, of course, their garish make-up. In their extensive world tours, they’ve attracted the most rabid fans: The KISS Army. KISS rocked 800 million viewers at Super Bowl XXXIII (while managing to stay fully clothed), breathed fire into the closing ceremonies of the 2002 Winter Olympics, and welcomed the New Year with a bang at Times Square for four consecutive years.
None of the pyrotechnics and make-up would matter without the music: Destroyer, Rock and Roll All Over, Love Gun and Alive became the soundtracks for teenage rebellion. They have recorded more gold records than any other American band in history and have sold more than 80 million albums worldwide. Now in their third decade of musical mayhem, KISS is as vital as ever. Their 1997 release, Psycho-Circus, climbed the charts and nabbed a Grammy nomination. They started 2003 by performing live with the prestigious Melbourne Symphony Orchestra (all donned in KISS make-up) before a sold-out crowd of over 40,000 fans at Australia’s Telstra Dome. The performance was recorded and released on the certified gold KISS SYMPHONY - ALIVE IV CD (KISS Records/Sanctuary Music Group) and on the double-platinum DVD, KISS SYMPHONY, which debuted at No.1. The year 2003 culminated for KISS with their co-headline tour with Aerosmith, which stands out as one of the most successful tours of the 21st century.
POISON exploded out of the LA club scene and onto the national stage, and Bret, Bobby, C.C. and Rikki never looked back. With a string of multi-platinum records and Top Ten hits that included "Every Rose Has Its Thorn," "Something To Believe In," "Unskinny Bop," "Nothin' But A Good Time," "Talk Dirty To Me," "Your Mama Don't Dance," etc., Poison went on to sell over 20 million records, and garnered a solid fan base around the world. Throughout the band's many ups and downs, as shown VH1's "Behind The Music" episode, which was seen by over five million viewers the weekend it premiered, fans who flock to their sold-out shows year after year have come to expect an exciting, high energy show in true Poison tradition. Says lead singer Bret Michaels, “Throughout our entire career, we have been headlining, but I look at the opportunity to go on the road with KISS as a complete honor. Poison’s set will be nothing but hits, a balls-to-the-wall, all thriller-no filler, stage show.
Tickets for ROCK THE NATION with KISS and POISON go on sale beginning on April 24, 2004. Tour DAtes are located at below the news.
In a posting on his official Web site (http://www.petercriss.net), Criss says his contract with Kiss has expired and that he has not yet been informed what, if any, his future status with the group is.
"No one, again no one has called me, or my attorney about an extension for future touring," he says. "As a founding member I find this to be disrespectful to me, and to the fans that have made us one of the biggest bands in the world. You will always get the truth from me, I have no reason to lie to the people that gave me such a wonderful life. And that's the God's honest truth."
On its lengthy recent tour with Aerosmith, Kiss performed without original guitarist Ace Frehley, who was replaced by former tour manager Tommy Thayer. A band spokesperson could not be reached for comment at deadline.
Here are Kiss' tour dates:
May 27-29: Tokyo (Budokan)
May 31: Osaka, Japan (Castle Hall)
June 2: Nagoya, Japan (Rainbow Hall)
Launched in December, Trunk is projected to do more than $5 million in sales this year, according to parent company Cinq Group.
What sets Trunk apart from many other fashion brands selling vintage T-shirts is that Trunk has been able to get the licensing rights for such top acts as the Beatles, the Doors, Madonna (news - web sites), Ozzy Osbourne, Kiss and Bruce Springsteen.
Unlike most music merchandising companies, which tend to focus on the artists' latest merchandise, Trunk prides itself on being retro. The vast majority of Trunk's merchandise comes from the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s.
Because Trunk T-shirts are considered collector's items, they carry high-end price tags to match. Most Trunk T-shirts have retail prices of $75 to $200. Some retailers sell the most in-demand Trunk items for up to $300.
Trunk's limited-edition T-shirts can be found at such upscale retailers as Barneys New York, Fred Segal, Ron Herman and Theodore. The shirts are also available online at trunkltd.com.
"People pay for things that are aspirational brands," Cinq CEO/creative director Brad Beckerman explains. "The retail price is justified because if people found the original T-shirts, they should expect to pay at least $400."
Trunk says that many of its items are on back order.
CELEBRITY FANS
The shirts have become popular among celebrities, including John Mayer (news), Dave Matthews, Liz Phair (news), Enrique Iglesias (news) and Jason Mraz.
Meg Ryan reportedly insisted on wearing a Trunk vintage Motley Crue T-shirt for her photos in Jane magazine's March 2004 issue. Strokes guitarist Nick Valensi wore a Billy Idol (news) T-shirt from Trunk when he appeared on Spin's December 2003 cover.
Trunk also counts Kid Rock, Britney Spears (news), Dido, Mya, Nas, Jewel, Coldplay and Sheryl Crow (news) among its customers.
Beckerman adds, "At some point, we may have a mid-tier product that we could bring to the masses. But right now, our philosophy is to start at the higher end."
So how did a startup business get so many top artists for its T-shirts?
"I'm not going to tell all my trade secrets," Beckerman says with a laugh. He credits the relationships he has built over the years.
Beckerman previously was GM for sports licensing firm the Starter Corp., which was founded by his father, David Beckerman.
From 1994 to 1999, the younger Beckerman also gained experience as president/CEO of Groove Track Productions, an entertainment consulting company whose clients included the Hard Rock Hotel, Universal Studios and Disney World.
Beckerman says that Trunk's guarantee of quality is what attracts people to the brand.
UPDATED DESIGNS
"Artists are also tired of having their brand names associated with low-quality apparel. We put a lot into our garments ... We even use a lot of the same fabrics as the original shirts."
Trunk also has updated the rock T-shirts of yesteryear to include custom fits for women.
"Back then, rock T-shirts were made mostly for guys. Trunk's T-shirts are made to uniquely fit the shapes of men and women," Beckerman notes.
One of the retailers selling Trunk merchandise is the boutique Dari in Studio City, Calif. The store was featured on MTV's "Newlyweds" when the reality show's co-star, Jessica Simpson (news), bought a Doors T-shirt there for her husband, Nick Lachey. Simpson wore the T-shirt at a concert in Georgia last year.
Dari manager Tiffany Wendel reports, "The Trunk merchandise is doing better than average for a new brand. The Trunk items are very authentic and have a good fit. They also have some of the best bands for their shirts, and they have great graphics."
Beckerman says the Trunk name was inspired by the idea that people keep their most prized possessions in trunks.
Wendel agrees that the vintage look is in demand, which she says is why Trunk T-shirts are selling well.
"No one wants to look like they have a brand-new T-shirt," Wendel says. "They want things that look like they've been in a closet for years."
Trunk will be expanding in the coming months. Beckerman says the company is launching a children's spinoff brand, mini-Trunk, later this year. It is also developing vintage denim apparel.
P.S. This is the stuff that breaks my heart.
The set is a follow-up to Simmons' 1978 self-titled solo debut, released in conjunction with albums by each of the original members of Kiss -- guitarist Ace Frehley, singer/guitarist Paul Stanley and drummer Peter Criss. Issued on the Casablanca label, "Gene Simmons" peaked at No. 22 on The Billboard 200 albums chart.
"Doing a solo record is important because I write so many different kinds of songs," Simmons said. "I literally have hundreds of songs that are demoed up that aren't right for Kiss, and some songs that weren't used on Kiss records I still like. In assembling the album, I went and reviewed over a hundred songs that I had lying around, and then it was by process of elimination I determined what would go on the record. But at the end of the day, above and beyond style, I had to like the songs."
The self-produced Simmons Records/Sanctuary Music Group set's title track will be delivered a week earlier to U.S. rock radio outlets for airplay consideration.
Like his last solo album, "***hole" is said to be a versatile affair, featuring everything from hard rock and blues to power ballads.
"I'm a child of the Beatles," Simmons explained. "They created this sort of hybrid white version of American music. They could do it all -- Little Richard, country, pop, soul, psychedelia. They had no rules. That had a major effect on me and that influence comes through on the record."
Simmons co-wrote the track "Waiting for the Morning Light" with Bob Dylan, while Frank Zappa is listed as co-writer of "Black Tongue." The recording of the latter includes the late artist's vocals and guitar, as well as contributions from Zappa's wife Gail, and his children Dweezil, Ahmet and Moon.
Other guests on "***hole" include Jane's Addiction guitarist Dave Navarro, one-time Kiss members Bruce Kulick and Eric Singer, and Simmons Records artist Bag, as well as Simmons' longtime girlfriend Shannon Tweed, and the couple's children Sophie and Nicholas.
Kiss spent much of 2003 on the road on a co-headlining tour with Aerosmith, pulling in just under $50 million in 43 shows reported to Billboard. Stanley is also planning his second solo release.
A week after Simmons' solo album is released, Koch will release an 11-track Kiss tribute album, "Spin the Bottle."
"I tell her to break the cycle. I tell her not to depend on man for a definition of who she is. I tell her not to depend on a guy for anything. When two girls are talking about a blind date, one will say, 'What does he DO?' When two guys are talking about a blind date, they don't care what your job is," he says. "It's, 'What does she look like?'"
In Simmons' view, parents "shouldn't put dollies into their daughter's hands. That's going to come naturally. Once they're past the pubescent stage, the nesting urge kicks in and they want to take on the guy's name and have babies and become Adam's rib. Then it's the never ending search for someone to take care of you.
"I say give them skills so they don't have to depend on a guy -- computer classes, languages, music..." he says. "Too many women believe everything they do is about making the guy happy, every moment of their waking life. Well, the information age has leveled the playing field. When you don't need the guy's money, you break the cycle."
Simmons, who also characterizes his mother as an extremely strong woman, by the way, laughs as he says, "Listen, I pity the poor guy who is going to try to be my daughter's boyfriend. He's going to have to fetch a few more sticks than the average guy before she'll even give him the time of day."
Simmons also has a 14-year-old son with erstwhile Playmate Shannon Tweed, with whom he's lived for 20 years.
His iconoclastic views extend to marriage. "My daughter understands her mom and her dad never marreid but are happy together. Most people's moms and dads HAVE been married and are not together, and the kids get shuttled back and forth between homes."
Videos included:
I Love It Loud
Lick It Up
Heaven's On Fire
Tears Are Falling
Crazy Crazy Nights
"Spin the Bottle" kicks off with the one-two punch of Twisted Sister's Dee Snider's "Detroit Rock City," Styx's Tommy Shaw's "Love Gun." Also included on the album are Motorhead's Lemmy Kilmeister's "Shout It Out Loud," Helmet's Page Hamilton's "Calling Doctor Love" and the Melvins' Buzz Osbourne's "God of Thunder."
Other artists lending their vocals to covers are Winger's Kip Winger, Slaughter's Mark Slaughter, King's X's Doug Pinnick and WWE professional wrestler Chris Jericho. The first pressing of the album will include a 40-minute DVD featuring behind-the-scenes footage, performances and interviews with many of the album's participants.
Here is the track list for "Spin the Bottle":
"Detroit Rock City," Dee Snider
"Love Gun," Tommy Shaw
"Cold Gin," Mark Slaughter
"King of the Night Time World," Chris Jericho
"I Want You," Kip Winger
"God of Thunder," Buzz Osborne
"Calling Doctor Love," Page Hamilton
"Shout It Out Loud," Lemmy Kilmeister
"Parasite," Doug Pinnick
"Strutter," Phil Lewis (L.A. Guns)
"I Stole Your Love," Robin McAuley (McAuley-Shencker Group)
The star-studded gala was hosted by acid-tongued comedian Lewis Black and was attended by concert industry professionals from around the world.
Each year, the Concert Industry Awards honor those whose contributions most enhance and enrich the live music experience. The nominees are chosen by their concert business peers and winners are determined by ballots cast by Pollstar subscribers.
And here are some of the winners:
Major Tour Of The Year:
Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band
Most Creative Stage Production:
Blue Man Group
Best New Artist Tour:
Good Charlotte
Most Creative Tour Package:
Aerosmith / KISS
Ezrin will be inducted at a special ceremony during the Juno Award celebrations in April, the Canadian Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences said.
"This is the greatest honour that has ever been bestowed on me," said the 55-year-old producer, who lives in Connecticut and most recently worked with the bands Jane's Addiction and the Darkness. "Nothing is dearer to me than being recognized in my homeland. It is also humbling to be put in the company of so many true icons."
Established in 1978, the Canadian Music Hall of Fame includes Glenn Gould, Joni Mitchell, Anne Murray, Oscar Peterson and the Band.
The academy is sending Juno invitations to some of the artists with whom Ezrin has collaborated over the years. In 2002, Bono, Peter Gabriel, Emmylou Harris and Willie Nelson appeared on a video message congratulating the year's inductee, Daniel Lanois.
Nominees for the Hall of Fame are selected from letters of support from industry representatives and fans. A committee then creates a short list from these submissions and typically votes on two new inductees -- one artist and one industry representative -- each year.
The academy is also working on a virtual Hall of Fame showcasing Canadian talent.
Never content with conquering one obstacle at a time, KISS, who are currently rocking hard on the extended leg of “the most successful summer concert tour of ‘03” with fellow rock icons Aerosmith , and who had the #1 music Pay Per View of 2000, now bring you a special offering of “KISS Symphony, Alive IV in Concert from Melbourne, Australia” on Pay Per View. As part of this special offer for $19.95, each customer that orders the Pay Per View, (premiering December 12, 2003 at 10:00 PM (EST), and available through January 2004), will receive a FREE copy of the double platinum certified “KISS Symphony – The DVD” (retail value $29.95).
KISS Symphony The DVD showcases the unprecedented collaboration of the sinners with the symphony as well as features extremely rare rehearsal footage and one-on-one interviews with founding members GENE SIMMONS, PAUL STANLEY, PETER CRISS, and new lead guitarist TOMMY THAYER.
A virtual vortex of in your face, on your feet, heart thumping musical mayhem, right there in your living room…you wanted it, you got it!
"Tell Joe we spoke, and now it's time to do it," Stanley said in a phone interview the other day.
The next day Perry called and agreed.
"I'll let them have their way with the makeup, and I'll slap a guitar on and go out and play," said Perry, whose band will team up with Kiss on Monday at Target Center. "I've always liked 'Strutter.' 'Do You Love Me' is one of my favorite ones that they play live.
"It will be historic because their whole image is a fantasy thing, and it kind of breaks the fourth wall when someone comes onstage with them."
Even though Perry is itching to jam onstage with Kiss, breaking through that wall isn't easy. Neither was putting this tour together. Aerosmith, which shared stages with Kid Rock last year, has wanted to tour with Kiss for the past four years, Perry said. Back then, of course, Kiss was doing its farewell trek. That rock 'n' roll retirement, of course, was premature.
"That farewell business," Perry, 53, said, "God is usually the one who says when the last gig is going to be."
"If you want to talk about retirement," said Stanley, 51, "you probably have to ask Michael Jordan or Sugar Ray Leonard or a whole lot of people who retire with the best of intentions and find it's not all it's cracked up to be.
"The fans never questioned why we came back after the Farewell Tour. During the hiatus, a fan came over to me and said, 'The Farewell Tour was great; when are you doing the 30th-anniversary tour?' At that point, I realized you can always go home."
Stanley said that touring with Aerosmith is "a natural next step -- you have arguably the two biggest American bands of the last 25 years." (Tell that to the Eagles and Metallica.)
With two bands with big hits and bigger egos, how did they decide that Kiss goes on first?
It was a practical decision. Kiss has more production equipment onstage, so the kings of pyrotechnics take longer to pack.
"When they're finished with their set," Perry said, "the stage is on a turntable so it turns around, and they can tear their stuff down while we're playing."
Tongue vs. Lips
Neither Kiss nor Aerosmith sees this tour as a battle of the bands.
"It's not a foot race," Perry said. "It's about getting the audience off."
Said Stanley: "It's two bands with a lot of respect for themselves and for the other. Both of us go out each night with a clear mind and determined to show everybody why we've lasted so long."
If it were a battle of the bands' mouthpieces, Kiss' Gene Simmons and Aerosmith's Steven Tyler, who would win the debate?
Stanley: "We'd have to investigate truth over content. There would lie the winner."
Perry: "I think Steven would. He's like Jimi Hendrix of the mouth. I think Gene is very even, almost analytical, and then he turns into this monster onstage."
How about a wrestling match between the two?
Stanley: "Between the Lips and the Tongue, I don't know. I'd like to watch. I'll buy the popcorn."
Perry: "Gene can breathe fire. But Steven is really fast on his feet and agile. It would be a tough one to call."
Like a heavyweight championship fight, the Kiss/Aerosmith tour has expensive tickets -- $125 tops, which is about twice the price of a Kiss farewell ticket in 2000 and $50 more than Aerosmith charged here last year.
"You get two headliners, and it costs a lot to put a show like this up," Perry said, adding that the bands split the ticket revenues equally. "It's a big production."
With two headliners, Kiss and Aerosmith are limited to about 75 minutes apiece onstage, much shorter than their usual shows. Is that easier or harder?
"You tend to trim away some of the fat that has become part of arena shows," Stanley said. "It means taking out some of the drum solos, extended guitar solos -- things that are considered the norm but they're filler. There is no time to catch your breath. I like that; it pushes the limits physically and musically."
Said Perry: "In one sense, it's easier. Physically, you're playing a shorter amount of time, but because of that we're putting more energy into the show. It's like doing a 50-yard sprint as opposed to a 3-mile marathon."
New Kiss guitarist
Stanley wasn't sure Kiss would be on tour if it wasn't with Aerosmith. The band has a new album, "Kiss Symphony: Alive IV," the quartet's classics recorded live with a 70-piece orchestra in Australia, in full makeup with pyrotechnics (there's a live DVD as well). And there's a new book, "Kiss: Behind the Mask -- The Official Authorized Biography."
The group is touring with a new guitarist, Tommy Thayer, who used to be the band's road manager.
Stanley was vague when asked about original guitarist Ace Frehley, who has battled chemical demons. When approached last year about returning to the road with Kiss, Frehley preferred a solo career, Stanley said, "so we decided at that point, once and for all, that we'd close the door [for Frehley] and move on."
For Kiss' 1996 reunion tour, Thayer had helped Frehley re-learn his guitar parts. "Tommy's written with us, been in the studio with us," Stanley said. "The band is more consistent night to night; we're in better form than in longer than I can remember."
Stanley, who is working on a solo album, is confident that Kiss will press on in concert, but he's not sure if there's a new album in the future.
Aerosmith is finishing a blues record, tentatively titled "Honkin' on Bobo," due in March. It will feature interpretations of songs by Muddy Waters, Little Walter and others, plus some originals in the blues-rock vein. Expect to hear two or three of these numbers at Target Center.
But if you expect Kiss -- with or without makeup -- to sit in with Aerosmith, dream on.
Description: You wanted the best you got the best….KISS Symphony, Alive IV in Concert! KISS, the legendary hard rock band that brought you the #1 music Pay Per View of 2000 and has sold more than 80 million albums, rocked the road this summer with sold-out venues on tour with Aerosmith and will “rock and roll” your house this December/January. This special concert presentation features KISS performing classics including “Rock And Roll All Nite,” “Deuce,” “Love Gun,” and “Detroit Rock City” accompanied by the 60-member Melbourne Symphony Orchestra all sporting full KISS makeup. Joining founding KISS members Paul Stanley, Gene Simmons, and Peter Criss for the concert is new lead guitarist Tommy Thayer.
Event Date/Time: Premiere’s December 12, 2003
Location: Taped in Melbourne, Australia 2003
Replays: through January 31, 2004
Program Length: 2 hour (106 minutes)
Suggested Retail Price: $19.95
Rating: TV- PG
Technical Delivery: DIRECTV, EchoStar, TVN, Cable TBD
A KISS Symphony, Alive IV DVD will be delivered to each customer that purchases the Pay Per View.
Tonight at 8, however, Stanley is working for an audience not long out of diapers, as his voice - and the image of his band - appear in the WB special "What's New Scooby-Doo?"
"As appealing as it would have been anyway, when you have a son who wears a Scooby-Doo T-shirt, it's one way to win brownie points," said Stanley, whose band is known for its wild makeup.
He did the voice work about four months ago, between rehearsals for the current Kiss-Aerosmith tour.
In the special, Scooby-Doo and Co. head to the town of Banning Junction to spend time with Velma's aunt (voiced by Julia Sweeney). There they head to a Halloween celebration where Kiss performs and Stanley talks to the visitors.
"Listening to Casey [Kasem] do Shaggy was just great," Stanley said. "Everyone was sitting around, almost like you were doing a script reading."
Stanley had no say in the story line. "Actually, I was hoping to get a little action with Velma's cousin," he said.
The voice for Velma's cousin, by the way, was supplied by Playboy Playmate-turned-actress Jenny McCarthy.
There have already been comic books, TV specials and toys based on the band, and "Scooby-Doo" is exposing Kiss to a new genera-tion, much of which may be totally unaware of the band.
Still, Stanley said, tonight's show is not about building a new fan base for the group, which started out in the '70s.
"I'm blessed," he said. "I've worked real hard to be this blessed. There's really no strategy to try to get new fans. I think I've earned the right to enjoy myself, and it seemed like fun to be part of this 'Scooby-Doo' Halloween special."
So what's the freaky musical act — which is currently touring the U.S. with Aerosmith — doing on TV with Shaggy and Scoobs? "Well, it doesn't veer towards Hamlet or anything," he wisecracks. "The whole gang goes to this town called Banning Junction to spend Halloween with Velma's aunt and uncle. You've got ghosts and mischievous things going on. We're part of the plot. There's a mystery to be solved and it is, in true Scooby fashion."
How did the makeup-mad KISS boys like the animated Halloween versions of themselves? "Nothing could possibly match me in the flesh!" Stanley crows. "Some people are considered a ham — I'm the whole pig."
On a more serious note, KISS had a real-life scare last Thursday. Their former guitarist, Bruce Kulick — who left the band about eight years ago — was among those injured when an unidentified man fired a 9 mm automatic pistol into the crowd at a Sunset Strip nightclub. One man was shot in the foot, while the 49-year-old Kulick was shot in the leg, and a second bullet grazed his head. How is he doing now?
"Bruce is fine," Stanley assures fans. "It was a near disaster, but he is fine, considering what could've happened. When something is close enough to graze your head, an inch or two over is a horrific thought. He was [treated and] released from the hospital the next day."
Then, chuckling, the rocker adds: "Maybe it's someone's way of telling you, 'You don't belong in the clubs, so it's time to go home!'"
Toronto Cineplex Odeon
Toronto Queensway
Scarborough Cineplex Odeon Varsity
Scarborough Cineplex Odeon Eglinton
Scarborough Town Centre
Barrie Cineplex Odeon Barrie Grande
Waterloo Galaxy Conestoga Mall
Peterborough Galaxy Peterborough Square
Cornwall Galaxy Cornwall
Sault Ste. Marie Galaxy Station Mall
North Bay Galaxy North Bay
Regina Galaxy Normanview
Calgary Cineplex Odeon Sunridge
Edmonton Cineplex Odeon South Edmonton
Grande Praire Landmark Jan
Vancouver Cineplex Odeon Strawberry Hill
Nanaimo Landmark Avalon
Abbotsford Landmark Towne Cinema
Kelowna Landmark Grand 10
Fort St. John Landmark Aurora
Montreal Guzzo Sphèretech
Montreal Guzzo Lacordaire
Halifax Empire Bayers Lake
It was an enjoyable time-machine ride through three decades of radio regulars and rock-star preening.
But there was a reason Aerosmith closes the show on this "Rockimus Maximus" tour. Kiss remains a flashy but predictable throwback to the wonderful excess that defined the '70s concert experience, while the Boston quintet again proved that it has plenty of fuel left in its tank.
Playing on a stage dressed with nothing but double-stacked amps, Aerosmith spun nearly 30 years of hits from "Mama Kin" to "Jaded," eschewing most of the band's second-wind power ballads. The show was built around the enduring charisma of Steven Tyler and Joe Perry, the erstwhile Toxic Twins who now seem determined to lead Aerosmith as far into the future as they care to go.
Looking purposefully scruffy, Tyler was in strong voice early on, shuffling and strutting while hammy guitarist Perry took any excuse for a fiery, protracted solo. As always, their supporting cast of original members allowed the pair to hog the spotlight, churning out the boogie riffs while Tyler and Perry enjoyed male-bonding moments around a shared microphone.
Unlike many ultra-veteran rock bands, Aerosmith's fastest songs were never sluggish. Even so, the band has earned the right to diversify a bit, which it did by previewing a pair of songs from its upcoming blues album. But while both were diverting, neither was riveting.
Meanwhile, Kiss' perpetual farewell tour should be sponsored by Energizer. Watching the band -- with Tommy Thayer replacing Ace Frehley in the Spaceman get-up -- is like popping a favorite movie into the VCR: You know you'll like what you get, but there aren't any surprises. These days, the pyrotechnics and hydraulics aren't as far over the top as they once were, and the song list remains the same. Still, it's impossible to deny the fun factor.
A shirtless Paul Stanley trotted out his well-rehearsed shouted ad-libs, stopping at one point to play the intro to "Stairway to Heaven." "You didn't come here tonight to hear that, didja?" he yelled. Naw. Instead, it was the typical doses of "Black Diamond," "100,000 Years," "Love Gun," etc., though Thayer did provide a bit of a fresh shred on guitar.
Of course, when it was all over, the buzzed crowd was buzzing. The fact remains that the Kiss live spectacle is something that every concert fan should experience. Just remember that if you're going back for seconds or thirds, you know what's coming.
Furthering the old-school theme, the same bill returns to the area in December at the L.A. Forum.
The November 8 show is a benefit for Safe Harbor Animal Hospital & Rescue. Kulick is an animal lover, and he owns a small brown dog named "Joey." When he saw the bullet wound in his leg, one of the first things that went through his mind was, "How will I walk my dog?"
Kulick was shot through the leg and had his head grazed after leaving a show by Motley Crue frontman Vince Neil at the Key Club last Thursday (October 16). The guitarist was the victim of random gunfire from a man in front of the Rainbow Bar & Grill, which is just down the block on Sunset Boulevard. Kulick was taken to Cedars-Sinai Medical Center for treatment after being examined by Emergency Medical Technicians at the scene. He's now home and resting.
The shooter, who also hit a second random person, was restrained by people at the scene, arrested, and charged with assault with a deadly weapon.
Kulick was the lead guitarist in Kiss between 1984 and 1995, when original member Ace Frehley returned to the group. He's been in Grand Funk since 2000.
According to Kulick, "I felt my leg hit and my temple grazed. I shouted 'Get down,' but never saw the shooter and did not realize the gunshots were from a half block up the street at the Rainbow... It was certainly a case of being in the wrong place at the wrong time, but I was very fortunate my wounds weren't more serious."
Kulick was examined at the scene and taken to Cedars-Sinai Medical Center for treatment, along with a second shooting victim, and the guitarist is now home and resting.
Kulick added, "I've received many messages and phone calls wishing me well and really appreciate all the concerns and messages from my fans around the world."
The shooter was at the Rainbow Bar & Grill when he got into a fight, went out to his car to get his nine-millimeter handgun, and began firing wildly, getting off between four and seven shots. Neither Kulick nor the second victim were being targeted.
After he began shooting, the gunman was wrestled to the ground by the crowd. An eyewitness told LAUNCH that the shooter was hit with several bottles and kicked in the head during a severe beating before police arrived. The gunman was treated at an area hospital for his injuries. He was also charged with assault with a deadly weapon.
Kulick said, "I'm very grateful for the immediate response of both the crowd and the doctors, and--obviously--the EMS crews. I'm fine and very thankful to be alive."
Kulick has been a member of Grand Funk Railroad for three years. Before that, he was the lead guitarist in Kiss from 1984 until 1995.
Kulick is looking forward to getting back on the road once his doctors give him the green light. Grand Funk's next show is a benefit for the Safe Harbor Animal Rescue And Hospital in Jupiter, Florida, on November 8.
One other person was slightly injured in the shooting rampage. The gunman was quickly wrestled to the ground by a nightclub patron and held down by others until police arrived.
Kulick, 49, was a short distance from the Rainbow Bar & Grill nightclub on Sunset Boulevard at about 1:20 a.m. PDT when he was hit in the leg and grazed in the head, a sheriff's spokesman said. He was treated at a hospital and released. Another man was shot in the foot, deputies said.
The gunman, who was not immediately identified by police, was in jail on Thursday on suspicion of assault with a deadly weapon. He had left the Sunset Strip club after arguing with several people but returned a few minutes later with a 9mm automatic pistol, deputies said.
The gunman fired several rounds into a crowd of about 300 people waiting outside the club or sitting in its outdoor restaurant, officials said.
Kulick and his representatives could not immediately be reached for comment.
The New York-born Kulick performed with KISS from 1984 to 1995, leaving after the original members donned their black-and-white makeup to embark on a nostalgia tour.
Kulick has since released a solo album and performed with the band Union and 1970s rockers Grand Funk Railroad.
The trek, which rolls into Phoenix tonight (Oct. 8), is now slated to wrap Dec. 20 in Fresno, Calif. Several major markets will be revisited, including Boston, Detroit, New York and Los Angeles.
Meanwhile, sources say each band is prepping separate arena tours for next year. Aerosmith will also release a long-awaited collection of blues-inspired songs on Columbia in early 2004.
The Kiss/Aerosmith combination has been a potent one at the box office. According to figures for 24 shows submitted to Billboard Box Score, the tour has played to 85% capacity and grossed more than $31.5 million.
"There are a lot of people who see this as the tour of the year, and a lot of people want to see it," Kiss principal Paul Stanley (news) told Billboard in August. "As long as everybody's enjoying themselves, that's the key to it -- we always wind up going full-circle to 'this has to be enjoyable.' Fans know when you're having a great time, so as long as this is fun, we'll continue to do it. If it truly turned into the battle of the bands, we'd go home."
Kiss/Aerosmith's tour dates are below the rest of the news
He may be the new guitarist that took over for Ace Frehley, but he's no newcomer to the legendary Kiss family. Recently I had the opportunity to interview Kiss guitarist Tommy Thayer. Tommy has worked with Kiss for years, earned respect, trustworthy creative positions, created killer guitar riffs, and now proves that he's worthy of their make-up.
Tommy Thayer is talented: he has produced, directed, played, and continues to test his musical limits. He truly is as rock n' roll as they come, without the attitude. "I'm not a cocky rockstar yet," he said. Tommy appreciates the little people in the business because, hey, he used to be one. "I have a much better attitude from working behind the scenes."
Born in Portland, Oregon in 1960, Thayer lived his teen years 70's style. Seventies hard rock music became his driving force, musically. He was a guitarist at 13. He lived and breathed music from garage band to garage band until his big break.
Thayer claims to have graduated high school in "Rock n' Roll 101" and went straight for the big leagues. "The closest I got to college was playing at frat parties." And it is a good thing. Thayer could not sit still. A band was in the making.
His previous band Black N' Blue was signed to Geffen Records in 1984 and recorded four albums, two produced by Kiss' very own Gene Simmons. "That's when I met Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley. That's where it started."
His encounter with Kiss led to a string of collaboration projects and, most importantly, earned him the confidence of all four band members. He has coordinated and managed the official 1995 Worldwide KISS Convention tour, directed and produced the double platinum Second Coming DVD, helped on the nine-pound Kisstory volume, created the opening title medley featured in New Line Cinema's film "Detroit Rock City," co-written songs including "Betrayed," "The Street Giveth And The Street Taketh Away," and "Childhood's End," and the list goes on.
Original guitarist Frehley even needed Thayer's assistance in remembering his signature guitar riffs in preparation for the band's first reunion tour.
"They asked me to help out. I really enjoyed it. It was a cool experience. It was kind of bizarre and ironic. That stuff influenced me when I was learning how to play guitar. We both got a kick out of it. Ace gave me props and we both had fun." What's more fun than becoming part of the band you grew up idolizing?
Putting on the make-up for the first time with the guys was not as strange as he suspected. It turns out he has worn it for years... dating back to "Halloween when [he] was 12." (Note to self: start dressing like Britney Spears for Halloween.)
Last year in Jamaica was the first time Thayer wore white, black and silver on stage with the other three frighteningly talented painted clowns; his guitar in hand just like in all those childhood dreams. "I was a little nervous. When you are in the makeup it puts you in the right state of mind. You become the character... it's kind of fun. It's Halloween all over again." But it was a long road from trick-or-treating to the rockstar treatment.
Last year when Frehley announced his leaving, it was obvious the band would not suffer. Thayer was a shoe-in, the obvious guy for the job. "Things started working well in Japan on tour and then it just happened. Everything fell into place."
Kiss is currently touring the U.S. with Aerosmith. "I like a lot of their stuff, especially the old songs. I like 'One Way Street' from their first album and 'Seasons of Wither,'" Thayer confessed. Each band has about a 75 minute set mixed with new songs and a whole lot of classics. After all, the bands have a lot to choose from, with over thirty years under each of their belts. The Kiss/Aerosmith tour seems to be America's hot ticket this summer.
"The thing that is unique about what we do is that the members always put their own makeup on and always have. Before a show it's the four of us in our inner sanctum listening to tunes. The transformation process takes about two hours."
Although his original Black N' Blue has taken some extensive time off, they did play a special benefit concert in June at Portland's Roseland Theater for a friend with ALS, also known as Lou Gehrig's disease. Their set raised money for a friend in need and gave the guys an excuse to go back in time and rock like the 80s, pre-big-boot, space suit days.
Thayer enjoys hometown shows. "I've played a lot of Portland clubs throughout the years, a lot in the early 80's. Most of those are gone or the name has changed but I still really like the Roseland Theater. The Paramount Theater, now called the Schnitzer Hall, used to be the cool place to go."
Thayer is always up for a challenge and enjoys all aspects of the recording process. His Portland label EON Records with co-owner and brother John Thayer is something "we haven't been super active with lately but whenever there is something we're passionate about we'll do it. We'll fire things up again, we've just been too busy lately."
Busy indeed: his four page spread in last month's Guitar World magazine and Portland's label guide Two Louies both recognize Thayer. Their tour was also mentioned in Rolling Stone in April. Oh yeah, and traveling the country!
He has helped the band for years but now the recognition he deserves finds him every night with screams from the crowd.
The public seems to have adjusted well to the change."There's overall 99.9% totally positive feedback, just great feedback. There are a couple of cheap shots on the Internet but that doesn't bother me. I know where I stand."
Thayer now plays with the big boys he grew up mimicking.His career proves that with a little determination, talent and perseverance nothing is out of reach, not even iconic rock bands."I really appreciate everyone's support and I'm super fortunate to be doing what I'm doing." Learn more about Thayer at www.tommythayer.com.
"I've got a knot in my gut at times for Gene (Simmons) and Paul (Stanley)," Criss explained. "And I miss Ace. I really do. I wish he was up here. But there are times I want to kill him. It's definitely a love/hate relationship. When we're not on the road we don't even talk to each other. We have nothing in common, really. Yet when the war paint is on and we step on the stage, the magic is there."
Besides, he adds: "I refuse to do a bad show just because I want to shoot Gene in the back of the head."
Stanley and Simmons were served in conjunction with a case against Jesse Hilsen, the band's former business manager. Hilsen fled to South Africa in 1994 and became a fugitive rather than pay $2 million or more to his former wife Rita in their divorce settlement, according to the Chicago Tribune.
Among other things, the Kiss leaders are being asked whether any bandmembers have been in contact with Hilsen since 1994, whether there are still any financial ties between the band and Hilsen, and whether Kiss is in possession of any of Hilsen's assets.
Hilsen's relationship with Kiss goes back about 20 years, to when he was Stanley's psychiatrist. He became the band's business manager in the late 1980s and continued in that role until 1992, when he and Kiss parted company.
The newspaper reports that Stanley and Simmons "were incredibly gracious" while being served with the papers. The process server wished them a happy New Year in Hebrew, since Friday was the start of Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year, and they wished him happy New Year back, also in Hebrew.
Kiss hasn't issued a statement about the subpoenas or the lawsuit.
The Hilsens were divorced in 1988, but Jesse Hilsen didn't make any alimony or child-support payments, and he declared bankruptcy in 1993 before leaving the country. Rita Hilsen has been living in homeless shelters for more than 10 years, since losing her home.
The program is overseen at Signatures by Dan Cooper, senior VP of artist relations, who says Signatures views the VIP packages as an extension of its merchandising deal with the artists.
The program began in March with Hagar. The $200 package offers fans an opportunity to get onstage with the rocker, as well as a meet 'n' greet with a photo op, a T-shirt, a coupon for Hagar's online store at redrocker.com and a yard glass filled with Hagar's signature Waborita, a margarita made with his Cabo Wabo tequila.
Each deal is cut individually with the act. "The artist has to be in on this to sequester the tickets," Cooper says. "We feel like we are the only ones positioned to combine merchandise with tickets and the VIP experience. We're already in business with the artist, we're already paying a royalty fee -- all we have to do is come up with a split on these packages."
In the case of Mana, its $350 platinum package includes a VIP-section ticket to the show, an autographed tour program, an exclusive concert T-shirt, a VIP laminate and a meet 'n' greet with the band. The $150 gold package includes a ticket for a preferred highest-priced seat, a collectible laminate and a souvenir tour program. Kiss has been on the high end so far, with $1,000 VIP packages.
For McGraw's recent Swampstock show in Rayville, La., tickets were available only through McGraw's official Web site, which linked to Signature's McGraw store; through Ticketmaster or through a boot shop in Rayville.
"We sold as many tickets as Ticketmaster did through the pre-sale," Cooper says, adding that the response has been "amazing. The key to this is keeping the fans happy. As fast as word spreads if something is a good thing, it spreads even faster if something is a bad thing. We really hand-hold our fans, especially the platinum fans. We give them our on-site guy's cell phone number. They're our personal guests."
Promoters, notoriously leery of any sale of a ticket above face value, "are, for the most part, OK with this," Cooper says, adding that in most cases, package buyers still pay full price for a ticket. "We're not trying to cut out the promoter's allocation; we're taking what already goes to the artists."
Yes, lots of people showed up at Borders on West End Avenue. In fact, more than 800 came for autographs of his book, Sex Money Kiss, and all sorts of other things, including dolls, lunchboxes and children's pajamas. In fact, 800 is nearly double the number of folks at Gene's signings in other cities. It may be the highest number of folks to ever come out for a single book signing in Nashville.
There was no loud music, no profanity, no exposed mommy parts, no lewd, crude or rude behavior of any kind.
Gene was downright charming. He kissed babies, he talked to autograph seekers' friends on their cell phones, he laughed, he joked, he wordlessly held one woman for two minutes while she sobbed uncontrollably.
In fact, the only thing folks were supposed to get autographed was his book, but Gene got on live TV at 10 Tuesday night and told folks he'd sign anything the rest of the night.
He signed and talked and joked with fans for almost five hours.
''He was by far the most gracious celebrity ever to come to the store,'' manager Juan Jimenez said. ''We were amazed.''
Paul Stanley, Peter Criss, Gene Simmons and long time KISS family member Tommy Thayer, joined forces with the prestigious 60-piece Melbourne Symphony Orchestra, for this sell-out, extravaganza of spectacular theatrical rock'n'roll entertainment. The results are nothing short of a symphonic explosion of pure unadulterated rock with an injection of classical music backing.
The concert is split into three acts. The first part of the show kicks off with a powerhouse rock set by KISS. The band performs over-the-top live renditions of Let Me Go Rock & Roll and Psycho Circus, followed by an unplugged set with the Melbourne Symphony Ensemble string quartet.
The incredible finale sees the hard-rock kabuki icons perform some of their greatest hits, such as I Was Made For Lovin' You and Rock And Roll All Nite, accompanied by the full 60-piece M.S.O.
KISS mania reached its peak between 1976 and 1979, when the band had a string of platinum albums, including 1976's Rock And Roll Over, 1977's Love Gun, 1977's Alive II, and 1979's Dynasty. Their cartoon-like stage persona and head banging rock 'n' roll, combined with large quantities of grease paint has helped the theatrical rockers stack up career album sales in excess of 70 million.
This 2-disc DVD set is presented in a deluxe 6-panel digipack alongside a 12-page souvenir booklet; all contained within an embossed slipcase with metallic print. Unquestionably, this was a once in a life time show for KISS fans, and this DVD is a must have for anyone who missed the live extravaganza!
He told the Post, "Is it my fault women come in and lift their tops or stick their butts in my face for me to autograph? The book's Sex Money Kiss, not the New Testament." Simmons added, "Bookstores are quiet places...they're not equipped for a party atmosphere. My fans aren't swinging from chandeliers, but they're enthusiastic and often in cleavage."
Simmons told LAUNCH that Sex Money Kiss should be looked at as a sort of advice manual. "I'm happy to say that Sex Money Kiss offers the kind of advice you always suspected was true, but never actually heard anybody tell you to your face--which is basically that you're a loser, and it's time to wake up."
The Kiss/Aerosmith concert scheduled for Virginia Beach, Virginia, this past Wednesday (September 17) was postponed due to safety and weather concerns from the threat of Hurricane Isabel. The date will be rescheduled.
The recently-released Kiss Symphony DVD entered Billboard's Top Music Video chart at Number One. It features the band performing earlier this year in Melbourne, Australia, backed by the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra, who play in full Kiss makeup. Meanwhile, the double-CD version of the concert will be re-released as a single disc on October 7.
Dinosaurs can still shake the earth.
Kiss and Aerosmith -- two admittedly long-in-the-tooth rock 'n' roll bands -- are showing the youngsters how it's done.
The co-headlining "Rocksimus Maximus" tour, which stops at Sound Advice Amphitheatre tonight, is doing better business than any other road show this year.
"What's great about this is, the fans win," says Gene Simmons, whose demonic Kiss costume and lascivious tongue are better known than much of his band's music. The band's bass player and public spokesman has been selling Kiss for 30 years, and he's part hypnotist, part carnival barker when he's on a roll.
"There are no two American bands, certainly, that have scaled higher heights. For one thing, Aerosmith continues to do well, decade after decade, and Kiss is the No. 1 gold record champion of all time, of any American group."
Calling from a tour stop in Chicago, the 54-year-old Simmons says the two groups are old friends. "It's a mutual admiration society," he explains. "Where most bands would get up onstage and it would be like Holyfield/Tyson, biting body parts off, it's nothing like that with us. Everybody gets along great."
And even though it's a co-headlining tour, he says, Kiss elected to go on first each night. "Somebody's got to. We prefer to go on first, because there are no noise limitations earlier.
"If you go on later, and you're outdoors, they restrict you on the noise level. And because Aerosmith doesn't do explosions and stuff, going on later is OK."
The stage is also built on an enormous turntable, to reduce the audience's wait time between acts. "You don't have to sit through 100 roadies getting up there, and looking at their plumbers' crack as they're moving equipment off the stage," Simmons says.
Fans will see the full-length Kiss show -- a theatrical marvel that combines loud, riff-heavy rock 'n' roll with pyrotechnics, leather and nightmarish Kabuki makeup. "Full bombast," as Simmons calls it.
"Being in Kiss is not a cheap situation," says Simmons, who oversees the business end of the Kiss enterprise along with singer/guitarist Paul Stanley. "Everybody knows that when we tour, we put all the money right there onstage. You can see it.
"To see a bass-playing guy who spits fire and drools blood fly up to the top of the light system at eight feet a second, well, it takes machinery. And that costs lots of money."
As always, there is unrest in the Kiss Kingdom. Original drummer Peter Criss is along for the tour this year, but lead guitarist Ace Frehley, whose problems with drugs are well known among the group's legions of fans, has been replaced by Tommy Thayer.
Simmons, a notorious teetotaler who says he's never been drunk or high in his life, has fired both Frehley and Criss on numerous occasions. He and Stanley hold the copyrights to all four makeup and costume designs, and they can fill the guitarist and drummer slots with whomever they choose to hire.
"Kiss is like the Olympics," Simmons explains. "If anything is in your bloodstream, you're out of the band. You're gone. Because it's too important to be up there.
"The fans give us too much of their time and their heart, and their money. You know, last time I checked, Kiss wasn't a charity. And this is a privilege. To get up there, you have to be proud of what you do."
Criss, who's had his own problems with substance abuse, was sacked in 2001, midway through the so-called Farewell Tour. It turned out to be Frehley's farewell.
Simmons says Criss has cleaned up his act. "One night you're drunk, and a complete moron, and the next day you wake up and say 'Gee, what was I thinking?'"
Fans shouldn't expect to see Frehley back in the greasepaint. "Three strikes, you're out," Simmons says. "He was out of the band for 15 years, then he came back, then he left ... no more."
Frehley, he adds, "was being self-destructive and blah blah blah, and the last thing I want to do, or the fans want to do, is to have Ace hurt himself. We love him, God bless him, and maybe not being in the band can save his health."
New to the canon is "Kiss Symphony: Alive IV," recorded in Australia with the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra. It a double CD and a DVD.
Surprisingly, the concept works. Conducted by David Campbell, the orchestra takes the power chords of "Shout it Out Loud" and "Rock and Roll All Nite" and renders them gargantuan and unstoppable.
"We're fearless in that way," says Simmons. "When you really look at it, most bands pay attention to style and fads, because nobody wants to be out of step.
"Well, look at us! We dress kinda weird, you know? And we've never paid attention to style. We wear more makeup and high heels than your mommy ever did.
"And in terms of sitting there and just playing our songs, that's not enough. We believe you deserve bang for the buck. We believe the stage is a holy place."
Gene & Co. are schlepping cross country on a year's tour. If it's any area where people know how to read, he's also scheduled for an in-store signing for his "Sex, Money, Kiss" book which came out recently.
Gene, of course, says it's because thousands of fans storm in to see him as opposed to the dozen folk their nice, quiet, polite book signings usually get. Borders says it's because the events were all too wild, raunchy and vulgar. Publisher New Millennium says they only know the thing's selling and he's doing another one.
Says Gene, calling from stop No. 20, Atlanta: "My fault women come in and lift their tops or stick their butts in my face for me to autograph? The book's 'Sex, Money, Kiss' not the New Testament. The title I really wanted was, 'Women Are From Mars, Men Have Penises.'
"See, bookstores are quiet places. The first word you learn there is 'Ssshhh.' They're not equipped for a party atmosphere. My fans aren't swinging from chandeliers, but they're enthusiastic and often in cleavage. And I give them my all. I take photos with them, don't take bathroom breaks, and I stay for hours until the very last person."
Yeah, yeah, so what happened?
"So Borders in our upcoming Nashville, Chicago, Pennsylvania stops sent word they don't want me."
Poor Gene. Such a shy understated timid bashful misunderstood soul.
Kiss members Gene Simmons, Peter Criss and Tommy Thayer appeared at Royal Palm Beach Stadium 18 theater to watch Kiss Symphony, a documentary film that captures the band in concert with the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra in Australia in February.The band will be headlining a concert with Aerosmith on Friday at the Sound Advice Amphitheatre west of West Palm Beach.
But 176 die-hard fans couldn't wait.
"I chased down the [radio station] van to get tickets," said Alfred Grittner, 37, clad in a Kiss shirt, black bandana and fierce boots Simmons might wear. "When I was a kid I wasn't allowed to go see Kiss because my father was strict. I've been making up for it ever since."
The band has one of the most well-known followings in rock 'n' roll history. The film, which includes fans, shows the meticulous preparation and collaboration Kiss underwent in its first performance with a symphony.
"This was an orchestra used to playing Mozart, Schubert and Beethoven, and here they were playing Gods of Thunder and yet it was so right," guitarist and front man Paul Stanley says in the film.
Kiss Symphony is playing in select theaters across the country and also has been released on CD, Kiss Symphony: Alive IV.
Henry Carlton, 7, posed as "The Starchild," Stanley's masked moniker, on Tuesday night, and was one of the few Kiss face-painters in the crowd.
Other fans clutched worn LPs, glossy photos and CDs for the rockers to sign.
"We're doing this for our fans," Simmons said. "The best feeling is looking out into the crowd during a concert and seeing all the Kiss crazies. And the irony is we've never gotten to check ourselves out. Now we can."
The band took the middle row in the movie theater, munching on popcorn and passing the huge tubs to people in the next row. A pleasant Simmons shared sugar-coated nuts.
A recording of the February concert from Melbourne's Telstra Dome will be shown at big-screen theaters in 21 U.S. cities Tuesday, to coincide with its release on DVD. A double CD from the concert was released in July as "Kiss Alive IV."
"This is a way to see Kiss more in the scale we should be — larger than life," lead singer Paul Stanley told The Associated Press. "The concert itself is pretty jaw-dropping. To be able to see it on a big screen with a full audience of people rocking is pretty amazing."
"Size does seem to matter," bassist Gene Simmons added.
The show features original members Stanley, Simmons and drummer Peter Criss with the band's newest member, Tommy Thayer, a longtime touring assistant who was pressed into service when original guitarist Ace Frehley declined to perform following what was supposed to be a farewell tour in 2000-01.
The band is touring with Aerosmith, which Stanley said will continue through next summer, and is considering doing a new studio album afterward.
Out of respect for the victims and survivors of the 9-11 terrorist attacks two year ago, major touring acts like Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band, Cher, Steely Dan, Fleetwood Mac and the Aerosmith-KISS combo, have opted not to schedule shows on the two-year anniversary, according to Billboard.com.
"It's going to be a while before we see [all] artists have events on that day," Larry Vallon, senior VP at House of Blues Concerts, tells Billboard.
Vallon foresees most tours skipping 9-11 altogether, at least in his lifetime. Of the 31 House of Blues venues, he notes that not one has been booked for a concert.
But honoring the victims and their families isn't the only reason musicians are skipping the date. Some music-biz types believe fans would shy away from events on what many view as a somber day, while other industry observers say a massive concert could be considered an attractive terrorist target.
"I think it's probably a situation where if the tour routing would allow it, they'd probably be off that day if only because there's a certain element of risk with that date," says Gary Bongiovanni, editor-in-chief of concert industry trade Pollstar "It's hard to read the mood of the country as to whether people are going to want to go out and party on that day."
However, the concert industry isn't shutting down entirely.
R.E.M. is going ahead with a gig scheduled for Las Vegas' Thomas & Mack Center, while Willie Nelson is set to take the stage at the Big Sandy Superstore Arena in Huntington, West Virginia.
"Personally, being a Vietnam veteran, I think it's totally important to forge ahead and not succumb to the pressure of terrorists," Buck Williams, R.E.M.'s booking agent at Progressive Global Agency, says in Billboard.
Some lesser known acts have taken those words to heart, especially country musician and multi-instrumentalist John McEuen. During last year's anniversary, the acoustic auteur played a show in Bemidji, Minnesota, to benefit 911 Emergency Medical Services. According to Bongiovanni, artists like McEuen feel performing can have a healing effect.
"McEuen came to [the Billboard Music Awards] show back in February and told the audience that playing [on 9-11] was a great way for people to remember what happened and do something positive for the world," says Bongiovanni. "He encourages other artists to do the same."
Tickets can be purchased in advance from Regal's official Web site (http://www.regalcm.com).
"Kiss Symphony" (Kiss Records/Sanctuary) chronicles the veteran rock act's Feb. 28 concert in Melbourne with the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra. Beyond live clips, the two-DVD set also features a behind-the-scenes documentary, rehearsal footage and band interviews. The concerts were recently released on CD under the name "Kiss Symphony: Alive IV."
Kiss is in the midst of an extensive co-headlining tour with Aerosmith, with the next stop set for Wednesday outside Boston. Due to the recent blackout in the U.S., dates in Detroit, Nashville, Kansas City, Kan., Chicago and St. Louis were postponed. The tour is expected to continue well into the fall and may jump to Europe and other international markets next year.
Many promoters and venues resorted to selling tickets from box offices with a hard-ticket pool printed prior to the blackout. "It's like a throwback to the old days," said Bill Reid, president of Rising Tide Productions, whose Friday night Nickel Creek concert in Norfolk, Va., was affected.
One of the biggest cancellations due to the blackout was the Kiss/Aerosmith (news - web sites) concert Friday at Comerica Park in Detroit. That sold-out show, promoted by Clear Channel Entertainment (CCE), was the lone stadium date on the bands' tour, and has been tentatively rescheduled for Sept. 7.
House of Blues Concerts Canada lost a Thursday performance by Steely Dan (news - web sites) at Molson Amphitheater in Toronto, now tentatively set for mid-September.
CCE New York lost at least four shows to the blackout, including an Aaron Carter (news) performance at Tommy Hilfiger Pavilion at Jones Beach in Wantagh, N.Y. Broadway was also dark for the first time since Sept. 11, 2001.
Public ticket sales for these two shows haven't been set yet, but Aerosmith's Aero Force One fan club has a presale scheduled for its members on Tuesday (August 12) at 10 p.m. ET. For more information, go to aeroforceone.com.
Kiss is also expected to offer presale tickets to its fans, as they've done for every show announced so far, but that information wasn't available at press time.
Aerosmith and Kiss started their coheadlining tour, with opening act Saliva, on August 2 in Hartford, Connecticut. Their next show is Monday (August 11) at the P.N.C. Bank Arts Center in Holmdel, New Jersey.
But when the members of Kiss take the stage in full makeup and costume, when they bring the full-on fire-filled, monster-truck-riff-laden, blood-spewing spectacle, it's hard to deny that what you're seeing is indeed what it is often dubbed -- the greatest show on Earth.
And despite taking the stage at this breezy state park before nightfall (unheard of for Kiss), despite this being the second stop on the tour (a time when kinks are still being worked out), Stanley, Gene Simmons (news), drummer Peter Criss (news) and new guitarist Tommy Thayer pretty much conquered Jones Beach, firing off hit after hit after hit, from "Detroit Rock City" to "Deuce" to "Shout It Out Loud" to "Strutter" to "I Love It Loud."
With Kiss, the music isn't as much the point as is the fun, the experience, the stunts. And, while the music was mostly up to par (new guitarist Thayer -- a longtime Kiss staffer, one-time tour manager and ex-guitarist in '80s metal act Black 'N Blue -- was especially impressive throughout), the stunts were flawless. Albeit brief, Simmons' fire-breathing and blood spewing antics were as thrilling as ever, and his now-just-as-well-known ascent to the top of the stage (via a pair of cables) was absolutely perfect between his bass solo and the start of his signature tune, "God of Thunder."
Seeing Kiss in the daylight, during which it will begin its set for at least a chunk of the tour, could have hurt the band tremendously. Yet, all four members were so energized at the start of the set, the time of day was a non-factor. That said, the entire spectacle fared much better once the sun went down, and the classic Kiss video clips (a truly nice addition) on the screens above Criss and to the sides of the stages could be seen better.
While Kiss fans are certainly pleased to see Criss behind the skins -- especially after a brief departure from the group a few years back -- the drummer was rarely the spark that he should have been. On only a few occasions, including the band's riveting take on "Black Diamond," did he match his bandmates' energy. Favoring a rather disconnected, rarely passionate, jazz-rooted style of playing, Criss just seemed to lack the spirit of the other three.
On this, the first of two nights at Jones Beach (the band also plays Aug. 6), fans certainly got a full, 15-song set (it's hard to say if they got their money's worth, seeing as some tickets topped $200). In reality, Kiss' set could have fared better had it been pared back by a song or two. Even still, it rarely lost momentum.
In terms of song selection, nearly every classic and fan fave (including "Do You Love Me?," "I Want You," "Beth," and "Love Gun") was delivered. It would have been nice to hear "Lick It Up," but it's one of several from the band's non-makeup era that has been understandably lost in this co-headlining situation.
Despite Thayer being spot-on, original guitarist Ace Frehley -- who opted out of the tour to pursue a solo career, among other things -- was missed. More than his playing, Frehley's presence is missed the most, making the show somewhat lopsided without stunts like setting his guitar on fire. That's not to mention his lead vocal on "Shock Me," which was not played. But his absence was most obvious during the solo in "Rock'n'Roll All Night," the set's climax.
Most Kiss fans are at a loss to explain why the band is opening up for Aerosmith (news - web sites). Sure, the latter is without a doubt more relevant, and certainly more talented musically. Yet, however irrelevant their music is today, Kiss delivers what is hands-down one of the most exciting live experiences rock fans have ever seen.
And so Aerosmith obviously had much to overcome in following Kiss, and the band clearly approached doing so as some sort of battle royale.
Blaring out of the gate, the enduring rock titan began with a ragged version of its early classic "Let the Music Do the Talkin'," clearly a shot at Kiss' gimmick-heavy routine. Oddly enough, it employed some rather cheesy video effects during the very next track, another raucous early number, "Mama Kin."
While clearly determined, Steven Tyler and Joe Perry seemed a bit cold at first. But, by the end of the fourth cut, "Rag Doll," the band owned Jones Beach and, frankly, was quickly erasing Kiss' memory. Perry was spot on, Tyler as manic as ever and the rest of the band solid as a rock.
However unintentionally, the band left Kiss' set feeling tired and played-out. While Kiss' show is essentially full of the same songs, crowd-participation dialogue ("We love you, people," etc.) and stunts, Aerosmith's felt clever and new, thanks to a mid-show set change and a foray into its blues-influenced album, slated for release early next year.
But the band had a couple weapons to its credit that Kiss didn't. This tour employs a revolving stage to cut down on the time between sets. While it didn't really seem to save that much time in between bands, Aerosmith made wise use out of the swivel stage during its performance.
When the band first took the stage, it was backed by several stacks of amps, and Kramer was behind a fairly beefy drum set. Four or five songs in, Tyler slyly drifted to stage left and began an a capella intro to the act's great, country-leaning "What it Takes" as the stage rotated to reveal a tiny drum set not even resting on a riser, and just a couple of amps.
A half-dozen or more vintage-looking neon lights advertised the band, faux girly bars, BBQ spots and cocktail lounges to wonderfully set the mood for the blues tunes, which included an Aretha Franklin (news) cover and the now fairly traditional "Baby, Please Don't Go," popularized by Van Morrison's Them.
As on Aerosmith's last tour, a catwalk extended to the halfway point of the floor section, stretching some 20 rows deep. It helped the band connect with the sold-out crowd better than Kiss, and it was where Tyler and Perry spent a good chunk of the set. Right off the bat, Perry darted out to deliver the slide-guitar solo on "Let the Music Do the Talking," which helped the band get off to a high-adrenaline start.
And it was also here that bassist Tom Hamilton, with the wind from the water blowing steadily against him, began the unmistakable intro to "Sweet Emotion," another highlight.
On the more obscure "Nobody's Fault," from 1976's "Rocks," the automatic concert staple "Walk This Way," '90s power-ballad "Cryin"' and a fiery take on the recent "Pink," the band more than proved that it belongs in the headlining spot on this so-called co-headlining tour.
Here is Kiss' set list:
"Detroit Rock City"
"Deuce"
"Shout It Out Loud"
"Strutter"
"Do You Love Me?"
"Let Me Go Rock'n'Roll"
"Firehouse"
"I Love It Loud"
"I Want You"
(bass solo)
"God of Thunder"
"100,000 Years"
"Black Diamond"
"Beth"
"Love Gun"
"Rock'n'Roll All Night"
Here is Aerosmith's set list:
"Let the Music Do the Talkin"'
"Mama Kin"
"Love in an Elevator"
"Rag Doll"
"Pink"
"Nobody's Fault"
"What It Takes"
"Shame"
"I Never Loved"
"Baby Please Don't Go"
"Dream On"
"Cryin"'
"Back in the Saddle"
"Walk This Way"
"Sweet Emotion"
"Dude Looks Like a Lady"
I knew a number of Nelvana’s shows, like The Care Bears, and some older shows, like Teen Wolf, so I called them and we bandied about the idea of doing a KISS cartoon,” says Simmons on his cell phone from a recording studio. “We couldn’t come to terms on that concept, but (former president) Toper Taylor and I liked each other, and we started discussing my peculiar home life, and the funny stuff that’s always happening.
Like when my boy went to kindergarten, and they asked the kids to bring in photos and things to talk about what their parents do. One boy brought scissors, because his dad was a barber, another kid brought a hammer, because his dad built houses, and my son walked in with a poster of me spitting fire and drooling blood.
That story pretty much sums up the premise of My Dad the Rock Star, about a larger than life, Heavy Metal dad named Rock Zilla, and his son Willy, who just wants a normal life.
Everybody’s got families they think are weird, but the real truth is that my son Nick has a mom and dad who are especially weird,’ laughs Simmons. “His mom’s a Playmate, that’s Shannon Tweed, my own Canadian content, and his dad is seven feet tall with Godzilla boots who sticks out his tongue for a living.
Simmons also has a daughter, Sophie, now 11 years old, who joined him and Nick, 14, to watch a preview episode of My Dad the Rock Star. “They were just laughing their heads off. It’s such a fantastic cast and it’s just such a great show. I’m really proud to be associated with it.
If all of this sounds like a big contradiction for The Demon, then you don’t know Gene Simmons. He might be the guy who put on some make-up, stuck out his tongue at the world and gained fame and fortune, but he remains at heart the hard-working immigrant kid who just wants to make his mom happy.
Simmons was born Chaim Witz in Haifa, Israel in 1949, the son of Flora Witz, a Holocaust survivor who soon became a single mom. With an uncle and brother in New York City, Flora decided to bring her son to America in 1958, where they settled in Flushing, Queens. At this time, the age of eight and a half, Chaim changed his name to Gene, and went by his mother’s maiden name, Klein. He’d go through the local yeshiva, American high school and community college before beginning his rock and roll career and adding the Simmons in 1972.
I’ve always felt like an outsider, I still do, but America has given me everything I’ve ever dreamed of, and there are no limitations. Immigrants try to prove they’re as good as the next person, and really work for the things they want. I’ve never taken a vacation in my life. You have a lot of time to have a long vacation when you’re underground.
And that pretty much sums up the premise that is Gene Simmons, which has seen the entertainer become a true multi-media celebrity. He moved from rock and roll to film and television, dated all the divas of his day, and now heads a monolithic merchandizing empire, which includes everything from KISS caskets to a new book and CD, both produced by his own imprint and label. Simmons will also be out on the road with KISS and Aerosmith starting in August 2003, which is sure to revive an interest in a band that has sold second only to The Beatles.
The idea of getting up on stage and shocking people is not what it’s all about,” he explains. “The idea is to make a complete spectacle of yourself. And if critics say that’s what we do, you’re damn right it is.
The spectacle formula has obviously paid off. A quick Internet search turns up 5,170,000 sites under KISS, 335,000 under KISS, the rock band, and 188,000 under Gene Simmons. That’s one impressive fan base, with age ranges Simmons sees as a great audience for the new TV show.
The people who come to see us are families, its parents bringing their kids,” he says. ‘They dress up like KISS and all come together. A forty-year old can put on make-up and no one will look twice at him, and a kid can stick out his tongue and have the time of his life. It’s kind of like Ringling Brothers, or Barnum and Bailey, but we look cooler. It’s the greatest show on earth.
And it’s the same for Rock Zilla,” Simmons continues. “I don’t see why we can’t do Rock Zilla records and Rock Zilla tours for the kids. If you can have Smurfs On Ice, then why not Rock Zilla On Ice?
If it sounds like Simmons has big plans for his animated incarnation, it comes as no surprise. He’s always seeing the potential in things, such as his early appreciation for Saturday morning cartoons. As he wrote in his autobiography, Kiss and Make-up, published in 2001, “I used to tape them and watch them over and over again. Even if I had company at the house – other musicians, actors, celebrities – I was intent on watching these cartoons. People didn’t understand my obsession, but then a few years after that everyone acknowledged these cartoons as seminal works of post-war American art. But I always knew they were.
In fact, Simmons says, animation has always been a big part of his life. As a teenager he published his own “fanzines” with titles like Cosmos and Faun and Lamaba Gamma. “They were based on fantasy and science fiction, comics, movies, basically anything that stretched the imagination. Too bad there isn’t a genre of literature called Imagination.
As a former Mickey Mouse Club fan, sixth-grade teacher, and Kelly Office… Guy? Simmons is known to practice what he preaches. “Once you break free of the rules, all things are possible,” he says. “That’s where the great stuff comes from, whether it’s the Bible, or Alice in Wonderland, or superhero comics, they’re all from the same place, which is not the three dimensional world.
The important thing is to create work, it’s the love of work, it’s not whether you have a job,” he says. “My kids understand that. My boy was the commencement speaker at his school, and the teachers said he was a shining example for the other students. There are strict guidelines at home. There’s no television until after eight o’clock, and up until then you get home and work your tail off.
That might not be the way Rock Zilla rules his roost, but then again, he’s one of many projects for the many-facetted Simmons. He’s also writing a comic book for Bongo Comics, producing motion pictures for Marvel Comics, and signing new acts for his record label. His new book, Sex, Money Kiss, and CD, KISS Symphony: Alive IV, are also launching this summer. Will the man never stop?
You get a chance to stop when they dig a hole for you,” he says. “And anybody who thinks I’m going out willingly better think twice. I’m the guy who’s going to be kicking and screaming – they’re going to have to push me in.
Something tells us we’re going to be hearing a lot more from Gene Simmons before that ever happens. Oh yes, and a lot more about Rock Zilla too.
And don’t forget to watch Mondays at 6:00 p.m., Tuesdays at 7:00 a.m., and Sundays at 5:30 p.m., beginning September 1, 2003.
Following a quick opening set by Saliva that was received fairly, if not enthusiastically, Kiss came out to their traditional "You Wanted The Best, You Got The Best" introduction and played a hit-filled 14-song set including "Detroit Rock City," "Shout It Out Loud," "I Love It Loud," "God Of Thunder," and "Rock And Roll All Nite."
However, the concert did not go off flawlessly. At the start of the show, Gene Simmons, Paul Stanley, and Tommy Thayer descended to the stage on a riser as lights and pyro started firing, but a problem with the curtain diminished the effect of their entrance. There were other glitches, including a bad sound mix that had Simmons' bass much louder than on past tours while Thayer's lead playing was sometimes buried, and Simmons messing up the lyrics in the second verse of "Let Me Go, Rock 'N Roll."
Even with that, the band tried their best to deliver the usual Kiss spectacle. Stanley, Simmons, and Thayer were all over the stage throughout their set, which was filled with enough lighting and pyrotechnic effects to truly demonstrate the meaning of "shock and awe." Special notice is due Thayer, who has replaced Ace Frehley in the band, for not only looking the part, but playing Frehley's solos virtually note for note, much to the crowd's delight.
Kiss trimmed their set back due to time constraints, which meant Simmons didn't breathe fire, and there were no extended guitar or drum solos. Simmons, did, however, spit blood before "flying" to the top of the lighting rig for "God Of Thunder," and Peter Criss drum kit did rise off the stage during "Black Diamond." Simmons and Thayer also rode lifts off the stage while Stanley broke a guitar at the end of the set-closing "Rock And Roll All Nite," which also saw the drum set rise again.
There were a few surprises in the Kiss set. One was the video history they played during the song "Do You Love Me" that charted the band from their earliest days through the release of their solo albums in 1978. It featured a lot of pictures and footage of Frehley, which might have been understandably edited out considering his decision not to work with the group again. Frehley's status wasn't discussed from the stage, and Thayer wasn't introduced. Another was their failure to use a ramp which ran about 20 rows into the audience from the center of the stage. Finally, the decision to go without the traditional confetti for "Rock And Roll All Nite" had a lot of people scratching their heads.
The fans seemed to enjoy the show, but there was a feeling that they had seen a great fighter on an off night--still able to execute the moves, but not as crisply as usual, and susceptible to a knockout.
Before the tour began, Simmons told LAUNCH he was so confident in how well it would do, he even promoted it as a weight-control assistant. "The Kiss/Aerosmith tour, which is gonna be the tour of the year--this is a tour that's gonna kick anybody's butt," Simmons said. "This tour is gonna drop five pounds off any fat girl within a thousand yards of that stage."
Aerosmith lead guitarist Joe Perry didn't go that far, but he told LAUNCH the tour would provide some serious entertainment. "Well, I'd say that it's gonna be as close to a circus as you can get," Perry said. "It's gonna be a lot of fun."
After a short intermission to change the stage, Aerosmith's road crew opened the curtain as the band kicked into a rousing version of "Let The Music Do The Talking," delivering a not-so-subtle message. Steven Tyler and Joe Perry spent a good amount of time out at the far end of the audience ramp, where they and bassist Tom Hamilton would return throughout their show.
Playing on a fairly minimalist stage in contrast to Kiss, Aerosmith was tighter and more focused on the music. In keeping with that idea, Tyler didn't spend a lot of time talking to the crowd between Aerosmith's 16 songs, as Stanley had done throughout Kiss's set.
Aerosmith's set included hits such as "Walk This Way," "Love In An Elevator," "Dream On," and "Sweet Emotion." Without taking a break, they also had the road crew spin their stage amps around to create the effect of a bandstand in a small club, at which time Tyler said, "Blues album time. We're gonna break off a little piece. Joe, you ready?" They then played three blues songs--Little Walter's "Temperature," Aretha Franklin's "I Never Loved A Man (The Way I Love You)," which was renamed "I Never Loved Another Girl Like The Way I Loved You" on the setlist, and the blues standard "Baby Please Don't Go."
The new staging also revealed some neon-style signs, including one that said "Honkin' On Bobo," which is the working title of the blues album Aerosmith will release in January.
Perhaps not surprisingly, a lot of people decided to use the blues portion of the show to make their runs to the bathrooms and concession areas.
Oddly, there was no formal encore for Aerosmith. Following "Back In The Saddle," Perry looked at his watch and asked the crowd, "You wanna hear one more?" After some hearty cheers, he asked, "How about two?", and the audience roared. Perry then said, "I think we got time," and Aerosmith played their last two songs--"I Don't Want To Miss A Thing" and "Sweet Emotion."
In contrast to the little mistakes that Kiss suffered through, Aerosmith's set appeared flawless, including a much better sound mix that allowed each member of the band to be heard clearly.
While their set was about the music, Aerosmith did do something straight out of the Kiss handbook. Aerosmith set off a blizzard of confetti during two different songs--"Back In The Saddle" and "Sweet Emotion."
Only the most partisan of fans would say that Aerosmith scored a clean knockout--after all, even on a bad night, Kiss puts on a better show than most bands ever dream of doing. However, the general feeling in the venue was that Aerosmith won the first night's battle on points.
Kiss and Aerosmith will go for a rematch on Monday (August 4) at the Tommy Hilfiger At Jones Beach Theatre in Wantagh, New York. The tour is currently scheduled to run until October 18, but they're expected to add shows that will keep them on the road until later in the year. Discussions are also underway to extend things until next year, which could include some overseas concerts.
The Kiss setlist: "Detroit Rock City," "Deuce," "Shout It Out Loud," "King Of The Night Time World," "Do You Love Me," "Let Me Go, Rock 'N Roll," "Firehouse," "I Love It Loud," "I Want You," "God Of Thunder," "100,000 Years," and "Black Diamond,” with the encore of "Beth" and "Rock And Roll All Nite."
The Aerosmith setlist: "Let The Music Do The Talking," "Walk This Way," "Love In An Elevator," "Jaded," "Rag Doll," "Cryin'," "What It Takes," "Temperature," "I Never Loved Another Girl Like The Way I Loved You," "Baby Please Don't Go," "Dream On," "The Other Side," "Back In The Saddle," "I Don't Want To Miss A Thing," and "Sweet Emotion."
It's not because they haven't written a good song in 100,000 years.
It's not because they've degenerated into shameless, money-grubbing hucksters who sell everything from condoms to caskets.
It's not because they've had more farewell tours than The Who. It's not because they keep coming up with new ways -- live albums, box sets, greatest-hits discs -- to make you buy the same songs again and again.
It's not because their latest hunk o'product -- a two-disc live set recorded with a symphony -- makes use of a gimmick that's been done to death by everyone from Metallica to Procol Harum.
And it's not even because they've replaced guitarist Ace Frehley with a crew member who's wearing his makeup and playing his licks (admittedly, better than Ace has lately).
No, critics hate KISS because even though it's obvious they see fans like us only as sheep to be fleeced, they still manage to suck you in every time. And on the stylish and surprisingly entertaining Symphony: Alive IV, damned if they don't it yet again -- and with all the grace and skill of the consummate carnies they are.
This energetic, hit-laden set finds Gene, Paul, Peter and The Guy Who is Not Ace rocking out like gods of thunder, delivering a solid block of oldies like Deuce and Strutter, then making impressive use of the Melbourne Symphony, drawing on the orchestra's grandeur and power to add new wrinkles to Detroit Rock City, Do You Love Me?, Shout it Out Loud and even Rock and Roll All Nite, in addition to the wretched but unavoidable Beth.
So just when you thought they were finally down for the count, Gene and Paul pull the fat out of the fire one more time and go laughing all the way back to the bank in their gold-plated limos. Damn them all to hell
Track Listing
Disc 1:
1. Deuce
2. Strutter
3. Let Me Go Rock & Roll
4. Lick It Up
5. Calling Dr. Love
6. Psycho Circus
7. Beth - Kiss w/The Melbourne Symphony Ensemble
8. Forever - Kiss w/The Melbourne Symphony Ensemble
9. Goin' Blind - Kiss w/The Melbourne Symphony Ensemble
10. Sure Know Something - Kiss w/The Melbourne Symphony Ensemble
11. Shandi - Kiss w/The Melbourne Symphony Ensemble
Disc 2:
1. Detroit Rock City - Kiss w/The Melbourne Symphony Orchestra
2. King Of The Night Time World - Kiss w/The Melbourne Symphony Orchestra
3. Do You Love Me - Kiss w/The Melbourne Symphony Orchestra
4. Great Expectations - Kiss w/The Melbourne Symphony Orchestra
5. Shout It Out Loud - Kiss w/The Melbourne Symphony Orchestra
6. God Of Thunder - Kiss w/The Melbourne Symphony Orchestra
7. Love Gun - Kiss w/The Melbourne Symphony Orchestra
8. I Was Made For Lovin' You - Kiss w/The Melbourne Symphony Orchestra
9. Black Diamond - Kiss w/The Melbourne Symphony Orchestra
10. Rock And Roll All Nite - Kiss w/The Melbourne Symphony Orchestra
Detroit Rock City
Deuce
Shout It Out Loud
King of the Night Time World
Do You Love Me
Let Me Go Rock & Roll
Firehouse
I Love It Loud
I Want You
God of Thunder
100,000 Years
Black Diamond
encore -
Beth
Rock and Roll All Nite
It's a surreal world whose primary inhabitants - the four members of Kiss - wear makeup, play driving hard-rock music and put on bombastic live shows in front of fervent fans who know every note of every song.
It's also a carefully constructed world, where each move is designed to advance one primary goal: augmenting the already impressive mythology of Kiss.
Stanley towers above everyone else in the hotel suite - 6-inch platform boots will do that - and he's bedecked in full Kiss regalia: white greasepaint, bright red lipstick, black star painted around his right eye and a skin-tight stage costume that reveals the singer and guitarist's hairy chest.
He and the other members of Kiss are in New York to promote a new album, "Kiss Symphony: Alive IV," an accompanying DVD scheduled for release in September and the band's summer tour with Aerosmith, which starts tonight in Hartford.
In another sense, though, Stanley and his band mates are in town for a little routine maintenance of the legend they have created.
You can argue all you want about the merits of Kiss' music. (Influential cultural force or execrable pandering to people with bad taste? Discuss). Either way, the band has built a vast commercial empire based in part on the music, yes, but more on the idea of Kiss.
"We're superheroes in a band," Stanley says during one of a series of TV interviews the group conducts. That's exactly the image Kiss wants to project, and what's more, that's exactly how fans see the band.
Very little of Kiss' success has happened by accident. Stanley and Gene Simmons (with help at various times from Peter Criss, Ace Frehley and others) have worked assiduously to build a rock band that looks, acts and sounds the part. And even though the Kiss legend has been secure for years - who else has fans so ardent, they envision themselves as soldiers in a rock 'n' roll army? - the band still works hard to maintain the mystique.
"Kiss is a totality," Stanley says later in a follow-up phone conversation. "It's not just music. It's a mindset. It is an attitude and a way of approaching life beyond music."
In full makeup and stage costumes, Simmons, Stanley, Criss and guitarist Tommy Thayer sit for a series of media interviews at the hotel before caravaning to a Best Buy in Manhattan for a lengthy in-store appearance with a division's worth of foot soldiers in the Kiss army. As bizarre and tiring as the day seems to an outsider, it's nothing unusual for the band.
"This is part of being in Kiss," Stanley says while striding through the opulent splendor of the Plaza on his way from one interview to the next.
The media sessions, with camera crews from VH1, E!, Reuters, an Australian TV network and a Hartford station, feature many of the same questions: How did you come to work with the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra on the new live album? How did the tour with Aerosmith happen? Why start in Hartford?
Although the musicians give largely the same answers, they deliver them as though they are hearing the questions for the first time. Despite occasional impertinence, none of them betrays the slightest sign of impatience or boredom with the questioning, or even with technical difficulties that beset the Australian camera crew. Stanley says later that showing irritation at hearing the same questions again and again isn't fair to the interviewers or to the people reading or watching the interview.
"People thank us for being so patient and cooperative," he says during a brief break. "But I tell them, `I'm not doing this for you; I'm doing this for me.'"
After doing so much press over the years, the musicians need the barest of prompts to unleash torrents of hyperbolic sound bites that interviewers love.
"When we started 30 years ago, what we were doing was shocking. Now it's just damn good," Stanley tells Derek Slap from WVIT, Channel 30.
In other interviews, Stanley calls the tour with Aerosmith "an alliance of rock," describes the new live album, which features the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra, as a meeting of "black tie and black leather" and tells a VH1 crew member who asks about the maneuverability of the singer's clunky footwear, "I could still part your hair with my boot."
Later, at Best Buy, more than 1,000 fans are lined up outside the store at 87th Street and Lexington Avenue. Some have been waiting for two days for the chance to pose for a snapshot with the band. What is most striking about the crowd is its diversity. There are men and women; old and young; whites, blacks, Asians and Hispanics - nevermind Jesse Jackson, Kiss has a rainbow coalition of its own.
Of course it does, Stanley says.
"As I've said before, you can't always look like Kiss, but you can feel like Kiss," he says on the phone. "We are the underdog who won. We are the disenfranchised who took over. We are the people who wouldn't accept our place or the status quo, and we said, `No, we're going to do it our way, and we're not only going to survive, we're going to thrive.'"
When it's suggested that the band's schedule that day seemed grueling, Stanley sounds almost offended on behalf of the fans.
"Grueling is digging ditches. Grueling is laying brick all day, for a lot less money than I make. So it would be the height of disrespect to call what I do grueling," he says.
What is perhaps most fascinating about watching Kiss at close quarters is the realization that the band not only talks a good game, but the musicians also believe in what they're saying about themselves, the music and, most especially, the fans. It's deeply seductive, and by the end of the day, you find yourself agreeing that maybe Kiss is the greatest band in the world.
"Maybe it's cheesy, but it's the best cheese around," Stanley says.
Then he grins and says, "I'm going to remember that line."
The band opened its summer tour with Kiss at the ctnow.com Meadows Music Centre, and Perry powered Aerosmith's set with his outstanding playing on songs culled mostly from the band's extensive catalog.
Aerosmith wasted no time in engaging the crowd - "Walk This Way" was the second song of the band's set, and Perry's guitar tone was thick and meaty. He was even better on the next tune, "Love in an Elevator," blasting out lead lines like an unstoppable guitar machine.
Tyler, alas, wasn't at his best. Call it opening night jitters, perhaps, but he had trouble with the words to more than a few songs - "Rag Doll," most noticeably - and the teleprompters placed strategically around the stage didn't seem to help.
Still, the singer was more energetic and attentive to the crowd than when the band played Hartford last September.
This year's set was much better, featuring a slew of tunes from "Pump," "Permanent Vacation" and older albums, with only a few newer, less powerful songs thrown in. Aerosmith also offered a preview of songs from a blues album the band is working on. Best among them was a turbo-boogie cover of "Please Don't Go."
The band ended what turned out to be the regular set with "Back in the Saddle," but didn't leave the stage before performing a quasi-encore that included "Sweet Emotion."
Kiss played an 80-minute set of the melodic, often suggestive hard rock songs the band is known for. Dressed in their outlandish costumes, with faces fully painted, the band indulged in pyrotechnics, loud guitars, levitating drum risers and all of the over-the-top trappings of a rock band serious about giving fans their money's worth.
The band's songs are constructed simply, as if to allow plenty of time for the musicians to point at the crowd or reach triumphantly toward the sky between each note.
Bassist Gene Simmons drooled fake blood all over himself at the start of "God of Thunder" before flying up to a platform on top of the light rig. The band also played "I Love It Loud," and singer-guitarist Paul Stanley pranced and strutted around the stage when he wasn't at the microphone.
Kiss started its encore with drummer Peter Criss singing "Beth," before the whole band ending with the party classic "Rock and Roll All Nite."